Radio John Moffatt starred as Poirot in a five-part
BBC Radio 4 adaptation by
Michael Bakewell, directed by Enyd Williams, and originally broadcast from 28 December 1992 – 1 January 1993.
André Maranne appeared as Bouc,
Joss Ackland as Ratchett/Cassetti,
Sylvia Syms as Mrs Hubbard,
Siân Phillips as Princess Dragomiroff,
Francesca Annis as Mary Debenham, and
Peter Polycarpou as Dr. Constantine. In 2017, the streaming service
Audible released another radio adaptation that featured
Tom Conti as the voice of Poirot. The voice cast also featured
Sophie Okonedo as Mary Debenham,
Eddie Marsan as Ratchett/Cassetti, and narration from
Art Malik. The Soviet radio play was released in 1966. The voice cast featured Vsevolod Yakut as Poirot,
Rostislav Plyatt as Colonel Arbuthnot,
Maria Babanova as Hubbard,
Oleg Yefremov as Hector McQueen,
Leonid Kanevsky as Antonio Foscarelli,
Angelina Stepanova as Princess Dragomiroff and
Alexander Lazarev as Hardman.
Film Murder on the Orient Express (1974) The book was made into a 1974 movie directed by
Sidney Lumet and produced by
John Brabourne and Richard B. Goodwin; it was a critical and commercial hit. The film starred
Albert Finney as Poirot,
Martin Balsam as Signor Bianchi,
George Coulouris as Dr Constantine, and
Richard Widmark as Ratchett/Cassetti, with the remaining cast of suspects including
Sean Connery (Arbuthnot),
Lauren Bacall (Mrs Hubbard),
Anthony Perkins (MacQueen),
John Gielgud (Beddoes),
Michael York (Count Andrenyi),
Jean-Pierre Cassel (Pierre Michel),
Jacqueline Bisset (Countess Andrenyi),
Wendy Hiller (Princess Dragomiroff),
Vanessa Redgrave (Mary Debenham),
Rachel Roberts (Hildegarde Schmidt),
Colin Blakely (Hardman),
Denis Quilley (Foscarelli), and
Ingrid Bergman (Greta Ohlsson), who won the 1974
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. Only minor changes were made for the film: Mary Debenham was the Armstrongs' secretary rather than Daisy's governess; Masterman was renamed Beddoes; the dead maid was named Paulette instead of Susanne; Helena Goldenberg became Helena Grünwald (which is German for "Greenwood"); Antonio Foscarelli became Gino Foscarelli; Caroline Martha Hubbard became Harriet Belinda Hubbard; and the train company's Belgian director, Monsieur Bouc, became instead an Italian director, Signor Bianchi.
Murder on the Orient Express (2017) On 16 June 2015,
20th Century Fox hired
Kenneth Branagh to direct and star as Poirot in another film adaptation of the story, which was released on 3 November 2017. On 29 September 2016, the studio issued a press release announcing much of the cast, including
Johnny Depp as Ratchett,
Michelle Pfeiffer as Mrs Hubbard,
Penélope Cruz as Pilar Estravados (a Spanish version of Greta Ohlsson, the name coming from a character in ''
Hercule Poirot's Christmas''),
Judi Dench as Princess Dragomiroff,
Derek Jacobi as Masterman,
Leslie Odom Jr. as Dr Arbuthnot,
Daisy Ridley as Mary Debenham,
Lucy Boynton as Countess Andrenyi,
Tom Bateman as Monsieur Bouc,
Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Biniamino Marquez (a Cuban version of Antonio Foscarelli),
Josh Gad as Hector MacQueen,
Marwan Kenzari as Pierre Michel,
Sergei Polunin as Count Andrenyi,
Willem Dafoe as Cyrus Hardman, and
Olivia Colman as Hildegarde Schmidt. The character of Col. Arbuthnot is combined with Dr. Constantine to create Dr. Arbuthnot, a sniper who served under Col. Armstrong in the war and had his medical school paid for by Armstrong; MacQueen's father is portrayed as having been a prosecutor in the Armstrong case rather than the Armstrong family's lawyer, and whose career was ruined after he prosecuted the maid Susanne; and Monsieur Bouc is changed from the director of the company to the director's nephew. Added was a direct link for Poirot to the Armstrong kidnapping—before Sonia's death, John Armstrong wrote to Poirot for help. Also unlike the book, the kidnapping does not take place on
Long Island but in
New Jersey, where the
Lindbergh kidnapping took place. Susanne Michel is switched from Pierre Michel's daughter to his sister. Cyrus Hardman poses as an Austrian scientist named Gerhard Hardman for part of the film. The last scene also sets up
Death on the Nile as a sequel.
Television German adaptation (1955) The novel was first adapted as a 1955 episode of the West German television series
Die Galerie der großen Detektive.
Heini Göbel played the role of Poirot.
