This Summer: Murder on the Transsiberian!
Filed under: Thrillers, Mystery & Suspense, Distribution
Part of me is really itching to see the upcoming film, Transsiberian, which I blogged about all the way back in December of 2006, while the other part of me is trying to prepare myself for disappointment. You hear about a murder mystery -- one that involves traveling couples on a train, whose trip becomes a murderous adventure with a foreign man hot on their trails -- there's one thing that should come to mind. If it doesn't, you need to brush up on both your classic murder mystery reading and Agatha Christie* films. This project just screams Agatha Christie and Murder on the Orient Express, although I imagine that Ben Kingsley's Russian police officer won't be as quirky as Hercule Poirot.
The film has wrapped, and Variety reports that First Look Studios has picked it up, with plans to release it late this summer. (Finally!) To recap -- the movie is about an American couple played by Emily Mortimer and Woody Harrelson who find themselves "in a chase of deception and murder on the Siberian train journey from China to Moscow." Kate Mara and Eduardo Noriega co-star as a younger couple on the train, and as I noted above, Kingsley is an officer hot on their trail. In the meantime, you can check out an early review for the film here.
*And I should make sure I'm not confusing Orient with Appointment with Death when I write that! Thanks, Saavik.









Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
2-27-2008 @ 8:51PM
Saavik said...
Though Peter Ustinov did star in a number of movies as Hercule Poirot (including Death on the Nile, which is my favorite), Murder on the Orient Express wasn't one of them. In that movie, Poirot was played by Albert Finney.
As to the topic at hand, I doubt that this could live up to the inevitable comparisons, but it does sound like it could be fun.
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2-28-2008 @ 12:46AM
jesse said...
i saw this film at Sundance. It is a nerve-clenching wonder, brilliantly executed with a great cast (including a powerful, oscar worthy Emily Mortimer). Though a little flabby in spots, this is still Brad Anderson's best work. It is one of the great train movies, with a beginning-of-third-act Boo-shock that will be remembered for some time.
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2-28-2008 @ 10:57AM
Wayne said...
I hope they kill off the Transiberian Orchestra on that train...
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