Which Ending do you prefer?
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otrnepodahl — 20 years ago(January 29, 2006 09:21 PM)
I don't really know if this exists, but the book ending should be adapted (if it hasn't already) to a play (or "The") Play ending. This way, when someone goes and sees the stage production, even if they've seen the show before, they won't know what ending this version will have.
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ismelllikepuppys — 19 years ago(September 21, 2006 06:42 PM)
Kinda woulda prefered a mixture of both. In the book, vera goes from ecstatic for being alive, to hearing a spooky noise, and hanging myself. I woulda prefered an interaction between the judge and vera, to her realizing she woulda took the rap, to her hanging herself.
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mr_milbury — 16 years ago(April 13, 2009 08:02 AM)
This (interaction between the last two characters alive) is something that totally destroys what the book is trying to do. If you do that, then you might as well show the meeting (to the viewer) between the doctor and the judge. The whole ending works because nobody knows what really happened (the epilogue contains the solution, but you don't even have to read that if you want to remain in the dark).
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Alorann — 19 years ago(September 26, 2006 09:26 AM)
While I like both versions, I prefer the book. Audiences in 1945 seemed to be more easily shocked, and I think the movie would have failed then with the book's ending. If it were made today, it could do well with the original ending.
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Cue-ball — 19 years ago(January 18, 2007 07:14 PM)
The only reason to change the ending in the written murder mystery is to make the movie different. The different ending is the only fly in the ointment for this film IMHO.
By the way, when I first read the book,
The Waltons
was very popular in the United States, and I thought Ellen Corby would make a good Emily Brent. But it's hard to top Judith Anderson.
There's something different about you today, Mr. Laurio. -
spydex — 19 years ago(January 22, 2007 12:07 PM)
Having recently reread the book, I can see why the movie's ending was different. Where the book is able to establish a deeper sense of motivation of the characters, movies are basically visual and therefore limited in their ability to explain necessary themes.
For example, in the movie Dune, there is much 'thought' narrative in the book. The moviemakers attempted to replicate that, but it came off as a bit silly. Likewise in And Then There Were None, the dynamics of Vera's crime combined with her desire for Hugo made the suicide by hanging more plausible. It just could not have been explained as well in the movie.
I prefer the book over the movie. I usually do anyway. -
wtl471629 — 19 years ago(January 24, 2007 01:15 PM)
SPOILER WARNING!
I have seen several remakes of this movie and they all have basically the same ending in that the final two people are innocent. I wish they could make one movie that had the same ending as the book and follow the book. I don't guess it will ever happen though. I think Anthony Hopkins would be great as the Judge. -
ncgraham — 15 years ago(June 05, 2010 06:39 AM)
I've not watched the movie yet, but having just finished the book and enjoyed it mightily, I have to say that, reading about the movie ending here, it makes sense to me. (I do think it's better in this instance I go into the movie spoilered then the shock at the change won't overpower my opinion of the movie as a whole.) Even in the book, there was a definite romantic tension between Lombard and Vera that could very much have been setting up this type of ending; indeed, I almost expected them to survive the island. As to the person who claims Vera is an evil person and felt no guilt over letting that child drown, she was possibly the most guilt-ridden and repentant of all the characters in the novel.
The nice thing about this sort of ending is that it seems slightly more realistic: it's hard to believe that someone could set up such a complicated plan as that and everything come out right. I'm inclined to agree with Frederick Knott of "Dial M For Murder" fame there's no such thing as a perfect murder.
