My Bonnie Bride and I, along with our daughter, Little Miss, went to see A Haunting in Venice (2023), Kenneth Branagh’s latest entry into adapting the Agatha Christie’s exploits of her detective Hercule Poirot. It is very loosely based on Christie’s novel Hallowe’en Party, at least according to the wikipedia entry for the film (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Haunting_in_Venice) and book (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hallowe%27en_Party), loosely adapted is an appropriate description, with a lot of liberties taken for the story-line. Granted, I have never read any of Christie’s novels, although I was interested in her works in my youth. I may at some point give her books a run.
The incorporation of a supernatural element into the film is one of the points that interested both me and my daughter in seeing it, plus it is another Poirot mystery starring Kenneth Branagh. That paranormal element added to the story’s overall mystique as well as a splash of creepiness not seen in the previous two Branagh films. There are also a few clues in the film to allow some, but not all, of the mystery to be solved.
Once we get into the meat of the story, the film flows nicely, with some interesting camera work in a couple of scenes, and some interesting effects to help drive home that maybe, just maybe, something weird is going on in the neighborhood, or at least in the mansion where most of the action takes place. The are a lot of lovely visuals in the film, both exterior shots of the surrounding Venice and its canel system, and the interiors of the mansion where much of the film is set. Also one interesting bit of special effects work during the séance involving the medium, Reynolds, adds a dimension of paranormal happenings that may, or may not be really taking place. There is also a Hallowe’en party for orphans, in the mansion, including a shadow play that helps sets the stage for the subsequent events, while providing some history on how the mansion had been used at one point in time.
Branagh is, to me, one of those few filmmakers working today that routinely turns out top quality films that I want to see (Tom Hanks and Ron Howard are also on that list). I have enjoyed seeing a lot of his films (and I have written about some of them previously), and this one is no exception. My daughter, Little Miss, also thoroughly enjoyed it, except for some of the water sequences which creeped her out a bit.
Although it may not be as good as Branagh’s Murder on the Orient Express (2017), A Haunting in Venice is still a solid entry and well worth the time to see in the theater. Sadly, it is not performing well in the box office, as we could see in our own theater there were only two other people in attendance. A darn shame as the film has high production standards, an interesting story, and a top notch cast. It’s possible that “Venice” I not doing well as, after reading the synopsis for the source material, it drifted too far from the original novel on which it is based so as to give us a creepier film in time for Halloween, but that is merely speculation.
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