Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

THE SEVEN DIALS MYSTERY

Written by Agatha Christie

SUMMARY:

Originally published in 1929, this 217-page Bantam paperback reprint (with cover art by Tom Adams) was released in 1987.  As a spin-off sequel to 1925’s The Secret of Chimneys, this follow-up stars a spirited Eileen “Bundle” Brent back at her ancestral home.  After an alarm clock prank by Bundle and her upper-class pals fails, oversleeping house guest Gerry Wade’s accidental suicide is discovered. 

Yet, a far more suspicious death follows, as their mutual friend, Ronny Devereaux, is fatally wounded in a roadway by an unknown sniper.  Enigmatic clues hint that the culprit belongs to an ominously masked group dubbed the ‘The Seven Dials Society.’   

Determined to find answers, Bundle recruits dapper playboy Jimmy Theisger; the dull-witted Bill Eversleigh; and Gerry’s eager sister, Loraine, to help investigate.  Even Scotland Yard’s stolid Superintendent Battle can’t dissuade Bundle from her increasingly dangerous amateur sleuthing. With Jimmy’s help, an intrepid Bundle must dodge more than just bullets and an unwanted marriage proposal to unravel the murderous enigma lurking behind the ‘The Seven Dials.’        

REVIEW:

Full of deliberate clichés and a generic cast, it’s apparent that Agatha Christie meant The Seven Dials Mystery as a tongue-in-cheek trifle.  Her light-hearted character descriptions (i.e. Jimmy Thesiger) are indicative of this assessment.  Further proof is the comedy relief from Bundle’s befuddled dad, Lord Caterham, who dreads his monotonous responsibilities as an old-school British aristocrat. 

Hence, their amusing father-daughter banter is one of the book’s most welcome elements, particularly when Bundle reels from a pompous and far-older politician’s hopes of matrimony.  Aptly mixing suspense and humor, Bundle’s amateur sleuthing is a welcome treat after her minimal role in The Secret of Chimneys.  The best part awaits in the final few chapters, as a few knock-out twists (including Battle’s ulterior motive) compensate for this story’s duller stretches. 

Even if it isn’t one of Christie’s better works, The Seven Dials Mystery makes a decent bedtime read.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                       5½ Stars

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

THEY CAME TO BAGHDAD

Written by Agatha Christie

SUMMARY:

Originally published in 1951, this 280-page St. Martin’s paperback reprint was released in 2002.  Early amidst The Cold War, Baghdad will be hosting an historic international conference.  Several lives will intersect there, as some are pursuing possibly nefarious agendas. 

Targeted for death is young spy Henry Carmichael (possible casting could be Daniel Radcliffe), who must deliver vital details to British intelligence of a covert radical conspiracy seeking to inflame the world’s great powers into total anarchy. 

Another enigma is Anna Scheele, ostensibly a wealthy American banker’s secretary, as she vanishes shortly after her arrival in England.  Then, there is the world-famous British traveler, Sir Rupert Crofton Lee, who seeks his own intended rendezvous in Baghdad.  He shares the same flight as a scatter-brained ex-secretary from London, Victoria Jones (think Reese Witherspoon or Billie Piper).  Victoria impulsively scams her way to the Middle East in search of her hunky new acquaintance, Edward.

Rendering aid in her hotel room to a homicide victim, Victoria invariably finds herself an unlikely new recruit for British Intelligence.  Trying to impress Edward while working undercover at a local charity, Victoria is in far more peril than she realizes.  Later posing as a new assistant for a British archaeological dig, the spirited rookie spy senses that suspicious eyes are closely following her. 

As shadowy enemies swarm in, Victoria’s improvisations may be the only hope of helping avert a worldwide political catastrophe.         

REVIEW:

Much of Christie’s obscure Cold War espionage novel is a fine read, particularly as a ditzy Victoria matures into a somewhat competent spy.  Her scenes with a world-weary Dakin; the excessively jovial Marcus; and a skeptical Richard Baker prove well-played.  In spite of bland options for Victoria’s possible love interests, a romantic undercurrent nicely slow- cooks.  Better yet, Christie ensures that Victoria’s naiveté foolishly causes her some heartbreak before harsh reality brings the perky heroine to her senses. 

Recovering from some lethargic stretches, the book’s suspenseful climax is worth waiting for, as some pertinent details are wisely left to the reader’s conjecture. Christie, however, makes a serious misjudgment by inserting a contrived late revelation that several twists were engineered by an ominous figure from the outset.  Though the mastermind’s scheme clarifies why Victoria is an expendable pawn, it isn’t plausible how her wonky itinerary could have been so accurately anticipated. 

In that sense, Christie fails her heroine, as Victoria’s endearing charm stems from her misadventures being ignited by some hilariously improvised lies.  Despite this inexplicable letdown, They Came to Baghdad is an obscure romantic spy adventure worthy of re-discovery.  A first-ever film adaptation would make an intriguing proposition, too.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                     7 Stars

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

TOMMY & TOMMY BERESFORD # 2: PARTNERS IN CRIME

Written by Agatha Christie

SUMMARY:

First published in 1929, it’s the sequel to Tommy & Tuppence’s first caper: 1922’s The Secret Adversary. This 217-page reprint was released by Signet Books in 2000.  Presented as an episodic series of short stories, the happily married yet restless Beresfords are recruited by British intelligence to serve as undercover operators of London’s International Detective Agency. 

On this adventurous new front, they must act as lookouts for a shadowy foreign conspirator seeking to contact them.  Masquerading as dashing private eye ‘Theodore Blunt’ and his assistant, ‘Miss Robinson,’ the light-hearted Tommy & Tuppence Beresford occasionally seek inspiration from classic detective fiction.  Maturing into capable sleuths, the Beresfords find several surprises await them.  

