Desyat Negrityat

Десять негритят
Film poster for And Then There Were None
Directed by Stanislav Govorukhin
Written by Novel:
Agatha Christie
Screenplay:
Stanislav Govorukhin
Starring Vladimir Zeldin
Tatyana Drubich
Alexander Kaidanovsky
Aleksei Zharkov
Anatoli Romashin
Lyudmila Maksakova
Music by Nikolai Korndorf
Cinematography Gennadi Engstrem
Edited by Valentina Olejnik
Release date
  • 1987 (1987)
Running time
137 min
Country Soviet Union
Language Russian

And Then There Were None (original title Ten Little Niggers, Russian: Десять негритят) is a 1987 Soviet film adaptation of Agatha Christie's novel of the same name. It was directed by Stanislav Govorukhin, who also penned the script.[1][2]

This version is unique in that virtually no part of the novel is altered. Unlike the previous Hollywood/British adaptations of the story, none of the characters or their respective crimes are altered in any way and the film concludes with the grim finale from Agatha Christie's original novel, rather than the upbeat ending from the stage version that most other adaptations chose to follow.[3]

Plot

On a hot, early August day sometime in the late 1930s, eight people arrive on a small, isolated island off the Devon coast of England. Each appears to have an invitation tailored to his or her personal circumstances, such as an offer of employment or an unexpected late summer holiday. They are met by Thomas and Ethel Rogers, the butler and cook/housekeeper, who state that their hosts, Mr Ulick Norman Owen and his wife Mrs Una Nancy Owen, whom they have not yet met in person, have not arrived, but left instructions, which strikes all the guests as odd.

Cast

Vorontsovsky Palace
Steps of Diva Rock

Locations

The film was shot in Crimea, utilizing the peninsula's two famous mansions, the Swallow's Nest and the Vorontsov Palace. However, when the house is seen on a cliff in the exterior scenes, it is actually a scale model, shot with actors using forced perspective.[4] The stone staircase leading up to the house was filmed at Diva Rock.[5]

References

  1. Richard Taylor, ‎British Film Institute The BFI companion to Eastern European and Russian cinema 2000 p.88 "and Desiat' negriat/Ten Little Niggers (1987), from the Agatha Christie story, ..."
  2. Andrew Horton, ‎Michael Brashinsky The Zero Hour: Glasnost and Soviet Cinema in Transition 0691019207 p176 1992 "Stanislav Govorukhin can once again serve as a model figure. He started his glasnost period with a purely commercial adaptation of Agatha Christie's Ten Little Indians (Desyat' negrityat, 1987), intended to be a blockbuster."
  3. И негритят не стало…
  4. IMDB.com
  5. Десять негритят. Тайны нашего кино, a Russian documentary about the making of the film.
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