Everywhere…there is Evil Under the Sun… (part of the Beach Party Blogathon)

Hey all! Today I’m participating in the Beach Party Blogathon, hosted by Speakeasy and Silver Screenings. Kowabunga! Here’s my entry…a little gem that is completely underrated.


You know those art deco travel posters that are all the rage? The ones advertising trips to Juan les Pins or Biarritz featuring stylized, tanned 1930s rick folk in belted maillots and swim caps? Imagine one of those come to life. That is Evil Under the Sun.


From its lovely watercolor sketch titles to its breezy Cole Porter soundtrack and its exotic Mallorca locales (standing in for an island off Albania somewhere), this movie has always ranked among my favorites.


Title


Not singing to you yet? Then throw in who I consider to be the best Hercule Poirot of all time– Peter Ustinov, who reprised him in several films in the late 1970s and early 1980s, including Appointment with Death, Death on the Nile, and Thirteen at Dinner. I found Albert Finney monumentally stiff and boring in Murder on the Orient Express, and I never warmed to Suchet. I know– the British TV purists will tut-tut at me, but it’s true. To me, Ustinov really wears those little grey cells. He comes across as a cuddly teddy bear of a man innately proud of his abilities, but also supremely amused at not only others’ foibles, but also his own. When the agent at the London Trojan Insurance Company laments having to pay out, Poirot tells him this is one of those times he must “laugh and lump eet.” Then chuckles at his own humor.


If that’s not enough to bring you onboard, imagine (for you youngins) a cage match between Lady Olenna Tyrell of Game of Thrones (Diana Rigg) and Violet, Dowager Countess of Grantham from Downtown Abbey (Maggie Smith). Yep, you heard me. Intriguing you a bit now?


If you know your Christie, you know the plot will be convoluted and inexplicable, and it doesn’t disappoint here. The movie locale has been transferred from the book’s original island off the coast of Wales, but the snappy dialogue and costumes carry you along on a wave of 1930s bliss. It’s the perfect beach movie (with a little mean-spiritedness thrown in for good measure).


The story begins when the insurance company asks Poirot to speak to Sir Horace Blatt, a millionaire industrialist who has recently tried to insure a diamond with them that is a cheap knock-off. Since Sir Horace is not in London, Poirot must travel to the South of France to visit Sir Horace on his yacht, the Jolly Roger.


Sir Horace explains that he recently met a showgirl whom he bought the diamond for, but she’s evidently had the diamond copied. He wants to confront the woman, Arlena Marshall, and he knows that she’ll be at “Daphne’s Place,” a fancy inn on an island paradise for society folk. Daphne herself is the former mistress of the King of Tirrhenia, who bought her the inn to keep her quiet when he married the Queen. However, since Poirot cannot handle boats (le mal de mer, unfortunately), he must take the train, and says he’ll meet Sir Horace there. But Sir Horace is delayed sue to his “piffle valve.”


When the guests arrive, Poirot doesn’t endear himself to Daphne, what with his unusual demands for “a good valet, a tisane de Montpoivret at 8:00 every morning, and beeswax for his shoes. That’s all.” Oh, and don’t forget his requests for creme de cassis or sirop de banane instead of the Sidecars and Between the Sheets cocktails she favors.


His hilarious “swim” involves him walking shin-deep in the cove, waving his arms in a swim-like motion, but barely getting wet.


PoirotSwim PoirotSwim2


“Great day for a swim, Poirot!”


“You saw me?”


Of course, with a name like Evil Under the Sun, someone has to die. This time, it is Arlena. She’s  a bitchy, gold-digging chorus girl who has recently given up the boards for marriage and stepmother-hood. She is found strangled on the beach in one of the island’s cove. And coincidentally enough, as it goes with Dame Agatha, everyone on the island had a reason to do her in.


This time, the suspects include:


Sir Horace (Colin Blakely) – Thrown over for Kenneth Marshall, and now made to look like a fool since Arlena kept the real diamond and gave him a forgery. He’s plenty mad.


Rex Brewster (Roddy MacDowell) – Fey theatre maven and worshiper of Arlena, who dug a little too deep for his recent biography, and can’t get it published because she doesn’t like what it reveals (her real birthdate, and how she got her role in Flames of Eternity). Oh, and he’s already spent the advance.


Kenneth Marshall (Denis Quilley) – Arlena’s new husband, who discovers she not only hasn’t given up her single-girl lifestyle, but booked her lover into the inn.


Patrick Redfern (Nicholas Clay) – A married, but extremely attractive lothario who romances Arlena, but leaves his wife mopey and miserable.


Christine Redfern (Jane Birkin) – A bit of an unmade bed in the looks department, and a bundle of neuroses as well (she has vertigo, skin that burns easily, and loves pity parties).


O’Dell and Myra Gardner (James Mason and Sylvia Miles) – Husband and wife Broadway producers who sank a mint into their last show, Hail and Farewell, starring Arlena, only to have her quit and leave them holding the bag.