Their twenty-three tales are:

  • A Fairy in the Flat;
  • A Pot of Tea;
  • The Affair of the Pink Pearl (two-parter);
  • The Adventure of the Sinister Stranger (two-parter);
  • Finessing the King & The Gentleman Dressed in Newspaper (two-parter);
  • The Case of the Missing Lady;
  • Blindman’s Buff;
  • The Man in the Mist (two-parter);
  • The Crackler (two-parter);
  • The Sunningdale Mystery (two-parter);
  • The House of Lurking Death (two-parter);
  • The Unbreakable Alibi;
  • The Clergyman’s Daughter;
  • The Red House;
  • The Ambassador’s Boots; and
  • The Man Who Was No. 16.

REVIEW:

Long predating Remington Steele and Moonlighting (not to mention, The Thin Man), helping popularize the witty amateur detective genre is another achievement that Agatha Christie should be credited with.  Deftly mixing decent mysteries with spoofy, self-deprecating humor, Christie clearly has a grand time revisiting the fun-loving Tommy & Tuppence.  In that sense, Partners in Crime is comparable to Christie’s semi-spoofy The Seven Dials Mystery — perhaps it isn’t a coincidence that both novels were sequels released in 1929.    

Though this book’s internal continuity is solid, Christie does (seemingly at random) tweak her hapless leads for a plot’s convenience.  There are such instances where a somewhat dense Tommy comes off as remarkably savvy tackling crooks and spies, so one wonders if he prefers playing dumb, if only for humor’s sake. 

Likewise, Tuppence’s mock housewife-like subservience is a pretense to her knack for impulsively connecting all the necessary dots before Tommy does.  Hence, Christie ensures that the Beresfords’ blissful marriage and professional partnership is competitive and very much on equal footing. Their semi-rivalry is very much part of the fun. 

Compared to other Christie franchises, these Tommy & Tuppence mini-mysteries aren’t all that remarkable.  Still, a few (i.e. The House of Lurking Death and The Sunningdale Mystery) stand out for creativity.  What makes this book a classic, of course, is the Beresfords’ brand of humor (including their overly-enthusiastic aide, Albert). 

Considering this book is nearly a century old, the reality that Tommy & Tuppence’s witty repartee remains fresh spells out why this vital element became a genre cliché.  For a droll and undemanding read, Partners in Crime delivers the goods. 

Note: Christie’s remaining Tommy & Tuppence novels (N or M?; By the Pricking of My Thumbs; and Postern of Fate) age the Beresfords in real time.  Their increasingly realistic, middle-aged narratives drops the tongue-in-cheek charm of Partners in Crime.   

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

None.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                  8 Stars

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Anthologies Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

THE HARLEQUIN TEA SET AND OTHER STORIES

Written by Agatha Christie

SUMMARY:

Released in 1998, this 214-page Berkley Books paperback reprint includes appearances from Hercule Poirot and Harley Quin.  Written between 1923 and 1971, these short stories were mostly penned for various British magazines.  Specifically, they are:

  • “The Edge” (1927): Prim-and-proper spinster Clare Halliwell contemplates exposing a self-involved wife’s infidelity to possibly gain her own heart’s desire.  
  • “The Actress” (1923): A famed British stage actress resorts to desperate measures to rid herself of a scurrilous blackmailer.
  • “While the Light Lasts” (1923): A chance meeting at an African tobacco plantation reunites two ex-lovers years after a wartime tragedy, or does it?
  • “The House of Dreams” (1926): Young clerk John Segrave’s recurring dream of a mysterious house and who  occupies it becomes a tragic obsession. 
  • “The Lonely God” (1926): Two lonely souls spark a kinship inside a British museum where they are drawn to a small stone statue.  Could this little statue subtly be playing matchmaker? 
  • “Manx Gold” (1930): Including a foreword and afterword by Tony Medawar, this newspaper serial depicts a murder mystery during a treasure hunt.  Intriguingly, Christie’s commissioned story was a tourism publicity gimmick for England’s Isle of Man.
  • “Within a Wall” (1925): Celebrated artist Alan Everard’s creative struggles are further complicated by his demanding wife and, from afar, a devoted family friend, Jane Haworth.
  • “The Mystery of the Spanish Chest” (aka “The Mystery of the Baghdad Chest”) (1939): With Hastings omitted from this version, private detective Hercule Poirot invites himself into a baffling homicide case. Only the Belgian sleuth can decipher how a decorative chest in plain sight concealed the victim’s corpse during a dinner party.
  • “The Harlequin Tea Set” (possibly 1971): The ethereal Harley Quin resurfaces after a long absence to seek elderly Mr. Satterwaite once more for his invaluable insights.  This time, Quin’s mortal ally finds that fatal danger imperils his own surrogate family.      

REVIEW:

Christie’s insights into human nature are evident with this mostly satisfying compilation.  As a semi-mystery, “The Actress” is a fun little read re: a blackmailer earning his just reward.  The same applies to the “Manx Gold” trifle, which deploys some clichés found elsewhere in Christie’s work.  Romanticism is another recurring theme, but this collection’s options vary in likability. 

For instance, the darkening psychological thrust behind “The Edge” is intriguing, but a late plot twist is too conveniently dramatic.  Even so, its conclusion’s wicked irony still makes perfect sense.  As for “The Lonely God,” its appealing premise is short-changed by too many contrivances and some sappy dialogue that doesn’t age well.     

