![]() ![]() ![]() Also, throughout the episode, Poirot complains of the diet programme he has to follow (on Miss Lemon's orders, of course). In turn, the Jolly Roger Hotel becomes Sandy Cove Hotel, a health resort, and all the guests are admitted with (more or less plausible) health issues. ![]() It also provides a rather humorous reason for Poirot to go on holiday - he is admitted to hospital and is considered 'medically obese' (later revealed to be food poisoning, and Hastings's restaurant is obviously to blame - another bad investment). This scene allows the three leads to be acquainted with Arlena Stuart, Kenneth Marshall and the man who is later believed to have been blackmailing Stuart. Japp and Poirot attend the opening night (Miss Lemon, of course, is 'way behind with her filing'). The solution this time around is to add an Argentinean restaurant, in which Hastings has invested much of his capital. First, he had to reintroduce the Big Three properly, just as he had started doing with Lord Edgware Dies. ![]() Horowitz remains largely faithful to the novel, but there are several minor changes. It was adapted for television by Anthony Horowitz and directed by Brian Farnham. This episode was based on the novel Evil Under the Sun, first published in 1941. ![]()
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