Month: July 2017

AWR0025: Cavalcade of America: My Son John (Summer of Bogart)

Amazing World of Radio

A new father (Humphrey Borgart) takes a shine to his new assistant radio man on a Submarine. Unfortunately, the young man is labeled a jinx.

Original Air Date: October 29, 1945

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EP2255: Richard Diamond: The Hatpin Murder Case

Dick Powell

Diamond flies to Oklahoma to investigate the murder of a wealthy cattleman.

Original Air Date: September 27, 1950

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EP2254: That Hammer Guy: Mike Hammer Sees Red

Larry Haines

Mike’s secretary Velda has a brother who is a Communist, and he’s in Velda’s apartment shot.

Original Air Date: June 2, 1953

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EP2253: Night Beat: Black Cat

Frank Lovejoy

A disturbed abandoned cat sets Randy into the midst of a murder mystery in a tenement where all the suspects are oddballs.

Original Air Date: November 3, 1950

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EP2252s: Suspense: Library Book

Myrna Loy
A librarian learns of a book missing a page and her investigation leads her to a kidnapping.

Original Air Date: September 20, 1945

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The Rathbone-Bruce Countdown, Part Four

After four weeks, we get to the cream of this crop of these fantastic films. (For previous films, (see Part One , Part Two, and Part Three.

3) Sherlock Holmes in Washington (1943):

The third of a mini-series within the films focusing on World War II sees Holmes and Watson off for Washington, seeking to recover microfilm vital to the war effort. The film is more a spy thriller than a traditional detective story, but Rathbone makes it work.

The film features another solid performance from Rathbone. In this one, Holmes is matched up against sophisticated and ruthless Nazi spies who will do anything to capture the microfilm. This is one of the best types of Holmes films, with the villains and Holmes racing against time towards a solution.

The tension is heightened by clever camera work surrounding the object of the quest, which is a matchbook containing the missing microfilm. The producers rarely let the matchbook out of our sight. We see it passed from hand to hand, even follow it on a tray at a party. It was a very clever and fun device.

2) Sherlock Holmes: The Voice of Terror (1942)

The Voice of Terror brought Holmes and Watson off the radio and back on to motion picture screens and relaunched the series at Universal, and set the series back into the modern times of World War II Great Britain, placing our heroes in the mix of one of the greatest fights in history. This movie has a ripped from the headlines feel as Holmes seeks out a man whose diabolical broadcast were designed to destroy the morale of the beleaguered British public by disclosing classified war information over the radio.

The cinematography was inexpensive but well-done. If you get the restored version from UCLA, the barroom scene where Holmes seeks help in weeding out the Voice of Terror is extremely well-shot. The solution to the case is unexpected and the film packs an emotional wallop. The spirit of World War II comes through in the film. The Voice of Terror is a film about sacrifice, courage, and the indomitable spirit that refused to blink in the face of Nazi Germany.

Of course, there are many people who question the decision to have movies where Sherlock Holmes fights in World War II. However, we must remember that at the time the movie was released, survival of Great Britain was an open question, and the movie has the sense of that. What this means is that the stakes of the film are high and the film had a sense of this larger story going on in the real world. It would be odd for Holmes not to be involved in these sort of cases.

World War II brought many changes to the lives of fictional detectives. Not only Sherlock Holmes, but other detectives such as Nero Wolfe and Charlie Chan lent their skills to the war effort. World War II was when people from all walks of life were having their lives shaken up. Holmes was no different..

And what would Arthur Conan Doyle think of his hero becoming a Nazi buster? The last line of the film provides a clue. Holmes tells Watson, “But there’s an East wind coming all the same. Such a wind as never blew on England yet. It will be cold and bitter, Watson, and a good many of us may wither before its blast. But it’s God’s own wind none the less. And a greener, better, stronger land will be in the sunshine when the wind is clearer.” The quote was actually a line Doyle wrote for Holmes in “His Last Bow,” which was set during World War I. I have no doubt that this film is one Doyle would approve of.

