Call & Times

‘Orient Express’ not a success

Remake of classic murder mystery film goes off track

- By STEPHANIE MERRY

There's a nagging mystery at the heart of "Murder on the Orient Express," and it has nothing to do with homicide. It's all about a mustache — specifical­ly, the one on the face of renowned Belgian detective Hercule Poirot, played by Kenneth Branagh.

Aviewer must know: How was this hirsute sculptural masterpiec­e created? The gray accoutreme­nt has layers upon layers of bushy swoops, and it's so mystifying­ly intricate, it often distracts from whatever else is happening. Hair hasn't inspired this much curiosity since Donald Trump's swirling combover first met a stiff breeze.

Most people may already be acquainted with the plot (not to mention the culprit) of Agatha Christie's novel, which was already famously adapted by Sidney Lumet in 1974. That means Branagh, who also directed, has a tall order, making a familiar tale worth revisiting. With a script by Michael Green, the story takes place in 1934 and follows Poirot as he investigat­es the murder of a man on a train marooned by an avalanche.

The victim, Edward Ratchett (Johnny Depp, playing it relatively straight for once), was a shady art dealer with plenty of enemies, so not even his associates seem surprised when he winds up stabbed to death. But the guilty party is almost certainly still on the train, which leaves about a dozen possible suspects.

The trick with such a sprawling cast is for the characters to efficientl­y make individual impression­s. That works with some — especially Josh Gad's sneaky Hector MacQueen and a flirtatiou­s widow played by Michelle Pfeiffer. Mostly, though, the big-name cast is wasted, leaving Willem Dafoe, Judi Dench, Olivia Colman and Penélope Cruz with little to do. They fade into the background behind Poirot, an eccentric man who doesn't shy away from reminding his fellow passengers that he's the greatest detective alive.

Those bombastic pronouncem­ents are quite funny, and early on, "Murder" excels at delivering laughs. For a moment, the movie seems to be going for a daffy vibe, in the vein of "Clue." But the story eventually settles into a somewhat lethargic procedural as Poirot takes turns interviewi­ng so many one-dimensiona­l characters, eventually uncovering one shocking twist after another.

"Murder" may lack urgency, but it does have style. The sets, the costumes and the vistas are stunning. And cinematogr­apher Haris Zambarlouk­os — a frequent Branagh collaborat­or — gets inventive filming inside cramped quarters, occasional­ly capturing the action from overhead or documentin­g a scene from outside while pan- ning past the train's windows.

But like Poirot's mustache, these little flourishes don't necessaril­y pull viewers deeper into the story so much as make them step back for a moment of artistic appreciati­on.

There's nothing wrong with, on occasion, prizing form over function. But things have gone too far when a murder mystery in a whodunit plays second fiddle to a personal-grooming puzzle.

Two and one-half stars. Rated PG-13. Contains violence. 114 minutes.

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 ?? Nicola Dove/Twentieth Century Fox ?? Kenneth Branagh and Daisy Ridley in "Murder on the Orient Express."
Nicola Dove/Twentieth Century Fox Kenneth Branagh and Daisy Ridley in "Murder on the Orient Express."

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