Thursday, January 10, 2019

Journey Into Strange Tales Atlas/ Marvel Horror! Issue 25






The Marvel/Atlas 
Horror Comics
Part Ten 
September/October 1951





 Mystic #4 (September 1951)

The Stranger  (a: Mike Sekowsky) ★1/2
The Forest of the Living Dead 
(Manny Stallman & Joe Giunta) 
The Devil Birds (a: Basil Wolverton)  
The Man Who Cheated Death  


Ed writes books on the supernatural but that darn girlfriend of his, Laura, keeps interrupting him, wanting him to do girly things with her, like dancing (yeccchh!). Ed accidentally conjures up the Demon of Death, a spirit that takes the form of a loved one, while researching and the monster plays havoc with his love life. "The Stranger" has a good twist ending but it's interminably slow for the first six pages. Sekowsky’s primitive doodlings don’t help.


Ainsley Carson has ruled the “Purple Forest” since he scientifically altered the trees within the forest to kill and maim anyone who wandered into its midst. Now, years after last seeing her father, Druselda Carson, the daughter of the mad forest ranger, sends her fiancé David in to have a talk with her estranged pop. When Carson starts in on the loony “the woods are alive” speech, David does a 180 and heads for home only to find the old man isn’t as crazy as he sounds. The trees wrap their branches around the young man’s throat and begin to squeeze the life out of him. He’s saved only when Druselda wanders into the scene and the trees, thinking the girl to be her long-dead mother, drop David and strangle their master instead. Though the script for "The Forest of the Living Dead" is confusing and downright gibberish at times, the art is rather perky. Manny Stallman pumped out some excellent work for the competition at times and seems to be heading in that direction here. Perhaps the final words of the young couple, while surveying the climactic carnage, sum this one up best:

David: “It’s difficult to understand!”
Druselda: “Let’s not try, darling!”

Even after scores of explorers have disappeared into the Nevada desert where the first H-bomb was tested and, even after the old man had warned them of giant devil birds, scientists Brian Stover and Keith Adams venture into the hot zone, searching for their friend, the lost photographer, Randy Benson. What they find is a landscape from hell, ruled over by vulture-like creatures and a huge chasm in the earth. Brian is nudged into the abyss by one of the giant birds and, as he’s falling into the bottomless hole, a strange metamorphosis takes place and the man become a giant vulture. A peace of mind comes over Brian as he swoops down on Keith, hoping his friend will join him soon. No art in funny books was more stylized and distinguished than that of Basil Wolverton’s and that schizo-vision serves “The Devil Birds” well.

While his ship is sinking, Captain Frost cheats death by stealing another man’s life vest but, days later, he’s visited by death himself, who says Frost will live another fifty years but must live the life of the man he stole the vest from. Frost is ecstatic until he’s trapped in Africa with a flesh-eating disease and realizes he’ll have to live in pain and misery for five decades. "The Man Who Cheated Death" is forgettable, but enjoyable, fluff.





Joe Maneely
 Suspense #10 (September 1951)

"Dance of Death"  (a: Russ Heath) ★1/2
(r: Uncanny Tales #7)
"Trapped in Time"(a: Rudy Palais) ★1/2 
"The Shadow" (a: Al Hartley) ★ 
(r: Frankenstein #15)
"Too Many Murders" (a: Rocco Mastroserio) ★1/2
"Tiger Man!" (a: Norman Steinberg) 

Dancer Eddie Baxter is a perfectionist but he's also an unknown and he's hoping the big dance contest will change all that. But there's a problem... he has no partner. He auditions several dames but all of them have two left feet. Luckily, Eddie runs across an ad in the paper from a woman seeking a male dance parter; in no time he's meeting the gorgeous Marla and discovering she's just the ticket. Eddie fans hard for the babe but she remains at arm's length, insisting they should be no more than partners and, anyway, she's involved at night and can't see Eddie outside the practicing. Even a day at the beach doesn't defrost the icy Marla but it does reveal to Eddie that the girl sure can take the sun without burning (hmmmm)! The night of the dance arrives and the couple win easily, but Marla can't seem to stop dancing, whirling Eddie right out into the park where she finally reveals her secret. She's a vampire looking for the perfect dancing partner and she's found him. Fabulous Heath art (Marla really is gorgeous!) divert attention away from the weak script. Too many unanswered questions (if Marla's a vampire, why can she go to the beach during the day but she's not available at night?) at the climax, which is too bad since the build-up is lively and suspenseful. Still, this is a better-than-average Suspense tale.

Heath!

"Too Many Murders." Not enough good art.
Murderer Joie Castello signs up for a suspended animation project to avoid getting caught by the cops but, in the end, he finds out the whole experiment was cooked up by the cops in order to get Joie to confess. Here's one that defies logic; all the coincidences and lucky breaks (and expensive lab equipment!) that lead to this dope's arrest would never occur in the real world. A pity that artist Rudy Palais has no room under all the bulky word balloons to work his horror magic. Palais is probably best known for his stellar work for the Harvey horror titles, including dozens of their drippy, gooey covers. Here, in "Trapped in Time," that talent is wasted. At least only three pages are wasted on "The Shadow," a groaner about a magician (The Great Shodini!) whose shadow can murder. "Tiger Man" is no better; its tale of a sadistic big-game hunter contains nothing interesting or original.

"Tiger Man"
Ken is an amazingly ambitious man. He knows where a legendary treasure is buried on Mount Cragmore and, to find it, he's invented a machine that allows him to eavesdrop on the past. Conjuring up images of the Jonas Blake expedition, the previous treasure-hunting team, allows Ken and his two investor-friends to follow the trail right to the gold and, hopefully, avoid the tragedy that befell the Blake party. On the way up, Ken discovers that Jonas got greedy and murdered his two partners; not a bad idea, thinks Ken and, when he gets to the top of Cragmore he's on his own. Unfortunately for the bright but-not-too-bright fortune hunter, the cliff the gold is buried on is built on less-than-solid ground and Ken tumbles down the side of the mountain, buried in an avalanche just like his predecessor. "Too Many Murders" starts out intriguingly enough but quickly degenerates into inane nonsense, capped off by a laugh-out-loud final panel (reproduced here) where Ken warns the reader not to kill anyone to claim the treasure, all while he's buried under tons of rubble. Rocco Mastroserio's art is very crude and sketchy, certainly not horrible, but nowhere near as effective as some of his work for Warren a decade later ("The Rescue of the Morning Maid," with art by Rocco,was one of the greatest horror stories Warren published in the 1960s).