Murder on the Orient Express (2001) A thoroughly modernized and poorly received
made-for-TV version starring
Alfred Molina as Poirot was presented by CBS in 2001. This version co-starred
Meredith Baxter as Mrs Hubbard and
Leslie Caron as Señora Alvarado (based on Princess Dragomiroff, and portrayed as the widow of a South American dictator). Poirot is portrayed as significantly younger and less eccentric than Christie's detective, and is given a subplot involving a romantic relationship with Vera Rosakoff, who is loosely based on an infrequently recurring character of the same name. The story is updated to a contemporary setting, and four of the suspects (Hildegarde Schmidt, Cyrus Hardman, Edward Masterman and Greta Ohlsson) are deleted, as is Dr Constantine.
''Agatha Christie's Poirot'': "Murder on the Orient Express" (2010) David Suchet reprised the role of
Hercule Poirot in "
Murder on the Orient Express" (2010), a 90-minute movie-length episode of the television series ''
Agatha Christie's Poirot'' co-produced by
ITV Studios and
WGBH-TV, adapted for the screen by Stewart Harcourt. The original air date was 11 July 2010 in the United States, and it was aired on Christmas Day 2010 in the UK. The cast includes
Dame Eileen Atkins as Princess Dragomiroff,
Hugh Bonneville as Masterman,
Jessica Chastain as Mary Debenham,
Barbara Hershey as Mrs Hubbard,
Toby Jones as Ratchett, and
David Morrissey as Colonel Arbuthnot. The character Cyrus Hardman (the former American police officer turned private detective) has been largely amalgamated with the chauffeur Foscarelli (inasmuch as being the lover of the dead maid) and Dr Constantine (who in the novel is unrelated to the murders) becomes a co-conspirator, depicted as having been the Armstrong family's doctor in America. As in the 2017 film, MacQueen's father was the prosecutor rather than the Armstrongs' lawyer, whose career was ruined after he was threatened into acquitting Cassetti. The adaptation's treatment of Ratchett's murder is much darker than the novel. The killers gather in his cabin and stab him one by one while he is drugged but awake, rather than stabbing him independently while he is unconscious. The ending dwells on Poirot's horror at the act of mob justice and his moral conflict, in view of his Catholic faith and commitment to the law, when he decides not to tell the Yugoslavian police what he knows. The interior of the Orient Express was reproduced at
Pinewood Studios in
London, while other locations include the
Freemason Hall,
Nene Valley Railway, and a street in
Malta (shot to represent Istanbul).
Japanese TV adaptation (2015) A Japanese adaptation was broadcast over two nights in January 2015 on
Fuji Television, titled '''', and it featured several famous actors, including
Ninomiya Kazunari,
Matsushima Nanako,
Tamaki Hiroshi,
Kichise Michiko,
Nishida Toshiyuki, and
Sawamura Ikki. The main character, Suguro Takeru, modeled on Hercule Poirot, was played by actor
Nomura Mansai. The first night featured a storyline true to the original text, but set in Japan in 1933. In this version, the train
Orient Kyuukou ran from the western city of
Shimonoseki to
Tokyo, with the train stopped by a small avalanche near
Sekigahara, Gifu. The second night was an original story.
Stage American playwright
Ken Ludwig adapted the novel into a play,
Murder on the Orient Express, which premiered at the
McCarter Theatre in
Princeton, New Jersey on 14 March 2017. The production was directed by
Emily Mann, and starred
Allan Corduner in the role of
Hercule Poirot. In 2024,
Old Globe Theatre presented the
Asolo Repertory Theatre Production reprise of the Ken Ludwig adaptation. Andrew Sellon led the cast in the starring role previously played at
Maltz Jupiter Theatre. The stage's turntable rotated between the train exterior, the dining car, the sleeping compartments, and the parlor car as snow effects set the scene.
Comics Murder on the Orient Express was adapted into an authorized graphic novel illustrated by Bob Al-Greene and published by William Morrow Paperbacks on 12 September 2023.
Games A board game based on the novel named
Orient Express was released in 1985. The
point and click computer game
Agatha Christie: Murder on the Orient Express was released in November 2006 for Windows and expanded on Agatha Christie's original story, revolving around Antoinette Marceau – a new character created specifically for the game – as
Hercule Poirot (voiced by
David Suchet) is ill and recovering in his train compartment. On October 19, 2023,
Microids released a new video game adaptation titled
Agatha Christie – Murder on the Orient Express. Having one prologue and thirteen chapters,
Agatha Christie – Murder on the Orient Express faithfully adapts and modernizes the novel's plot, with the main characters retaining their original names and using mobile phones and computers. Players alternately take on the two roles of Poirot and an American detective named Joanna Locke. For four years, Locke has been investigating the kidnapping and murder of Daisy Armstrong, and boarded the
Orient Express in a failed attempt to arrest Cassetti for the crime and prove Susanne's innocence. Switching between flashbacks and the present time, the in-game investigation progresses as Poirot and Locke exchange clues regarding Cassetti and the Armstrong case. While the first eight chapters of the game adapt the entire novel, a twist expands the plot by adding a thirteenth killer, who had murdered Cassetti before the Armstrongs' and Susanne's loved ones unleashed their revenge on him. The five remaining chapters of the game revolve around Poirot and Locke hunting down the perpetrator and bringing to light Cassetti's own crimes and other victims.
Agatha Christie – Murder on the Orient Express is available on PC and PlayStation, Xbox, and Nintendo Switch consoles. ==Publication history==