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Meurtre en trois actes

Original title: Murder in Three Acts
  • TV Movie
  • 1986
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
Peter Ustinov in Meurtre en trois actes (1986)
WhodunnitCrimeDramaMystery

Hercule Poirot attends a dinner party in which one of the guests clutches his throat and suddenly dies. The cause seems to be natural until another party with most of the same guests produce... Read allHercule Poirot attends a dinner party in which one of the guests clutches his throat and suddenly dies. The cause seems to be natural until another party with most of the same guests produces another corpse.Hercule Poirot attends a dinner party in which one of the guests clutches his throat and suddenly dies. The cause seems to be natural until another party with most of the same guests produces another corpse.

  • Director
    • Gary Nelson
  • Writers
    • Agatha Christie
    • Scott Swanton
  • Stars
    • Peter Ustinov
    • Tony Curtis
    • Emma Samms
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    2.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gary Nelson
    • Writers
      • Agatha Christie
      • Scott Swanton
    • Stars
      • Peter Ustinov
      • Tony Curtis
      • Emma Samms
    • 31User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos6

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    Top cast23

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    Peter Ustinov
    Peter Ustinov
    • Hercule Poirot
    Tony Curtis
    Tony Curtis
    • Charles Cartwright
    Emma Samms
    Emma Samms
    • Egg
    Jonathan Cecil
    Jonathan Cecil
    • Hastings
    Fernando Allende
    Fernando Allende
    • Ricardo Montoya
    Pedro Armendáriz Jr.
    Pedro Armendáriz Jr.
    • Col. Mateo
    • (as Pedro Armendariz)
    Lisa Eichhorn
    Lisa Eichhorn
    • Cynthia Dayton
    Dana Elcar
    Dana Elcar
    • Dr. Strange
    Frances Lee McCain
    Frances Lee McCain
    • Miss Milray
    Marian Mercer
    Marian Mercer
    • Daisy Eastman
    Diana Muldaur
    Diana Muldaur
    • Angela Stafford
    Nicholas Pryor
    Nicholas Pryor
    • Freddie Dayton
    Concetta Tomei
    Concetta Tomei
    • Janet Crisp
    Jacqueline Evans
    • Mrs. Babbington
    Ángeles González
    • Housekeeper
    • (as Angeles Gonzalez)
    Philip Guilmant
    • Rev. Babbington
    Claudia Guzmán
    • Rosa
    • (as Claudia Guzman)
    Rodolfo Hernández
    • Miguel
    • (as Rodolfo Hernandez)
    • Director
      • Gary Nelson
    • Writers
      • Agatha Christie
      • Scott Swanton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    6.22.4K
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    Featured reviews

    4njmysteryman

    Lackluster Adaptation

    Ustinov is great, as always, but the movie is your basic made-for-TV fare. The setting is changed from the novel. I think this really hurt the production. You feel more like your watching an episode of "The Love Boat" than an Agatha Christie mystery. The plot is pretty decent, but it feels as if the cast is just going through the motions. And in my opinion, being that many of the stars just seem to have small parts, I find it's rather easy to spot the murderer. Still, it makes sense and everyone does a decent job with what's there, but I'd def. like to see this remade, esp. with David Suchet. Still, not bad for an afternoon's viewing.
    7TheLittleSongbird

    Enjoyable if rather bland Agatha Christie movie

    Murder In Three Acts certainly isn't terrible, but compared to Death On the Nile and Evil under The Sun, it has a certain blandness to it. That I can understand because it is a TV film, so would be limited in budget in comparison. There is some lavish scenery, costumes and locations, and the acting is good on the whole. Peter Ustinov certainly seems to be enjoying himself as the dapper detective, while Tony Curtis, Lisa Eichlorn and Emma Samms give able support. Jonathan Cecil is wonderfully naive as Hastings as well. However despite a good cast, and the lovely production values, the film does have a number of failings. One was the script, badly underdeveloped in places, and bore little resemblance to the book, which is brilliant by the way, I suggest you read it. There are numerous plot changes too, even characters's names were changed, Hermione Lytton Gore's name was changed to Jennifer for some obscure reason, and Bartholemew Strange's portrayal wasn't at all what I imagined. And I did think the murders were clumsily handled. However, there are a number of redeeming qualities, it is very entertaining and enjoyable, but isn't like the book. 7/10 Bethany Cox
    7Lechuguilla

    Enjoyable Whodunit

    This is a fine movie. Watching Peter Ustinov play Poirot is always a treat. The dialogue between him and Hastings provides adequate humor. And the Agatha Christie whodunit puzzle is fairly good.

