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Go for an all-star ride

“Murder on the Orient Express,” ★★ review.

- Brian Truitt Columnist

The detective is aces aboard Murder on the Orient Express. It’s the crime — and the ensuing whodunit — that doesn’t play.

Kenneth Branagh directs and wears the bushy, ridiculous (and ridiculous­ly awesome) mustache of the iconic supersleut­h Hercule Poirot in the ponderous all-star Agatha Christie adaptation ( ★★, rated PG-13; in theaters Friday). What starts out as a breezy Indiana Jones- style adventure screeches to a halt when someone’s stabbed to death on the train, and most of the storytelli­ng momentum is also killed in a mystery that’s surprising­ly philosophi­cal.

Set in 1934, the story introduces Poirot just as he’s about to crack his latest case at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem. A persnicket­y Belgian who lives for Charles Dickens and perfectly prepared eggs, Poirot is extremely OCD and in aggressive need of balance. He’s constantly annoyed by the imperfecti­ons in life, like an askew tie, though his exquisite attention to detail is a boon for his crime-solving career.

Desperate for a holiday but desperatel­y needed in London for a case, Poirot is booked on the luxurious Orient Express by a friend (Tom Bateman) who promises “three days free of care, concern and crime.” The passenger list looks like a supersize game of Clue with a criminal art dealer (Johnny Depp) traveling with his personal secretary (Josh Gad) and butler (Derek Jacobi); a Russian princess (Judi Dench) and her maid (Olivia Colman); a weird German professor (Willem Dafoe); an unassuming governess (Daisy Ridley); an ultradevou­t Spanish nurse (Penélope Cruz); a forthright doctor (Leslie Odom Jr.); and an American socialite (Michelle Pfeiffer) looking for Mr. Right.

Poirot’s vacation goes awry when an avalanche strands the passengers and one winds up a corpse, kicking off a string of motives and alibis, as well as a twisty mélange of subplots that connect to the murder of a young girl years ago.

There’s a throwback vibe for sure, mainly to the celebrity-packed films of yesteryear. With all its overly dramatic head turns and frowny faces, Murder largely wastes its extremely impressive cast: At least Depp makes the most of his menacing turn as a smarmy crook, Pfeiffer and Gad chew up some scenery, and Lucy Boynton is strong in limited action as a drug-addled countess.

Michael Green’s script is overcooked yet interestin­gly touches on how lies and loss can affect the human spirit. Branagh’s filmmaking surrounds those themes with splendor through thrilling scenes of the speeding Express and a neat tracking shot early on where Poirot walks the length of the train, letting him (and the audience) get a sense of the chaos to come.

Branagh’s best stuff comes in front of the camera as the eccentric investigat­or. Poirot’s bushy facial hair is a character in itself (he even wears a mustache guard when he sleeps), there’s a great sense of justice and sadness in his narrative, and he’s the only reason Orient

Express doesn’t go off the rails.

 ??  ?? Poirot (Kenneth Branagh) investigat­es a “Murder on the Orient Express.” NICOLA DOVE
Poirot (Kenneth Branagh) investigat­es a “Murder on the Orient Express.” NICOLA DOVE
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