Product Details
Poirot: One, Two Buckle My Sho

Poirot: One, Two Buckle My Sho
From Acorn Media

List Price: CDN$ 35.99
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Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Released on: 2001-10-16
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: NTSC, Import
  • Original language: English
  • Running time: 103 minutes

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
Even the great Hercule Poirot (David Suchet) dreads a trip to the dentist. And in this case, with good reason: while the detective's checkup is completed without a hitch, mere hours later the dentist and two of the day's patients are found dead. Poirot's first clue is a fancy buckle that fell off a patient's shoe as she climbed out of a cab earlier that same day. Always attentive to the ladies and their fashions, Poirot senses that something is amiss well before Inspector Japp (Philip Jackson) catches on. Although the viewer is able to see the deception before Poirot works it out, One, Two, Buckle My Shoe has enough unexpected twists to keep the motive a mystery until the climactic scene in which all is revealed.

What has always set the Agatha Christie's Poirot series apart from other mystery shows is the high production values, and this 103-minute episode is no exception. From the eerie, slow-motion opening sequence of two girls singing the title's nursery rhyme to the art deco set details (down to the curtains and teacups), One, Two, Buckle My Shoe is not merely a video adaptation of Christie's novel but a beautifully wrought film in its own right.

The DVD's special features include biographies of Agatha Christie and David Suchet, challenging Poirot trivia, and cast filmographies. --Larisa Lomacky Moore

Synopsis
Agatha Christie's popular sleuth Hercule Poirot (David Suchet) goes after the murderer of a dentist in the full-length feature One, Two, Buckle My Shoe. Poirot and Inspector Japp (Philip Jackson) investigate a murder and find the connection to a high-profile political figure. After finding the first clue -- a buckle from a women's shoe -- the detectives are off in search of the killer. This series of Poirot mysteries is well-known for its high production values and art direction. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide

DVD Menu

  • Main
  • Play Feature
  • Side #1 -- POIROT ONE, TWO, BUCKLE MY SHOE
  • Special Features
    • David Suchet
    • Filmographies
    • Agatha Christie Connection
      • Biography
      • Poirot Books
      • Agatha Christie Resources
    • Poirot Trivia
    • Poirot Quotes
  • Acorn Media


Customer Reviews

Just WONDERFULL5
This movie is so good, that you can watch it many times.

100% suspens!!!!!!!!!

One thing fo sure, be caferul when you go to you dentist appointment ;-)

The Best Poirot of them all.5
This is really the best of all the Poirot movies of them all. Great writing, directly adapted from Christie's book. Great production values recreating 1936 London, and wonderful acting by the whole cast led by David Suchet as Hercule Poirot and Philip Jackson as Cheif Inspector Chapp.

From the Poirot Movie Collection5
This has perhaps the best opening in a Poirot episode I have seen so far: slow-motion footage, plenty of superimposed images, of a (particularly malevolent) dentist being shot while little girls play hopscotch outside (the very fact that they do nothing else during the course of the film but play hopscotch makes them seem obsessive and evil)... The film itself did not disappoint. No other episode quite conjures up the feeling of clueing and detection in the books--although I am a great fan of the films, I sometimes feel that they fail to measure up to the essence of detection and mystery possessed by the books (the last two films, THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD and LORD EDGWARE DIES, are examples of this). Yet in this adaptation, I was conscious of Poirot as __a mind__, as, with the assistance of Inspector Japp, he investigates murder after murder: a dentist's suicide (although the clue of the stains and the rug, also, I think, found in MURDER IN MESOPOTAMIA, was missing), his patient's death by overdose (not revealed that he was a spy / blackmailer until end, unlike book), and the death of an actress (or was somebody else the victim, as the dental records indicate?). Finally, following the titular clue of a shoe buckle, Poirot is able to accuse the murderer (watching with my family, they were able to spot the villain--one of the flaws in the series, as Christie's misdirection works perhaps better on page than on screen). The acting was superb, and new areas of the characters' lives were revealed: a shot of the Whitehaven Mansions lobby, and Inspector Japp at home in Isleworth. Unfortunately, the church service scene was not in the film, nor are Mr. Chapman and Howard Raikes to be found; and most of the spy business was missing. Yet this is still an absolutely superb film, one that any fan of Agatha Christie would do well to watch.