Saturday, August 10, 2019

The Hitchcock Project: List of All Episodes Reviewed to Date (annual update-2019)

by Jack Seabrook
"Revenge"

An introduction to The Hitchcock Project may be found here. The episodes that have been reviewed so far are listed below. Click on any episode name to jump to the post.

1.39-Momentum


"The Creeper"


2.39-The Dangerous People


"Alibi Me"


3.35-Dip in the Pool
3.38-The Impromptu Murder


"The Percentage"


4.36-Invitation to an Accident


"And the Desert Shall Blossom"


"The Greatest Monster of Them All"

7.1-The Hatbox
7.3-Maria
7.9-I Spy
7.14-Bad Actor
7.20-The Test
7.37-The Big Kick
7.38-Where Beauty Lies

"Where Beauty Lies"

S.1-The Sorcerer’s Apprentice (shown only in syndication)


"The Sorcerer's Apprentice"

8.7-Annabel

9.31-Isabel

"The Evil of Adelaide Winters"

10.29-Off Season

"Return of Verge Likens"

BONUS ARTICLES:

Thursday, August 8, 2019

Journey Into Strange Tales! Atlas/ Marvel Horror Issue 40






The Marvel/Atlas 
Horror Comics
Part 25
August 1952 Part I





 Journey Into Mystery #2

"The Scarecrow" (a: Russ Heath) 
(r: Crypt of Shadows #1)
"Don't Look!" (a: Jay Scott Pike) 
(r: Crypt of Shadows #1)
"How Clumsy Can Ya Be?" (a: Howard Post) 
(r: Vault of Evil #2)
"Thru the Door" (a: Ben Brown & David Gantz) 
(r: Crypt of Shadows #2)
"The Hiding Place" (a: Gene Colan) 

Tired of being called "The Scarecrow" on account of his puny physique, Tim Blake visits a magic shop and buys a potion guaranteed to give him massive muscles. The shopkeeper tries to sell Tim the antidote but the Scarecrow ain't hearing nothing about going back. Tim takes the potion and, sure enough, awakens with a strong-man body and an all-new attitude. He heads right out into this new world to find the big bullies who'd made his life a nightmare and evens the score very quickly. But all is not a bed of roses for Tim when he discovers his muscles won't stop growing and he becomes too heavy to support. First his bed collapses, then he falls through the floors of his building. Even the ground won't halt his fall and we exit poor Tim Blake, falling into the "bowels of the Earth."


A Charles Atlas ad gone dreadfully wrong, "The Scarecrow" is a quite funny cautionary tale about being happy with what you've got. At least I think it is, but then our uncredited writer piles on the derision so thick how could we not feel empathy for Mr. Skin and Bones, even when he's bustin' heads and cornerin' dames?  Russ seems to be in on the joke as well since his art here almost looks like it would be at home in MAD. Sadly, "The Scarecrow" is the only good thing about this sophomore effort. Four very sub-par efforts follow.


In "Don't Look!,"a crazy old man attempts to sell the patent to a mirror that enables the owner to see into the future. But is the man crazy? And is he old? Lawyer Harold Whitney ("It's funny how old he looks, and yet it's not real age! He's a young guy made old by insanity!") takes advantage of the situation by stealing  the mirror and having the loon committed to an asylum. But Whitney finds that some things in the future are inevitable and inescapable. EC did these time-travel thingies so much better. "How Clumsy Can Ya Be?" is a clumsy rip-off of Robert Bloch's "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" has some of the most amateurish art we've seen so far. More awful art awaits the reader of "Thru the Door," a dopey tale of a fight manager who tries to steal his client’s girl and then discovers the dame is a vampire. Why? Who knows? A wildly random reveal. Lastly, Gene Colan enlivens "The Hiding Place" a tad but the story is weak. Ann and Paul murder Ann’s hubby, Jeb, and hide the body. They head for a costume party but, in the end, it turns out Jeb’s risen from the grave and in Paul’s costume!






