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Audio Drama Review: Avengers, The Lost Episodes, Volume 7


Big Finish concludes its four-year promise of adapting all the episodes from the mostly lost first season of the Avengers starring Anthony Howell as Dr. David Keel and Julian Wadham as John Steed. There are three stories in this final release, but only one features both protagonists.

Dragonsfield is a superb Cold War story that finds Steed on his own and investigating espionage at a British lab. The lab is trying to create a top-of-the line space suit in order to sell it to the Americans. This story is a delightfully done mystery with plenty of suspects and manages to keep you guessing. We do see Steed using some enhanced interrogation methods on one spy, but other than that this is a very well-done story featuring Steed alone.

In the Far Distant Dead, on his way home from a South American holiday, Dr. Keel stops to provide medical relief in the wake of a cyclone. In the process, he encounters a fisherman with food poisoning and discovers the source–a can of hydraulic fluid mis-labeled as olive oil.

Keel sets out to get to the bottom of the deliberate act meant to save on custom fees. Following on the heels of a solo episode for Steed, this solo episode for Keel balances things out and we get a story that centers on Keel as a physician and where the mystery is driven by Keel’s compassion and righteous anger. Dr. Sandoval is an interesting supporting character. Is her outrage real or is she in on the conspiracy?

The story does suffer from a villain who is over-the-top. The way he says “Kill him!” is hilarious but I don’t know if that goes well with the tone of the story.

Finally, in The Deadly Air, Steed and Keel investigate sabotage at a laboratory trying to discover a vaccine. This story suffers from being in the same box set as Dragonsfield which is a much better story, rendering The Deadly Air a repetitive episode.

The story is okay, but it pales in comparison to Dragonsfield which has more suspense and more interesting characters. This adventure by comparison is an average story with a few good moments.

Overall, this is a good set in what’s been a good series. The Lost Episodes has filled a big hole in the history of one the 1960s most beloved and iconic programs with superb acting, good writing, and a dedication to authenticity.

Overall rating for this box set: 3.75 out of 5.0

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EP2120: Dragnet: The Big Phone Call

Jack Webb

Friday and Jacobs have the goods on a suspect in a robbery.

Original Air Date: February 14, 1942

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EP2119: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Moonshine Matter

Bob Bailey

Johnny heads to Missouri to deliver a $5,000 settlement check to the widow of the insured but he has to make it through hillbilly country to do it.

Original Air Date: March 6, 1960

When making your travel plans, remember http://johnnydollarair.com

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EP2118: Boston Blackie: The Auctioned Vase Mystery

Richard Kollmar

Blackie buys a vase for Mary at an auction and the losing bidder is willing to commit murder to get possession of the vase.

Original Air Date: February 26, 1946

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AWR0014: You Are There: The Election of Thomas Jefferson (OTR Hamilton)

Amazing World of Radio

CBS News reports on the deadlocked presidential election of 1800.

Original Air Date: October 31, 1948

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EP2117: Richard Diamond: The Pop Skoals Case

Dick Powell

Diamond investigates a cop killing and a blind ex-con is tied in.

Original Air Date: February 26, 1950
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EP2116: Inspector Thorne: The Vacant Lot Murder Case

Karl Weber

A mystery man is found murdered in a vacant lot.

Original Air Date: July 27, 1951

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EP2115: Night Beat: The Night Watchman

Frank Lovejoy

Randy encounters an out-of-work watchman who believes his son is behind a series of arsons.

Original Air Date: May 15, 1950
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EP2114: Dragnet: The Big Honeymoon

Jack Webb

Friday and Jacobs investigate a man who marries women and  jilts them for their money on the pretense of using it to pay for a world cruise for the honeymoon.

Original Air Date: February 7, 1952

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DVD Review: The Line Up

The Line Up is a noir film based on the 1954-60 TV series of the same name (later syndicated as San Francisco Beat.) The film begins with an exciting scene where a cabbie flees police and drives erratically until he’s shot. Lieutenant Guthrie (Warner Anderson) and the police discover a smuggling ring which smuggles heroin through the baggage of innocent people and then retrieves the heroin from them.

There are two basic reasons to see this film:

The first are the stars are not the police but the villains. Dancer (Eli Wallach) is a psychopathic gangster and is assisted by his wiser mentor Julian (Robert Keith) in collecting the drugs and disposing of those who know too much which turns out to be most people.

Unlike in an earlier era where these two would walk around sounding dopey, Dancer and Julian are constantly well-spoken, polite, even friendly when the job calls for it. However, in an instant, they turn deadly. Julian sums up Dancer well, “There’s never been a guy like Dancer. He’s a wonderful, pure pathological study. He’s a psychopath with no inhibitions.” Wallach makes the character very believable and menacing.

Johnny Dollar star Bob Bailey has one scene in this film as a finger man telling Dancer who the drugs had been smuggled in with. It’s a decent performance.

Also, though he only appeared in one scene where he barely spoke, Vaughn Taylor turns in a memorable performance as the drug kingpin, “The Man.” It’s practically an acting clinic on how much can be communicated using only facial expressions.

The second big reason to see this is San Francisco. So much of the movie is shot on location in the City by the Bay. The locations aren’t only good looking but they’re used in some innovative ways in the story. It really makes for a unique look.

The film’s biggest issue is the police characters. The film’s intent was to rope in the 30 million fans of the TV series, “The Line Up,” which is why stars of that series were brought in. However, these scenes are the least interesting in the film. Not bad per se, just obligatory. Policework can be interesting in a Noir film (see: He Walked by Night) but it doesn’t happen here.

In addition to the trailer, the DVD release includes a kind of interesting special feature with Dark Knight Director Christopher Nolan discussing how the NOIR genre influenced him. I was surprised that this film had a commentary track, but listening to it, I found it a bit unpleasant as one of the commentators was just randomly foul-mouthed rather than insightful or funny.

Overall, The Line-Up is a solid film and there’s much to recommend it to those who love Noir films, San Francisco, or Bob Bailey. Ironically, the only thing you won’t get out of it is a sense what the classic radio series the Line Up looked like on film.

Rating: 4.0 out of 5.0

Available for purcahse on Amazon.

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EP2113: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Look Before You Leap Matter

Bob Bailey
Johnny gets a lead on a six-year-old case on February 27th. An insured gangster believed to be dead has been spotted in Paris and Johnny has until March 1st to get him home.

Original Air Date: February 28, 1960

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EP2112: Boston Blackie: The Benson Murder

Richard Kollmar
A man who murdered his wife is acquitted in court. At the request of his brother, Blackie sets out to prove his guilt and bring whatever justice he can while a man Blackie sent to jail has escaped and is determined to kill Blackie.

Original Air Date: February 19, 1946

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EP2111: Richard Diamond: The Mario Ciminio Case

Dick Powell

A man has been murdered who the police suspect of being a jewel thief but the police may have to let his widow have the jewels they suspect were stolen if Diamond can’t figure out where they came from.

Original Air Date: February 19, 1950

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AWR0013: Cavalcade of America: The Constitution of the United States (OTR Hamilton)

Amazing World of Radio

The story of the drafting and passage of the Constitution. From Cavalcade of America.

Original Air Date: December 8, 1937

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EP2110: Inspector Thorne: The Fabulous Divorce Pay-Off Murder Case

Karl Weber

A soon-to-be divorced man is murdered outside his wealthy wife’s house and is found with a million dollar check on him.

Original Air Date: July 20, 1951

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