Supernaturally tinged, the morose “House of Dreams” offers introspection re: obsessions.  As much as this story drags on, it’s still more tantalizing than the self-absorbed cast inhabiting a tedious “Within a Wall.”  Originally commissioned as part of a tourism promotion, the formulaic “Manx Gold” isn’t a remarkable tale, but it is an entertaining piece of fluff. The same applies to the afterword explaining how the real treasure hunt’s clues were actually found.

Featuring Hercule Poirot and Ms. Lemon in vintage form, “The Mystery of the Spanish Chest” is a welcome read.  It’s equal to its original version (and possibly even better) as a top-notch whodunnit.  Yet, this collection’s gem is the title piece, which is evidently Christie’s last Harley Quin mystery.  The murderous scheme that Satterwaite stumbles upon is well-played.  As evidenced by its wistful finale, Quin’s role as love’s not-quite-angelic messenger has never been better conveyed by Christie. 

Sporting two mini-masterpieces, The Harlequin Tea Set and Other Stories is worth keeping by the fireplace for a relaxing read.  To her credit, even Christie’s lesser tales here hint at some basic truths worth reflecting upon. 

Just a heads-up: eight of these stories overlap with 1997’s HarperCollins paperback, While the Light LastsLight Lasts swaps out “The Harlequin Tea Seat” for Poirot’s obscure “Christmas Adventure” – it’s the original draft version of “The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding novella (aka “Theft of the Royal Ruby”).  The other substitution is “The Mystery of the Baghdad Chest,” as it’s the original Hastings-narrated version of “Spanish Chest.”  Also included in Light Lasts is Tony Medawar’s brief commentary/introduction per each story – the only Medawar contribution in Tea Set is for “Manx Gold” (it’s verbatim to the other book). 

While The Light Lasts vs. The Harlequin Tea Set — Which Book is Better?

If one wants Medawar’s insights into Christie’s storytelling, Light Lasts is a good read, but this collection is harder to find outside the United Kingdom.  As for actual literary content, The Harlequin Tea Set prevails … by a single story.  Frankly, the two versions of “Chest” cancel each other out.  Since Poirot’s “Christmas Adventure” is a crude first draft, it’s the Tea Set’s Harley Quin and Mr. Satterwaite saving their best team-up for last that makes the difference.      

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

The only supplement is Tony Medawar’s interesting commentary re: “Manx Gold.”

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                      7 Stars

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Anthologies Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

WHILE THE LIGHT LASTS

Written by Agatha Christie

SUMMARY:

First published in the United Kingdom in 1997, this 213-page HarperCollins paperback collects nine Agatha Christie short stories dating back to 1923.  Specifically, they are:

  • “The House of Dreams” (1926): Young clerk John Segrave’s recurring dream of a mysterious house and who occupies it becomes a tragic obsession. 
  • “The Actress” (1923): A British stage actress resorts to desperate measures to rid herself of a scurrilous blackmailer.
  • “The Edge” (1927): Troubled spinster Clare Halliwell contemplates exposing a self-involved wife’s infidelity for her own personal gain.  
  • “Christmas Adventure” (1923): Discreetly investigating a jewel theft case, Hercule Poirot receives an unusual ‘gift’ during the holiday season. 

Note: This story was later modified into Christie’s “Adventure of the Christmas Pudding” novella.  The novella’s alternate title is “The Theft of the Royal Ruby.” 

  • “The Lonely God” (1926): Two lonely souls spark an unlikely kinship inside a British museum where they are drawn to a small stone statue.  Could this statue subtly be playing matchmaker? 
  • “Manx Gold” (1930): This newspaper serial is a murder mystery during a treasure hunt.  Intriguingly, Christie’s commissioned tale was designed as a tourism publicity gimmick for a real treasure hunt on England’s Isle of Man.
  • “Within a Wall” (1925): Celebrated artist Alan Everard’s creative struggles are further complicated by his demanding wife and, from afar, a devoted family friend, Jane Haworth.
  • “The Mystery of the Baghdad Chest” (1932): Aided by Captain Hastings, private detective Hercule Poirot tackles a baffling murder case. Only the Belgian sleuth can decipher how a decorative chest displayed in plain sight could  hide the victim’s corpse during a dinner party.
  • “While the Light Lasts” (1924): A chance meeting years later at an African tobacco plantation years reunites two former lovers after a wartime tragedy, or does it?

REVIEW:

Christie’s perceptions re: human nature are readily evident with this decent compilation.  What bolsters one’s read are some insights into Christie herself through Tony Medawar’s commentaries.  For instance, the fact that “The Edge” was evidently written shortly before Christie’s high-profile December 1926 disappearance coincides with the tale’s themes of adultery and marital jealousy. 

As a semi-mystery, “The Actress” is a fun little caper re: a blackmailer getting his just reward.  The same applies to the delightful “Manx Gold,” which deploys some reliable clichés found elsewhere in Christie’s work.  Romanticism is also a recurring theme, but this collection’s options vary as to likability. 

For instance, “The Lonely God” has an appealing premise, but it’s hampered by too many contrivances and sappy dialogue that doesn’t age well.  Darkening shifts in feminine psychology for “The Edge” are intriguing, even if a late plot twist is too conveniently dramatic.  Still, its ironically wicked conclusion is fitting.

With its supernatural tinge, the morose “House of Dreams” offers some introspection re: obsessions.  Even though this story drags on too long, its narrative is more intriguing than the tedious “Within a Wall,” where its self-absorbed characters offer little to readers. 

The same applies to Christie’s unlikable “While the Light Lasts.”  Frankly, an exotic African setting (reminiscent of Ernest Hemingway’s style) far overshadows its bland soap opera love triangle unworthy of reader sympathy.  Had “While The Light Lasts” been expanded into a novella allowing more development of its superficial trio, this title story might have had some potential.  For whatever this tale is, it’s drab by Christie’s standards.