Maneely
 Marvel Tales #108

"The Terrible Tunnel" (a: Bill Everett) 
"The Guillotine" (a: John Romita) 
"Pain in the Neck" 
"Horror in the Moonlight!" (a: Bill Everett) 
"Hate!" (a: Bill LaCava) 

Sadistic mining supervisor Steve Brill has pushed and prodded his men with beatings and promises of worse if the job isn't done in time. After one of the men is shot by Brill in an altercation, the survivors work out a plan for a sweet revenge involving a switch in the direction they dig. I love Bill Everett's art, always have, but sometimes his male protagonists look like Popeye's buddy, Bluto, and in "The Terrible Tunnel," it's tough to tell the guys apart. That does not diminish the enjoyment of this strip one bit though. It's a funny, clever little revenge yarn.


"The Terrible Tunnel"
Like Bill Everett, John Romita can seemingly take the sparsest crumb of a story and make it into something worthwhile. With "The Guillotine," Jazzy Johnny almost does it again. George Katt makes his living buying curios low and selling them high to  collectors. When George stumbles onto the infamous "Red Blade," he knows he can make a fortune off the ancient guillotine. Only a hesitant dealer and his old hound dog and in George's way. As I mentioned, there's not much thought put into this one (and the climax is pretty dull despite the sharpness of the blade) from any party other than John Romita.

The final three aren't much better, but at least "Horror in the Moonlight" gives us a second dose of Bill Everett. A man follows his wife to a graveyard where he discovers she's a vampire. That's all there is to "Horror in the Moonlight" (which is just about devoid of any word-clutter) but it's a treat to look at nonetheless. Bill manages to squeeze a boatload of atmosphere into three measly pages. In "Pain the Neck" (a phrase that befits this groaner), our heroine Gale knows she could be a Broadway star if only her worthless hubby, Tony, had a bit of moola for funding. But Tony is content to make his pretty scarves and live the life of a Bohemian. When a Broadway producer plants the seed in her mind, Gale poisons Tony for his insurance money but the artsy Tony proves he can really be a "Pain in the Neck" in the end. Little surprise in a story that telecasts its "twist" in its title and a catchphrase that's repeated every couple of panels. The uncredited art is awful.


Finally, we have the dirge known as "Hate!" Greedy Agnes is attempting to drive her sister, Ellen, loony in order to gain both halves of the family estate, but the laugh's on Agnes when she pushes her sis too hard. I've liked some of Bill LaCava's work thus far but "Hate!" is probably not one of his credits he highlighted on his Curriculum Vitae and, even by 1952, the "greedy heirs" plot was growing mold.

"Horror in the Moonlight"





Heath
 Adventures Into Weird Worlds #9

"Locked Up" (a: Carmine Infantino) 
(r: Crypt of Shadows #4)
"Do Not Feed" (a: Tony DiPreta) 
(r: Chamber of Chills #16)
"Too Much TV" (a: Bill Benulis)  
"Alone" (a: Ben Brown & David Gantz) 
(r: Tomb of Darkness #13)
"The Last Laugh" (a: George Roussos) 
(r: Weird Wonder Tales #8)

William is the town outcast; he's been accused of outrageous activity... like transforming into a werewolf, sucking blood like a vampire and, perhaps most egregious of all, keeping his father locked in a cellar dungeon! But gorgeous Margie ignores all that because she's keen of William and wants to be part of his life. Bill admits that Margie is easy on the eye and they begin a relationship that ultimately (and some would say predictably) ends up with the beauty visiting her beau's run-down estate. There she confronts William about his checkered rep and the flustered young man denies growing hair or fangs at night but owns up to having a dad in the wine cellar. Margie flings insults his way and tells her she never wants to see him again. William hangs his head and stomps downstairs to bear his soul to his father... a talking ape.

