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And Then there Were None

(81 Posts)
ninathenana Sun 27-Dec-15 21:57:37

Mr. Lombard phwa !!

henetha Mon 28-Dec-15 14:40:18

I am seriously in lust with Aiden Turner.... Poldark and now Mr.Lombard...
it's more than flesh and blood can stand!

Anya Mon 28-Dec-15 15:05:27

Stansgran - are you visualising David Suchet just about wearing a towel and propping himself suggestively against a door post hmm

rosequartz Mon 28-Dec-15 15:13:02

I think I read the book when I was about 15 so, er, over 30 years ago blush and I can't remember the ending.
I'm a bit disappointed that it wasn't filmed on Burgh Island and the art deco hotel there, where I believe Agatha Christie wrote it. But of course, the mainland is accessible by foot from Burgh Island at low tide which would ruin the plot!

rosesarered Mon 28-Dec-15 19:04:52

Anya did you have to say that!?

Ana Mon 28-Dec-15 22:51:18

Well, a tense and satisfying (?) finale to the series, I thought. I've read most of Agatha Christie's books, but it was a long time ago, and although I had an inkling I deliberately didn't try to remember the ending.

(I do wish the BBC would stop warning us that we might find some scenes 'upsetting' prior to all their dramas though.)

whitewave Mon 28-Dec-15 22:59:34

Yes I enjoyed it. I think that the director probably played fast and loose with the dialogue as it lost its 30s feel somehow. Although saying that I did think it was a good production.

merlotgran Mon 28-Dec-15 22:59:59

Well I was mightily upset when Poldark got shot! grin

ninathenana Mon 28-Dec-15 23:03:00

roseq I thought Burgh Island would have been a good location (love that place) but not as bright as you to think it wouldn't work due to the low tides tchsmile
I was surprised by the ending, I was convinced there was an unknown party on the island.

rosequartz Mon 28-Dec-15 23:08:28

I'm not sure which locations were used; was the jetty Hartland Point? DH kept saying 'I should know which beach that is'!
Definitely not Devon, I think it was North Cornwall

Deedaa Mon 28-Dec-15 23:08:54

Nearly gave up on the first night as it seemed very slow, but then I would have missed the towel moment grin Definitely picked up over the next two nights and even DH stayed with it so it must have been good!

rosequartz Mon 28-Dec-15 23:12:26

I just googled it and it was South Cornwall! - Kynance and Mullion Coves and it was Mullion Harbour apparently (not Hartland)

gillybob Mon 28-Dec-15 23:58:01

I bloody well knew it was gonna be the judge. self satisfied smile

Is it just me who finds that (Charles) "Dance" guy really creepy?

WilmaKnickersfit Tue 29-Dec-15 01:05:02

He's so good at being bad! tchgrin

I read the book yonks ago, but adaptations can be so different. I'd worked it out it had to be someone who died in a way that could be faked, so that meant the judge or the maid. Out of those two, the judge was most likely because of his age, although I thought he'd explain his connection to all the people who'd been killed by each of the other guests.

I thought it fizzled out in the last episode tbh.

Much appreciated Poldark - he made a lovely vampire before his time in Cornwall! tchgrin

gettingonabit Tue 29-Dec-15 09:29:43

Well-that was as clear as mudgrin.

Nice clever ending, but I still don't get what the judge's motive was. blush

gillybob Tue 29-Dec-15 09:37:38

gettingonabit As I guessed earlier in the thread I think the judge was effectively punishing those that he believed had escaped justice the first time around.

whitewave Tue 29-Dec-15 09:51:28

There was a clue in the dialogue -blink and you would have missed it - after finding the judge one of the character's said that he hadn't heard any gun shot.

Ana Tue 29-Dec-15 09:56:46

I noticed that, but thought as there was a storm it was understandable. But by then I was convinced it was the maid as she'd inexplicably 'died in her sleep' - was she actually murdered?

gillybob Tue 29-Dec-15 09:56:50

Yes whitewave you're right. They speculated as to how this might have happened didn't they? Muffled with a towel etc.

pensionpat Tue 29-Dec-15 10:29:35

Agatha Chrisie must be spinning in her grave. I enjoyed the production but it was the use of the F word that made it lose the 30s feel. I am not easily shocked. My all time favourite is The Sopranos. Would a gentleman use that word in mixed company in those times ? I think Damn would have been shocking then. Perhaps I should be in Pedants Corner!

Anya Tue 29-Dec-15 11:15:12

You are easily shocked I agree!

The language was very modulated, with the men apologising for minor slip ups, or calling others to remember there was a 'lady' present ( even though she wasn't) at the beginning.

It was only when the tension, fear and suspicion built up that 'manners' were abandoned. Very realistically I thought.

M0nica Tue 29-Dec-15 15:02:01

I sat and sort of watched this with DD and DGD, but to be honest, it was so dark that I could hardly see what was going on and somehow the gothickisation of an improbable plot left me unengaged and by the third episode I sat on the settee with the other two, but read a book.

I didn't watch Poldark, so I had no eager anticipation, but to be honest, whichever the Poldark one was, I could see nobody in this cast to get excited about. Cardboard cutouts of cardboard characters made all the acting stereotyped and characterless as well, even though some of the actors are usually quite good.

Anya Tue 29-Dec-15 15:49:22

Try turning up the brightness setting on your TV MOanica wink

Jane10 Tue 29-Dec-15 18:01:22

It certainly was gloomy stuff. Can't say I really enjoyed it. Must admit that I preferred the ITV drama about the 'ghost hunter'. Beautifully done and looks like its setting up to be a series. If you missed it ,check it out on i player.

gettingonabit Tue 29-Dec-15 19:58:48

I think the trouble was (for me, anyway) that the characters weren't sufficiently well-established before they started to be bumped off, so you had no context for the crimes they had been involved in. I had no idea what the Judge's motive was (had to look it up) but I thought the "missing bullet" idea was clever (although the Judge "coming back to life was, for me, implausible).

Nice bit of entertainment, and Aiden Turner in a low slung towel is always going to be a nice diversionwink

Jane10 Tue 29-Dec-15 20:47:45

Oh dear. Aiden Turner does nothing for me. He just looks a bit grumpy generally. Gratuitous nudity seems tacky -we'd complain quick enough if the female was standing around in her underwear for no particular reason. Has that actor no pride? Just being used to titivate?