 Astonishing #6 (October 1951)
"The Coffin" (a: Bill LaCava) 

As is our custom with Astonishing, we'll flip right past those beautifully-illustrated Marvel Boy adventures by Bill Everett (the first one this issue has MBoy running afoul of a magician who bears an uncanny resemblance to Namor) and dwell on the sole fantastic tale, "The Coffin," yet another weak variation on Poe's "The Premature Burial." This time out, millionaire Milton Whitestone, afflicted with catalepsy, equips the family vault with a telephone and instructs his wife, should he die, to answer any calls from the grave. Being a 1950s wife, Sylvia wants the dough and no strings attached so, after her husband's obligatory funeral and "rise from the dead," the woman ignores the incessant ringing. Luckily, Milton expected such behavior from his spouse and had a second line installed, this one a hotline to his lawyer, who arrives in the nick of time to dig out his client. Mitlon, justifiably upset, exacts ironic revenge on his greedy wife. If you're paranoid about being buried alive, why would you consent to a below-ground burial in the first place? Milton's a dope and he deserves what he gets. The final panel throws in an out-of-the-blue supernatural angle as well. Bill LaCava's art is rushed and crude, among this a tale to avoid.

This issue closes out Marvel Boy's run in Astonishing and, next issue, the title will feature only short horror yarns. MB's next appearance will be as the Roy Thomas-rebooted Crusader in Fantastic Four #164, but that's a story for the Marvel University boys.

Yes, this is really bad!




 Strange Tales #3

"The Shadow!" (a: Joe Maneely)  
"The Man Who Never Was" 
(a: John Romita & Les Zakarin) ★1/2 
"Invisible Death" (a: Mike Sekowsky) 
"The Madman!" (a: Joe Maneely) 
"Voodoo" (a: Bill LaCava) 

George and Dick are always fighting over gorgeous Iris and their rivalry reaches a zenith when George pops Dick a good right and warns him to stay away from his girl. Not one to accept defeat, Dick heads to Iris' house for their date but is crestfallen when the girl refuses to answer his knock. On his way back home, Dick notices his shadow is acting strange, darting to and fro, before it leaves him for good. After Dick tries Iris on the phone without success, he requires the trail of his shadow, following it down into the cemetery, where a service is underway. The bewildered young man recognizes Iris at graveside and quickly realizes the funeral is his; George killed him with that right hook and then was executed for his crime. "The Shadow" proves you can have two below-par stories with the same title in one month -- not a goal one strives to achieve but one interesting enough to mention. If nothing else, these 1950s horror stories shows us that justice was delivered much quicker then -- located right next to Dick's freshly-dug grave is that of George, who had already been given a trial, convicted, and buried before Dick could be laid to rest. That has to be a record. Joe Maneely's art looks nothing like his incredibly detailed work a couple years later; in fact, if it wasn't signed by Joe, I'd scoff at the credit.

Joe Maneely, please come home!

Roger Hunt is asked by his old friend, reporter Jerry Bramley, to meet him at a local diner and, when Roger arrives, he finds Jerry in a flustered state, spouting nonsense about a friend they knew in school named Paul. Seems Paul was a scientist, working on a theory that Death actually "exists in a tangible form" and got too close to the Reaper. Now, Death is wiping out all traces of Paul, including the memories of all who knew him. Only Jerry seems to be able to remember his missing buddy and, soon, Jerry vanishes off the face of the Earth. Is Roger next? "The Man Who Wasn't There" is a solid suspenser that only has a few lapses in logic (having all traces of Paul disappear reaches a ridiculous level when the building he lives in vanishes!) and a pretty grim climax. Sadly, John Romita, Sr.'s talent is buried under Les Zakarin's inks and yet another case of overburdened word balloons.

Planet Mondu sends an invasion fleet (cloaked in invisibility) to bomb both the US and USSR, sparking a war between the unwitting nations. Only "the blind science wizard," Kevin Scott and his equally blind (but gorgeous) assistant/soon-to-be-wife Moira can stop the "Invisible Death!" 6 pages of sheer lunacy, cornball dialogue, and awful art don't always make a great read. This one feels like the "pilot" for a really bad Challengers of the Unknown spin-off, with its superhero scientist and porky alien assassins. Blind wiz Scott somehow manages to fly a spaceship and destroy an entire alien militia with nothing but his smarts and white cane. "Voodoo" is a limp noodle about a man who sees a witch doctor about offing his wife and "The Madman!" is a cute two-pager about a crafty poltergeist in a boarding house.






Bill Everett
 Venus #16

"Thru the Lens" (a: Joe Maneely) 
(r: The X-Men #88)

Raf, an astronomer on a planet a thousand light years from Earth gets a little overtime at work when his boss insists he stay late and witness an occurrence on a star a thousand light years away. Meanwhile, on Earth, Professor Marston shows off his new invention, an engine that runs on water. Unfortunately for the professor, his former aide (extremely angry for being axed) breaks into the lab and destroys the engine. The destruction sets off a chain reaction in our atmosphere which leads to the entire destruction of Earth. As the distant star explodes and goes out, Raf tells his impatient girlfriend they can finally go out for a night on the town. This one’s a little tough to follow (it took me a couple of reads to figure out the whole “water = armageddon” thing and then decided I really didn’t need bother, not when you’ve got art by the great Joe Maneely to gawp at. But this one really could have used a couple more pages.






 Journey Into Unknown Worlds #7

"The Men Who Conquered the Earth" 
(a: Russ Heath)  ★1/2
"Escape from Death!"  (a: Joe Maneely) 
"Planet of Terror!"  (a: Basil Wolverton) ★1/2
"The House That Wasn't There" (a: Paul Cooper) ★1/2 

A well-meaning but bone-headed brilliant scientist tries to bring together the nations of the world by creating a catastrophe that only brotherhood could overcome. The egghead shoots an "atomic spear" at the planet Mars and pulls it closer to Earth, thus making it easier for the war-like citizens of that planet to gas up their low-range spaceships and conquer our world. Unfortunately, the big brain didn't count on the warriors of Mars to bring all their big guns with them and, very soon after the invasion, it's apparent that no amount of Earthling hand-holding will repel the slaughtering aliens. After he's captured, our hero/dunderhead tricks one of the Martians into taking him back to his lab where he reverses the "atomic spear" and lets Mars return to its proper place in the galaxy, stranding the not-too-bright Martians on a planet where they have no food and the air is too polluted for them to breathe.

