Ten Little Indians (1965 film)

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Ten Little Indians

DVD cover
Directed by George Pollock
Produced by Harry Alan Towers
Written by Peter Welbeck
Erich Kröhnke
Enrique Llovet
Peter Yeldham
Starring Hugh O'Brian
Shirley Eaton
Fabian
Leo Genn
Stanley Holloway
Wilfrid Hyde-White
Daliah Lavi
Dennis Price
Marianne Hoppe
Mario Adorf
Christopher Lee (uncredited)
Music by Malcolm Lockyer
Cinematography Ernest Steward
Editing by Peter Boita
Distributed by Warner-Pathé Distributors Ltd.
Release date(s) June 1965
Running time 91 min.
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The 1965 version of Ten Little Indians is the third film version of Agatha Christie's detective novel And Then There Were None. Although its background story is the same as the 1945 version (ten people invited to a stranded area by a mysterious stranger), this one takes place on an isolated snowy mountain. Most of the murder methods were just like the 1945 version, with some minor variations. This version is also the first adaptation of the novel to show the murders on screen.

Contents

This particular adaptation has been re-tooled to fit the appeal of the "swinging sixties", like changing the character of a sinister spinster into a glamorous movie star, adding a lot more action to complement the mystery, a fight scene, and even a (not very graphic) sex scene. The film is 91 minutes long and is in black and white.

The ending was changed in this version to a less pessimistic one, heavily borrowing from an upbeat ending Christie wrote for the stage version of the show. In the end, upon finding the dead body of Doctor Armstrong (Dennis Price), Hugh Clyde (Hugh O'Brian) and Ann Lombard (Shirley Eaton) realize they are apparently the only two left, and the suspicion almost drives them to a breaking point. The film pauses for a "whodunit" minute to give viewers time to decipher the clues and arrive at a solution. When the movie resumes, Clyde draws Lombard's revolver, which he had given her earlier, shoots, and then returns to the house. When Clyde enters the house, she discovers a noose hanging there, with a chair under it, and Judge Arthur Cannon alive!

Cannon (Wilfred Hyde-White) explains how he carried out the murders and tricked the doctor. He then invites Clyde to kill herself rather than remain there alone to take the blame when the police arrive. Then he sips a glass of poison that he had prepared. But as he is about to succumb to the poison, Lombard walks in -- they had faked his death. Seeing that he has failed in causing the deaths of his last two victims, Cannon dies ("Never trust a woman" are his last words) leaving Clyde and Lombard to await the arrival of the police.

The house used in the film was Kenure House in Rush, North County Dublin, Ireland.

This film version stars:

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