Radio Show Review: Can You Imagine That?

Can You Imagine That? was one of several golden age programs dedicated to weird and unusual facts. It was produced in 1940 as a syndicated program. Can You Imagine That? focused on strange cases such as the 92 year-old man that started teething and interesting facts about Paul Revere’s ride, and two famous women fighting a duel with fingernails. These radio dramatizations of the weird, the strange, and amusing were hardly alone with other programs such as Strange as it Seems and Ripley’s doing just as competent a job.

What makes Can You Imagine That stand out is its music history segment which tell the histories of great songs of the era such as, “I”ll Take You Home Again, Kathleen” and “It’s a Long Way to Tipperary.” These stories great songs, that have sometimes even been forgotten with the years come to life.

Can You Imagine This is  a wonderful for those who love fun facts and music history with great acting, great writing, and wonderful music.

Rating: 5.0 out of 5.0

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EP0979: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Lansing Fraud Matter, Part Five and the Widow is Willing

Bob Bailey

Johnny confronts Hillary Franks in a deserted area o Tuscon.

Original Air Date: December 16, 1955

In a house full of murder suspects, the reading of the will provides plenty of motives for more murders.

Original Air Date: 1958 or 1959

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EP0978: Sherlock Holmes: The Final Problem

John Gielgud
Sherlock Holmes battles his archenemy Professor Moriarty in one of his most perilous adventure.

Original Air Date: April 10, 1955

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EP0977: Mr. Moto: Smokescreen

Mr. Moto tries to break up a Communist plot to addict America’s young people to drugs.

Original Air Date: June 3, 1951

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EP0976: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Lansing Fraud Matter, Parts Three and Four

Bob Bailey
Johnny closes in on the insurance agent as the beneficiary stubbornly refuses to admit the fraud.

Original Air Date: December 14 and 15, 1955

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EP0975: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Lansing Fraud Matter, Parts One and Two

Bob Bailey
A man with a $50,000 life insurance policy dies of malnutrition prompting suspicion.

Original Air Date: December 12 and 13, 1955

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Book Review: The Big Sleep

The Big Sleep was the first published Philip Marlowe stories. Marlowe is hired by General Sternwood to stop another blackmail attempt against for his youngest daughter, Carmen. Marlowe takes on the job and along the way tumbles into a blackmail racket, an illegal porn shop, a few murders, and the ever pressing question of what happened to Rusty Regan, the husband of Sternwood’s other daughter Vivian.

From there Marlowe has to navigate the corrupt world of the Sternwood girls, stop the blackmailer, and protecting the dying General Sternwood. As a mystery, the Big Sleep is top notch. The mystery grows more complex the deeper Marlowe gets into it. Marlowe’s world is packed with memorable characters that inhabit this gritty world.

And then there’s the writing, in the Big Sleep Chandler has a wonderful way with words. The book features quotes like this:

“I don’t mind if you don’t like my manners. They’re pretty bad. I grieve over them during the long winter evenings.”

“Such a lot of guns around town and so few brains. You’re the second guy I’ve met within hours who seems to think a gat in the hand means a world by the tail.”

“Neither of the two people in the room paid any attention to the way I came in, although only one of them was dead.”

“I don’t mind if you don’t like my manners. They’re pretty bad. I grieve over them during the long winter evenings.”

Fans who know Marlowe from the radio should be advised that the book is far edgier. It’s a world that includes a pornography-related plot and sexual references, though the book avoids graphic description However, the morally redeeming quality of the book is the character of Philip Marlowe, an honest detective living in a code of honor facing a corrupt world that runs from LA’s upper class to its underworld.

Rating: 5.0 out of 5.0 stars

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EP0974: The Line Up: The Frivolous Forger Fracas

William Johnstone

Guthrie has an ID o a forger but how did he pass a bad check after he was jailed.

Original Air Date: October 11, 1951

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Telefilm Review: Lord Edgeware Dies

The second episode of the seventh Poirot series was Lord Edgeware Dies. This is notable as it’s the first time ITV adapted a Poirot story that had been previously adapted with Peter Ustinov, though Ustinov’s adaptation was, “Thirteen at Dinner.”