The next day, as the professor sighs and shrugs his shoulders, the world gets back to dividing race and borders. I had to Marvel at all the silly science going on in "The Men Who Conquered the Earth," and I'm not even good at science. No one else in the scientific community noticed the large beam of energy flowing through outer space nor the fact that Mars somehow dislodged from its orbit? How the heck did this guy harness enough energy to magnetically pull an entire planet out of its neighborhood? If you're a Martian getting ready to conquer a planet, do you wait until you arrive to realize you haven't brought any snacks with you? Oh, and why would a race of BEMs want to overthrow a planet they can't live on? "By the beard of Oog," as one of the head Martians exclaims, it makes no sense. That doesn't mean it's not a heck of a lot of fun, as most of the Russ Heath-illustrated Atlas tales have proven to be. There's a dynamic sense of exhilaration to Heath's work that's unequalled in the field, whether he's working in horror, SF, or war comics.

"Escape from Death"
At only three pages, "Escape From Death!," doesn't have the room to blossom into any more than a quick showcase for the talents of the legendary Joe Maneely (now, this looks like the Maneely I fell in love with as a kid reading the "Black Knight" reprints in Fantasy Masterpieces). It's about a death row tough who's convinced his gang will save him, but it's Satan who comes to collect him after the switch is thrown. The final story in the issue, "The House That Wasn't There" is a lifeless and overly long fantasy tale about Ed Miles, an ambitious mailman who will stop at nothing to become postmaster. Unfortunately, for the carrier, a goofy couple who can jump in and out of time and space, have decided that Ed is the only man for the job on their street. There's some loopy twists here (as though Grace Slick, high on whatever she used to pump out "White Rabbit," stumbled into the Atlas offices one lunchtime and got hold of a typewriter) but the narrative is sooooo slow and boring that you won't care if there's a bit of imagination in every 20th panel.

A pair of space explorers land on Saturn, searching for a previous, lost expedition. What they find is a "Planet of Terror!," ruled over by a god named Mokog. When the men are brought before the mighty Mokog by savage Saturnians, they discover the fierce, large-headed creature is actually Leo Gorman, leader of the doomed expedition the men are searching for, who took advantage of some low-IQ aliens to become master of the world. Mokog is shot and killed and the spacemen are allowed to leave Saturn in peace. An obvious "homage" to Wizard of Oz, "Planet of Terror" has the oddities and unique touches found only in the work of Basil Wolverton, but the story lacks excitement and adventure. When it comes to guessing storyteller or artist credits, I'm useless, but the very style of Wolverton's art and nature of the grotesqueries that populate his panels leads me to believe that he wrote his own stories. Prove me wrong.

"The House That Wasn't There"





 Adventures Into Terror #6

"The Return of the Brain" (a: Russ Heath) 
(r: Giant-Size Weewolf #4; Curse of the Weird #3)
"You Can't Escape" 
(r: Giant-Size Dracula #4)
"The Dark Room!" ★1/2
(r: Vault of Evil #17)
"The Girl Who Couldn't Die!" (a: Paul Reinman)  ★ 
(r: Giant-Size Chillers #1)

In the sequel to the mind-melting saga known as "The Brain," we discover that the disembodied head of evil Nazi genius, Otto von Schmittsder has used its amazing pogo-sticklike ability to hop aboard plane and, later a moving van bound, coincidentally, for Otto's destination: the lab of US government secret genius/ scientist/ inventor/ babe Gilda Spears, whose use of valuable chemicals badly needed for our country is particularly interesting to our favorite noggin. Otto worms his way into Gilda's brain, enslaving her to do his bidding, which includes framing one of her colleagues. Luckily, Gilda has a handsome boyfriend, Steve Manners, who also happens to be an ace FBI agent. Steve intercepts letters Gilda has written to the USSR (under Otto's command), giving away some behind-the-scenes secrets, and confronts her. The Brain does some quick thinking and orders Gilda to murder Steve but her love is too powerful and, after an unfortunate benson burner accident, the lab goes up in flames. Steve and Gilda embrace, knowing that tomorrow is a new day, unaware that the Brain has hopped out a back window and is planning his next adventure.

Just as much brainless fun as its predecessor, "The Return of the Brain" is almost critic-proof thanks to its sheer dopiness. Otto's limberness, despite not having limbs, is astonishing; we witness leaps into moving trucks, atop high shelves, even into a woman's hat box aboard a plane, with agility an Olympic pole-vaulter would envy. As with the first installment, Russ Heath's art here has a whole lot to do with our enjoyment. Otto's noggin isn't simply a menacing head; it's evil, scary, and hilarious all at the same time, often highlighted by a pink or yellow glow depending on von Schmittsder's mood, I suppose. Sadly, this was the last of the "Brain" series but, with a little imagination, you can almost see him bouncing from alleyway to alleyway and making it, finally, to the White House in November of '16.

In "You Can't Escape," a crazy fella breaks the fourth wall by letting me know he's going to get to me through the funny book I'm reading. No, seriously! This guy writes a script, pays an artist to draw it (hopefully someone with a little more pizazz than the uncredited hack who pumped this out), then pays a printer a bundle to print one copy so that he can sneak the story into the latest issue of Adventures Into Terror for me to pick up on the newsstand. And it works! A cute idea that smacks of deadline doom. A small boy comes to stay with his mysterious Uncle Helas, who lives in a castle high atop the cliffs of Zornhiem, unaware that the man is a practitioner of the dark arts and conjures up giant snakes from "The Dark Room!" Amateurish art and cliched script doom this one.

