The soundtrack on the BBC TV’s
three-part series based on Agatha
Christie’s The ABC Murders is
music to the ears of typewriters lovers. By soundtrack, I don't mean Isobel
Waller-Bridge’s efforts in putting together a handful of tunes ranging from
Cole Porter to Woody Herman, a harpsichord suite from Barry Lyndon and a touch
of what could be a Handel chaconne. No, I’m referring to that wonderful grating
noise that a typewriter carriage makes when it is moved back over the escapement rack and the
star wheel’s dogs flick past the cogs. Or the slap of the typeslug on ribbon
and paper, or the gears on the key rods clicking back to lift the typebar. Imagine
all that amplified to the max, and accompanying the movement of a microcamera
as it snoops in under the typebasket and ribbon capstan, and forages among the levers and switches and
springs. That’s what one gets aplenty,
at least in the first episode of the series (the only one I’ve seen so far). I
wish I could download that
soundtrack, but unfortunately I’ve thus far been unable to do so.
This BBC TV version of The
ABC Murders makes the Imperial Good
Companion portable typewriter of leading character Alexander Bonaparte Cust
(played by Eamon Farren) the star
attraction. It has the main role. As Jonah Benjamin put it on the "Thoughts in
Digital" website, "Ever wondered what a typewriter looks like really close up?
Well, wonder no more, as BBC's latest Agatha Christie adaptation spends most of
its running time next to, on top of, or inside a typewriter."
Agatha Christie at her Remington portable typewriter.
The
Radio Times, however, reveals that
Christie’s champion detective Hercule Poirot (played by John Malkovich) "matches
the 'unknown fingerprints' on Cust’s typewriter with [spoiler alert, someone
else’s] prints, as collected from his brandy glass. This is used as part of [the
killer’s] conviction." Now, we all know that’s not quite how things work when
convicting killers on evidence gathered from typewriters – and one would expect
Christie knew better, too. After all, fictional detectives had been applying
forensic science to typescripts since Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes at
the end of the 19th Century. And, as it turns out [another spoiler
alert] Poirot had been bluffing when he suggested to the killer that he had a
matching fingerprint from the typewriter. The Radio Times points out that in Christie’s novel, Poirot says, "Most
damning of all - you overlooked a most elementary precaution. You left a
fingerprint on Cust’s typewriter - the typewriter that, if you are innocent,
you could never have handled."
Sarah
Phelps, who faithlessly adapted the novel to the small screen, was asked by the "BBC Writers
Room" website about director Alex Gabassi stressing the significance of two
machines, a train and the typewriter, in the story. She answered, "The whole
point of the typewriter is that the letters are not written by hand. You can
feel the human behind a written hand and there is an identity to it; you can
see character in the way someone writes his or her name. Whereas a typewriter
is like being hate tweeted, because it’s just text and there could be anybody
behind it. The only thing is that this
typewriter does have a tiny ghost in a setting which gives it its own character,
but even that is sinister. So as the railway has its own pulsating life, I
wanted to feel that the typewriter has
its own pulsating life. There’s almost this symbiosis between technology and our killer. I like that sense of
anonymity but a sense of profound
identity as well; the typewriter is
just an object but then suddenly it’s infused with malice. Like the train
is innocent, you get on it to go to the seaside or to get to work and you know
every inch of it and then suddenly it’s a terrifying thing."
It’s
great that the BBC has found the right typewriter for the time. The TV series
is set in 1933 (the book in 1935) and the first model of the Imperial Good Companion came out in
1932. The one used by the character Cust looks as though its innards need
cleaning, but it’s the appropriate model for the period and locality. The book was first published in Britain on
January 6, 1936. The TV series was broadcast in Britain over three consecutive
nights after Christmas last year and started on ABC TV in Australia last
Sunday. It was released on DVD through Universal Pictures UK on March 11.
I've got to look for the DVD.
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