The Lady Edgeware, Jane Wilkinson wants a divorce from her unhappy marriage to Lord Edgeware and asks Poirot’s help. Poirot visits Lord Edgeware and finds to his suprirse that Lord Edgeware and already agreed to the divorce. Poirot reports this back to Lady Edgeware who says she never received the letter. That night, Lord Edgeware is murdered and the servants at his home point suspicion at Lady Edgeware. However, Lady Edgeware spent the whole with twelve respectable people at a dinner. Poirot sets out to find who committed the murder and is trying to frame the beautiful Lady Edgeware.

This film works great with the requisite twists, turns, and red herrings you expect from an Agatha Christie mystery, plus a solid performance by Suchet as well as the guest stars. This clearly beats Ustinov’s much more ambiguous adaptation. My one complaint in this film is its portrayal of Poirot having a crush on Lady Edgeware. I didn’t buy that, but the rest of film is pure gold.

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.0

 

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EP0973: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Cronin Matter, Part Five and the Widow is Willing

Bob Bailey

 

Johnny suspects Dolly Cronin was murdered as he mourns her death.

Original Air Date: December 9, 1955

An insurance arrives to investigate the death of a wealthy man and the suspects line up.

Original Air Date: 1958 or ’59

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EP0972: Sherlock Holmes; The Golden Pince-Nez

John Gielgud

 

Sherlock Holmes investigates the murder of a professor’s aide.

Original Air Date: April 3, 1955

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EP0971: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Cronin Matter, Parts Three and Four

Bob Bailey

 

Mrs. Cronin takes ill as one of her friends and guest is a thief. Johnny’s job is to flush him about.

Original Air Date: December 7 and 8, 1955

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EP0970: Mr. Moto: A Force Called X07

Mr. Moto is called in by a scientist about a dangerous new biological weapon and is subsequently murdered.

Original Air Date: May 20, 1951

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EP0969: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Cronin Matter, Parts One and Two

Bob Bailey

Johnny is assigned to guard a $150,000 necklace as it’s worn to be a party by an aging starlet.

Original Air Date: December 5 and 6, 1955

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Radio Drama Set Review: Father Brown Mysteries Vol. 4

The fourth volume of the Father Brown Mysteries from Colonial Radio Theater collects four more G.K. Chesterton stories. More importantly, the middle two stories have been previously adapted either in the 1970s British TV series or the 1980s BBC radio series.

In the  “Actor and the Alibi”, Father Brown is called in by a theater company to calm down a temperamental Italian Catholic actress and finds himself investigating the murder of the theater owner who most of the company holds to be a scoundrel. This solution as well as the distortion of reality that seems to have engulfed the situation is remarkable. Unless you have the sagacity of Father Brown, there’s little chance of solving it.

“The Worst Crime in the World”  has Father Brown concerned about a young man that might marry his niece. A strange visit to the castle-home of his reclusive father does little to allay his concerns, particularly when the young man seems to have disappeared.

“The Insoluble Problem” is a classic story that finds Father Brown and Flambeau stumbling on an impossible murder after Father Brown is called the house while Flambeau is driving to a museum protect valuable jewels. Unlike all the weird murders Father Brown has solved, is this one truly insoluble?  Really, this was a pretty clever concept that plays quite nicely with classic tropes of the mystery genre.  I’m surprised that I haven’t seen this clever plot used  more often.

“The Eye of Apollo” is a classic story which pits Father Brown against the founder of a sun-worshiping cult who has convinced a strong-headed wealthy woman to follow his way. When she dies, it appears to have been accident with the cult leader having a perfect alibi. The actual solution has a great ironic twist that’s pure Chesterton.

This is the best quality Father Brown set Colonial has put out yet. J.T. Turner has Father Brown down pat and M.J. Elliott is adept at giving listeners all the life and pleasure of the original stories. One thing I noted in this collection is how Turner would take some of Chesterton’s artful descriptive commentary and put it in the mouth of his characters.

Overall, this is a faithful and high quality adaptation that is a must for fans of Father Brown and of classic mystery.

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