"The Dark Room"

Fake swami Larry Benson has been bilking lots of dough from poor old Mrs. Evans, who only wants to see her dear departed niece, Louise, a few more times. For that luxury, she contributes heavily to the charity of Larry and his sweetheart, the lovely Sandra. The charity, of course, is the lining of their pockets. Larry handles the front end of the ruse and Sandra handles the visual and vocals of Louise, completely fooling the poor old woman, and everything goes smoothly until the real Louise appears from the spirit world and throws a monkey wrench into the couple's plans to build their "temple of spiritualism." Sandra believes Larry's been working too hard but has a chance of heart when she discovers that Louise was actually an axe murderer. Unfortunately, she receives this news after Louise has lured Larry to a dark mansion and shows him her weapon of choice. "The Girl Who Wouldn't Die" contains another of the Horror Comics Top 20 Cliches (the fake oracle), but then manages to whip up a couple of sly surprises to keep the interest. Paul Reinman's distinctive style helps enormously, with the final panel, of Louise delivering the killing blow, a standout.






Marvel Tales #103

"Touch of Death" (a: Paul Reinman) ★1/2
"When Time Stood Still" (a: Ross Andru)  ★1/2
"Behind the Mask" (a: Jerry Robinson)  
"The Ink Blots!"(a: Manny Stallman)  

Gravedigger Walter loves money, lots of money, and he'll do anything to gain more of it. So, when a strange voice offers Walter as much cash as he can imagine if he'll only dig up a casket, the greedy dope starts digging. He comes to discover that he's unearthed the "Black Magician of the Dark World," and the grateful spook makes good on his promise, giving his savior the gift of King Midas. Only, with Walter, everything he touches turns to dollar bills. Eventually, Walter learns what Midas learned: greed is not good. A particularly rough Reinman job here to go with a ho-hum script, "Touch of Death" is really not very memorable and, since it sticks right with the Midas myth, not very surprising.

Speaking of weak art, our old DC war buddy, Ross Andru, puts his... unique... stamp on the SF tale, "When Time Stood Still," wherein brilliant professor Gene Handley accidentally concocts a formula that halts time for 24 hours (the elixir works so well it freezes a cat in mid-leap!) and then, naturally, uses his discovery to rob lots of banks. The poor sap is undone by an even smarter professor who deducts that the guilty party would be the only man to have eaten in the last 24 hours and a handy-indy PH paper proves to be Handley's downfall. The final story in the issue, "The Ink Blots!" continues the trend of weak art this issue, spotlighting the "talents" of Manny Stallman, an artist I never could get into while reading the Avon and Harvey horror books. Stallman falls into that "wiggly" category where characters almost resemble spineless jellyfish rather than humans (yes, a lot like Rocco Mastroserio and Jerry Grandenetti). The story, about a magician who takes a mute boy under his wing and then pays dearly for it, is not all that bad, and it's got a smart twist in its tale but it's hard to get past those squiggles.

Morose at the Mardi Gras, Charles Roll perks up a bit when a vendor convinces him to buy one of his life-like masks. Roll opts for one resembling vanished billionaire, J.P. DuPont, and agrees to have the mask back by the end of the night. Roll has a blast disguised as the money-man and then neglects to return the mask, heading for homestead. His landlady awakens him the next morning and is astonished to see DuPont in Rob's bed. Once the news gets out, Roll decides he may be able to pull off the con of the century "Behind the Mask," and slides into DuPont's life. After a bit of a honeymoon learning all there is to learn about being a corporate giant, Roll/DuPont grabs the reins and never looks back, becoming more and more of a heartless SOB every day. Then one day, the old vendor arrives at Charles' door, demanding his mask back. Roll ties the man up and decides he's going to kill him but, by the time he returns the man has escaped. Too late, Charles learns the old man had used his marvelous mask-sculpting skills to impersonate DuPont's butler and his "day of reckoning" is delivered. very imaginative and nicely illustrated by Batman vet Jerry Robinson,

"Behind the Mask" is one of those rare Atlas tales that convinces you that you're heading down Street A when you're actually swerving toward Street B. Yep, it's somewhat reminiscent of "The Masks" from Twilight Zone, but I doubt writer Rod Serling had time to peruse Marvel Tales for ideas. You do have to check your brain at the door a bit (but then, have we had many stories during this journey where we didn't) when the idea is trotted out that a mask is so well constructed it could fool every person who knew DuPont prior to his disappearance. I'd think authorities would at least want to take fingerprints.



In Two Weeks!




























Monday, January 7, 2019

Star Spangled DC War Stories Issue 146: February 1974

The DC War Comics
1959-1976
by Corporals Enfantino and Seabrook




Dominguez
Weird War Tales 22

"Wings of Death"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by George Evans

"The Day After Doomsday..."
Story by Len Wein
Art by Jack Sparling
(Reprinted from The Witching Hour #9, July 1970)

"Last Rites for the Living"
Story by Arnold Drake
Art by Tony DeZuniga

Peter: In "Wings of Death," Jack Oleck tells the real story behind the Nazi surrender at the end of World War II. In France, the Baron Henri de Saville has had enough of German bombs disturbing his peace and quiet so he talks the Allies into capturing thousands of bats, rigging them with explosives, and dropping them over Germany. The ensuing firestorms are enough to convince the Germans to surrender and the baron goes back to his chateau to live the life of a peaceful vampire. A pretty hokey (but, to be fair, somewhat enjoyable) tale with some seesaw art by George Evans (some panels look like he might have gotten a bit of help). Since the bombers had to fly over Germany to let the bats loose, I'm not sure why the Army even said "Hey, let's try it!" to the Baron's idea.

"Wings of Death"

"The Day After Doomsday..." reprint was covered by Jack and I during our (plug! plug!) discussion of the DC mystery titles. It's silly to reprint it here since it's out of context when taken away from the rest of the series. Perhaps Joe couldn't fill an entire page full of letters?

"Last Rites for the Living"
Lieutenant Kogan is a self-serving, medal-loving, glory hog who wants nothing more than to climb the Army brass ladder and he doesn't care one bit if that means he has to step on corpses along the way. When he and his men save a gypsy camp from a band of sadistic Nazis, the gypsy leader gives Kogan a medallion he claims has mystical powers. The medal will tell the soldier the year he will die and, as long as he wears it around his neck, it will keep him safe. Kogan dons the trinket and sees "1994" flash across his mental screen. The date emboldens him and he goes on a mission to kill as many dirty stinkin' Ratzi bastards as he can level in his scope, throwing caution to the wind and taking chances no sane man would attempt. Of course, the crazy schedule finally catches up to him and he ends up armless and legless in a basket, horrified by the knowledge he'll live another fifty years in this condition.