Co-starring Hercule Poirot and Captain Hastings, “The Mystery of the Baghdad Chest,” however, is a vintage whodunnit.  The advantage this murder-mystery has over its later “Spanish Chest” alternate version is indulging fans who prefer reading Poirot, as filtered through Hastings’ point-of-view.  Further, “Baghdad Chest” represents a classic Poirot tale, which balances the pendulum re: the Belgian sleuth’s disappointing holiday hijinks in this same book.   

As its title implies a work-in-progress, Poirot’s “Christmas Adventure” falls short of “Adventure of the Christmas Pudding (aka Theft of the Royal Ruby).”  Sporting different character names and unremarkable plot twists, this bland holiday caper reads like what it is: an early draft.  One sign of how undercooked this mystery lies with Poirot’s condescending comments to a housemaid-turned-informant.  Not only is Poirot conveyed as exceedingly sexist, this dialogue ends the story on a lousy note.  “Christmas Adventure” is worth perusing, but, otherwise, it’s as appetizing as last year’s fruitcake.

Sporting several obscure Christie non-mystery tales, While the Light Lasts is a low-key diversion by the fireplace.  To her credit, even Christie’s lesser efforts here explore some basic truths worth reflecting upon.  The dilemma is that a few of these tales won’t merit more than a single read.  Considering Light Lasts is nearly duplicated by 1998’s The Harlequin Tea Set and Other Stories, that other anthology is a better bet due to its stellar title story.  

Note: Beside swapping out Poirot’s blah Christmas caper for Harley Quin’s last adventure, Tea Set also replaces “Baghdad Chest” with its eventual update.  Specifically, “The Mystery of the Spanish Chest”  replaces Hastings with Poirot’s secretary, Miss Lemon.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

Including a two-page preface, Tony Medawar wrote some insightful background notes in 1996 on each story.  Due to its complex background, “Manx Gold” requires a foreword and an afterword. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                      6 Stars

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Anthologies Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

THE WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTION AND OTHER STORIES

Written by Agatha Christie

SUMMARY:

Initially printed in 1948 by a different publisher, this 230-page Berkley Books paperback reprint was released in 1984.  Concluding with an obscure Hercule Poirot tale (it’s a thinly veiled precursor to the better-known Dead Man’s Mirror), these eleven British crime capers date as far back as 1924. 

Specifically, they are:

  • The Witness for the Prosecution:”: A defense attorney senses a grim fate for his client, Leonard Vole, after he is accused of an elderly woman’s brutal homicide.  Could Vole’s own wife effectively seal his death sentence?
  • “The Red Signal”: Dermot West secretly loves his best friend’s wife.  After a séance, West is subsequently incriminated as the prime suspect in his skeptical uncle’s murder.
  • “The Fourth Man:” Aboard a late-night commuter train, four strangers gossip over a tragic high-profile case re: a dead woman, who evidently suffered from a dual personality complex.
  • “S.O.S:” Stranded commuter Mortimer Cleveland senses a desperate plea for help by someone residing at the secluded home that has taken him in for the night. 
  • “Where There’s a Will:” An elderly woman believes her late husband’s ghost is summoning her through a newfangled radio purchased by her doting nephew. 
  • “The Mystery of the Blue Jar:” Amateur golfer Jack Hartington hears a mysterious cry for help while getting in some early morning practice before work.  As this eerie cry persists in haunting him, Jack seeks insight from a knowledgeable new friend.
  • “Sing a Song of Sixpence:” Retired criminal defense attorney Sir Edward Palliser is called upon to honor a long-forgotten promise stemming from a brief sexual tryst years before.  Hence, his courtroom experience may unravel a robbery-homicide impacting his pro bono client’s family.
  • “The Mystery of the Spanish Shawl:” Mystery author Anthony Eastwood is drawn by mistaken identity into real-life turmoil, or is his wild predicament all what it seems?
  • “Philomel Cottage:” A possible love triangle complicates newlywed Alix Martin’s dark suspicions of her new husband, Gerald.  Worse yet, what might Gerald do should his enigmatic past ever come to light? 
  • “Accident:” A retired cop suspects his neighbor’s wife is a ‘black widow’ serial killer.
  • “The Second Gong:” Belgian private detective Hercule Poirot steps in to decipher an eccentric millionaire’s apparent suicide prior to hosting his nightly dinner party.

Notes: Highlighted in red are those stories with known film and/or television adaptations (i.e. TV’s “The Agatha Christie Hour” in the early 1980’s).  Re: “The Second Gong,” David Suchet’s Poirot TV series incorporates some of that story’s elements into its production of “Dead Man’s Mirror.”   

REVIEW:

Considering that Agatha Christie pioneered so many of the mystery genre’s best twists nearly a century ago, these eleven tales were innovative for their time.  Yet, it’s no wonder why this collection is déjà vu by 21st Century expectations.  While the title story is synonymous with Christie’s best-known works, one may wonder if its notoriety rests solely with a shock value ending.  Despite an ingenious premise, “The Witness for the Prosecution,” otherwise, is a middling read.  Thematically, deception mixed with murder and/or attempted theft also permeate the other humorless stories. 

“Sing a Song of Sixpence” is a prime example.  This forgettable trifle is hampered by weak plot contrivances, including an ultra-convenient last-minute clue.  More so, the sexist dismissal of an icky past fling won’t likely endear a dignified 70-year-old Edward Palliser (it’s easy to visualize either Ian Richardson or Christopher Plummer playing the role) to contemporary readers. 

