Agatha Christie's Great Detectives Poirot and Marple

Agatha Christie's Great Detectives Poirot and Marple

2004 • Animation, Crime, Mystery
Young Mabel West is the daughter of mystery writer Raymond West, who wants her to lead a normal life. Rebelling against this, Mabel wants to be a great detective, and sets out for London to become assistant to none other than Hercule Poirot, the great Belgian detective who resides there. She finally wins the reluctant approval of her father, and embarks on an exciting life of mystery and suspense - his only demand being that she occasionally spend some time with her great-aunt, Jane Marple, in the small village of St. Mary Mead.

Why you should read the novels

There’s nothing quite like the thrill of unraveling Agatha Christie’s classic mysteries in her original novels. As you dive into her intricately woven plots and vivid character portrayals, the atmosphere of classic England seeps off every page, drawing you directly into the heart of the investigation. Pages filled with red herrings, clever twists, and ingenious solutions offer a mental challenge that no visual adaptation can truly replicate. Reading Christie’s works provides nuanced character exploration, subtle clues, and the satisfaction of piecing together each puzzle as the world’s greatest detectives do. Poirot and Miss Marple’s personalities, wit, and deductive methods are revealed in unparalleled depth through Christie’s prose. Her unique narrative styles, such as unreliable narrators and clever misdirections, are best experienced firsthand. By choosing the books, you connect with the very imagination that invented these timeless characters and stories. The novels invite you into a world where every detail matters and where the reader is as much a part of the crime-solving team as the detectives themselves. No adaptation can truly match the immersive, interactive experience reading the originals provides.

Adaptation differences

One major difference between Agatha Christie's original novels and the anime adaptation is the introduction of new, original characters to appeal to younger audiences. For example, Mabel West (Miss Marple's great-niece) and her friend, George, were created exclusively for the anime. These characters play integral roles in bridging Poirot and Marple's cases, whereas in the books, there is no such link or crossover between these detectives, who operated in separate stories within Christie’s works. Furthermore, the anime often simplifies or modifies existing plots and characters. Some stories are abridged or altered to accommodate younger viewers, trimming complex or dark themes and omitting intricate subplots. The adaptation frequently changes certain motives, the fates of characters, or the sequence of investigative events for pacing, making them less faithful to Christie’s original intent. Another significant alteration is the direct interaction between Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple. In Christie’s books, these legendary detectives never meet, nor do their investigations overlap. The anime, however, emphasizes their connection and often has Poirot and Marple assisting each other and appearing in crossover episodes. This creative liberty crafts a unified detective universe absent from the original novels. Lastly, the unique elements of Christie’s writing—her distinctive narrative styles, the interior thoughts of her detectives, and the gradual revelation of clues—are condensed or lost in the visual medium. The anime relies on visual cues and dialogue rather than the subtlety of Christie’s prose, often removing the satisfaction of piecing together the mystery alongside the detective and resulting in a different overall experience.

Agatha Christie's Great Detectives Poirot and Marple inspired from

Death on the Nile
by Agatha Christie
The Adventure of the Cheap Flat
by Agatha Christie
The Body in the Library
by Agatha Christie
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd
by Agatha Christie
Murder at the Vicarage
by Agatha Christie