Good reasoning. But after reading it, I have a bigger question. If the deceased was killed by the murderer, that is, twelve people in the entire carriage, there would also be more than a dozen wounds of different depths and sizes on the deceased. , is it really each one stabbed with a knife? If not, who or what stabbed them? If it is one knife per person, then so many people go in and out of the deceased's room in succession, does the homicide detective himself live in the same carriage without noticing it at all?
In addition, the filming time of the film is too long, and it is still a little uncomfortable for me who is used to watching the new film, and the completion of this changed film is far less than one-tenth of the original.
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Murder on the Orient Express reviews