Fade to Chat: Golden Age Cinema
Marty and Cindy review the film adaptation of Agatha Christie's favorite work. Title: And Then There Were None (1945) Director: René Clair | Screenplay: Dudley Nichols Stars: Barry Fitzgerald · Walter Huston · Louis Hayward · Roland Young · June Duprez · Mischa Auer · C. Aubrey Smith · Judith Anderson · Richard Haydn · Queenie Leonard Music: Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco | Distributed by: 20th Century Fox Running Time: 97 minutes | Black and White | Released: October 30, 1945 The Source Material Christie's novel was first published in 1939. By the 1970s, And Then There Were None became the preferred title worldwide. She called it the most difficult of her novels to write: the killer had to be one of ten people — yet all ten had to die. The 1945 film follows Christie's 1943 stage adaptation, in which two characters survive — unlike the novel's bleak ending. Emily Brent's line "Those whom the gods would destroy..." draws on the Greek dramatist Euripides; her other quotation, "The wicked flee..." is from the Book of Proverbs. Several character names were altered from the source, partly to satisfy 1945 censorship codes. Production & Behind the Scenes Directed by René Clair, a French filmmaker working in Hollywood during WWII, the film was effectively his Hollywood farewell. It won the Golden Leopard and Best Direction Award at the 1946 Locarno Film Festival. The score, by Italian-Jewish composer Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, has an unusual chamber-music quality beneath the suspense. The film's copyright later lapsed; it is now in the public domain, with a 4K remaster available free on YouTube. The film was released October 30, 1945 — the day before Halloween. The timing appears deliberate. The opening five minutes contain no dialogue — the island setting is established entirely through visuals and music. In the UK, the film was released as Ten Little Indians — a title that would itself eventually become too controversial to use. The Cast Two cast members had won Academy Awards at filming: Barry Fitzgerald and Walter Huston. Judith Anderson, best known as Mrs. Danvers in Rebecca (1940), plays the severe Emily Brent. C. Aubrey Smith, 82 at filming, died the following year, making this one of his final appearances. Mischa Auer, cast as the first to die, was primarily known for screwball comedies — deliberate misdirection for audiences expecting him to last longer. Queenie Leonard, who played Ethel Rogers, was the last surviving cast member, dying January 17, 2002, at age 96. June Duprez, Louis Hayward, and Richard Haydn all died within six months of each other in 1984–85. Reception & Legacy The New York Times praised Clair's "light macabre touch." Variety called it a "dull whodunit." Leonard Maltin awarded four stars; Rotten Tomatoes holds it at 100% from 12 reviews. Christie's novel has sold more than 100 million copies and is widely cited as the world's best-selling mystery novel. The film's first documented TV broadcast was July 23, 1951, on Chevrolet Movie Time on KRON in San Francisco. Later remakes — 1965, 1974, 1987, 1989, and a 2015 BBC miniseries — all used a revised ending; none restored the novel's original bleak conclusion. Subscribe on YouTube: @FadetoChat | ThePodTalkNetwork@gmail.com | ThePodTalk.Net
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