Linda Marshall (Emily Hone) – Arlen’a stepdaughter. At about fourteen or so, she’s at the age when any cruel word can do extra damage to a psyche, and Arlena provides a battery of them.


Daphne Castle (Maggie Smith) – The proprietress of the inn. She and Arlena performed together years ago, and their dislike for each other is palpable. Besides, Daphne’s sweet on Kenneth (and he likes her too).


Poirot has to put two and two together as usual, this time taking into account the following clues: a watch, a bathing cap, a mid-day bath, a bottle of suntan oil, and the noonday gun (fired every day at noon to commemorate the victory of the Tirrhenian Army against an opposing force of Bosnians in 1183).


Guy Hamilton (who also directed Agatha Christie’s The Mirror Crack’d from 1980) helms the catfight expertly. Hamilton was also the mastermind behind several Bond films (Goldfinger, Live and Let Die, Diamonds are Forever, and Man With the Golden Gun). And in addition to Ustinov, several of the others here are Christie regulars. Jane Birkin and Maggie Smith both appeared in 1978’s Death on the Nile. Denis Quilley and Colin Blakely were both in Murder on the Orient Express.


Anthony Powell outdoes himself with the costume design here. Mostly Arlena’s. A silver lame’ number with turban the first night is not-to-be-believed. And another of stretchy, body hugging red lame.’ Then there are the bathing costumes– one white with huge multicolor dots, matching turban, bangles, necklace and cape. And another with a diaphanous Asian print coverup and a pointed Chinese red hat. In addition, there are Myra’s elaborate hats and Rex’s sailor suits.


SilverLame


Silvery!


PolkaDotSuits


Dots versus nautical deathmatch…


ArlenaRedDress


Red and slinky…


20150607_102116_resized


The Gardners are not amused…


ChineseHat


The Chinese hat (fashion accessory or murder prop? You decide…)


The dialogue is side-splitting in certain places. “She runs like a dromedary with dropsy!” Arlena cruelly says of her stepdaughter.  Or “Linda, don’t just stand there like a cough drop, say hello to Monsieur Poirot.” And Daphne throws out expressions like “diggity boo” with no irony whatsoever.


If you haven’t seen this movie, you’re missing out. Pour yourself a sirop de banane, rub on some Coppertone, and prepare to have some fun.


Here are the other Beach Party Blogathon entries. Enjoy!





Blue Hawaii (1961)
Speakeasy
hqofk.wordpress.com/


Beach Party (1963)
Silver Screenings
silverscreenings.org


Hula (1927)
Movies Silently
moviessilently.com


Lord Love a Duck (1966)
Font and Frock
fontandfrock.com


Great White (1981)
Mike’s Take on the Movies
mikestakeonthemovies.com


Point Break (1991)
Brian Doan
http://bubblegum-cinephile.blogspot.com/


The Black Camel
Caftan Woman
http://www.caftanwoman.com/


To Catch a Thief
Old Hollywood Films
www.oldhollywoodfilms.com


Horror of Party Beach
Sister Celluloid
www.sistercelluoid.com


Beach Blanket Bingo
A Shroud of Thoughts
http://mercurie.blogspot.com/


The Fat Spy
Forgotten Films
https://forgottenfilmcast.wordpress.com/


Jaws 2
Cinematic Catharsis
http://cinematiccatharsis.blogspot.com/


Jaws / Harvey Lembeck as Eric Von Zipper
Tales of the Easily Distracted
http://doriantb.blogspot.com/


Road to Singapore
Now Voyaging
nowvoyaging.wordpress.com


Flipper (1963) and Flipper’s New Adventure (1964)
The Movie Rat
themovierat.com


Clambake
Once Upon a Screen
aurorasginjoint.com


Drive a Crooked Road
Shadows & Satin
https://shadowsandsatin.wordpress.com/


Some Like It Hot
The Filmatelist
filmatelist.blogspot.com/


The Palm Beach Story
Critica Retro
http://www.criticaretro.blogspot.com


Piranha
Prowler Needs a Jump
https://prowlerneedsajump.wordpress.com/


On an Island with You (1948)
The Stars are Ageless
http://stars-are-ageless.blogspot.com.au/


The Talented Mr. Ripley
BarryBradford.com
Www.BarryBradford.com


Local Hero
Moon in Gemini
https://debravega.wordpress.com/


Open Water (2004)
Movie Movie Blog Blog
http://moviemovieblogblog.wordpress.com


Malibu Beach (1978)
Cinema Monolith
https://cinemamonolith.wordpress.com/


Creature From the Black Lagoon
The last drive in
Http//:www.thelastdrivein.com


The Endless Summer
Wide Screen World
http://widescreenworld.blogspot.com


Orca (1977)
Film Grimoire
http://www.filmgrimoire.com


Such a Pretty Little Beach
Make Mine Criterion!
https://makeminecriterion.wordpress.com/


The Palm Beach Story
The Stop Button
http://www.thestopbutton.com


Gidget (1959)
Phyllis Loves Classic Movies
http://phyllislovesclassicmovies.blogspot.com/


