Month: July 2016

EP1943: Richard Diamond: The Tom Waxman Bombing Case

Dick Powell
A labor leader, who is a friend of Diamond’s, is killed by a bombed and suspicion falls on his brother.

Original Air Date: June 26, 1949

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EP1942: The Line-Up: The Molly About Seven Case

William Johnstone

A gangland killer is identified in the line-up, but Guthrie and Groeb have to scramble to identify him when the witness is killed.

Original Air Date: February 27, 1951

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EP1941: Michael Shayne: The Case of the Deadly Dough

Jeff Chandler

Mike takes a simple job to deliver a suitcase and ends up between several criminals fighting over loot from a 1931 robbery.

Original Air Date: Sometime in 1948

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DVD Review: Here Comes Cookie, Six of a Kind, Love in Bloom

George Burns and Gracie Allen won the hearts of millions by coming into their homes over radio and television for more than two decades. It’s often forgotten that the two also appeared in films in the 1930s. A 2003 DVD from Universal Home Entertainment collects three of these rare films.

Here Comes Cookie (1935): In this one, Gracie plays the daughter of a wealthy man who fears that his daughter’s beau is a fortune hunter, so he decides to leave everything to Gracie. Gracie gets the idea that her father wants the family to be as poor as possible. This is a screwball piece and Gracie has some good moments, though George is relegated to a bit role. The film is a fun screwball affair with some old vaudeville actors featured.

Six of a Kind (1934): Like many of the Burns and Allen films, Six of a Kind is an all-star comedy. This one also features W.C. Fields and Charles Ruggles, along with Mary Boland and Allison Skipworth.

The plot involves a meek man (Ruggles) going on vacation unwittingly carrying $50,000 from his bank. George and Gracie sign on as travelling companions to share the ride. W.C. Fields comes into the story as a Sheriff and replicates a famous scene shooting pool from his Vaudeville days. Gracie has some hilarious lines, and George even gets a few laughs in as well.

Love in Bloom (1935): George and Gracie get the least screen time in the longest feature on the DVD. While they’re featured prominently in the credits, they have bit roles as the heroine’s brother and sister-in-law. The heroine (Dixie Lee) comes from a circus family and wants a decent, honest life, but struggles to escape her background even as she falls in love with a talented young singer/songwriter (Joe Morrison) and they go to work in a music shop on the strength of her salesmanship skills and his talent. The film is really a romance rather than a comedy and George and Gracie are pretty much side characters with them having a couple funny moments: one where Gracie tries to get out of a ticket and another where she tries to “sell” the music store to its owner. Beyond that, the movie is worthwhile when given a chance. Joe Morrison isn’t the best leading man but he’s got a good voice and Dixie Lee’s performance coupled with the old fashioned decency of the story, give it a certain charm despite its flaws.

Overall, the rare films on this DVD, while by no means in the same class as the greatest comedies of the era, are enjoyable. If you’re a fan of Burns and Allen, it’s a bonus as you get to see some of their work in films. However, to get acquainted with them at their best, their radio and TV performances are still the best bet.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5.0

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EP1940: Dragnet: The Big Set-Up

Jack Webb

Friday and Romero investigate a series of high dollar home burglaries.

Original Air Date: July 12, 1951

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EP1939: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Deadly Chain Matter

Bob Bailey

An eccentric millionaire wants Johnny’s protection from threats in a chain letter.

Original Air Date: August 2, 1959

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EP1938: Boston Blackie: Blackie Jilts Mary

Richard Kollmar
After two weeks of not seeing her, Blackie shows up to tell Mary he wants nothing to do with her and Mary wants to find out why.

Original Air Date: July 2, 1945

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EP1937: Richard Diamond: The Fred Sears Murder Case

Dick Powell

Diamond loses his cool with a difficult client and shoves his retainer check down his client’s throat. Trouble comes with the client found shot in Diamond’s office the next morning.

Original Air Date: June 19, 1949

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AWR0003: The Jackie Gleason and Les Tremayne Show

Amazing Word of Radio
Jackie plans an opera and tells of his bitter romance with a jukebox

Original Air Date: September 24, 1944

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EP1936: The Line-Up: Suspect Poisoned

William Johnstone
A suspect is identified in the line-up and then during questioning, he collapses dead of poisoning.

Original Air Date: August 10, 1950

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EP1935: Michael Shayne: The Case of the Generous Killer

Jeff Chandler
Michael Shayne receives a $100 to go and arrest a wanted man and then finds him dead of an apparent suicide.

Original Air Date: Sometime in 1948

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EP1934: Dragnet: Big Love

Jack Webb

A man’s wife and her two-year-old daughter has disappeared and the man isn’t telling the whole truth.

Original Air Date: July 5, 1951

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Graphic Novel Review: Steed and Mrs Peel: A Very Civil Armageddon

This trade paperback collects Issues 0-3 of the ongoing Steed and Mrs. Peel comic book series from Boom Studios.

These issues are written by an Eisner award winning comic writer and Mark Waid and get off to a strong start in Issue 0 with several people with high security clearances apparently doing Rip Van Winkle acts and waking up to find its the future and people from the future want their now “out of date” knowledge for “historical purposes.” The solution to this is clever and it feels like something that could have been expanded and broadcast in the 1960s.

The problem becomes that the next three are a single story arc where Steed and Mrs. Peel witness the seaming end of the world and end up in an underground bunker surviving thanks to the villains of the last piece. What’s going on is painfully obvious based on the first story and disappointingly the writing falls a little short of capturing the fun of the original TV series.

The book isn’t bad. The art is fairly good throughout and the first issue is enjoyable, however the three-part story arc in Issues 1-3 makes this a bit harder to get into.

Rating: 2.5 out of 5.0

EP1933: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Bolt out of the Blue Matter

Bob Bailey
A niece asks the insurance company for helps when she fears her ex will kill her insured Uncle.

Original Air Date: July 26, 1959

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EP1932: Boston Blackie: The Larry Brown Case

Richard Kollmar

Larry Brown owes Boston Blackie $100 and tells Blackie to go to a hotel to pick it up, Blackie sends a man who wanted to borrow from Blackie to pick up the $100. When the man is murdered, Blackie becomes the prime suspect.

Original Air Date: June 25, 1945

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