Tag: Adrien Brody

  • Here are IMDb’s top six Agatha Christie film adaptations

    Here are IMDb’s top six Agatha Christie film adaptations

    Mumbai: Bibliophile or not, everybody is familiar with the name ‘Agatha Christie’. Prominent for her murder mysteries like Murder On The Orient Express, And Then There Were None and The Murder Of Roger Ackroyd among others, Christie has lived in our hearts and minds rent-free with her gripping tales. Over the years, she has been affectionately called the Queen of Mysteries and her stories have inspired numerous films over the last century. If you are someone who loves mysteries but doesn’t like reading books, we highly recommend watching Agatha Christie movie adaptations. They are funny, intriguing and filled with mind-boggling twists that will keep you entertained for hours.

    Curious for more? Here are six best Agatha Christie film adaptations as per IMDb.

    1. Knives Out – 7.9/10

    Fingers are pointed at each other after a wealthy patriarch is slain in his home, but who is the killer? When Knives Out hit the big screens, it took the world by storm with its whodunnit murder mystery and impressive cast. Although not based on a particular Christie novel, this film is director Rian Johnson’s homage to the Queen of Mysteries. Audiences admired its masterful and satirical depiction of the elite’s desire for unending wealth.

    2. Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery – 7.1/10

    Glass Onion, a sequel to Knives Out, is another masterpiece by director Rian Johnson. People had high hopes for the movie, and fair to say, they weren’t let down! Things go awry when someone ends up dead at Tech billionaire Miles Bron’s get-together and Detective Benoit Blanc is called in to unravel the mystery. The plot shares similarities with Christie’s popular novel ‘And Then There Were None’.

    3. Murder On The Orient Express – 6.5/10

    Adapted from one of Agatha Christie’s most widely read classics, Murder On The Orient Express, the film is as good as the book. Starring our favorites like Johnny Depp, Penelope Cruz, Kenneth Brannagh, Olivia Coleman and many others the film was a major success. The plot follows detective Hercule Poirot’s quest to solve a murder that occurs on the trains he is travelling in.

    4. See How They Run – 6.5 /10

    This movie stands out on our list for being loosely adapted from Agatha Christie’s well-known play, ‘Mousetrap’. See How They Run, starring Saorise Ronan, Adrien Brody, Sam Rockwell, and many more, has won fans for its classic British design, humorous aspects, and intriguing whodunit story. The plot follows a halt in plans for a movie adaptation of an award-winning play due to the murder of a key crew member in the West End of 1950s London.

    5. Death On The Nile – 6.3/10

    Kenneth Brannagh once again returns as the famed detective Hercule Poirot in this 2022 film adaption of Christie’s novel by the same name. Death On The Nile made headlines for many reasons, one of them being the second big screen adaptation of the novel, following the 1978 film. The story is a sequel to Murder On The Orient Express and follows Poirot’s next quest of solving a heiress’s murder during a vacation on The Nile.

    6. A Haunting in Venice (releasing 15 September)

    This upcoming supernatural thriller is the latest film adaptation of Agatha Christie’s novel ‘Hallowe’en Party’.  The film serves as the sequel to Death on the Nile, and it is the third film where Branagh plays the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot. Set in post-World War II Venice, the plot follows Poirot, now retired and living in his own exile, reluctantly pulled into solving a murder at a seance. The film is set to release in cinemas on 15 September 2023.

    If you’re seeking an enthralling murder mystery you won’t have to wait too long. Catch the highly intriguing A Haunting in Venice at PVR INOX this Friday onwards.

  • Big RTL Thrill presents Driven to extremes

    Big RTL Thrill presents Driven to extremes

    MUMBAI: To set adrenaline rushing of its target audience, Big RTL Thrill, a male entertainment destination on television, this December will be premiering Driven to Extremes.

     

    The three-part programme, available in dual feeds of Hindi and English, will be aired on the 1, 8 and 15 of December and will see Hollywood celebrities like Tom Hardy, Henry Cavill and Adrien Brody along with a motor sport professional, pitting two specially-built vehicles against three of the most difficult roads on earth.

     

    The company said in a statement, “We are extremely pleased to bring Driven to Extremes to the Indian audiences. This show has been critically acclaimed the world over and also has a great fan following, owing the participating celebrities. With the adventurous premise, high drama and excitement quotient, Driven to Extremes comprises of all the aspects that male viewers look for in a great TV show and we are confident that it will resonate well with our audiences and advertisers alike.”

  • Adrien Brody to star in Houdini miniseries on History

    Adrien Brody to star in Houdini miniseries on History

    MUMBAI: History has announced that it has ordered a four-hour miniseries about the famed magician and his wife.

     

    The Pianist star Adrien Brody will play Houdini in the Lionsgate/A&E Studios co-production, with House of Cards’ Kristen Connolly playing his wife, Bess. Oscar nominee Uli Edel will direct the project.

     

    The mini will trace the arc of Houdini’s life from desperate poverty to worldwide fame. The drama will chronicle the life of a man who can defy death through his stunts, his visions and his mastery of illusion. Production will begin in the fall.

     

    “Since my childhood, when I dreamed of being a great magician, Harry Houdini has been one of my heroes,” Brody said. “His bravery and obsessive determination still fascinate me. Houdini mastered the art of escape – not only from physical chains, but from poverty and the social constraints of a humble immigrant origin. His life story appeals to the universal longing for acceptance with which we all can identify. To portray him is beyond an honor.”