Miss Marple: Le train de 16 h 50
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA friend of Miss Marple's sees a woman being strangled in a passing train. When police cannot find a body and doubt the story, Miss Marple enlists professional housekeeper, Lucy Eyelesbarrow... Tout lireA friend of Miss Marple's sees a woman being strangled in a passing train. When police cannot find a body and doubt the story, Miss Marple enlists professional housekeeper, Lucy Eyelesbarrow, to go undercover.A friend of Miss Marple's sees a woman being strangled in a passing train. When police cannot find a body and doubt the story, Miss Marple enlists professional housekeeper, Lucy Eyelesbarrow, to go undercover.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- James Stoddart-West
- (as Daniel Steel)
Avis à la une
For the big screen the characters of the woman who saw the strangling on a passing train and the woman who Miss Marple sends in as a housekeeper to scout out the terrain are eliminated. Rutherford's character serves as both and one of the biggest strengths of the film is Rutherford doing her own scouting and sleuthing and her scenes with ailing family patriarch James Robertson Justice are a hoot and a half.
Joan Hickson's Jane Marple is a milder sort, but still a woman who doesn't miss much. This version is faithful to the Christie story and has a friend of Miss Marple see the strangling of a woman and her being thrown out the window of a train going the other way. But no body turns up near the tracks. At that point Hickson goes into action and determines that the body was most likely thrown off near the Crackenthorpe estate. At that point she sends in Jill Meager as an operative so to speak.
The Crackenthorpes are wealthy British family, new money, they got rich manufacturing breakfast cereal. And they've got an ailing patriarch with one of those crazy wills that provide a host of relatives as suspects.
I will say this, the same perpetrator in the Margaret Rutherford movie does the deed again in 4:50 From Paddington Station. And nearly gets away with it, but for an unexpected witness.
A little slow, but more is explained and the murder itself doesn't seem quite as contrived as the Rutherford film.
It's a fun story with a surprise villain. In the story, a friend (Mona Bruce) of Jane Marple's traveling by train to visit her witnesses the strangling of a woman on a train going in the opposite direction.
No one except Marple takes her seriously, no evidence can be found, and Marple's involvement annoys her nemesis, DI Slack. He does very little on the case. In studying the train route, Marple feels the body was thrown off the train and landed on the grounds of the Crackenthorpe estate.
The family has difficulty keeping domestic staff, so Miss Marple enlists the help of a fabulous young housekeeper, Lucy, and asks her to get a position there. In her spare time, she hits golf balls and walks around the estate.
Eventually she finds the body hidden in a shed on the property. But who is the dead woman? What is her connection, if any, to people on the estate? It falls to Miss Marple to figure it out.
Very well done. In the Rutherford film, Marple herself sees the murder and gets a job on the estate. The Hickson version is closer to the book.
Since it's such an intriguing story with interesting characters and plenty of suspects, both versions are highly entertaining. However, the presence of Lucy (Jill Meager) offers some potential romance, which adds to it.
I just love the look on DI Slack's face when dealing with Marple, especially when other people speak highly of her. David Horovitch is quite good in the role.
Another Miss Marple winner from this '80s series.
Carefully constructed adaptation of Agatha Christie's 1957 mystery of the same name. It was filmed twenty-seven years earlier as MURDER SHE SAID (1962) with Margaret Rutherford playing Miss Marple. Interestingly Joan Hickson appeared in the latter film as the Crackenthorpe's housekeeper Mrs Kidder. Rutherford wasn't exactly faithful to Christie's original character, but she made the part entirely her own and she was always a joy to watch. Hickson makes a convincing Miss Marple and she is more to the letter of the book than Rutherford, but alongside each other they are still the best two actresses to have played the character. This film moves at a good pace and Hickson is most ably assisted by a first rate supporting cast including Maurice Denham as Luther Crackenthorpe, Joanna David as Emma Crackenthorpe, Jill Meager as Lucy Eyelesbarrow and John Hallam as Cedric Crackenthorpe. The only slight weakness in the film is that it sometimes tends towards the stodginess of an old drawing room play, which was quite common with so many of the BBC's dramas at this time. Still there is a good feeling for period detail and this is streets ahead of ITV's latest attempt to bring Miss Marple to television. See Agatha Christie's Miss Marple: The Body In The Library (2004).
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesJoan Hickson was in an adaptation of this story in 1961 called Le train de 16h50 (1961), Margaret Rutherford played Miss Marple and Hickson played Mrs. Kidder.
- GaffesAlthough the film takes place in October 1957, Alexander Eastley is reading the May 30, 1958 issue of "Eagle".
- Citations
Miss Jane Marple: But of course you must go on searching, Inspector! Now you might say that Elspeth is not a sophisticated person, but, I assure you, she has both feet firmly on the ground. She saw what she saw!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Arena: Agatha Christie - Unfinished Portrait (1990)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Agatha Christie's Miss Marple: 4:50 from Paddington
- Lieux de tournage
- Orchardleigh House, Frome, Somerset, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Surroundings, exterior and interior of Rutherford Hall)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro