Month: October 2014

EP1393: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Funny Money Matter

Bob Bailey

Johnny investigates when an insured pays off his policy with thousands of dollars in counterfeit money.

Original Air Date: June 30, 1957

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EP1392: Nick Carter: The Case of the Clumsy Forgeries

Lon Clark

Nick investigates the case of a wealthy heart patient who appears to have been murdered.

Original Air Date: June 11, 1946

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EP1391: Philip Marlowe: Heat Wave

Gerald Mohor

Marlowe is hired the identity of a burlesque dancer by a woman who think she’s her sister.

Original Air Date: April 16, 1949

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EP1390:Easy Money: The Gem Switch

Larry Haines
A small jewelry store has a $5,000 ruby disappear and be replaced with a duplicate. Mike Trent thinks he knows how to get it back-with the aid of a third hand.

Original Air Date: December 19, 1954

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EP1389: The Saint: The Color Blind Killer

Vincent Price

The Saint tries to unravel a string of murders on a cruise ship.

Original Air Date: September 18, 1949

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Telefilm Review: Dead Man’s Folly

In the Series 13 film, Ariadne Oliver’s been hire to set up a “Murder Hunt” for a fête, which is a sort of  bazaar or carnival. However, Oliver is suspicious by some changes requested to her scenario and calls Poirot in for help.

Trouble starts with the actual murder of the Girl Guide who was to play the victim in the murder hunt. This is followed by the disappearance of the lady of the house.

This is a solid mystery that lives up to the highest standards of the Poirot series. I also preferred this over the Peter Ustinov version from the 1980s, if for no other reason than I really had trouble buying Jean Stapleton as Mrs. Oliver in the Ustinov version while Zoe Wanamaker carries the role off with style.

Rating: 4.25 out of 5.0

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EP1388: Dragnet: Production 11 (aka Sixteen Jewel Thefts)

Jack Webb
Friday and Romero search for a jewel thief whose committed sixteen robberies in sixteen nights.

Original Air Date: August 18, 1949

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EP1387: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Parley Barron Matter

Bob Bailey

Johnny is called to find a fishing-loving retiree who never caught a fish.

Original Air Date: June 23, 1957

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EP1386: Nick Carter: The Case of the Dictaphone Murder

Lon Clark
A man is found murdered in his room with a dictaphone in the closet.

Original Air Date: June 4, 1946

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EP1385: Philip Marlowe: The Name to Remember

Gerald Mohr
Marlowe is hired to find out the identity of a man with a t-shirt who has been stalking his client. The client is found dead and he’s not the only one.

Original Air Date: April 9, 1949

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EP1384: Easy Money: Galloping Ivories

Larry Haines

Mike Trent sets out to expose a big time gambler taking wealthy kids’ money in a crooked craps game.

Original Air Date: November 14, 1954

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EP1383: The Saint: Greed Causes Murder

Vincent Price

The Saint investigates when a gangster is pressuring an old man to sell his jalopy to him.

Original Air Date: August 14, 1949

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Book Review: Death on a Deadline

Robert Goldsborough’s 2nd Nero Wolfe novel began poorly but improved to mediocrity by the end.

Wolfe is concerned that a Scottish newspaper baron with a reputation for sensationalism will purchase the Gazette, Wolfe’s long time ally and source of information. Wolfe sets out to prevent it. However, when one of the principals in the Gazette is killed and everyone else thinks its suicide, Wolfe concludes that it’s actually murder and sets out to prove it.

The first third to half of the book is carnival of flummery. To start with, Goldsborough brings partisanship into the book. Notice, I send partisanship, not politics. In finding out about the misdeeds of the news tycoon, Wolfe learns from Lon Cohen that McLaren’s papers have consistently endorsed Republicans and Wolfe  expresses his disapproval of endorsing Republicans and includes this as a talking point in his full page New York Times ad. (more on that in a bit.)