Unlike the weakly predictable “Red Signal,” at least “The Mystery of the Blue Jar” and “The Mystery of the Spanish Shawl” embellish their meandering plots with some well-played twists.  The same might have applied to “The Fourth Man,” had its morose storyline not been practically unreadable.  Exploring these grim tales, there isn’t any glimpse of Christie’s reliable wit for welcome comedic relief.

Still, “S.O.S.” and “Accident” are solid under-the-radar reads, as is “Philomel Cottage.”  Due to its down-to-earth subject matter, “Philomel Cottage” probably ages best for this sinister collection.  All three stories probably deserve film adaptations, along with the eerily familiar “Where There’s a Will.”  “Will” is an instance where imitators have siphoned off its sci-fi premise, but Christie does it best with an appropriately ironic finale.  This ghost story, suffice to say, is worthy of The Outer Limits or The Twilight Zone.  The Alfred Hitchcock Hour would be ideal, too.       

Readers will regrettably find that “The Second Gong” isn’t a long-lost Poirot gem.  In reality, it’s an inferior earlier draft of “Dead Man’s Mirror.” For instance, Poirot’s suspects merely describe the deceased’s quirky personality vs. readers actually witnessing a pompous Herbert Lytcham Roche in action first.  As compared to “Dead Man’s Mirror” and another similar Poirot tale, “The Dream,” it’s apparent that “Second Gong” is inferior to them. 

Aside from contriving Poirot on to the crime scene, “Gong” would have benefitted from the spice of enabling a savvy household guest (say, the millionaire’s female ward?) to play amateur sleuth — thus removing Poirot altogether. In a merely adequate read, Poirot’s ‘little grey cells’ resolve the locked room “Gong” almost too easily. 

Note: An example of Christie removing Poirot from a story and then successfully recycling it would be how Poirot’s “Yellow Iris” transforms into the novel Sparkling Cyanide.

Among her short story collections, The Witness for The Prosecution and Other Stories is a middle-of-the-road proposition.  What helps alleviate this book’s unremarkable aura is revisiting it once every several years.  That way, these lesser-known mysteries will seem fresher than they really are.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

None.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                        6 Stars

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

AMD THEN THERE WERE NONE

Written by Agatha Christie

SUMMARY:

Originally published in 1939, this 247-page softcover edition was released by publishing imprint William Morrow (through HarperCollins) in 2011. 

Ostensibly invited for a weekend house party on secluded Soldier Island off the Devon coast, eight British strangers are lured there under varying false pretenses.  The guests are: alcoholic Dr. Edward Armstrong; elderly General John MacArthur; chilly spinster Emily Brent; tortoise-like Justice Lawrence Wargrave; roguish mercenary Captain Philip Lombard; demure secretary Vera Claythorne; undercover ex-cop William Henry Blore; and obnoxious stud Anthony Marston.  Joining them at the island’s mansion is a low-key servant couple, Thomas and Ethel Rogers.  The nursery rhyme, “Ten Little Soldiers,” is viewed with mild amusement as the manor’s omnipresent theme.    

After dinner, an ominous recording from their absent host, ‘U.N. Owen,’ accuses his guests of ghastly crimes that had evidently eluded justice.  Friday night frivolities instantly cease.  Inside of twelve hours, two corresponding toy soldiers from a dining table decoration vanish. 

Horrific reality sets in that an enigmatic predator is stalking the marooned captives; each one is systemically killed, in accordance with the rhyme’s suggestive lyrics.  With a violent storm bearing down, will anyone survive the death trap of Soldier Island?

Note: The novel’s U.S. title was previously Ten Little Indians, though the term ‘soldiers’ is substituted for ‘Indians’ in the storyline.    

REVIEW:

Despite its contrivances (i.e. the omniscient culprit), Christie’s bleak novel remains a masterpiece long after this premise practically spawned its own suspense genre.  In large part, the plot’s brilliance is attributable to Christie plausibly conveying distinct personalities without resorting to caricatures.  Without a super-detective like Poirot, Marple, or even Inspector Battle on hand, Christie’s unlikable captives are imbued with everyday reality that spell out increasingly desperate shades of human nature.

Unlike its sanitized film and stage adaptations, this novel’s intensity ranks among Christie’s darkest material, with Endless Night and Crooked House completing that Top Three.  For fans of vintage murder-mysteries that don’t resort to cheap cop-outs, And Then There Were None is truly a ‘dark-and-stormy night’ experience.  As a high-quality softcover book, this particular reprint is definitely recommended!  

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

Quoted from her autobiography, Christie provides a brief note.  The publisher also includes Christie’s mini-biography.  Again inserting the less-offensive term of “soldier,” poet Frank Green’s notorious 1869 ‘nursery’ rhyme is reprinted.      

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                      10 Stars

Note: Of its numerous film and TV adaptations, arguably its best comes first. Starring Barry Fitzgerald and Walter Huston, the same-named 1945 film (based on Christie’s less-intense play) is top-caliber black-and-white entertainment. Otherwise, the most faithful renditions belong to a 1980’s Russian adaptation and the recent BBC mini-series.

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related DVD Movies & Television (Videos) Mystery & Suspense

AND THEN THERE WERE NONE (1945)

SUMMARY:             Running Time: 1 Hr., 37 Min.  (Black & White)

Produced and directed by René Clair, this film was produced/released by 20th Century Fox, but the movie has since lapsed into the public domain. Eight British strangers are piloted by a sandwich-munching boatman across rough coastal waters on a Friday afternoon to remote Indian Island, which is occupied by a sole manor home.  Awaiting them is a dim-witted servant couple: Thomas & Ethel Rogers, who aren’t thrilled managing a weekend house party. 