I like DeZuniga's rough and scratchy art but the script definitely has a moldy odor about it. At 12 pages, it's also about twice the length it needs to be, which means we get a lot of padding. I hate to complain but I am not digging the Arnold Drake/Jack Oleck era of Weird War Tales one bit.

Jack: Me neither! George Evans continues to puzzle me. How could he be so great at EC in the '50s and so weak at DC in the '70s? Much of the art in "Wings of Death" looks more like the work of Jack Sparling than George Evans, and that's not a good thing. The story is not very good and the twist ending where the old man is revealed to be a vampire is ridiculous. DeZuniga's art is uneven in "Last Rites for the Living," but the panels that are good are very good indeed. Still, it's an old story and one where anyone reading horror comics would have no trouble predicting the ending.


Kubert
Our Army at War 265

"The Brother"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by John Severin

"Rocco's Roost!"
Story and Art by Sam Glanzman

Jack: Blockbuster awakens from a nightmare in which he sees his friend Joey killed in combat by Japanese soldiers. Hours later, Easy Co. sustains heavy casualties when they cross a river under heavy mortar fire. When replacement soldiers arrive a few days later, Blockbuster sees that one is Japanese and attacks the new man. Rock explains that the new scout is a Japanese-American named Johnny Hayakawa, but all Blockbuster sees are the man's Asian features. The scout leads the men of Easy Co. across a river and into woods, where they are pinned down by enemy fire until Blockbuster comes to the rescue. Finally, they reach the Nazi encampment and Rock is trapped in an open field under heavy fire. Hayakawa runs out and covers Rock with his body, sacrificing his life to save the sergeant and allowing Blockbuster the opportunity to lob a grenade at the enemy. Blockbuster sees the error of his ways and mourns the replacement soldier.

"The Brother"
Blockbuster's remarks about a "slant-eyed nip" and Rock's use of the term "kraut" seem jarring in the early pages of "The Brother," but soon it becomes clear that this will be a plea for racial tolerance. While such stories were common a few years before at DC, they were less common by 1974. I liked how Jackie Johnson spoke up for Hayakawa and thought Kanigher mixed elements of the morality play with exciting battle sequences effectively. Bulldozer's conversion is believable and it helps that John Severin provides strong illustrations, especially in the sequence where Hayakawa saves Rock.

"Rocco's Roost!" is a hatch on the deck of the U.S.S. Stevens where a fat sailor named Rocco likes to perch and block the fresh air from reaching the sweltering decks below. He is unpopular due to his selfishness, but his profile improves after he saves a couple of sailors scalded in an explosion. Sam Glanzman's less than slick art fits this story unusually well, since he is able to draw Rocco as a caricature of a hairy fat man. I am no fan of the Stevens series but this entry is better than average.

"Rocco's Roost!"

Peter: In the mid-1960s, when Big Bob's first wave of morality fables were published, they seemed like something new and exciting, a shot in the arm for a dying funny book genre. Unfortunately, by 1974, Kanigher's short jabs at the evils of racism come off as calculated and formulaic. For instance, I don't recall Bulldozer being a loud-mouthed, bigoted lout; he was just a lout. Is he just taking on those characteristics for the sake of Big Bob's narrative and next issue he'll return to the fun-loving brute we've all come to know? As far as the art goes, John Severin does a great job filling Russ Heath's shoes, which is a good thing because John will be riding a carousel with George Evans (gulp!) and Russ for the next sixteen issues. "Rocco's Roost" is a nice change of pace from the usual downbeat U.S.S. Stevens vignette (even though I do like those, too!) but the chronological leaps to and fro in each succeeding installment are jarring; there seems to be no continuity.


Walt Simonson
G.I. Combat 169

"The Death of the Haunted Tank!"
(Reprinted from G.I. Combat #150, November 1971)

"Peace With Honor!"
Story and Art by Ric Estrada

Peter: It's not enough that Archie and Co. steal our hard-earned dimes and deliver no new Haunted Tank this issue (Arch lays blame right at the feet of the dreaded deadline), but then they add insult to injury by reprinting a story that's only a little more than two years old, on the pretense that this will jar our memories as to how the current Haunted Tank got its wheels. I ain't buyin' it (literally!).

So what we're left with is five original pages devoted to one of Ric Estrada's historical war sagas, this time chronicling the battle between Coriantumr and Shiz, two mighty leaders who fought meaningless wars and watched both of their armies dwindle down to one man each. The final battle, between the two kings themselves, ends in death for both. Though I'm not fond of these little history lessons ("Peace With Honor!" is adapted from The Book of Mormon), Ric Estrada's art is getting better each succeeding installment.

"Peace with Honor!"

Jack: A "historical" battle tale adapted from The Book of Mormon? I did not see that coming. Or should I say, I wish I did not see that coming. Speaking of wishes, I think you are engaging in wishful thinking with your comment about Ric Estrada's art getting better. He's one of those artists whose drawings did not register with me at age ten, but at age 55 they look pretty dreadful.


Kubert
Star Spangled War Stories 178

"Sting of Death!"
Story by Frank Robbins
Art by Jack Sparling

"A Nice, Warm Bed!"
Story by Frank Robbins
Art by Vicente Alcazar-Serrano

Peter: The Unknown Soldier escapes detection by the Nazis and continues his daring secret mission to find the terror missiles, armed with poisonous gas, weapons designed to kill thousands on contact. Working against him is his German counterpart, Captain von Sturm, a man so filled with hatred for the Allies that he'll sacrifice his life and forego his family life to take down the Unknown Soldier. With help from Hans, a Dutch prisoner of war, the Soldier manages to infiltrate the chamber holding the bombs and sets off a monstrous explosion that blows to hell the factory and its contents. Narrowly escaping through a hidden hatch, US and von Sturm engage in a vicious battle before being ejected into a river. Only one human mummy emerges from the drink. Is it our hero or his nemesis?

