Appointment with Death
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Michael Winner
Peter Ustinov
Lauren Bacall
Carrie Fisher
Mohammed Hirzalla
Hugh Brophy
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Agatha Christie's Belgian detective Hercule Poirot finds his vacation trip to the Holy Land (Palestine circa 1937) interrupted when one of the members of his tour group is murdered at an archaeological dig, and Poirot must solve the crime before continuing with his holiday.
Director
Michael Winner
Cast
Peter Ustinov
Lauren Bacall
Carrie Fisher
Mohammed Hirzalla
Hugh Brophy
Michael Craig
Nicholas Guest
Rupert Horrox
Danny Muggia
Jenny Seagrove
Michael Sarne
Douglas Sheldon
Marcel Solomon
Ruggero Comploy
Hayley Mills
Piper Laurie
John Terlesky
Amber Bezer
John Gielgud
Babi Neeman
Lutuf Nuayser
David Soul
Valerie Richards
Crew
Asher Asherov
David Auld
Anat Avivi
Avi Avivi
Frank Barber
Frank Barber
Anna Bargiel
Stephen Barker
Chris Barnes
Muki Ben-hamo
Danny Ben-menahem
Judith Ben-yod
Miki Benjamini
Charles Biderman
John Blezard
John Bloomfield
Esty Braminsky
Clifton Brandon
Peter Buckman
Chris Carreras
Alan Cassie
Razi Chan
Ayelet Chen
Agatha Christie
Yvonne Coppard
Gadi Danzig
Laura Dinolesko
Pino Donaggio
Rona Doron
Giancarlo Ferrando
Giancarlo Ferrando
Dana Fogach
John Fraser
Asher Gat
Marcia Gay
Alfred Gershoni
Paula Gillespie
Yoram Globus
Menahem Golan
Shaul Gorodetzki
David Gurfinkel
David Gurfinkel
Mati Halachmi
Yoni Hamenachem
Richard Hammatt
Hanan Haogen
Graeme Harrington
Pat Hay
Nick Johns
Rafi Kadishson
Jakob Kalusky
Boaz Katzenelson
Stephanie Kaye
Debi Klider
Itzik Kol
Naomi Kol
Rafi Laadan
Avraham Leibman
Cheryl Leigh
Tony Lenny
Tami Levi
Brian Lintern
Dyson Lovell
Daniel Magen
Natale Massara
Miguel Merkin
Blondine Mille
Talia Natanzon
Mati Raz
Mary Richarson
Edna Rosen
Peter Russell
Vered Sapir
Geoffrey Sebag-montefiore
Miri Sformes
Simon Shabach
Anthony Shaffer
Danny Shneor
Danny Shneor
Shuli Silberberg
Rami Siman-tov
Uri Steinmatz
Ora Strikovski
Bill Surridge
Yehuda Tatarko
Maya Tavi
Shlomo Tzafrir
David Varod
Arie Vies
Issahar Vishnia
Arthur Wicks
Michael Winner
Michael Winner
Michael Winner
David Wynn-jones
David Wynn-jones
Eli Yarkoni
Yosi Yarkoni
Udi Yerushalmi
Rafi Zabar
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Sir Peter Ustinov (1921-2004)
He was born Peter Alexander Ustinov on April 16, 1921 in London, England. His father was a press attache at the German embassy until 1935 - when disgusted by the Nazi regime - he took out British nationality. He attended Westminster School, an exclusive private school in central London until he was 16. He then enrolled for acting classes at the London Theater Studio, and by 1939, he made his London stage debut.
His jovial nature and strong gift for dialects made him a natural player for films, and it wasn't long after finding theatre work that Ustinov moved into motion pictures: a Dutch priest in Michael Powell's One of Our Aircraft is Missing (1941); an elderly Czech professor in Let the People Sing (1942); and a star pupil of a Nazi spy school in The Goose Steps Out (1942).
He served in the British Army for four years (1942-46), where he found his talents well utilized by the military, allowing him to join the director Sir Carol Reed on some propaganda films. He eventually earned his first screenwriting credit for The Way Ahead (1944). One of Sir Carol Reed's best films, The Way Ahead was a thrilling drama which starred David Niven as a civilian heading up a group of locals to resist an oncoming Nazi unit. It was enough of a hit to earn Ustinov his first film directorial assignment, School for Secrets (1946), a well paced drama about the discovery of radar starring Sir Ralph Richardson and Sir Richard Attenborough.
After the war, Ustinov took on another writer-director project Vice Versa (1948), a whimsical fantasy-comedy starring Roger Livesey and Anthony Newley as a father and son who magically switch personalities. Although not a huge hit of its day, the sheer buoyancy of the surreal premise has earned the film a large cult following.
Ustinov made his Hollywood debut, and garnered his first Oscar® nomination for Best Supporting Actor, as an indolent Nero in the Roman epic, Quo Vadis? (1951). After achieving some international popularity with that role, Ustinov gave some top-notch performances in quality films: the snappish Prinny in the Stewart Granger vehicle Beau Brummel (1954); holding his own against Humphrey Bogart as an escaped convict in We're No Angels (1954); the ring master who presides over the life of the lead character in Max Ophuls's resplendent Lola Montez (1955); and a garrulous settler coping with the Australian outback in The Sundowners (1960).
The '60s would be Ustinov's most fruitful decade. He started off gabbing his first Oscar® as the cunning slave dealer in Spartacus (1960); made a smooth screen adaptation by directing his smash play, Romanoff and Juliet (1961), earned critical acclaim for his co-adaptation, direction, production and performance in Herman Melville's nautical classic Billy Budd (1962); and earned a second Oscar® as the fumbling jewel thief in the crime comedy Topkapi (1964).
He scored another Oscar® nomination in the Best Original Screenplay category for his airy, clever crime romp Hot Millions (1968), in which he played a con artist who uses a computer to bilk a company out of millions of dollars; but after that, Ustinov began taking a string of offbeat character parts: the lead in one of Disney's better kiddie flicks Blackbeard's Ghost (1968); a Mexican General who wants to reclaim Texas for Mexico in Viva Max! (1969); an old man who survives the ravaged planet of the future in Logan's Run (1976); and an unfortunate turn as a Chinese stereotype in Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon Queen (1981). Still, he did achieve renewed popularity when he took on the role of Hercule Poirot in the star laced, Agatha Christie extravaganza Death on the Nile (1978). He was such a hit, that he would adroitly play the Belgian detective in two more theatrical movies: Evil Under the Sun (1982) and Appointment With Death (1988); as well as three television movies: Thirteen at Dinner (1985), Murder in Three Acts, Dead Man's Folly (both 1986).
Beyond his work in films, Ustinov was justifiably praised for his humanitarian work - most notably as the unpaid, goodwill ambassador for United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). Since 1968, he had traveled to all corners of the globe: China, Russia, Myanmar, Cambodia, Kenya, Egypt, Thailand and numerous other countries to promote and host many benefit concerts for the agency.
Ustinov, who in 1990 earned a knighthood for his artistic and humanitarian contributions, is survived by his wife of 32 years, Hélène du Lau d'Allemans; three daughters, Tamara, Pavla, Andrea; and a son, Igor.
by Michael T. Toole
Sir Peter Ustinov (1921-2004)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Spring April 15, 1988
Released in United States on Video September 8, 1988
Began shooting May 24, 1987.
Released in United States Spring April 15, 1988
Released in United States on Video September 8, 1988