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5.2/10
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Miranda Green y otros cinco desconocidos son invitados a la remota mansión en una isla del multimillonario Lewis Findley. A medida que avanza el fin de semana, las pistas sobre por qué han s... Leer todoMiranda Green y otros cinco desconocidos son invitados a la remota mansión en una isla del multimillonario Lewis Findley. A medida que avanza el fin de semana, las pistas sobre por qué han sido invitados comienzan a revelarse.Miranda Green y otros cinco desconocidos son invitados a la remota mansión en una isla del multimillonario Lewis Findley. A medida que avanza el fin de semana, las pistas sobre por qué han sido invitados comienzan a revelarse.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Bianca A. Santos
- Carmen Blanco
- (as Bianca Santos)
Pete Berwick
- Patron
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Six strangers receive invites to the home of Millionaire Lewis Findley, when they arrive their host is absent, they anxiously wait to learn their purpose for being there.
The first couple of minutes all seemed to point to one thing, a reworking of And then there were none, the ultimate Whodunnit, we had the strangers, the island, the invitations, that's where the similarities end.
Let's be honest, it's nonsense, but if you are fan of mysteries and whodunnits, you may just get some enjoyment out of it, there are some interesting moments, and the story has a few clever ideas.
For me, it had the look and feel of a stage play, entertaining enough, maybe a little rough around the edges at times.
The accents are a little hit and miss, and at no point does it feel as though it's England, I've not checked the production details, but I'm assuming The States or Canada.
Mischa Barton does a fine job, more Fletcher than Marple, but pleasing enough. Chris Browning stole the show for me, I enjoyed his performance.
6/10.
The first couple of minutes all seemed to point to one thing, a reworking of And then there were none, the ultimate Whodunnit, we had the strangers, the island, the invitations, that's where the similarities end.
Let's be honest, it's nonsense, but if you are fan of mysteries and whodunnits, you may just get some enjoyment out of it, there are some interesting moments, and the story has a few clever ideas.
For me, it had the look and feel of a stage play, entertaining enough, maybe a little rough around the edges at times.
The accents are a little hit and miss, and at no point does it feel as though it's England, I've not checked the production details, but I'm assuming The States or Canada.
Mischa Barton does a fine job, more Fletcher than Marple, but pleasing enough. Chris Browning stole the show for me, I enjoyed his performance.
6/10.
Seems to be a remake of agatha christie's novel "and then there were none". They even mention christie by name in the first minute! Micha barton is miranda green. She notices little details. So when guests at an estate start dying, she's determined to figure it out before the police arrive. Alex hyde white (plays sean, the butler) is the son of wilfrid hyde white, who was in the 1965 version of ten little indians! And in some other pretty big films too. My fair lady, third man. It's mostly good. Never gets too suspenseful, but there are some twists and turns. The guests' stories near the end really slow down the story. They seem to drag on and on. And one demerit for some silly little mistakes that a solid christie fan probably would not make. Directed by stephen shimek.
This is a murder mystery in a setting similar to films like Murder on the Orient Express and Clue, sadly as much as this isn't a terrible movie, it isn't up there with those classics.
On the plus side, the story is quite compelling and doesn't go in the obvious direction. It's also not stuffed with too much filler.
Unfortunately there are some major criticisms i have with this, not least the atrocious accents that range from Traditional English to Pantomine Dame. However it's the main character where's i have most issues. First off, she looks like she's walked in right off the catwalk, not Mid 20th Century England, but worse than that, is how her character behaves. Are we really to believe a group of Adults, most older than her, are going to be bossed around like school Children by a Florist. She even gives orders to the Detective. Why on Earth would anyone let a normal civilian interrogate and order them around, even if she was good at selling murders. At least Jesscia Fletcher of Murder she wrote had the decency to speak to people with respect, this woman was a trumped up snob that in reality would be laughed at. This is a shame, because it's so distracting from the movie, it means it's quite hard to get into.
Still, if you have 90 mins free and there's no better options, it should prevent boredom.
