Romance on the Orient Express
Romance on the Orient Express | |
---|---|
Directed by | Lawrence Gordon Clark |
Produced by |
Michael Glynn Robert M. Sertner |
Written by | Jan Worthington |
Starring |
Cheryl Ladd Stuart Wilson |
Music by | Allyn Ferguson |
Cinematography | Peter Jackson |
Edited by | Stan Hawkes |
Release dates | 17 November 1985 (UK) |
Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Romance on the Orient Express is a 1985 television film directed by Lawrence Gordon Clark.
Plot
Lily Parker (Cheryl Ladd) is a sophisticated American magazine editor who is on a business trip in Europe with her outgoing best friend Susan Lawson (Ruby Wax). Susan convinces her to travel from Venice to Paris by train, instead of by plane. They board the Orient Express, where they hope to find romance. Instead, the atmosphere reminds Lily of a trip on the same train 10 years earlier, when she was a 19-year-old college student traveling through Europe with her friend Stacey (Betsy Brantley). On that trip, she met Alex Woodward (Stuart Wilson), an aristocratic Englishman whom she courted, and then never heard from again.
On the present day trip, Lily unexpectedly runs into Alex again on the train, who admits that the rendezvous is no coincidence. Enraged over the past, she refuses to talk to him. Through flashbacks, their past story is slowly revealed. They fell in love on a train to Nice, and agreed to travel together. Alex wanted to marry her, but his friend Sandy (Julian Sands) assured him his father Theodore (John Gielgud) would never approve. While having dinner one evening, Alex was excused by one of his father's friends, and never returned.
In the present, Alex convinces Lily to have dinner with him, but past conflicts causes her to leave prematurely. She later returns, deciding to give him another chance. They find out they were both married for five years and then divorced, but only Lily's marriage produced a child. Alex reveals that his father pressured him into another marriage, and that he never regretted something more than leaving her. The conversation soon escalates into them re-starting a passionate affair, but the next morning Lily makes clear that she has no desire of rekindling with him. They go into different routes, until Alex decides to follow her to Paris.
Meanwhile, Lily regrets her decision of sending Alex away. She fears she will never love someone again, and thinks the solution is marrying a man she is meeting in London. One day, however after wondering around Paris, Alex finds Lily in a Parisian restaurant with Susan and Lily's young daughter. Alex walks over to Lily and takes her into his arms.
In a minor sub-plot, Susan falls in love with Flavio, one of the Orient Express staff members. They start a romance, but his work forces them to part their ways.
Cast
- Cheryl Ladd as Lily Parker
- Stuart Wilson as Alex Woodward
- Renée Asherson as Beatrice
- Ralph Michael as Harry
- Ruby Wax as Susan Lawson
- Julian Sands as Sandy
- John Gielgud as Theodore Woodward
- Barry Stokes as Flavio
- Betsy Brantley as Stacey
Production
The film was shot on location in Italy, France and England.[1] Shortly before its premiere, Cheryl Ladd expressed her delight in Romance on the Orient Express, because the film, due to its time span of 10 years, allowed her to play two different characters.[2]
References
- ↑ Review Summary The New York Times
- ↑ "Cheryl Ladd: more than just a pretty face" by Pat Hilton, The Spokesman-Review, 3 March 1985. p.5