Tweeting on the Orient Express - Agatha Christie goes social


  • TECH
  • Saturday, 14 Nov 2015

Digital treatment: Christie's work is now being targeted at digital audiences. Pictured is a logo on the Orient Express train, where one of her mysteries were set.

With her page-turning detective mysteries and murder whodunnits, Agatha Christie's novels have won over generations of fans since they were first published 95 years ago.

Now, in a world of smartphones and tablets, her work is being targeted at digital audiences with an app telling one of her tales through a social media feed of messages, photos and videos.

Based on Christie's set of short stories The Mysterious Mr Quin, the pilot Mr Quin launched on is being billed as the first digital drama of its kind.

Agatha Christie Productions has teamed up with entertainment mobile platform Tell to bring the eponymous Quin and socialite Satterthwaite into a contemporary setting.

The story, in which characters talk to each other via Twitter-like text, images and videos, begins at a country manor party where hostess Lady Laura plans to unveil her new online venture.

But the tone soon darkens when a mysterious Mr Quin takes over Satterthwaite's live blogging of the event, turning the conversation to the suicide, five years ago, of the guests' mutual friend.

"All of the characters tell their stories on social media so, you voyeuristically look in at their worlds as the story comes out," Tell interactive director and producer Kevin Moss said. "We kind of call it an entertainment stream and you literally use your thumb to scroll up and down the timeline."

Viewing is on demand or via an immersive scheduled show, in which audiences receive messages and can participate by posting comments.

To give a sense of real footage, the production, starring Game of Thrones actor Gethin Anthony as Satterthwaite and Rebecca Scroggs as Lady Laura, was shot on GoPros and iPhones.

"(In) any whodunnit ... murder mystery, it's always interesting, you have your opinions," Scroggs said. "And this way you can actively share that."

Christie, who died in 1976, wrote dozens of stories, which followed much-loved characters such as moustached detective Hercule Poirot and elderly Miss Marple.

"Christie ... used to keep all of her fan letters and she replied to every single one," Julia Wilde, director of business development at Agatha Christie Limited, said.

"So we truly believe she would have absolutely loved this type environment where you can have that direct contact with your fans on a daily basis, right down to the minute detail." — Reuters

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tech News

TikTok artists and advertisers to stay with app until 'door slams shut'
TikTok to suspend TikTok Lite's reward programme amid EU concerns
ASML approves Christophe Fouquet as CEO at annual meeting
AT&T beats estimates for subscriber additions, free cash flow
Exclusive-Google rival Tuta complains to EU tech regulators about de-ranking
Microsoft's AI lead puts Amazon cloud dominance on watch
TE Connectivity beats quarterly profit estimates on sensor demand
UK watchdog seeks views on Microsoft's and Amazon's AI partnerships
Texas Instruments' upbeat Q2 forecast pushes chip stocks higher
Italy fines Amazon over ‘recurring’ purchase option

Others Also Read