The Beach Girls and the Monster (1965)
A Classic Movie Blog
aclassicmovieblog.com


Holiday Camp (1947)
British Film Classics
britishfilmclassics.wordpress.com


Girl Happy (1965)
Old Movies Nostalgia
http://oldmoviesnostalgia.com


The Seventh Seal
CriterionBlues
http://www.criterionblues.com


Tarzan’s New York Adventure.
Wolffianclassicmoviesdigest
https://wolffianclassicmoviesdigest.wordpress.com/


Stromboli (1950)
The Wonderful World of Cinema
https://thewonderfulworldofcinema.wordpress.com


All is Lost
Hitchcock’s World
hitchcocksworld.blogspot.ca


And God Created Woman
GirlsDoFilm
https://girlsdofilm.wordpress.com/


A Summer Place
Pop Culture Reverie
https://popculturereverie.wordpress.com/


The Ghost And Mrs Muir
In The Good Old Days Of Classic Hollywood
https://crystalkalyana.wordpress.com/


Bikini Beach
Smitten Kitten Vintage
http://smittenkittenvintage.wordpress.com


The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini
Classic Film & TV Cafe
www.classicfilmtvcafe.com


Lord of the Flies
Part Time Monster
http://parttimemonster.wordpress.com


Captain Blood
Sourcerer
http://sourcererblog.wordpress.com


Gidget
Chasing Destino
http://chasingdestino.com/


Open Water
Herheadache
http://www.kkherheadache.wordpress.com


Teen Beach Movie
Victim To Charm
http://victimtocharm.com


Plein Soleil
Ramblings of a Cinephile
http://ramblingsofacinephile.com/


Dr. No (1962)
The Doglady’s Den
http://thedogladysden.com


Die Hard With A Vengeance
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque
http://cinephiliaque.blogspot.ca/


Night Tide
The Last Drive In
http://www.thelastdrivein


La Mer (1895)
Century Film Project
https://centuryfilmproject.wordpress.com/


Point Break
Everything Noir
everythingnoir.com


Key Largo (1948)
B Noir Detour
bnoirdetour.wordpress.com


The Significance of ‘The Beach’ in Hitchcock’s REBECCA (1940)
No Nonsense with Nuwan Sen
https://nononsensewithnuwansen.wordpress.com/


Italian Film ‘Il Compleanno’, in English – ‘David’s Birthday’ (2009)
No Nonsense with Nuwan Sen
https://nononsensewithnuwansen.wordpress.com/


Jaws
The Cinematic Frontier
https://cinematicfrontier.wordpress.com/


Back to the Beach
Silver Scenes
silverscenesblog.blogspot.com


Bikini Beach
The Hannibal 8
https://thehannibal8.wordpress.com/


Mr. Hulot’s Holiday
The Stop Button
http://thestopbutton.com/


Whale Rider
portraitsbyjenni
https://portraitsbyjenni.wordpress.com


Summertime. 1955
In The Good Old Days Of Classic Hollywood
https://crystalkalyana.wordpress.com/


Humanoids From The Deep
Destroy All Fanboys!
http://fanboydestroy.com


Miranda (1948)
Mildred’s Fatburgers
www.mildredsfatburgers.com


The Beach
Back to the Viewer
https://backtotheviewer.wordpress.com/


Cabin Fever: Patient Zero
It Came From The Man Cave!
http://www.mda4life.blogspot.com/


Female on the Beach
Movie Fanfare
http://www.moviefanfare.com/


Beach Blanket Bingo
Thrift Shop Commando
http://thriftshopcommando.blogspot.com/


Dangerous When Wet
Love Letters to Old Hollywood
loveletterstooldhollywood.blogspot.com


Beaches
Plucking Of My Heartstrings
http://pluckingofmyheartstrings.com


Evil Under the Sun
Sepia Stories
https://sepiastories.wordpress.com/


Evil Under the Sun
Vivien Leigh
http://vivienleighlegend.blogspot.com/


The Old Man & the Sea
365 Days 365 Classics
https://365days365classiccinemareview.wordpress.com/


“The Raft” in Creepshow 2 (1987)
Reel Distracted
www.reeldistracted.com


Beneath the 12 Mile Reef (1953)
The Stalking Moon
thestalkingmoon.weebly.com


Beach Party
Laura’s Miscellaneous Musings
http://www.laurasmiscmusings.blogspot.com/


The Blue Lagoon (1980)
confessions of a broccoli addict
https://broccoliaddict.wordpress.com/


Lonesome (1928)
Nitrate Diva
nitratediva.wordpress.com


Mosayile Kuthira Meenukal
Totally Filmi
totallyfilmi.com


Girls on the Beach
SixtiesCinema
sixtiescinema.com


beach movie influence on fashion/pop culture
Outspoken & Freckled
http://kelleepratt.com/


Creature from the Haunted Sea
U.P. Schlock: The Good, The Bad, And The Retro
http://upschlock.blogspot.com/



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Published on June 07, 2015 10:22
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