Politics is nothing new to Wolfe’s world. Wolfe books include anti-Communism, anti-McCarthyism, concern about civil liberties, and civil rights. Even individual political figures such as J Edgar Hoover, Joe McCarthy, and Richard Nixon. However, in each of those cases, he was upset about their specific action. Wolfe never expressed loathing of an entire political party in Stout’s work.

Of course, a progressive could argue that the Republican Party of Stout’s age was more diverse and the modern version was more uniformly wrong by Wolfe’s standards. However, this case is never made. Rather, Wolfe is presented as a partisan with unexplained animus against an entire political party. And this animus was never actually raised again and had no relevance to the plot. Indeed, had Goldsborough merely had Wolfe object to shotty journalism, the story would have lost nothing and he wouldn’t have violated the Wolfe character.

Beyond partisanship, Wolfe’s scheme of putting a full page ad in the New York Times was dumb. Doubtless, Goldsborough remembered the countless times Wolfe placed display ads in the paper, but never a full page ad for something that really didn’t need it. The point of the full page ad was to get public attention so Wolfe could meet with people involved with the Gazette and the attempt to sell it to prevent the sale to McLaren. However, Wolfe could have run a smaller ad, or given his notoriety sent in an op-ed and saved the money. In addition, we get to read the ad and it’s dull and sounds nothing like anything Stout’s Wolfe would have said.

Archie is even more vapid when he bets Wolfe $10 that the Times won’t publish the ad. Given that Archie has read The Times for years, this was just a stupid bet and it’s unbelievable Archie would have proposed it. Like most attempts to reconstruct the Wolfe-Archie magic in this book, this one fails.

Goldsborough also has mixed success at updating Archie and Wolfe to the 1980s. On one hand, it’s reasonable to imagine that Archie would want a personal computer and Wolfe not wanting to do it. Stout’s Wolfe objected to buying newer cars and buying Archie a new typewriter. However, in one lazily written scene where Wolfe shows respect to a woman, Archie wished he had a VCR so he could record the moment. However, as he was not watching this on TV, he really meant he wished he had a video camera.

The mystery itself was decent but forgettable. There was no suspect, client, or interview in this story that was memorable. Wolfe performs no stunning act of showmanship. There was no big surprise twist in the investigation. It was bland and the solution we were presented strained credulity.

The best thing about this novel for the person who has read Stout’s Wolfe is that it truly makes you appreciate all the little touches Stout put in that make reading his Nero Wolfe stories so memorable. One thing this book made me notice was the way that Stout chose dinner conversations. Stout’s Wolfe talked about a wide variety of topics from agriculture to histories of the ancient world, to obscure scientific questions, and anthropology. I never knew what exactly Wolfe was talking about, but I felt like this was the type of thing a well-read genius would discuss. Unfortunately, Mr. Goldsborough’s line of conversation for Wolfe seems far more limited with him mostly talking politics, political books, American history, and sports. Yes, Nero Wolfe discusses whether College athletes should be paid at the dinner table in this book.

While dinner conversation is prosaic, I do give Goldsborough credit for one thing: Compared to the last book, Goldsborough’s Wolfe reads in a more Wolfian manner based on the titles of the books of Wolfe mentioned.

Still, I admit being eager to see Wolfe hold a confab and name a murderer when I got to that part of the book. Goldsborough’s book allows you a chance to see Wolfe and Archie in action. If you can get past all the flummery and just think about better Nero Wolfe stories, you may enjoy this book more than I did.

Rating: PFui!

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EP1382: Dragnet: Production 10 (aka: The Maniac Murderer)

Jack Webb

Friday and Romero search for a man who has already brutally murdered two women.

Original Air Date: August 11, 1949

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Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Dixon Murder Matter (EP1381)

Bob Bailey

Johnny returns to where he investigated last week’s missing person’s case to solve the murder of a young woman.

Original Air Date: June 16, 1957

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