The guests consist of: curmudgeonly Judge Francis J. Quincannon; sleazy physician Dr. Edward Armstrong; bumbling private detective William H. Blore; suave explorer Phillip Lombard; willowy secretary Vera Claythorne; self-righteous spinster Ms. Emily Brent; elderly General Mandrake; and Prince Nikita Starlov, a boozy, freeloading Russian expatriate.  According to a letter sent to the butler, their unseen hosts, Mr. & Mrs. Owen, evidently won’t arrive until later that evening. 

After dinner, the houseguests are stunned when their mysterious host, U.N. Owen, accuses each of them of a ghastly crime through the use of a gramophone record.  Worse yet, they find themselves effectively marooned on Indian Island.  Three deaths in short order confirms that Owen intends to execute them all, one by one. 

Eerily, this scheme is an allegory of the manor’s “Ten Little Indians” nursery rhyme theme, as it ominously hints at the next victim’s method of death.  Secret alliances are made, but it remains to be seen if anyone will escape Indian Island alive.  

Notes: This film’s content reflects Dame Agatha Christie’s stage play, which she adapted from her own 1939 suspense novel.  Yet, this film changes the names of three characters.  Presumably, the names of the judge and “Anthony Marston” were swapped out for ones befitting the actors.  As for the movie’s “General Mandrake,” in all likelihood, no wanted to confuse the novel’s “General Macarthur” with the real U.S. General.   

REVIEW:

Despite its implausibly light-hearted final twist, And Then There Were None is vintage Hollywood entertainment!  Tinged with delightfully droll gags, it’s a low-key movie relic populated by top-notch character actors, including two Oscar winners and three nominees. 

Barry Fitzgerald headlines this likable cast as the curmudgeonly Judge Quincannon.  Demonstrating the most layers of characterization, Walter Huston is superb depicting his Dr. Armstrong’s descent from a seemingly dignified physician into sleazy self-preservation.  Among the cast’s youthful members, June Duprez’s gracious Vera and Louis Hayward’s dapper Lombard amiably display terrific on-screen chemistry. 

Well-played contributions come from Dame Judith Anderson’s snooty Emily Brent and Roland Young as a perpetually-befuddled Blore.  Most of the others (i.e. Mischa Auer’s oblivious Nikita Starlov; C. Aubrey Smith’s senile General Mandrake; and Richard Haydn’s cartoony Rogers) are caricatures, but their performances fit perfectly with the film’s endearing ambiance.

In a nod to good taste, blood and graphic violence are implied off-screen.  Even some of the novel’s appalling unseen crimes (i.e. Vera Claythorne’s) were clearly altered to appease the era’s film censors.  More so, the guests’ past sins are mostly glossed over, presumably to not hamper the audience’s entertainment.  Even if one takes issue with such a cavalier attitude, this adaptation’s inspired dark comedy wouldn’t be nearly as effective, if they had exactly duplicated the novel’s unlikable characters.  Hence, Christie’s intriguing psychology re: the captives’ deliberate order of execution is ignored. 

If you can accept this black comedy more as a semi-spoof (i.e. occasionally hammy acting; sprinkles of morbid humor; campy suspense music; and even the clichéd eye-darting gag amongst suspects on a dark, stormy night), then you won’t likely be disappointed.  Unlike its mediocre remakes, the breezy And Then There Were None is a cinematic gem worth re-discovery. 

For an ideal double-feature, one might pair it with similarly tongue-in-cheek whodunnits like: Murder By Death; Arsenic & Old Lace; Clue; 1927’s silent The Cat and the Canary; Dark and Stormy Night; and Knives Out.   

BONUS FEATURES:

Some manufacturers offer a bonus black-and-white comedy short or a black-and-white TV episode … or some trivia notes … or cast biographies.  This 2006 VCI Entertainment release adds an obscure Leon Errol black-and-white comedy short entitled “Twin Husbands.”  The VCI version also includes a ‘Narrative for the Blind.’   

QUALITY CONTROL:

Finding a re-mastered version is unlikely (perhaps its Blu-ray release is), so the visual quality varies upon the manufacturer.  Having purchased a shoddy copy elsewhere once before, this reviewer opted replacing it with VCI Entertainment’s DVD release.  VCI’s upgrades meets all reasonable expectations re: visual and sound qualities.  VCI also offers basic control access, making it easy to navigate viewing options (including scene chapters).  If pristine picture and sound quality is a priority, another option is purchasing And Then There Were None in a digital format. 

PACKAGING:

VCI Entertainment solidly protects this DVD with a firm casing.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                           9 Stars

MISCELLANEOUS CAST TRIVIA:

  • Mischa Auer was Oscar-nominated for Best Supporting Actor re: 1936’s “My Man Godfrey,” starring William Powell.
  • Dame Judith Anderson received her Oscar nod as Best Supporting Actress for 1940’s “Rebecca,” directed by Alfred Hitchcock.
  • Barry Fitzgerald is the Oscars’ only acting dual-nominee.  For 1944’s “Going My Way,” he was nominated as both Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor.  Fitzgerald won the latter.  Thereafter, the Academy Awards changed its rules – such double-nominations are now impermissible.   
  • Roland Young earned his Oscar nod for Best Supporting Actor for 1937’s “Topper,” starring Cary Grant.
  • Working with Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston’s Best Supporting Actor Oscar came for 1948’s “Treasure of the Sierra Madre,” directed by his son, John Huston.
  • The captives consists of nine Britons and one Russian.  Yet, the movie’s sole distinguishable accent is Fitzgerald’s Irish brogue.
  • This international cast features one Canadian (Huston); one South African (Hayward); one Irishman (Fitzgerald); one Russian (Auer); an Australian (Anderson); and five Britons (Duprez; Haydn; Leonard; Young; and Thurston).
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AGATHA CHRISTIE’S TEN LITTLE INDIANS (1989)

SUMMARY:                   Running Time: 1 Hr., 38 Min.  

