It is called the Orient Express.
The original Orient Express Train is no longer in use. However, there are different trains throughout the world that are known as the Orient Express that are still being used.
The Orient Express? Maybe
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the Orient Express
obviousely the orient express in Europe
Hercule Poirot boards the train in Istanbul at the start of "Murder on the Orient Express".
The train featured in the Agatha Christie story "Murder on the Orient Express" was the setting for the 1974 film adaptation of the same name.
Hercule Poirot first interviews the conductor of the train, Pierre Michel, in "Murder on the Orient Express" by Agatha Christie.
The original Orient Express train service stopped running in 2009 due to declining interest and increased competition from modern transportation methods like airplanes. There are several tourist trains that now operate under the name "Orient Express" on various routes, but they are not part of the original service.
In the book "Murder on the Orient Express" by Agatha Christie, the Orient Express stops at several locations including Istanbul, Belgrade, and Zagreb. The main setting for the novel is on board the train while it is traveling from Istanbul to Calais.
The Orient Express is the name of a long-distance passenger train, the route for which has changed considerably in modern times. The first run of The Orient Express was on 4 October 1883. The train travelled from Paris to Giurgiu in Romania, via Munich and Vienna. At Giurgiu, passengers were ferried across the Danube to Ruse in Bulgaria to pick up another train to Varna. From here they completed their journey to Istanbul by ferry. The Orient Express reached the height of its popularity in the 1930s, when three parallel services ran. These included the Orient Express, the Simplon Orient Express, which took a more southerly route via Milan, Venice and Trieste, and also the Arlberg Orient Express, which ran via Zurich and Innsbruck to Budapest, with sleeper cars running onwards from there to Bucharest and Athens.