    The film suffers though when compared to two previous Ustinov films: "Death On The Nile", and "Evil Under The Sun", both of which were grand and stately big-budget theatrical productions. By contrast, "Murder In Three Acts" is a made-for-TV movie, and therefore seems small and cheap. The scenery, the music, and the casting cannot compete.

    Further, the suspects in "Murder In Three Acts" seem too "normal"; there are no really eccentric characters. The women especially seem bland and undifferentiated.

    Still, if you can avoid the temptation to compare this film to other Hercule Poirot films, as well as Christie's source novel, the movie "Murder In Three Acts" is still entertaining.
    aramis-112-804880

    A Contrarian View

    Poirot using a pc?

    THREE ACT TRAGEDY is one of Dame Agatha's great ideas, because of the way she was able to hide the murderer, the motive, even the fact of murder. But it's not one of her strongest novels, strangely enough. That's a matter of structure. And, I suppose, taste.

    Poirot misses the second murder in this show because he's hammering away on a computer, writing his memoirs. That's a clever dodge. It's rare one of these modernized TV adaptations adds something interesting, so they need to be acknowledged when they do.

    I've been a fan of Christie's since seeing "Murder on the Orient Express" on the big screen as an adolescent. I especially enjoyed Albert Finney's Poirot, who hypnotized me like a snake (not having read a Christie story at that time I had no other frame of reference). I was disappointed when Oscar-winner Ustinov took over. This has nothing to do with Mr. Ustinov personally. I've enjoyed many of his performances. But by the time his Poirot rolled around I had read several Christies and I saw nothing of Poirot in him; I don't care how many houses of cards he constructs. Nevertheless, I had a compulsion to watch any new Christy adaptations. I see his movies as mysteries using Christy's ideas but with a whole new detective. And, by his accent, a detective by way of Inspector Clouseau. Peter Ustinov is a truly great actor, but not a great Poirot. That's my contrarian view.

    This movie is part of the slide away from all-star, splashy movies and into narrower TV budgets with notable film stars replaced by familiar television faces.

    Hastings: I don't recall if Hastings was in this book but I rather think he wasn't.

    I 've enjoyed Jonathan Cecil in a number of radio programs and talking books, but his Arthur Hastings is an idiot. He's not even a good sounding-board.

    Tony Curtis is perfectly cast and they wanted a sexy female so Emma Samms was thrown in, where a woman of more modest dimensions might have been more advisable, though perhaps not so good for advertising.

    For the rest, actors like Dana Elcar and Diana Muldaur are best known for being journey-people actors who get a job done.

    Frankly, I'm no great fan of Tony Curtis but he's definitely a star, in the sense that the Finney flick and early Ustinov movies were cast with stars. A strange actor, when he's up against weak opposition on the screen he can be dull; but when cast against a Burt Lancaster or Jack Lemmon he can ratchet up his game to match them. He was notable in comedies and a twist of humor is always helpful in Agatha Christie performances; whereas in performances of her great contemporary P. G. Wodehouse the characters have to be dead serious, without a twinkle or a wink or a tongue in cheek.

    This adaptation, so modernized, as I mentioned, Poirot is writing is memoirs on a computer, has changed a lot, if it remained faithful to how the murder was disguised. But, as with Christy's novel this adaptation tends to drag.
    6eddax

    Watching a less-engaging Agatha Christie movie adaptation is like watching an extended episode of Murder, She Wrote.

    Watching a less-engaging Agatha Christie movie adaptation is like watching an extended episode of Murder, She Wrote. Like Hercule Poirot, Jessica Fletcher is a walking crime magnet, making you wonder if the world wouldn't be a safer place for the rest of us if people like them were put away for good.

    Agatha Christie movies often host a potpourri of stars to be the suspects. Sometimes they're a mix of renowned actors, like Vanessa Redgrave, John Gielgud, Ingrid Bergman et al, in 1974's Murder on the Orient Express; and sometimes, like in Murder in Three Acts, they're a mix of actors you vaguely recall seeing on some TV show or other, like Emma Samms from Dynasty and Diana Muldaur from Star Trek: The Next Generation. Though the former makes for a more attractive package, even when they're the latter, they usually still turn out to be decent viewing, as this movie is.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Originally published under the title "Three Act Tragedy" in 1934.
    • Goofs
      In the end of the movie as Poirot is explaining how the police will prove the murderer crossed into Mexico from the US he states they can prove when he crossed the border by using his passport. At the time this movie was made Americans could enter Mexico without a passport. You only had to show proof of valid US citizenship (US driver's license, I. D. card, or birth certificate) and there was no record of you entering or leaving Mexico.
    • Quotes

      Hercule Poirot: Porot is only on the side of one thing... and that is the truth.

    • Connections
      Followed by Rendez-vous avec la mort (1988)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 1987 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Mexico
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Drame en trois actes
    • Filming locations
      • Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros. Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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