On the plus side, the story is quite compelling and doesn't go in the obvious direction. It's also not stuffed with too much filler.
Unfortunately there are some major criticisms i have with this, not least the atrocious accents that range from Traditional English to Pantomine Dame. However it's the main character where's i have most issues. First off, she looks like she's walked in right off the catwalk, not Mid 20th Century England, but worse than that, is how her character behaves. Are we really to believe a group of Adults, most older than her, are going to be bossed around like school Children by a Florist. She even gives orders to the Detective. Why on Earth would anyone let a normal civilian interrogate and order them around, even if she was good at selling murders. At least Jesscia Fletcher of Murder she wrote had the decency to speak to people with respect, this woman was a trumped up snob that in reality would be laughed at. This is a shame, because it's so distracting from the movie, it means it's quite hard to get into.
Still, if you have 90 mins free and there's no better options, it should prevent boredom.
A bit slow and plodding with some questionable acting and some atrocious attempts at acents. The script writing is somewhat lacking and the there's not much of a plot. By the time the titles roll at the ninety minute mark it feels like it's been half an hour too long. The characters are all a bit wooden and the actors seemed to be simply going through the motions. None of them seemed to engage with their character and I couldn't engage with them either.
Has a made for TV feel to it and I would strongly suggest it's not worth going to the cinema to see.
It's not terrible but it's not good either. If you're really bored then maybe give it a whirl.
Has a made for TV feel to it and I would strongly suggest it's not worth going to the cinema to see.
It's not terrible but it's not good either. If you're really bored then maybe give it a whirl.
So the acting in this flick is absolutely terrible but it certainly did not get any help from the writing. I am a life long fan of Agatha Christie and other mystery authors, as well as some film noir and I'm a little crazy about giallos. I also love a good mystery-comedy like the 1985 classic, Clue: The Movie with Tim Curry and Madeline Kahn. I would go as far as to say that Clue is one of my top five favorite films of all time. I thought more recent films like Knives Out and See How They Run were both fun and entertaining, while not being up to my highest standards. BUT THIS....did a teenager write this screenplay as fan fiction or what?
Casting a middle aged woman as the obnoxious but lovable, brilliant Hercule Poirot in a skirt could have worked. Could have. An older, curvier Mischa Barton can't plod through movies on her youthful glamorous looks anymore - she's borderline unrecognizable as an average, curvy blonde of about 40 - but that's not the problem: she can't act.
At bottom it is the writing that is terrible, though, that much is clear by the multiple caricatures which should be delightful and funny but just end up coming across as wooden and ridiculous.
There is a enormous dark house with chandeliers, and I do love a nice pair of vintage curtains.
Casting a middle aged woman as the obnoxious but lovable, brilliant Hercule Poirot in a skirt could have worked. Could have. An older, curvier Mischa Barton can't plod through movies on her youthful glamorous looks anymore - she's borderline unrecognizable as an average, curvy blonde of about 40 - but that's not the problem: she can't act.
At bottom it is the writing that is terrible, though, that much is clear by the multiple caricatures which should be delightful and funny but just end up coming across as wooden and ridiculous.
There is a enormous dark house with chandeliers, and I do love a nice pair of vintage curtains.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaEarly in the movie, when Miranda is in the book store, she opens the book to a chapter titled "Locard's Exchange Principle," named for Edmond Locard, a French criminologist commonly regarded as the "father" of forensic science in the early 1900s. The principle says that "every contact leaves a trace." Thus, whenever two objects come into contact, there is always an exchange of material between them; e.g., if a person is hit on the head with a tree branch, some trace of the branch will be left on the head and some trace of the head will be found on the branch.
- ErroresMiranda reads in a book that Findley is worth billions. In the time in which this movie is set, in Britain, a billion is not a thousand million but a million million. As such, there was nobody worth billions in the world, and a British book would not have made that claim about anybody.
- ConexionesFollowed by Murder at the Embassy
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Invitation to a Murder
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 12,860
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 32min(92 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39:1
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