The glamour and rich history of the
Orient Express has frequently lent itself to the plot of books and films and as the subject of television documentaries.
Literature •
Dracula (1897) by
Bram Stoker: while
Count Dracula escapes from England to
Varna by sea, the group sworn to destroy him travels to Paris and takes the Orient Express, arriving in Varna ahead of him. •
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1925) by Anita Loos, wherein Lorelei and her friend Dorothy take a journey on the
Oriental Express from Paris to Central Europe. •
Stamboul Train (1932) by
Graham Greene • The short story "
Have You Got Everything You Want?" (1933), by
Agatha Christie •
Murder on the Orient Express (1934), one of the most famous works by
Agatha Christie, takes place on the
Simplon Orient Express • "
Minder on the Orient Express" (1985): a special episode of the long-running
ITV sit-com
Minder. • ''
Whicker's World – Aboard The Orient Express'': Travel journalist
Alan Whicker joined the inaugural service of the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express to Venice in 1982, interviewing invited guests and celebrities along the way. • ''
Gavin Stamp's Orient Express'': in 2007 UK's
Five broadcast an arts/travel series which saw the historian journey from Paris to Istanbul along the old
Orient Express route. • The 1987 cartoon
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles had an episode titled "Turtles on the Orient Express". As the title suggests it is primarily based on the train. • A 1993 advert for
Bisto Fuller Flavour Gravy Granules featured in it with a young couple. • In 1994's season 1 episode of
Where on Earth Is Carmen Sandiego? called, "The Gold Old Bad Days",
Carmen Sandiego and her V.I.L.E. gang are given a challenge to do something low tech by The Player robbery. Carmen's goal is the train. • The 1995 cartoon
Madeline had an episode titled
Madeline on the Orient Express, in which a chef stole a snake. • The episode "
Emergence" of the science fiction television series
Star Trek: The Next Generation partially takes place on a
Holodeck representation of the
Orient Express. • On the 15 May 2007 broadcast of
Jeopardy!, the shows theme music "Think" was played by a person on the train’s piano, since the Final Jeopardy clue was about the
Orient Express. • In the British soap opera
EastEnders, in 1986, characters
Den and Angie Watts spent their honeymoon on the train. • "Aboard the Orient Express"
Get Smart series 1, episode 13 is set on the
Orient Express. • In one episode of the British cartoon series
Danger Mouse, called "Danger Mouse on the Orient Express" (a parody of
Murder on the Orient Express), Danger Mouse and Penfold travel on the train on their way back to London from Venice. Danger Mouse's arch enemy Greenback is also on the train. • In an episode of the television series
Chuck, Chuck and Sarah decide to go
AWOL and take a trip on the
Orient Express. • At the end of the
Doctor Who episode "
The Big Bang", the
Doctor receives a call for help from the "Orient Express — in space". This setting is used in the episode "
Mummy on the Orient Express", including a reference to the ending of "The Big Bang", four years later. The
Orient Express also briefly appears in the beginning of the 2024 Christmas special, "
Joy to the World". • In episode 15 of television series
Forever (U.S. TV series), Dr Henry Morgan travelled from
Budapest to
Istanbul with his wife Abigail Morgan on his honeymoon in 1955. He performed an appendectomy on a member of the fictional Urkesh royalty. •
The Backyardigans episode "
Le Master of Disguise" features the Orient Express, showing Uniqua, Pablo, Austin, Tasha and Tyrone going to Istanbul from Paris. • The series ''
Agatha Christie's Poirot'', which adapted the entirety of Christie's works featuring
Hercule Poirot as played by
David Suchet, included an adaptation of
Murder on the Orient Express as part of its 2010 episodes. • ''Michael Palin's Around The World in Eighty Days
(1988). Michael Palin travelled on the Orient Express'' in episode 1 from London Victoria to Innsbruck, using a ferry across the English Channel from Folkestone. The train did not continue on to Venice because of a strike on the Italian railways. • One of the episodes of the animated series
The Adventures of Paddington Bear titled “Paddington on the Orient Express” features the titular bear and Mr. Gruber on the train. They end up being part of a mystery when a bracelet goes missing.
Music •
Alex Otterlei’s "Horror on the Orient Express" is inspired by the
Call of Cthulhu RPG. The integral symphonic version was released on CD in 2002, a 26-minute
Suite for
Concert Band was published in 2012. •
Orient Expressions, a musical group from Turkey who combine traditional Turkish music with elements of electronica, take their name from the train service. • The
Jean Michel Jarre album
The Concerts in China has a track entitled "Orient Express" as track 1 of disc 2, though the relation to the train is unknown. • A
concert band piece,
Orient Express was written by
Philip Sparke. • There was a band based in Hawaii called
Liz Damon's Orient Express. • A band in France with exotic instrumentation was called The Orient Express.
Games Sources: • The
role-playing game Call of Cthulhu (1981) used the train for one of its more famous campaigns,
Horror on the Orient Express. • The TSR role-playing game
Top Secret had a 1983 module based on the train titled "Operation Orient Express". • Just Games released a murder mystery boardgame (1985) called
Orient Express using the famous train route as a backdrop for solving murders. The game is based on the novel
Murder on the Orient Express by
Agatha Christie. •
Heart of China (1991 computer game) has a final sequence in the
Orient Express. An action scene takes place on the roof. • The
Orient Express plays host to an adventure game by
Jordan Mechner.
The Last Express (1997 computer game) is a murder mystery game set around the last ride of the
Orient Express before it suspended operations at the start of World War I. Robert Cath, an American doctor wanted by French police as he is suspected of the murder of an Irish police officer, becomes involved in a maelstrom of treachery, lies, political conspiracies, personal interests, romance and murder. The game has 30 characters representing a cross-section of European forces at the time. • In the game
Crash Bandicoot 3: Warped (1998) for PS1, the third level (which is Asian-themed) is named
Orient Express. • The
Orient Express was featured in two scenarios in the
Railroad Tycoon series: • In
Railroad Tycoon II (1998), players get to connect Paris to Constantinople in a territory buying challenge. • In
Railroad Tycoon 3 (2003) players need to connect
Vienna to
Istanbul. • The train is featured in
Microsoft Train Simulator (2001), where its route is a section from
Innsbruck to
Sankt Anton am Arlberg in Austria. • The
Orient Express cars were made available for download to use in
Auran's
Trainz Railroad Simulator 2004 or later versions by the content creation group FMA. • The video game adaptation of
From Russia with Love includes scenes aboard the
Orient Express •
The Adventure Company developed a point-and-click adventure based on Agatha Christie's novel,
Agatha Christie: Murder on the Orient Express (2006). • The first scenes of
The Raven: Legacy of a Master Thief, a 2013 game for PC, involve a mystery set amongst train carriages inspired by the
Orient Express. • The entire
Orient Express set was used in the Facebook game,
TrainStation (2010). • The
Orient Express is a usable engine and caboose in the mobile game
Tiny Rails (2016). • In
Euro Truck Simulator 2 (2012) there is an achievement called
Orient Express requiring players to complete deliveries between the following cities: Paris-Strasbourg, Strasbourg-Munich, Munich-Vienna, Vienna-Budapest, Budapest-Bucharest, Bucharest-Istanbul. • In
Train Simulator, it features several routes of the Arlberg-Orient Express from London to Faversham, Bludenz to Innsbruck, a few lines around Salzburg, and a small section of the Simplon-Orient Express in Ljubljana. It also features a part of the ÖBB EN Orient Express and the original Orient Express line between Strasbourg and Munich. ==See also==