1) The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1939)

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes is not just the very best of the Rathbone-Bruce Sherlock Holmes films, but the best Holmes film I’ve yet seen. The movie begins with Professor Moriarty (played superbly by George Zucco) being acquitted of a crime and Holmes pledging to bring him to the gallows. Moriarty responds by planning an ostentatious crime and plans to keep Holmes distracted by giving him a puzzle so fascinating that it’ll keep Holmes occupied while Moriarty pulls off the crime of the century.

While Hound of the Baskervilles introduced us to Rathbone as Holmes, he really begins to own the role in this performance. The dynamic between Holmes and Moriarty has never been better. The crimes are clever and well-executed. The film represents the ultimate in the Holmes-Moriarty battle of wits and the battle is not limited to wits only. The confrontation between Holmes and Moriarty at the end of the movie is well-shot and well-scored, making for an exciting and well-paced end to the adventure.

The movie also has the some nice little touches including a fun musical interlude. In addition, unlike later Holmes films which were shot on a limited budget due to wartime restrictions, this film is a beautifully shot period piece.

Thus, while many great and good Holmes would follow, if I had to pick only one Sherlock Holmes film to take on a desert island, this would be the one.

EP2252: Dragnet: The Big Signet

Jack Webb

Friday investigates a case of an elderly shopkeeper who was beaten and robbed of his father’s signet ring.

Original Air Date: July 31, 1952

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YouTube Channel Caught Up

Since I announced the YouTube channel a little more than four months ago, I’ve been working to bring our show’s archives to YouTube to introduce the Great and after a long process filled with trial and error, I’m pleased to announce that were caught up to where I want the channel to be. As it’s an archive, the YouTube channel is ten weeks behind the podcast feed.

Currently our YouTube channel features 2,243 videos including the last eight episodes of our Public Domain Video Theater. With YouTube’s Playlist feature, listeners can from start to finish through fifty-eight series playlists as well as seven complete seasons playlists. In addition, we have special playlists such as the one containing all of our special episodes and our lady sleuth playlist.

What’s next for the channel? Those who follow the show the show on YouTube will get six new detective episodes a week on a daily schedule of the Great Detectives of Old Time Radio. In addition, I’ll be posting old episodes of the Amazing World of Radio and the War. I won’t be posting Superman as there are way too many episodes of that series that it needs own channel. I’ll also be working on a channel trainer and getting channel art added.

Youtube is a great new venture, but our podcast remains our primary contact with the audience. Last month, we had under 16,000 views on YouTube which is pretty impressive until you realize we had 713,000 unique downloads from the podcast. However, you interact with the show, as always, thank you for listening and for supporting the show.

EP2251: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Killer Kin Matter

Bob Bailey

The brother of a man who accidentally killed himself while Johnny was pursuing him calls Johnny promising to kill him.

Original Air Date: September 4, 1960

When making your travel plans, remember http://johnnydollarair.com

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EP2250: Boston Blackie: Murder Aboard the Swan

Richard Kollmar

The only passenger on board a ship is murdered.

Original Air Date: July 30, 1946

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AWR0024: Suspense: Love’s Lovely Counterfeit (Summer of Bogart)

Amazing World of Radio

An ambitious hood (Humphrey Bogart) seeks to bring down his boss and forms an alliance with a reform politician’s campaign aide.

Original Air Date: March 8, 1945
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EP2249: Richard Diamond: The Bald Head Case

Dick Powell

A man’s neck is broken in a hair loss salon and Diamond has to figure out who committed the murder.

Original Air Date: September 20, 1950

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EP2248: That Hammer Guy: What You Don’t Know About Dames

Larry Haines

Mike’s pal, Captain Pat Chambers, has a serious girlfriend and according to anonymous caller he’s also got serious problems.

Original Air Date: April 28, 1953

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EP2247: Night Beat: The Doctor’s Daughter

Frank Lovejoy

Randy is outraged when a doctor chooses to take a vacation in France rather than operate on a man whose life hangs by a thread after a gunshot wound.

Original Air Date: October 27, 1950

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Video Theater 112: Richard Diamond: The Chess Player

The wife of an eccentric businessman hires Diamond to keep her husband safe, to do so he’ll need to brush up on his chess.

Season 1, Episode 8

Original Air Date: August 19, 1957