The "Why Didn't They Ask Evans" First Clip Introduces Frankie Derwent

The "Why Didn't They Ask Evans" First Clip Introduces Frankie Derwent

BritBox's announcement of Hugh Laurie's adaptation of Why Didn't They Ask Evans? last year marked the production studio's most prominent, most expensive original to date, and the first clip looks spectacular. If the company's response is any indication, it seems that the streaming service is happy with the results of its first foray into making Agatha Christie adaptations in-house; so happy, it's going to keep making them. At the Television Critic's Association press tour, the company announced that Laurie's next version was only the beginning. Three more Christie stories are being commissioned to follow and will join the amassed collection of other adaptations on the service.

But there's an interesting twist, especially for those of us who have become accustomed to multiple adaptations all stemming from the same source, whether it be Kenneth Branagh, Sarah Phelps, or the Agatha Christie Ltd. productions on ITV. BritBox will let each of these Christies stand on their own as completely separate works, allowing each director to put their own stamp on it, even as they may function as an interconnected universe. (BritBox compared it to DC Films, as opposed to Marvel. I cannot tell if this means I should start referring to it as the ACEU. Either way, we were promised no spandex.)

As for Why Didn't They Ask Evans?, Hugh Laurie told the assembled reporters that he believes there's a comic spirit to the novel, which tracks back to another big hit from the period. "Agatha Christie published this novel a year after Dashiell Hammett published The Thin Man. And I have it in my mind that she either read it, The Thin Man, or she saw the film which came out the same year. And I think she was animated by that. It's got a sort of American bounce to it and a comic spirit, which I absolutely adored in The Thin Man, too. And I've got a feeling that she did. And she wanted to imbue these characters with that kind of playfulness and spirit."

The first clip from the series certainly feels of a piece with that: