Ten Little Indians (1987)
November 11, 1987Release Date
Ten Little Indians (1987)
November 11, 1987Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Currently Ten Little Indians is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: Amazon Video
Streaming in:🇺🇸 United States
This Movie Is About.
Cast & Crew.
Vladimir Zeldin
Mr. Justice Lawrence John Wargrave
Tatyana Drubich
Vera Elizabeth Claythorne
Aleksandr Kaydanovskiy
Captain Philip Lombard
Aleksei Zharkov
William Henry Blore - PI
Anatoli Romashin
Dr. Edward George Armstrong
Lyudmila Maksakova
Miss Emily Caroline Brent
Mikhail Gluzskiy
General John Gordon Macarthur
Aleksey Zolotnitskiy
Thomas Rogers - Servant
Iryna Tereshchenko
Ethel Rogers - Maid
Aleksandr Abdulov
Anthony James Marston
Stanislav Govorukhin
Director
Agatha Christie
Writer
Nikolai Korndorf
Composer
Gennady Engstrem
Cinematographer
Valentina Oleynik
Editor
Raisa Molchanova
Makeup Artist
Valentyna Oliynyk
Editor
Valentin Gidulyanov
ProductionDesigner
Valentina Zaytseva
Set Decoration
Natalya Kharnas
Costume Design
Nina Amelina
Makeup Designer
Natalya Rysyukova
Sound Editor
Iosif Goldman
Sound Designer
Fyodor Odinokov
Media.
Details.
Release DateNovember 11, 1987
Original NameДесять негритят
StatusReleased
Running Time2h 17m
Filming LocationsAvrorina Rock, Ukraine
Genres
Wiki.
Desyat Negrityat (Russian: Десять негритят, 'Ten Little Negroes') is a 1987 Soviet film adaptation of Agatha Christie's 1939 novel of the same name, now known as And Then There Were None. It was directed by Stanislav Govorukhin, who also penned the script.This version was, upon its release, unique in that virtually no part of the novel is altered (although a sexual relationship between Vera and Lombard is introduced, and the latter's revolver is changed into a small automatic pistol). 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 1943 stage version that most other adaptations chose to follow. The Soviet adaptation is a bit more fanciful in that the murderer expounds at some length, in solitude, about their methodology and the critical twist (aloud instead of on paper as in the novel).