Bright Young Things discussion
Group Reads Archive
>
The Mysterious Affair at Styles - Chapters 1 - 4
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Ally
(new)
Jan 30, 2011 12:23PM



reply
|
flag


This isn't a genre I'm used to reading so I find the whole structural set up you've noted quite fascinating - I'm going to be looking out for those five elements now as I read! Thank you.
Does the old fashioned whodunit still hold sway and fascination in the world of modern crime techniques and almost 'foensi fiction - thats what I'm on a personal mission to discover here!
I'm certainly drawn in and I've only read the first couple of chapters - it's quite exciting and I'm sure its not just me but after a lifetime of watching Poirot and Marple TV adaptations I'm glad that the distinctive 'voice' of the shows has been lifted straight from the books!
Ally
Does the old fashioned whodunit still hold sway and fascination in the world of modern crime techniques and almost 'foensi fiction - thats what I'm on a personal mission to discover here!
I'm certainly drawn in and I've only read the first couple of chapters - it's quite exciting and I'm sure its not just me but after a lifetime of watching Poirot and Marple TV adaptations I'm glad that the distinctive 'voice' of the shows has been lifted straight from the books!
Ally

The recent Marple adaptations bear little resemblance to the actual story as written by Christie.
I believe the family had insisted on it at the beginning with Poirot and they stuck to it, even up to this season. The Marples, after the first series, has not maintained the truth of the novels. They are still excellent shows - but bear less and less resemblance to the original story.

The recent Marple adaptations bear little resemblance to the actual story as written by Christie.
I believe the family had insis..."
You are quite right, but did you see the recent Suchet Orient Express? A travesty. Poirot has a pusillanimous spiritual crisis, scenes are added to explain this intrusion, and the story is upended to make room for it. Compare this to Finney's portrayal in 1965.

I thought the part at the beginning was added. This part was not added. This part is in the book.
What part did you think was added or changed?

I thought the part at the beginning was added. This part was not added. This part is in the book.
What part did you think was added or changed?"
Hmm. I have neither the text nor the film to consult. The scenes at the beginning were the ones added. Strictly speaking the ones in the middle and at the end which I am thinking of, where Poirot agonizes over what to do, are in the text, but not as portrayed. In the book Poirot has his usual self-confidence and merely ponders what is the right thing to do. In the movie he agonizes and looks for help from a higher power. This is not Poirot the rationalist with the little gray cells.

I do have the book and the film to refer to.
If we are comparing the Suchet and Finney Poirots (or for that matter, the Ustinov or Molinaro? )) versions, the one that is closest to the book is the Suchet version.
The only scene that I actually compared was the first scene because I hadn't remembered it at all and it had never been in any of the earlier film versions.


The recent Marple adaptations bear little resemblance to the actual story as written by Christie.
I believe the family..."
Finney's film - Sidney Lumet's film - was released in 1974. I did enjoy the remake with Suchet, but prefer the 1974. Did anyone see the recent adaptation of "Hallowe'en Party" (the same season as "Orient Express")? Loved it.

The great Alfred Molina.

Thanks, Ivan. I had a brain freeze.


One of the things they pointed out is that the human brain can only hand a certain number of characters - something like 8-9 - and so she always uses more than that. So that we just cannot keep them all straight.
I have switched to the kindle version from my paperback. I never seemed to get anywhere in the paperback - I think I am bothered by the tight binding in my particular volume.
Another point was in the writing. I never noticed this but they said that, through an examination by the computer, she has a tendency to repeat words close together. On a given page a word (or something very similar to the word, same meaning and similar sounding) might appear 8-9 times.

I made an attempt to read "And Then There Were None" but did not enjoy it; this is much more to my taste.

Ivan, I want to ask you about this, but I thought the "whole book" thread would be a better place.

There's no problem for me - I'm following the story quite well without knowing all this about how the 'structure' is supposed to be.
There's the narrator - visits this lady's home. She has recently married a much younger man. Many in her household are sure he's planning to knock her off for the money.
She does die - or is murdered, they don't know. The narrator brings in Poirot who is a great whodunit detective.
The author amuses the reader with Poirot's personality as he figures his clues one by one.
That's enough for me - maybe when I've finished all the disks - I think about 6 ... maybe the how/why of it all will interest me. But for now? I'm enjoying it - listening to the story while I'm picking around at my online jigsaw puzzle keeps me amused. Just like an old movie.
(I know I'm here late - don't expect you folks to chime in with me now that the discussion's been over for days. I'm just clocking myself in so to speak)