Talk about Christie TV and Film here
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DrDavid, what do you mean by 'unnecessary rearrangement of the narrative'? It would be interesting to discuss that, I just love narrative perspections. And I agree, we should discuss novels and adaptations separately, though it is sometimes difficult, I know. But there are various sections on this Forum to do so.
Since this is the film-section: it was interesting to see a bit of the earlier life of Simeon Lee, though perhaps it was a bit too long. But it made a nice contrast to the warmth of the other continent and the Christmas atmosphere of England in December. It even had comic relief! The funiest bit was Inspector Jap suffering under the endless singing of Christmas carols, mercifully he was freed by Poirot.
I liked the Poirot's Christmas movie very much, but not at first. I had to watch it a couple of times to be able to appreciate it more. I thought the lighting was too dark, at first, but I got used to it. I liked the characters, though they are a very disfunctional group!
If you are looking for another Christmas Poirot story to enjoy this holiday season, try Theft of the Royal Ruby. It is even more Christmassy than Poirot's Christmas. The entire story is set around a Christmas gathering in a family setting. Poirot is invited to the gathering and the outdoor scenery is snowy and cold, the Christmas tree is decorated, the Christmas pudding is stirred by all and takes a central role in the story, there is beautiful Christmas music at the church and my favorite carol is sung, O Come All Ye Faithful! The children are excited as expected and there is a place for young and old. I love the game of charades! A typical English Christmas, but with a mystery, of course! Tell us what you think of it!
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Please no more polls! More endless lists without any motivation or content! And no more ratings too!
Instead let's discuss the interesting point you bring up: the similarity between A Murder is Announced and Death on the Nile. Both start with carefully prepared murders that needed a great deal of 'scenario' but both were also at risk that if only one little thing went wrong, the entire enterprise would fail.
But the other murders that followed, like the one on Miss Murgatroyd in AMiA and on the maid Louise (and Mrs. Otterbourne) in DOTN were highly improvised, because they were so called 'panic' murders. So in both cases the murderer needed a calculating mind AND considerable 'sang froid'. The murderer took great risk and yet nobody noticed it. While the 'original' murder eventually showed some cracks in the entire scheme which eventually lead to Poirot and Marple solving the crime.
The same in Hercule Poriot Christmas (to bring the topic back to its origin): the original murder was well prepared but the attack on Pilar was just out of panick.
The plot was not unrealistic: a nasty wealthy old man who holds the strings of the purse; Various family members who bear a grudge against him and who need the money for various reasons. And this in a big country house during the holidays. All the ingredients for a classic murder mystery! Christie has used this situation many time before (and after) in her books.
No, I found the murder method unecessarily complicated. The murderer went to a great deal of clutter with a high risk of things going wrong. I think a good forensic team would have solved the crime in half the time. Why not just kill the old man, lock the door and leave? Less risk and hardly any clues for Poirot to investigate and question. But I guess that is the formula of crime fiction.
That brings me to the next point: there are two types of murder method in Christie's work. The ones that need a great deal of preparation and plotting: Hercule Poriot Christmas is one; also A Murder is Annouced and Death on the Nile (and many others). I always found those highly unconvincing, though they make a nice puzzle. They read well but when you look at them more close it is a lot of hokum. They owe a lot of their credibility to sounds, time tables, clocks, and other objects.
There are others where the murder method is so simple (for Christie that is) that nobody even thinks it could have been done like that because it was so obvious: Peril at End House, Sleeping Murder, Five Little Pigs, The Hollow. All you need is to MAKE people believe it was done like that, create a faulty vision so to speak. I find those more interesting and convincing (and modern).
GKCfan, interesting to learn the book was so limited available in the US, I didn't know that. Perhaps the publishers considered it as a novel only for the Holiday Season, it wouldn't sell during the summer.
By the way, why is this novel discussed in the Television and Film section?
I agree, it is an enjoyable book, I have a few problems with it though. The murder method was....well.... what can I say? Unbelievable might be the right term? There are so many reasons why I didn't buy this, though I will not mention them not to spoil the book for new readers.
I found the characters a bit colourless (the family members I mean, especially the women), perhaps that is inevitable when the victim is such a powerful character.
It was lacking in Christmas atmosphere but perhaps that is unavoidable too, I mean, with a murder in the house! Nobody was really in a festive mood, no nice dinners, though they started decorating AFTER the murder took place! ('Let's brighten up the place, with a corps upstairs!').
Since this is the Television and Film section: The Suchet version was rather good, at least with more Christmas atmosphere than the book (though the snow looked very fake, all those green trees in the garden). The brothers were not looking very alike (this is an important part of the plot). The scream sounded like one of the pipes in the bathroom being unblocked, this is important in the plot too. But in the end at least someone (I think it was Lydia) excused for the lack of real Holiday Spirit.
Ten people, each with something to hide and something to fear, are invited to a lonely mansion on Soldier Island by a host who, surprisingly, fails to appear.
When the wealthy patriarch, Aristide, is murdered, suspicion falls on the whole household. ...
Travelling on the Orient Express, Poirot is approached by a desperate American. Afraid that someone plans to kill him, Ratchett asks Poirot for help ...
Masthead Photography: Joan Hickson image © BBC
MURDER MOST FOUL © Turner Entertainment Co. A Warner Bros. Entertainment Company. All Rights Reserved.
AGATHA CHRISTIE® POIROT® MARPLE® Copyright ©2009 Agatha Christie Limited. All rights reserved.
I like this story and I never see or hear people say they like and i was woundering if I was the only person who really liked the story. I like a lot of AC other books but I am reading this one at the moment.