Again, I'm finding myself getting used to Sparling's doodles (a declaration I swore I'd never make) and Robbins keeps the action flowing, though the events in "Sting of Death!" do tend to become a bit complicated at times. I like the cliffhanger and the fact that we really don't know which super-spy has pulled himself out of the drink. Von Sturm has become the US equivalent of Rock's "Iron Major," a super-villain that I hope will be around for some time to come. It's surely preferential to faceless Nazis and fat Commandants.

Two GIs bemoan the fact that they have to constantly slog through the rain, sleeping in the mud, when just out of reach, in a bombed-out village, is "A Nice, Warm Bed!" Frank Robbins's short fable is deceptive, leading us down the path we trod so many times before with, say, Robert Kanigher and Mort Drucker. Good old boys who continually prattle on about some such and always get their wish by story's end. Not so here; Robbins's nasty final page is a kick in the head. Newcomer Vicente Alcazar-Serrano (who would contribute but one job for the war titles before moving on to become regular artist on DC's Jonah Hex) even kicks in a fairly good variation on the old Drucker style

Jack: In "Sting of Death!" we see that the German version of the Unknown Soldier does not wear bandages under his masks, which leads me to ask why the Unknown Soldier does. Don't they get wet, dirty, and sweaty? Don't they show through the eye holes? The story, though I was primed not to like it, was pretty good in an action/pulp sort of way. The backup story had better art but seemed similar to many Kanigher tales that beat a phrase into the ground. This version is more violent, however. The Kubert cover makes me want to know why we don't get more Kubert in the war books! Other than two covers this month, he's nowhere to be found, and that in itself is the biggest loss to the line. In the letters column, Goodwin writes that Frank Thorne may draw some upcoming new Enemy Ace stories. Is this going to come to pass?



Next Week...

Thursday, January 3, 2019

The Hitchcock Project-Bernard C. Schoenfeld Part Eleven: Hitch Hike [5.21] and Wrapup

Journeys and generational conflicts have always been fertile subjects for stories, from Homer's Odyssey to the Biblical tale of David and Saul. In his last teleplay for Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Bernard C. Schoenfeld used both themes to weave an entertaining half hour in "Hitch Hike," based on a short story by Ed Lacy called "Pick-Up," which had been published in the January 1959 issue of Mystery Digest.

Ed Lacy was a pseudonym of Leonard Zinberg (1911-1968), a writer born and raised in New York City who began publishing short stories in the 1930s. He was interested in left-wing causes, boxing, and race relations, and he wrote under his own name, the Lacy name, and the pseudonyms Steve April and Russell Turner. He began writing novels in earnest after serving in Italy in WWII and published the majority of his works as Ed Lacy, writing 28 novels and well over 100 short stories in all. Room to Swing (1957) won the Edgar Award for Best Novel in 1958 and was one of the earliest books to feature a black private detective.

"Pick-Up" is narrated by an unnamed man who, with another 100 miles to go on his drive to Detroit, picks up a young hitchhiker, who admits that he just spent 18 months in the state penitentiary for pick-pocketing. The driver, a salesman, worries about the young man but won't admit that he is frightened, and decides to take a longer route through small towns because he thinks it will be safer than taking the lonely thruway. After stopping for lunch at a diner, the car is pulled over for speeding. The narrator gets out to argue with the policeman and is joined by the young hitchhiker. Realizing he has been caught in a speed trap, the narrator is given a ticket and drives off. He complains to the young man and hands him the ticket, which the young man tears up. The hitchhiker shows the driver the policeman's ticket book and admits that he picked the cop's pocket. The young man says that he plans to go straight but decided to do the driver a favor and suggests that they burn the ticket book in an open field.

"Pick-Up" was first published here
"Pick-Up" is a very short story, only three and a half pages long, little more than a vignette with an unexpected ending. To turn this into a half-hour television show, Bernard C. Schoenfeld expanded the tale a great deal, adding a third passenger to the car and introducing new themes that make for a memorable show. The title was changed to "Hitch Hike" and the episode aired on CBS on Sunday, February 21, 1960, directed by Paul Henreid and starring John McIntire as Charles Underhill, the driver, Robert Morse as Len, the hitchhiker, and Suzanne Pleshette as Underhill's niece, Anne, the new passenger in the car.

The show begins with Underhill and Anne descending the steps outside Juvenile Hall; they get into his car and he drives off, breaking the uncomfortable silence between them by trying to engage her in conversation and providing background on the situation for the viewer. Anne was arrested for riding around town with a car thief and the judge let her off with a reprimand to protect the reputation of Underhill, a respected councilman from nearby Allendale, a town 50 miles from San Francisco. Despite having attended Deep Valley School, "the finest finishing school in the West," Anne fell prey to temptation and her uncle tells her that she can spend the next year working in his office as punishment.

The first scene of "Hitch Hike" establishes the story's location and introduces two of the three main characters. Charles Underhill represents the older generation; he is a middle-aged, successful businessman whose livelihood depends on maintaining the status quo. His niece, Anne, represents the younger generation, on the cusp of major changes about to erupt in the new decade and questioning the value of traditional gender roles. She has upset her uncle by turning her back on her training at finishing school and enjoying a ride with a young man on the wrong side of the law: Charles sees himself as her guide and protector and, although he is not her father, he takes it upon himself to try to ensure that she does not continue to stray from the safe path.

John McIntire as Charles Underhill
Charles parks the car and walks across the street to a tobacco shop to buy cigarettes, leaving Anne alone in the car and subject to new temptation, which comes along in the form of a handsome, young hitchhiker a short way up the block from where the car is parked. He and Anne exchange glances just before Uncle Charles returns to the car. Fate intervenes as another car backs into the front of Underhill's car, causing him to sound his horn, which gets stuck in the on position. Charles opens the hood to look for the source of the noise and suddenly the hitchhiker appears next to him and pulls a wire under the hood, silencing the horn and solving the problem. This small gesture foreshadows the story's conclusion, where the hitchhiker will once again come unexpectedly to Charles's aid.

