Film Review: Crooked House (2017)

"The murderer is never the one you initially suspect"

A real treat here for fans of Agatha Christie as Crooked House is one of the few novels of hers that has yet to be adapted for the screen. With a screenplay by Julian Fellowes, Tim Rose Price and Gilles Paquet-Brenner, the latter of whom also directs, a curious release strategy sees it materialise on Channel 5 in the UK despite it being blessed with the kind of castings and high production values that you'd've thought would be destined for the cinema.

The story begins as so many of them do, with a murder. This time it is wealthy 80-some tycoon Aristide Leonides who kicks the bucket and the finger of suspicion doesn't know where to point as it could any one of the disillusioned family members who also lived in the sumptuous family pile. His grand-daughter secures the services of a private investigator to look into the case discreetly and thus the mystery begins.

Is it Glenn Close's mole-murdering Lady Edith, the sister of Leonides first wife? Christina Hendricks' much younger second wife Brenda who stands to inherit everything? His hapless elder son or his hapless younger son or maybe one of their wives, a pair of crackingly vibrant performances from Gillian Anderson and Amanda Abbington respectively. And what secrets do Jenny Galloway's nanny or Honor Kneafley's 12 year old Josephine have up their sleeve? 

Pleasingly, Max Irons' investigator isn't a Poirot or Marple-like savant and so the focus is allowed to rest on the unfurling of characters with murky motivations and a real sense of unease that percolates through the whole story. Sebastian Winterø's cinematography plays into this with constantly interesting angles and Simon Bowles' luscious production design is extraordinarily detailed in the way different rooms reflect their inhabitants.

Last but by no means least, there's no denying the thrill that comes from a genuine shock of an ending that is brilliantly brutal, both in its reveal and its finality. Its darkness is possibly one of the reasons Crooked House hasn't been filmed before but I love the fact that it is also one of Christie's two favourites of her novels (the other being Ordeal By Innocence which was scheduled to be this year's BBC/Sarah Phelps adaptation but which remains in limbo due to allegations made against one of its cast members). 

Photos from here




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