I got a late phone call and missed the last two minutes!
I only watched it to clarify in my mind the difference between this story (where there is some sort of conspiracy) and the Agatha Christie one on a train (Murder on Orient Express) where almost everyone was involved in the murder/cover up.
I watched the 1979 version of the film yesterday afternoon on Film 4 which I enjoyed. I didn't watch the one last night apart from the odd glimpse so I cannot comment really. I may have watched it if it had been on different days a few weeks apart.
I enjoyed it immensely. It was the sort of thing that the BBC does so well...I just wish they would make more like this this, instead of these endless games shows.
I didn't see this but I notice that the lead characters are called Tom and Tuppence, which are the names of two Agatha Christie characters. Is this a coincidence?
Also, were Charters and Caldicott in it?
The cricket obsessed Charters + Caldicott didn't make an appearance. Two mature ladies, keen to get back to see a theatrical production, took their place in the plot.
I have watched this and although it sticks more closely to the book, which I am reading, it is not a patch on the Hitchcock film with Margaret Lockwood and Michael Redgrave. That was much more exciting.
i thought it was dire, some of the acting was second rate at best. I am not even making comparisons with the film as i don't think that would be right, but put this is in the same category as the awful dancing on the edge, another turkey
The photography was very good; some beautiful shots both inside and outside the train, - a real train-buffs delight, but having said that, the characterisation was poor, a bunch of irritating people, even the chief protagonist, the heroine, got me down. I saw it through, but wouldn't have made without a nice bottle of wine.