The young man is headed to San Francisco and speaks in a beatnik lingo that marks him as belonging to a different generation than Underhill; he tells the older man, "Either you dig a motor--or you don't." He talks his way into a free ride as far as Allendale. Once they are on the road, with Charles driving, Anne in the passenger seat, and the young man occupying the back seat, Charles again tries to make conversation and asks the hitchhiker his name, eliciting the reply: "If it's names you want, make mine ... Len." It seems that the young man makes this name up on the spot and it is possible that Schoenfeld was giving a sly nod to Leonard "Len" Zinberg, the author of the short story upon which the teleplay is based. Len is reticent about providing personal details and suddenly Underhill has to stop because a truck is blocking the roadway. In the back of the truck are a group of young men who yell with delight when they see pretty Anne in the front seat of the car; she appears to enjoy the attention and, after the truck moves on and the car resumes its trip, Len explains that the men in the truck were convicts from a nearby youth correctional facility.

Robert Morse as Len
Charles questions the source of Len's knowledge and Len reveals that he had been a resident at the prison until that morning. Underhill immediately stops the car and orders Len out, but then changes his mind and decides to keep his word and give the young man a ride to Allendale. Len then lectures Anne about Insiders and Outsiders, putting himself in the second category and Charles in the first. Len begins to make Charles nervous when he discusses his friend who loves knives and knows how to fix cars; it is clear that Charles suspects that Len is talking about himself. They stop at Henry's Diner to eat and, inside the diner, Len continues to discuss his friend, remarking that: "He was a flipper, from way, way out." Len plays a song on the jukebox and dances with Anne, while Charles goes outside to a phone booth to call the police. Len suddenly appears next to him, interrupting Charles and hanging up the phone.

Back in the car, night has fallen and the conversation between the two young people turns to literature, as Len recommends Dostoevsky and alludes to Crime and Punishment, where a poor student murders an older businesswoman. In the first sign of growth and change among the characters, Anne has become emboldened by her time with Len and talks back to her uncle, telling him that she will return to school despite his threats to keep her from doing so. Len remarks that he would like to build a race car and suggests that if his friend were there he would cut Charles's throat. This is all too much for poor Underhill and, perhaps inspired by Len's mention of a race car, he begins to drive faster and faster, hitting 80 mph in a 45 mph zone and attracting the notice of a motorcycle cop, who follows him and pulls him over for speeding.

Suzanne Pleshette as Anne
Charles, relieved at no longer being trapped in the car with Len, tells the policeman that the hitchhiker threatened him. The cop pays little attention to Charles's story at first, putting the councilman in the unfamiliar position of being an Outsider to the policeman's Insider. However, Charles convinces the policeman to speak to Len and the cop searches the young man, finding only a pocket comb instead of the knife that Underhill feared.

After the cop leaves, Len pulls out the ticket book and admits for the first time that he spent three months in prison for "picking a guy's pocket when I was out of a job." In a clever turn of events, Len asks Charles if he wants to return the ticket book to the police station across the street and risk going to jail for speeding. Charles thinks for a moment and then the trio get back in the car. As they drive off, Len rips up the ticket and lets the pieces fly out the car window, where they scatter in the breeze.

A good story often shows how a character or characters change and grow in response to catalysts. In "Hitch Hike," each of the three main characters learns something from their time together and exhibits growth. Anne begins the show quiet and ashamed, afraid to respond to her uncle's criticisms of her choices and seemingly resigned to her fate. After spending time with Len, however, her confidence increases and she speaks up on her own behalf, telling Charles that she will return to finishing school despite his wishes to the contrary. Len's change is very subtle: he goes from being an Outsider to an Insider, as evidenced by his move from the back seat, where he sits during the first part of the show, to the front seat, where he occupies the place next to Anne in the show's latter scenes.

Paul E. Burns as the diner owner
The biggest change of all occurs in the show's protagonist, Charles Underhill. At the beginning, he is a proud member of the community, lecturing his niece and mentioning a safety award he has earned twice before. At the end, he is presented with a choice: either follow his own strict code of conduct and, by doing so, destroy his standing in the community, or bend the rules and become a willing participant in a crime, thus preserving his reputation at the cost of knowing that it is a facade. By choosing the second option, Charles admits that he is open to accepting the sort of behavior he had earlier criticized; he also opens his heart to his niece and to Len, allowing for the possibility that a bridge can be erected to allow for some level of understanding between the generations.

Schoenfeld's script for "Hitch Hike" is a marvel and it is a wonderful demonstration of his ability to take the bare bones of a short story and expand them into a tale that contains both entertainment and sly social commentary, without being overly preachy. Once again, Paul Henreid (1908-1992) uses the camera to tell the story effectively--the half hour speeds along like Underhill's car, the shots  perfectly chosen to provide the viewer with all the information he or she needs to keep up without being needlessly showy.

John McIntire (1907-1991) is superb as Charles Underhill, giving another in a career of great performances. He began as a busy actor on radio in the 1930s and his film career started in 1947. He first appeared on TV in 1956 and was a regular face on screen until 1989, two years before his death. He was in Winchester '73 (1950) with Jimmy Stewart and plays the sheriff in Hitchcock's Psycho (1960). On television, he starred in the first season of Naked City until he got tired of working in New York City and quit. He later starred in Wagon Train from 1961 to 1965 and in The Virginian from 1967 to 1970. He was married for over 50 years to Jeanette Nolan, a great actress who was on Alfred Hitchcock Presents several times and who was one of the unseen actresses giving voice to Mrs. Bates in Psycho.
Read Morgan as the motorcycle cop

Robert Morse (1931- ) gives a memorable performance as Len, not long before he made a big splash (and won a Tony) on Broadway in 1961 as the star of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. Morse had been on Broadway since 1944 and had begun appearing on big and small screens in the mid-1950s; he was also in the Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode, "Touche." Morse later appeared on Night Gallery and was a regular on TV's Mad Men as Bert Cooper from 2007-2015. He is still working today at age 87.

Only 22 years old at the time "Hitch Hike" was filmed, Suzanne Pleshette is convincing as the attractive young woman, Anne. Her acting career had just started, with roles on Broadway and TV beginning in 1957 and her first film role in 1958; this was her only appearance on the Hitchcock show. She would go on to have an important part in Hitchcock's The Birds (1963), but her most famous role came as one of the stars of The Bob Newhart Show from 1972 to 1978. She continued working until 2004 and died in 2008.

