Agatha and the Curse of Ishtar, Channel 5 review - a diverting melding of fact and fiction | reviews, news & interviews
Agatha and the Curse of Ishtar, Channel 5 review - a diverting melding of fact and fiction
Agatha and the Curse of Ishtar, Channel 5 review - a diverting melding of fact and fiction
Some clunking exposition but it looked lovely
Christmas and Agatha Christie are a very good fit – how better to spend time with your loved ones than sitting down to watch some murder and intrigue together?
We were in Ur, southern Iraq in 1928 where a team of British archaeologists led by Leonard Woolley (Jack Deam) and his assistants Max (Jonah Hauer-King) and Pearl (Crystal Clarke) were uncovering a site in the desert, which contained an abundance of ancient Babylonian artefacts, including a tablet with the curse of Ishtar etched on it. Enter Agatha Christie (Lyndsey Marshal), recently divorced and lonely, and looking for inspiration as she started to write romances, having decided to move away from the detective novels that brought her fame and fortune.
What do you know, but within a few minutes of setting foot on the site, she was involved in a mystery involving a few deaths – although the closest Christie came to gruesome endings in real life was her invention of detectives Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot. Here, she turned super-sleuth herself in a tale of murders, international art theft, extra-marital affairs and betrayal.
Keen Christie fans will have enjoyed how writer Tom Dalton introduced a classic of the Christie genre – the country house – as all the protagonists stayed at a mansion rented by Marmaduke (Rory Fleck Byrne), the obnoxious American who was funding the dig. Rounding out the cast was Marmaduke’s security chief Ezekial (Waj Ali), the British ambassador Sir Constance (Stanley Townsend, both pictured above) and his wife, Lucy (Bronagh Waugh), also part of the dig team.
Each one of them looked guilty – except the lovely Max, whom Christie fell for (Christie and Max Mallowan later married in real life). Was it the unhappily married Lucy, who was having an affair with someone on the dig, or Pearl, frustrated that she had been overtaken by Max? Maybe it was the decadent Katharine (Katherine Kingsley), Woolley’s wife, a woman dedicated to having fun and noisy sex, or Ezekiel, angry that his country was being looted?
Or maybe they all did it – but whoever done it, they chose the wrong method of despatch. As Christie said: “Strychnine is a very poor choice as a murder weapon. It's unsubtle and easy to detect.” Good to know.
Christie’s biographer Laura Thompson has roundly debunked the notion that any of this happened, and no viewer should take the story seriously as a work of biography. When Dalton shoehorned some very modern mores into the story – a very good joke about semen and Christie having sex with Max within a couple of days of meeting him – they just came over as preposterous, and underlined the lack of subtlety in the drama's moral message about Britain’s cultural appropriation and how Iraq was plundered for oil as well as it artefacts. But clunky exposition and occasional dodgy overacting aside, with its beautifully photographed desert landscapes, lovely costumes and some sly humour, this was diverting fun.
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Comments
Absolutely dead boring and
yes totally agree with the
Was there a British embassy