Of course I believe what I say
. I don’t think that physical descriptions of characters - their ‘egg-shaped head’ or their fastidious mannerisms tell us anything about their personality, or motivations. I loved Christie’s books as a child/young woman, and aa others found, they were a stepping stone from Blyton to more adult reading. But with hindsight they are very formulaic and plot-based. Some of the adaptations have made it feel like we know the characters- the Suchet Poirot in particular - but this is the direction and screenplay at work, rather than the books themselves.
It doesn’t matter though. They are good stories, and light entertainment. I don’t expect people to agree, and none of this is important. I said similar things about the black Anne Boleyn, and on the thread about Great Expectations, and was accused of wokeness on those too, when that is not where I am coming from at all.
Actually, both of those examples are of pretty awful adaptations (or representations in the case of Anne B) too
. The thinking behind them was lost to the clunky scripts and so on in both cases. I am not saying that any of them were good tv, or that the decisions were the right ones, just picking up on what I still believe to be true, which is that adapting stories and changing some of the cast, plotting and settings is fine if it works, and not sacrilege in any way. It’s not about backing down - it’s just a point of view.