In smaller roles:
  • Read Morgan (1931- ) as the motorcycle cop; he was seen often in small parts, mostly on TV, from 1949 to 1994 and appeared on the Hitchcock show three times. He also showed up on The Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits.
  • Paul E. Burns (1881-1967) as the owner of Henry's Diner; he made a career out of bit parts that were often uncredited and was on screen from 1930 to his death. He was seen on The Twilight Zone and in two other episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, including a small part in "The Blessington Method" as the fisherman whom Dick York's character sends off the pier to his death.
"Pick-Up" has never been reprinted but is reproduced below. "Hitch Hike" is available on DVD here or may be viewed for free online here. Read the GenreSnaps take on this episode here. Thanks to Peter Enfantino for helping me search for the story that was the basis for this episode, and thanks to Jennifer Nyiri at Bowling Green State University for sending me a scan of the story!

Sources:
The FictionMags Index, www.philsp.com/homeville/FMI/0start.htm.
Grams, Martin, and Patrik Wikstrom. The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. OTR Pub., 2001.
“Hitch Hike.” Alfred Hitchcock Presents, season 5, episode 21, CBS, 21 Feb. 1960.
IMDb, IMDb.com, www.imdb.com/.
Lacy, Ed. “Pick-Up.” Mystery Digest, Jan. 1959, pp. 17–22.
Lynskey, Ed. Ed Lacy: New York City Crime Author. www.mysteryfile.com/Lacy/Profile.html.

Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, www.wikipedia.org/.


Bernard C. Schoenfeld on Alfred Hitchcock Presents: An Overview and Episode Guide

Bernard C. Schoenfeld wrote 14 teleplays from Alfred Hitchcock Presents on his own and is co-credited on two others; it is not known if he worked with the other writers on those two shows or if he (or they) rewrote each other's work. His first two teleplays, "Decoy" and "Alibi Me," were adapted from radio plays, while the rest were adapted from published short stories. Schoenfeld did not write any original teleplays and none of his scripts were adapted from his own stories.

His first show came at the tail end of the first season. He wrote five episodes in season two, three in season three, five in season four, and two in season five. One of his strengths was in story structure, as evidenced by the scripts for "The Better Bargain," "The Jokester," "And the Desert Shall Blossom," and "Hitch Hike." Like Robert C. Dennis, an even more prolific contributor of scripts during the series's early years, Schoenfeld seems to have been replaced by Henry Slesar, whose contributions during the latter years of the half-hour show were extensive.


EPISODE GUIDE-BERNARD C. SCHOENFELD ON ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS

Episode title-"Decoy" [1.37]
Broadcast date-10 June 1956
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"A Murder of Necessity" by Richard George Pedicini
First print appearance-none; aired 4 March 1952 on radio show Suspense
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

Episode title-"Alibi Me" [2.7]
Broadcast date-11 Nov. 1956
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"Alibi Me" by Therd Jefre
First print appearance-none; aired 4 January 1951 on radio show Suspense; radio play by Walter Newman
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

Episode title-"Jonathan" [2.10]
Broadcast date-2 December 1956
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld and Stirling Silliphant
Based on-"Turmoil" by Fred Levon
First print appearance-Maclean's, October 15, 1948
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

"Alibi Me"

Episode title-"The Better Bargain" [2.11]
Broadcast date-9 December 1956
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"The Better Bargain" by Richard Deming
First print appearance-Manhunt, April 1956
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

Episode title-"Vicious Circle" [2.29]
Broadcast date-14 April 1957
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"Murder Comes Easy" by Evan Hunter
First print appearance-Real, March 1953
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

Episode title-"The Night the World Ended" [2.31]
Broadcast date-28 April 1957
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"The Night the World Ended" by Fredric Brown
First print appearance-Dime Mystery, January 1945
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

"Vicious Circle"

Episode title-"Night of the Execution" [3.13]
Broadcast date-29 December 1957
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"The Day of the Execution" by Henry Slesar
First print appearance-Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, June 1957
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

Episode title-"The Percentage" [3.14]
Broadcast date-5 January 1958
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"The Percentage" by David Alexander
First print appearance-Manhunt, April 1957
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

Episode title-"Listen, Listen .....!" [3.32]
Broadcast date-11 May 1958
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"Listen, Listen!" by R.E. Kendall
First print appearance-Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, June 1947
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

"Listen, Listen .....!"

Episode title-"The Jokester" [4.3]
Broadcast date-19 October 1958
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"The Jokester" by Robert Arthur
First print appearance-The Mysterious Traveler, March 1952
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

Episode title-"And the Desert Shall Blossom" [4.11]
Broadcast date-21 December 1958
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"And the Desert Shall Blossom" by Loren D. Good
First print appearance-Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, March 1958
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

Episode title-"Out There--Darkness" [4.16]
Broadcast date-25 January 1959
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"Over There--Darkness" by William O'Farrell
First print appearance-Sleuth Mystery Magazine, October 1958
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

"And the Desert Shall Blossom"

Episode title-"The Right Price" [4.22]
Broadcast date-8 March 1959
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"Make Me an Offer" by Henry Slesar
First print appearance-Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, December 1958
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

Episode title-"A Night With The Boys" [4.30]
Broadcast date-10 May 1959
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"A Fist Full of Money" by Henry Slesar
First print appearance-Playboy, February 1959
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

"Specialty of the House"

Episode title-"Specialty of the House" [5.12]
Broadcast date-13 December 1959
Teleplay by-Victor Wolfson and Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"The Specialty of the House" by Stanley Ellin
First print appearance-Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, May 1948
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

Episode title-"Hitch Hike" [5.21]
Broadcast date-21 February 1960
Teleplay by-Bernard C. Schoenfeld
Based on-"Pick-Up" by Ed Lacy
First print appearance-Mystery Digest, January 1959
Notes
Watch episode-here
Available on DVD?-here

In two weeks: Our series on James P. Cavanagh begins with "The Hidden Thing," starring Biff McGuire and Robert H. Harris!

Special note: A podcast called "Presenting Alfred Hitchcock Presents" has begun appearing. One episode per month is examined in detail, and five episodes have appeared thus far. Here is a link to the podcast's website. I recommend giving this series a listen!