‘And Then There Were None’: Ten Little Secrets

This classic film by director Rene Clair, based on a Agatha Christie murder mystery, doesn’t give anything away.
‘And Then There Were None’: Ten Little Secrets
Gore-free mystery: (L–R) Philip Lombard (Walter Huston), Dr. Edward G. Armstrong (Louis Hayward), and Detective William Henry Blore (Roland Young), in “And Then There Were None.” GJW+
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NR | 1h 37m | Drama, Mystery, Thriller | 1945

Before slasher films gave us cabins in the woods and paranoia-filled video games went mainstream, there was this: an ensemble of strangers, a mysterious island, and a growing sense that someone among them is playing executioner.

Director René Clair’s 1945 adaptation of “And Then There Were None,” drawn from Agatha Christie’s landmark 1939 novel, set the template. Barry Fitzgerald, Walter Huston, and Judith Anderson lead a cast that doesn’t need gore to keep you unsettled. Instead, viewers are treated to good pacing, tight direction, and the creeping dread of revenge closing in.

The film’s trick lies not in who did it, but in how the story maneuvers suspicion from one character to the next without tipping its hand too early.

The setup is deceptively simple. The ensemble includes eight guests and two servants who arrive at an isolated manor under different pretenses. Once there, the guests discover they share one thing in common: secrets that they thought were buried.

This house isn’t creepy at all. Nah. “And Then There Were None.” (GJW+)
This house isn’t creepy at all. Nah. “And Then There Were None.” GJW+
Clair directs with a light cinematic touch, letting visual cues and pacing do much of the early storytelling. There’s a charm in how the guests are introduced: via quick portraits with barely a word exchanged. Yet we already sense something’s off. It’s a film that shows its age, but it also shows how sharp narrative mechanics can transcend time.

Teacups and Suspicion

After seven guests, a secretary, and two staff arrive on the lonely island, the real fun begins. Things happen quietly, ominously. The staff seem uneasy. The guests are a parade of secrets, clipped manners, and barely concealed contempt. At the center of the dining room sits a ring of figurines, each one fated to vanish in grim sync with the increasing body count.

Dinner is served, awkward smiles are exchanged, and then the butler drops the needle on a record that kills the mood entirely. A voice played on a record player accuses every person present of murder. Their crimes are unpunished, but not forgotten.

Dr. Edward G. Armstrong (Walter Huston, L) and Detective William Henry Blore (Roland Young), in “And Then There Were None.” (GJW+)
Dr. Edward G. Armstrong (Walter Huston, L) and Detective William Henry Blore (Roland Young), in “And Then There Were None.” GJW+

From there, it’s all downhill in the most deliberate way possible. One guest winds up dead. Then another … and yet another. The remaining few start glancing at each other a bit too long over breakfast. The island isn’t that big, and no one else seems to be hiding on it. So, they begin to realize that the killer must be right there among them at the table. Coffee, anyone?

After each death, one of 10 Indian figures on a table falls. The group tries to keep their cool, but you can only play detective for so long before paranoia throws your deduction skills out of the window. As the bodies pile up and the figurines vanish one by one, the survivors are left wondering: Who invited them, and who is going to make it off the island alive?

The Original Whodunit Sandbox

Watching “And Then There Were None” feels a bit like cracking open the prototype user manual for many of the mysteries that came after it. This is not in a dusty, academic way, but in the ah-ha! sense of recognizing just how many familiar tropes started right here.

Swap the dinner jackets for parkas and the dining room for an Antarctic outpost, and you’ve basically got “The Thing.” Throw in voting mechanics and digital accusations, and you’re playing the popular social deduction game “Among Us.”

One of the creepy clues in “And Then There Were None.” (GJW+)
One of the creepy clues in “And Then There Were None.” GJW+

Director Clair’s version plays it with a certain knowing charm. Not slapstick. Not self-serious either. Everyone is suspicious, and no one has the decency to die quietly in bed. The guests arrive already fraying at the edges. As they start disappearing, the film becomes a round-robin accusation of “Wait, was it you?” all while the remaining players try to sip their tea with dignity and keep one eye on the nearest exit.

What makes this version pop isn’t just the plot (though that’s a gem on its own); it’s also the theatrical flair of the cast. The characters are sketched in broad, delightful strokes. It’s a bit like watching a very dramatic board game unfold, except the pieces are talking back and accusing each other of murder. There’s a mischievous energy here with keyhole spying, guilty confessions straight into the camera, a dinner party gone completely off the rails.

In a way, it’s more fun because we’ve seen where the formula went. This is the original “who’s the killer” sandbox, dressed up in black-and-white elegance and laced with just enough dark humor to keep things deliciously watchable.

“And Then There Were None” is available on GanJingWorld.
‘And Then There Were None’ Director: René Clair Starring: Barry Fitzgerald, Walter Huston, Louis Hayward Not Rated Running Time: 1 hour, 37 minutes Release Date: Oct. 31, 1945 Rated: 4 stars out of 5
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Ian Kane
Ian Kane
Author
Ian Kane is a U.S. Army veteran, filmmaker, and author. He is dedicated to the development and production of innovative, thought-provoking, character-driven films and books of the highest quality.