Month: May 2022

EP3767: Man Called X: The Desert of Death

Herbert Marshall

Ken goes to Afghanistan to prevent the Soviets from acquiring the hydrogen bomb.

Original Air Date: May 6, 1952

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EP3766: Mr. Chameleon: The Dusty Room Murder Case

Karl Swenson

An inventor is found dead in a room completely covered with dust…except for the gun.

Original Air Date: April 5, 1950

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EP3765: Casey, Crime Photographer: Road Angel

Stats Cotsworth

Casey investigates the murder of a driver by a hitchhiker.

Original Air Date: January 13, 1954

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Video Theater 225: Man with a Camera: Two Strings of Pearls

Mike Kovac thinks he recognizes a girl from a cruise ship, but she pretends not to know him and her “Uncle” doesn’t want his picture taken.

Original Air Date: December 12, 1958 

Season 1, Episode 9

Book Review: Deadly Image

Casey notices an old friend who manages his small investment getting uncharacteristically roaring drunk at a bar. The man’s wife asks for a ride home and Casey is asked to hold some film for another photographer, film that is going to be more than a bit dangerous for him. Before he knows it, the veteran crime photographer has a web of murder and blackmail to untangle.

This novel, featuring the character of Jack Casey, was published in 1962, well after the character’s heyday in the 1930s and 1940s. Yet the writing of George Harmon Coxe, who’d written another photographer mystery series in the intervening years, remained exactly the same. In fact if you were to level a criticism of the book, it would be that it doesn’t feel like a book from 1962, with very few clues to its more recent vintage. The big one is that Casey has a small investment portfolio. It’s hard to imagine a hard boiled character in the 1930s investing in the stock market given how skittish people were after the Crash.

Beyond that, it’s a very well-written mystery with a lot of elements to it, more than you would expect for a book of its relatively short length. However, it’s easy to follow and the clues are all there if you’re paying attention. Casey remains the same honorable and decent guy he always was, and the story holds your attention throughout.

After reading three of his books, my opinion of Coxe as a writer is that he’s not one of those brilliant must-read writers of the classics of detective fiction like Raymond Chandler or Dashiell Hammett. However, Coxe was talented and wrote diverting smart mysteries that are worth a look. I put him in the same category as Britt Halliday and plan on visiting some of his other works.

This was a fun book and it won’t be the last time, I read one of Coxe’s novels.

Rating: 3.75 out of 5

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EP3764: Tales of the Texas Rangers: Death by Adoption

An adoptive father is robbed and shot at his used car dealership.

Original Air Date: March 18, 1951

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EP3763: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Nathan Gayles Matter

John Lund

Johnny investigates the murder of an insured New York City policeman.

Original Air Date: November 17, 1953

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EP3762: Philo Vance: The Green Girls Murder Case

Two daughters of a wealthy man are murdered…and District Attorney Markham doesn’t want Vance to investigate.

Original Air Date: April 12, 1949

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EP3761: Man Called X: Cholera Epidemic

Herbert Marshall

After the murder of a man bringing medical supplies to those strung with cholera in Malaysia the Man Called X travels there to bring medicine and confront the guerillas responsible for the murder.

Original Air Date: April 29, 1952

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EP3760: Mr. Chameleon: The Perfect Maid Murder Case

Karl Swenson

A maid is murdered after tendering her resignation and announcing she’d marry the master of the house.

Original Air Date: December 21, 1949

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EP3759:Casey, Crime Photographer: The Upholsterer

Stats Cotsworth

An upholsterer is found murdered in his own locked shop.

Original Air Date: November 16, 1950

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Blu-ray Review: 4-film Collection


This Warner Archives collection features four Noir films of different sorts.

One note on the quality of the set. I ordered this set twice. The first time I watched the first film and it was fine. I waited a few weeks to watch the second and all the remaining disks were bad and I was past the return window. Then the next time, the second and third films played fine but the fourth was unwatchable and I was once again past the return window. Given that this happened with two sets in row, it’d be critical to check all disks before watching. Now onto the films.

Murder My Sweet (1944): This was an adaptation of Raymond Chandler’s novel Farewell, My Lovely. It stars Dick Powell as Philip Marlowe. The film allowed Powell to transition from the light musical comedy roles that defined his early career into the more hardboiled and serious roles that he played for the rest of his career. Powell turns in a superb performance that captures the character perfectly. I don’t think there’s been a better on-screen Marlowe.

Powell’s supporting cast is superb as well. Claire Trevor and Anne Shirley are great as the female leads. Mike Mazurki is superb as the towering thug Moose Malloy. Malloy is terrifying but not entirely unsympathetic. This was the result of some smart changes from the book.

Beyond, the movie has some good camera work and solid incidental music. It’s easily my favorite film in the set.

Out of the Past  (1947) stars Robert Mitchum as private investigator Jeff Balley, who has gone into hiding and running a gas station after crossing a sinister client (Kirk Douglas).

Out of the Past has a lot of twists and turns. At first, I thought it might be a story centered on a flashback like The Killers, but there are plenty of past and present activities that really build suspense. Kirk Douglas hadn’t yet become a superstar, but he’s marvelous, providing equal measures of charm and menace. Jane Greer is great as the femme fatale who really drives the action in the film.

Gun Crazy (1950) is about a troubled young man (John Doll) who is a great marksman but afraid of killing anyone. He marries a woman (Peggy Cummins) who’s already killed, someone. while both are working at the circus. Together they spend his life savings on their honeymoon and then she leads him into a life of crime.

The acting was good and there were some really superb moments from a technical standpoint. I had trouble getting into this one because I thought the premise and some of the psychology were a little too contrived. Still, I can see why it’s viewed as a Noir classic. It just wasn’t for me.

The Set-Up (1949) is a boxing film, but different than many others. The focus of most famous boxing films is huge prize fights that go fifteen rounds with the championship of the world at stake. The Set-Up is about pro boxing in a more seedy part of town. The central story is about a three-round fight fought by an over-the-hill boxer (Robert Ryan) with a losing record. His cornermen agree their guy will take a dive for a local gambler without even cutting their boxer in for a cut of the $50 bribe or telling him he’s supposed to take a dive because they’re so sure he’ll lose, but what if he doesn’t?

There’s so much to like about this film. This is one of those films that really works to make its location feel like a real place. There are so many realistic touches to make this feel like a real arena and give the viewer the impression they’re seeing what boxing is like for all the pro-fighters who never quite make the top tier.  The acting is realistic and adds to the atmosphere the film’s trying to establish.

While I think all of these films look good., this one may be my favorite from an artistic perspective. One thing the movie really went for was capturing how bloodthirsty fans could be at a match and they really excelled themselves in that.

It’s also the shortest film in the collection (at only 72 minutes) which leads to a very pacey film that doesn’t waste any time in crafting a compelling narrative. While it wasn’t my favorite film in the collection, this may be the best one.

Overall, if you love noir movies from this era, this is well worth getting. Do watch out for discs that don’t work, but other than that this is a collection of superb exemplars of American noir films.

Rating:4 out of 5

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EP3758:Tales of the Texas Rangers: Blind Justice

The seeing-eye dog of a missing blind man shows up beaten in a small town. Jace sets out to find the owner.

Original Air Date: March 11, 1951

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EP3757: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Bobby Foster Matter

John Lund

Johnny is called in to investigate when a boy is nearly killed and ends up paralyzed as a result of a racket dealing in fake polio treatments.

Original Air Date: November 10, 1953

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EP3756: Philo Vance: The Movie Murder Case

A hated movie actor is killed on the set of a Western film.

Original Air Date: April 5, 1949

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