Filmed on location in South Africa, this 1989 Cannon Films remake is directed by Alan Birkinshaw.  Agatha Christie’s suspense thriller is now re-imagined taking place in a remote African safari during the mid-1930’s.  Like the original 1945 film adaptation and two subsequent remakes, some character details have been altered while loosely adapting Christie’s classic mystery. 

For instance, the novel’s self-righteous British spinster Emily Brent is now the fussy, middle-aged American actress, Marion Marshall. The names and nationalities of the general and the doctor have also been altered without actually changing their personalities. Hence, the characters from Christie’s novel/stage play are mostly intact, including their alleged crimes. One oddity, as a comparison to other versions, is that this group of ten now inexplicably consists of a composite of Americans, Central Europeans, and the British.

Soon isolated by a native tribe and with their radio disabled, the ten bewildered guests are trapped as human prey for their unseen host: U.N. Owen.  Owen’s predatory reliance on the “Ten Little Indians” nursery rhyme foretells their doom., with the lyrics being noticeably emphasized this time.  Not only is their camp surrounded by dangerous jungle wildlife (i.e. tigers and lions), these captives are subsequently executed one-by-one for ghastly crimes they are accused of committing.  Can anyone evade Owen’s bloodthirsty wrath?    

Judge Wargrave: Donald Pleasance

Marion Marshall: Brenda Vaccaro   

General Romensky: Herbert Lom

Vera Claythorne: Sarah Maur Thorp

Capt. Phillip Lombard / Jack Hutchinson: Frank Stallone

Blore: Warren Berlinger

Dr. Werner: Yehuda Efroni

Elmo Rodgers: Paul L. Smith

Mrs. Rodgers: Moira Lister

Anthony James Marston: Neil McCarthy

U.N. Owen’s Voice: Uncredited

Notes: Producer Harry Alan Towers actually filmed Ten Little Indians” three times: the other instances being 1965 and 1974.  Set in a wintry chalet in the Alps, his 1965 black-and-white “Ten Little Indians” stars Hugh O’Brian & Shirley Eaton.  Using “And Then There Were None” and, in some alternate versions, “Ten Little Indians,” as the title, his 1974 version is set at an abandoned hotel in the Iranian desert, where Herbert Lom portrays the doctor amongst an all-European cast. 

Of interest is how Towers’ increasingly muddled remakes mixes-and-matches with both Christie’s novel and her stage play, the semi-parody 1945 film, and inevitably his own 1965 film’s plot variations and name changes.     

REVIEW:

Any residual shock value dating back to 1945’s And Then There Were None has long since evaporated.  Filmed on the cheap, some authentic scenery delivers this 1989 clunker’s sole asset – a possible second is a ham-fisted effort trying to convey the bone-chilling horror of Christie’s novel (ironically, the film’s credits only reference her sanitized stage play). 

What’s devoid from this somewhat grisly potboiler is any semblance of deductive reasoning by the captives/suspects or even a believable descent into cold fear/paranoia amongst the dwindling survivors. For that matter, why exactly the killer chose these specific targets is ignored. Case in point: when this U.N. Owen’s captives all too thinly reveal their past sins, no one bothers to question their accounts – worse yet, Lombard’s backstory once again isn’t even provided.

Additional missteps in basic logic effectively sabotage this film (i.e. Why do the supposedly human-hungry lions and tigers briefly seen early in the film evidently vanish?  Given the limited technology of the 1930’s, how could this U.N. Owen have researched all these old crimes in different countries? Aside from Christie’s convenient ‘twists’ aiding the culprit, the film’s variations bungle them in such ways where it’s likely impossible to commit at least one of the murders.).  Such unforced gaffes subsequently ground Christie’s iconic whodunnit into pulpy cinematic sludge.   

As for the cast’s performances, it’s a mixed bag.  Hollywood veterans Pleasence, Berlinger, Lom, and, to a degree, the young Maur Thorp (resembling Elizabeth Perkins) are watchable – give them some credit for trying.  Of them, Lom reliably makes the most of his limited screen time while Pleasence knows how to play subtle creepiness. Of minimal help to them is George S. Clinton’s passable musical score that lends some sense of a period piece mystery the film sought to be.  

As for the other castmates: Stallone, Vaccaro, Efroni, Lister (eerily resembling Gilligan Island’s Mrs. Howell, no less), McCarthy, and Smith’s clichéd aura of menace all hover between underwhelming to eye-rolling, amateur hour-caliber performances.  Usually an extra in his older brother’s movies, Stallone is dubiously cast as a romantic stock hero in the mold of Allan Quatermain.  Yet, his bland macho presence still surpasses veteran character actress Vacarro, who disappoints in a paycheck-only effort.        

Watching this theatrical flop is really about the curiosity factor, if anything.  The question is: how much patience should Christie’s fans muster?  Enduring this dreck once is plenty, but its potential (i.e. the safari novelty) for a better film is sporadically visible.  Otherwise, this Ten Little Indians is convincing proof of Hollywood’s law of diminishing returns — too many remakes inevitably erode masterpieces into formulaic schlock. 

Note: For a suspenseful “Ten Little Indians”-type safari, try 1996’s “The Ghost and The Darkness,” starring Val Kilmer & Michael Douglas.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING: 2 Stars

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TEN LITTLE INDIANS (aka AGATHA CHRISTIE’S TEN LITTLE INDIANS) (1965)

SUMMARY:       Running Time: 1 Hr., 29 Min. (Black & White)

Directed by George Pollock, this retitled 1965 remake (of 1945’s And Then There Were None) shifts Agatha Christie’s secluded Indian Island to a wintry mountain chalet, presumably in the Austrian Alps.  As the prior film did, some character names, nationalities, and/or their crimes are altered in a loose adaptation of Agatha Christie’s stage play of her own classic novel. 

