Month: June 2015

EP1600: Ellery Queen: The Vanishing Magician

An old vaudeville magician makes a wager for $25,000 that he can disappear from a house under the nose of New York’s finest.

Original Air Date: November 6, 1943

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EP1599: The Saint: Button, Button

Vincent Price

The Saint is called by a wealthy man who tells him to go home. The Saint is then knocked out and finds his host missing.

Original Air Date: March 11, 1951

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Audio Drama Review: The Twilight Zone Radio Dramas, Volume 1


The Twilight Zone was one of television’s most remembered and enduring dramas from the 1950s and 60s, running from 1959-64 and then being revived for a movie in 1983, and revival TV series from 1985-89 and again from 2002-2003.

Carl Amari, best known for his work at Radio Spirit, brought the Twilight Zone to radio in a series starring Hollywood actors and narrated by Stacey Keach, who took over for Rod Serling as narrator. The stories are often expanded and updated to the reflected the twenty-first century technology and society. We’ll take a look at the first volume of Twilight Zone Audio Dramas from Audible.com which collects six stories.

“Night Call” features Mariette Hartley playing an old shut-in who begins receiving disturbing calls with nobody there. The story is creepy and Heartley’s performance is perfect as she manages to play this character with gusto and depth. I found the ending a little disappointing but that is due to the original story.

“Long Live Walter Jameson”-Lou Diamond Phillips plays Walter Jameson, a professor with a secret. The father of the woman he’s about to marry discovers photos of Jameson dating back to the 19th Century. Phillips turns in the best performance of the set and the story has a classic Twilight Zone feel to it.

“The Lateness of the Hour”-In a house full of androids, with a middle-aged couple and their daughter, the daughter (played by Jane Seymour) is fed up with their artificial life and wants something far more real. It’s a wonderful Science Fiction story with a classic twist at the end.

“The 30-Fathom Grave”-Is a good and proper ghost story with kind of a classic feel as a 1960s Submarine comes upon the wreck from World War II and one crew member goes a little beserk over it.The story has a period feel—for the most part. The series had the idea of giving a woman the role of the ship’s doctor, but you don’t have to be an expert in military history to know that wouldn’t have been the case. Either moving the story forward a couple decades or having a male doctor would have made sense. In the case, the woman doctor on the 1960s Naval vessel came off as a distracting anachronism.

“The Man in the Bottle” features a modern day genie that offers a couple who owns a pawnshop four wishes Ed Begley, Jr. stars in a tale that’s amusing and has its own subtle lessons, though some of them unintended.

“The Night of the Meek” is probably the biggest disappointment of this collection. As made starring Art Carney, the story was a Christmas classic. Chris McDonald steps into Carney’s role and almost sleepwalks through it. The expansions and the revisions of the story make it even weaker. I will admit that, on reflection, “Night of the Meek” had its problems and if done wrong would have come off almost as bad as the audio version if not for the fact that Art Carney was in the lead and the future Oscar-nominated Actor was able to take a performance that would have been forgettable and make it gripping and real. Sadly Mr. McDonald was out of his depth in terms of doing this for radio.

Overall, this is a good collection with some good audio quality, some solid soundscapes, and mostly well-done musical production. I will admit the appeal of these audio dramas is probably a bit less than it was in 2002 when they first began. With the development of Netflix and Amazon Prime, coupled with 4G networks, many people can watch any episode of the original Twilight Zone anytime and anywhere they want and in most cases the originals are still better.

Still, if you’re a fan of audio drama, these are worth a listen. It’s particularly noteworthy for allowing us to hear many modern American actors in audio drama. Beyond those in this first set John Rhys-Davies, Louis Gossett, Jr.  and Jason Alexander are among the stars who found themselves in the Twilight Zone.

In addition to the sets on Audible, you can download three episodes off their website with a subscription to their newsletter.

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EP1598: Dragnet: The Big Fake

Jack Webb

Friday and Romero investigate an allegation of robbery by a police officer.

Original Air Date: June 1, 1950

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EP1597: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Diamond Dilemma Matter

Bob Bailey

Johnny is called in to prove that diamonds weren’t stolen by extraterrestrials.

