Month: November 2015

EP1731: Michael Shayne: The Murder Trial of Jack Holmes

Wally Maher

The fiancée of a newly convicted murderer dies while trying to give Mike a clue that would clear her intended.

Original Air Date: May 21, 1945

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EP1730: Dragnet: The Big Church

Jack Webb
Friday and Romero investigate when a pastor reports that a young woman in his congregation and himself have both been receiving threatening letters.

Original Air Date: November 2, 1950

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DVD Review: Just Off Broadway


In Just Off Broadway , Private Detective Michael Shayne is serving on a jury. He becomes convinced the defendant is innocent, so he votes not guilty and debates it in the jury room….

Actually, that’s what he would do in a rational world. Instead, Shayne conceals evidence from the police, gets a sleeping draft from the sheriff, and uses it to drug his roommate so he can escape a hotel room where he is sequestered with the rest of the jury and sets off on a madcap night of investigation to find the real killer.

The story works well as a Comedy Mystery, particularly as it’s an early film for Phil Silvers, who the first television generation would come to know as Sergeant Bilko. His role is relatively small but he plays it to the hilt. Nolan’s Shayne is very fun and charming. Majorie Weaver is solid if not outstanding as the female lead.

The quality of the restoration is very nice and probably better than most films in the series that have released, and the physical disk itself has a very elegant look. However, this comes at a cost. It is more than a bit expensive for a sixty-five minute B-movie even with the better quality.

It is far from the best movie in the series, but it’s still an enjoyable hour despite the fact that Shayne isn’t given a shred of motivation for his illegal actions. However, I liked the end, which, after so much absurdity, offers a realistic ending in a very funny way.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5.0

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EP1729: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Two-Faced Matter

Bob Bailey
Johnny investigates a five-year-old theft perpetrated against a group of eccentric Ludite furniture makers.

Original Air Date: August 10, 1958

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EP1728: Nick Carter: The Case of the Candidate’s Corpse

Lon Clark
A nervous politician asks for Nick’s help and then a body is found dead in the candidate’s hotel room.

Original Air Date: September 26, 1948

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EP1727: Philip Marlowe: The Pelican’s Roost

Gerald Mohr

Marlowe is called in by a wealthy woman who is in danger from a former suitor.

Original Air Date: June 28, 1950

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EP1726: Crime Files of Flamond: The Case of the Winning Widow

The wife of an efficiency expert wants a divorce, and the man her husband has accused her of having an affair with is murdered.

Original Air Date: Sometime in 1953

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EP1725: Michael Shayne: Date With a Wedding

Wally Maher

At Phyllis’s wedding, Shayne investigates the death of the father of the Bride.

Original Air Date: May 14, 1945

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EP1724s: Nightbeat: Am I My Brother’s Keeper?

Frank Lovejoy

A killer has escaped prison. When a crowd gathers to witness the murderer’s capture, a young couple in trouble captures Randy’s attention.

Original Rebroadcast Date: April 30, 1950

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Audio Drama Review: Return of the Jedi (the Original Radio Drama)


As the movie-viewing public awaits the seventh Star Wars film in December, we’ve been taking taking a look at the radio dramatizations. See my reviews of Star Wars and the Empire Strikes Back

While Star Wars and the Empire Strikes Back were dramatized within four years of their release date, it took twelve years for Return of the Jedi to be made due to behind-the-scenes drama. It didn’t come until 1996 and was produced by Highbridge Audio.

Compared to Star Wars, this radio adaptation did a far better job in taking the visual excitement of the source material and turning it into good audiodrama that painted pictures for the audience. The story was expanded in a few cases but generally remained faithful to the original story. They do a great job painting audio “pictures” of scenes like the madness of Jabba’s lair and Luke’s post-victory vision. The sound design is simply marvelous as is the direction with narration used naturally most of the time.

Unlike The Empire Strikes Back, the roles of Luke Skywalker and Lando Calrissian had to be recast with Joshua Fardon as Luke and Arye Gross as Lando. Fardon does a superb job as Luke. His voice is similar to Hamill’s and his acting is equally good, perhaps better in a few places. Gross is less satisfactory as Lando, though acceptable. Ed Asner plays Jabba the Hutt and does as good a job as the film.

The rest of the returning cast of major players turn in wonderful performances with Anthony Daniels as C-3PO, Brock Peters as Vader, Ann Sachs as Leia, and Perry King as Hans Solo. John Lithgow is far better as Yoda in Return of the Jedi than he was in Empire Strikes Back. 

Return of the Jedi works as the final act of this trilogy as the conclusion of our journey. In the first two  films  and the first half of this one, we see the characters struggle. Timidity, greed, fear, selfishness, treachery, and arrogance are things the characters  exhibited during the course of this trilogy. Yet, the end of Return of the Jedi, you see them at their very best in a glorious ending. The final episode of the Radio Drama captures the joy, exhilaration, and redemption of the end of one of the greatest science fiction sagas ever.

This is a tremendous adaptation with solid acting, superb sound design, and the brilliant music of John Williams.

Rating: 4.25 out of 5.00

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EP1724: Dragnet: The Big Meet

Jack Webb

Joe Friday goes undercover to catch a big time drug smuggler.

Original Air Date: October 26, 1950

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EP1723: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Lucky 4 Matter

Bob Bailey

Johnny travels to Colorado to investigate a rancher’s mysterious death.

Original Air Date: August 3, 1958

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EP1722: Nick Carter: The Case of the Homely Bride

Lon Clark

The daughter of a wealthy man marries a blackmailer and becomes the prime suspect when the blackmailer was murdered.

Original Air Date: September 19, 1948

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EP1721: Philip Marlowe: The Uneasy Head

Gerald Mohr
When someone slips Marlowe a mickey while he’s waiting for a would-be client, he wants to find out why.

Original Air Date: June 6, 1950

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EP1720: Crime Files of Flamond: The Case of the Ruinous Report

Mike Wallace

A man hires Flamond to help fake his own murder to prevent a real one and three more occur.

Original Air Date: April 25, 1948

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