For instance, secretary Vera Claythorne is now ‘Ann Clyde,’ while condescending middle-aged British spinster Emily Brent is replaced by a glamorous German movie star.  Obnoxiously stupid British playboy Anthony Marston (in the 1945 film, he is a boozy, free-loading Russian expatriate) is now Fabian’s obnoxious American crooner ‘Mike Raven.’  Likewise, the names of the judge and the servant couple have been modified to better suit the actors.  

Transported by train, sleigh ride, and then gondola, eight strangers attend a weekend house party—isolating them at least fifteen miles from the nearest village.  Left to entertain themselves, the guests and the married servant couple are mortified by accusations of ghastly crimes from the ominously recorded voice of their absent host, ‘U.N. Owen.’ 

Adhering to revised lyrics of the “Ten Little Indians” nursery rhyme (a copy of which appears in each guest’s room), the ten captives are subsequently murdered, one by one.  Alliances will be made, but will anyone evade a predator’s vengeful wrath?    

Hugh Lombard: Hugh O’Brian

Ann Clyde: Shirley Eaton   

William Henry Blore: Stanley Holloway

Dr. Edward Armstrong: Dennis Price

Ilona Bergen: Daliah Lavi

Judge Arthur Cannon: Wilfrid Hyde-White

Herr Grohmann: Mario Adorf

General John Mandrake: Leo Genn

Frau Grohmann: Marianne Hoppe

Narrator: Bill Mitchell

U.N. Owen’s Voice: Christopher Lee (uncredited)

Note: One of the film’s producers, Harry Alan Towers, remade this same movie twice more — once in 1974 (reverting to the British title of “And Then Were There None”), with an ‘all-star’ European cast in an Iranian desert locale.  The last Towers remake is a cut-rate 1989 rehash set amidst a 1930’s South African safari.  The 1989 title is switched back to “Agatha Christie’s Ten Little Indians.”  Of interest is how these increasingly muddled remakes insist on mixing-and-matching Christie’s source material, the 1945 film, and this 1965 film’s own plot variations and name changes.     

REVIEW:

Viewing this remake, either in comparison to its classy 1945 predecessor, or strictly on its own merits, the result is still the same.  Unlike And Then There Were None’s droll black comedy charm, 1965’s incarnation blandly rolls through its motions geared for a different generation that is more attuned to Sean Connery’s James Bond films. 

Replacing the original film’s witty banter, sensuality (i.e. implied sex) and gritty violence (i.e. a destroyed cable car; a lengthy fistfight) are weakly substituted in, if only for sensationalism’s sake.  Further, this cast’s wooden chemistry doesn’t help – for instance, Blore, the general, the judge, and the doctor blend far too much together as the older British guests.  As Dr. Armstrong, Dennis Price, in particular, is guilty of an apathetic, reading-off-the-script performance.  

Stanley Holloway and Wilfrid Hyde-White gradually assert themselves as Blore and the judge, as their work becomes the film’s best asset.  The same doesn’t apply to romantic co-leads Hugh O’Brian and Shirley Eaton.  While Goldfinger’s Eaton has a likable screen presence, her one-dimensional ‘Ann Clyde’ is merely a blonde damsel-in-distress.  O’Brian’s macho engineer shares hardly any resemblance with Christie’s scoundrel, Phillip Lombard, short of the same last name.  

Another stale re-imagining is Fabian’s mercifully brief role.  Overplaying the smug ‘Mike Raven,’ Fabian appears out of his acting league.  Case in point: he delivers one the most amateurish-looking death scenes in movie history.  Dalilah Lavi’s effort is marginally better, but her conceited ‘Ilona Bergen’ is an unnecessary (and far younger) substitute for the morally shrewish Emily Brent. 

As the ill-tempered servant couple, Marianne Hoppe and Mario Adorf are the most compelling, largely because they are the only ones conveying a believable sense of panic.  Portraying the volatile ‘Grohmann,’ Adorf at least brings a new variant to Christie’s storyline.  

Note: Curiously, despite playing the butler, Adorf resembles the novel’s physical description of Blore. Had Adorf switched roles with the affable Holloway (and instead making it a Lombard/Blore fistfight), that might have inspired a welcome boost to the script.      

The unremarkable changes re: the killer’s methods can be shrugged off … that is, with a notable exception.  One death pits the syringe-packing killer slowly closing in on another hapless victim – who doesn’t bother screaming or even make a token effort of resistance (supposedly, this wide-awake character is just too terrified).  No matter how the director rationalized it, this sequence is a ludicrous Hollywood ‘homicide.’  Another element that sabotages suspense is composer-conductor Malcolm Lockyer’s inability to shift his misguided jazzy score into something appropriately menacing.    

A final straw is the goofy ‘whodunnit?’ interactive time-out at the climax where an unseen narrator implores viewers to guess the culprit.  Let’s dismiss this ridiculous intrusion as a best-forgotten 1960’s Hollywood gimmick.  Despite its surplus of weaknesses, this take on Ten Little Indians still isn’t half-bad by comparison. 

Think of this way: between Towers’ three remakes (1965, 1974, and 1989), sliding into mediocrity becomes inevitable.  It’s really the fallacy of excessive recycling.  By that reckoning, 1965’s Ten Little Indians ranking second-best to the original film is a back-handed compliment.             

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING: 6 Stars

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