Original Air Date: March 2, 1958

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EP1596: Nick Carter: The Case of the Absent Clue

Lon Clark

A shopkeeper is killed and suspicion falls on a racketeer who beat him up for not going along with his number’s racket.

Original Air Date: March 7, 1948

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EP1595: Philip Marlowe: The Bid for Freedom

Gerald MohrA mentally imbalanced woman escapes from a sanitarium and Marlowe fears her husband will be a target.

Original Air Date: January 21, 1950

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EP1594: Ellery Queen: The World Series Crime

Carleton Young

Ellery is called in to find a baseball star’s lucky bat.

Original Air Date: October 2, 1943

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EP1593: The Saint: The What-Not that Got Hot

Vincent Price

The Saint and Louie witness the Saint’s house being robbed and the Saint is set on to a series of deaths.

Original Air Date: March 4, 1951

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Telefilm Review: The Brazilian Connection

In the 1980s, the Saint returned to television with a series of TV movies starring Simon Dutton. “The Brazilian Connection” originally aired in 1989. In it, the Saint takes a hand to investigate when a baby is kidnapped in broad daylight.

The best thing about this updated Saint story is that Simon Dutton isn’t Val Kilmer. The second best thing about it is everything that doesn’t have much to do with the main mystery. There’s the early scene which has the Saint robbing a couple of criminals and getting away in style and then busting up an art fraud ring. Inspector Teal’s got a new boss who believes the Saint needs to be brought to heel, despite Teel’s support of Templar.

There’s lovely location shooting in London as well as some nice effects.

As a leading man, Dutton isn’t in the same league as the great Saint Actors: George Sanders, Roger Moore, or Vincent Price. He’s more like Hugh Sinclair, who played the role in two films in the 1940s. He’s certainly adequate, looks up to the part, and can be charming when the script lets him be. The problem is, far too often, the script doesn’t.

While this is better than the 1996 movie by a country mile, it seems the creative team doesn’t really understand the Saint and thus we’re given a story that could feature any 1980s Detective/Action hero.

The big failing of, “The Brazilian Connection” is it’s mystery story. It’s told with little style or real intrigue, and it’s hard to buy into the plot.

You could applaud the story for being years ahead of its time by its discussion of human trafficking, but the way the movie addresses the issue is unbelievable.

I’m not spoiling anything to explain the couple who kidnapped the baby in London worked for a black market baby ring that kidnapped babies from Brazil, particularly rural areas, taking advantage of local corruption to kidnap babies and smuggle them out of the country. The mystery is who the boss is.

So these kidnappers who have this Brazilian deal set up where due to their connections, they can easily smuggle babies out of the countries. So they are walking down the street, see a stroller, and do an impromptu kidnapping in the middle of London where they have none of the advantages they do in Brazil. Why? They figured they could pick up some extra bucks.

The story also does a disservice to adoptive parents who are concerned with overly strict regulations that made it difficult for them to adopt by tying people who support their cause to a baby smuggling ring.

Overall, the story isn’t awful, but it’s not great, either, and it didn’t leave me at all curious to see future episodes of this incarnation of the Saint.

Rating: 3.0 out of 5.0

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EP1592: Dragnet: The Big Key

Jack Webb
Friday and Romero investigate a brutal Christmas eve murder where the only clue is a single.

Original Air Date: May 25, 1950

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EP1591: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Durango Laramie Matter

Bob Bailey
Johnny is called in when an eccentric oil millionaire disappears on his way to Hartford to pay his insurance policy.

Original Air Date: February 23, 1958

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EP1590: Nick Carter: The Case of the Boy Who Got Lost

Lon Clark
The older brother of a sixteen year old boy calls Nick  in to investigate when his brother appears to be mixed up in a murder.

Original Air Date: February 29, 1948

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EP1589: Philip Marlowe: The Covered Bridge

Gerald Mohr

Marlowe is taken by gunpoint to drive three people to Mexico and he’s determined to find out what the score is.

Original Air Date: January 14, 1950

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EP1588: Ellery Queen: Adventure of the Circus Train

Carleton Young

A long-time circus owner is murdered on a train.

Original Air Date: March 27, 1943

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