Let's get one thing out in the open right now: my three-star rating is awarded only for the sheer goofiness of "Locked Up," a terror tale that defies any coherent synopsis. Why good-looking William has a giant talking gorilla for a dad is anyone's guess (old reliable Hank Chapman is the author of this alternate classic and I'll assume he had no explanations for the twisted turn of events) but the missing panel explaining that William's mother was vacationing in the jungles of Africa when she happened upon a really good-looking gorilla who asked her to marry him would only ruin the WTF? of the story's finale. The dialogue, as well, is just too much fun to ignore (as you can see in the panels reprinted to the right):



In the end, poor William is a misunderstood young man who lives in a spider-webbed and decaying mansion, with only his gorilla pop to bide the time with. The much-maligned Carmine Infantino does just fine here; his work at this point in his career (looking nothing like mid-70s Infantino) closely resembles that of the Kirby/Ayers stuff that would grace the pages of Tales to Astonish and Tales of Suspense half a decade later.


A museum guard develops an irrational and intense hate for the curator of the facility's aquarium, Dr. Heiden, and schemes to destroy Heiden's pet octopus. "Do Not Feed" has a very predictable twist (Heiden is, in reality, the star octopus' mate) but, like "Locked Up," that goofy surprise is not explained and, also like "Locked Up," the "mystery" works to the story's advantage. I'm really taking a shine to Tony DiPreta's crude and scratchy art; weird, since those attributes usually turn me off (see: any art by Myron Fass or Dick Ayers). His depiction of Heiden, the human octopus, has a goofy charm.

"Too Much TV" is Stan's three-page cautionary tale about a woman who spends too much time in front of the idiot box. The Broadway star of "Alone" has had enough of his suffocating throng of fans and only wishes for some solo time. He gets it and then immediately wishes he had the throng back. Finally, Charlie is driving brother Leo crazy with his practical jokes and gags but Leo gets "The Last Laugh" when his brother pushes him too far. We've seen this story way too many times and George Roussos' art is bland and lifeless.










Everett
 Astonishing #16

"I Prowl at Night!" (a: Syd Shores) 
"Terror in Jimmy's House" ★1/2
(a: Edwin Goldfarb & Bob Baer)
"The Miser" (a: Bernie Krigstein) 
"Don't Make a Ghoul of Yourself!" 
(a: Dick Ayers & Ernie Bache)

Parven Gabora, a Budapest werewolf tears the throat out of a country farmer and then transforms back into a man. Disgusted by his actions, Gabora wanders onto a road and is hit by a car, driven by American embassy worker, Allan Hart. The wreck leaves Hart on an operating table and, he soon discovers, his life was saved by the blood of the dying Gabora. Of course, since this is an Atlas horror story, the events take a sinister turn. Hart soon finds himself changing and, after a bit of research and interviews with Gabora's neighbors, discovers he's infected with the blood of a werewolf. Not wanting to hurt his beloved wife, Louise, Allan flees to a secluded cabin but his wife tracks him down just as the moon is full and Allan is transforming. Quickly, he locks himself into a room and makes it through the night without harming his wife. The next morning, while heading to the hospital for a cure, the couple wreck their car and find themselves in that nasty situation again. Allan dies before he can warn the doctors of the tainted blood flowing from his veins into Louise.

"I Prowl at Night" is a simple, but effective, yarn heavy on the pathos and light on the hairy monster moments. I thought it a nice change for Hart to infected by a blood transfusion rather than the cliched attack by the monster. This is another of those rare occasions where an innocent Atlas protagonist has something nasty happen to him (and that can also be said of Louise's fate as well). Allan's only thought is that his wife be spared any fallout from his bad luck (in fact, just before the couple crash their car, Allan concludes that only suicide will keep Louise safe). Syd Shores contributes nice, atmospheric work, especially in the Allan transformation scene where the full-out facial change is minimized to maximize the pain of the metamorphosis. A solid monster story.

"Terror in Jimmy's House" concerns little Janie, left alone during the day while her dad is at work, who is contacted and befriended by "Kol," a beast from the center of the Earth. Dad comes home one day early and witnesses the monster snuggling up with Janie; he goes ballistic (being a caring dad and all) and forbids his girl ever to see the giant-snorkeled beastie. Janie throws a tantrum and falls down the stairs, leaving her pop swearing vengeance on the monster that started this all. Said creature shows up and revitalizes his little buddy but dad doesn't notice as he unloads his pistol into the hairy beast. Janie smiles and tells her dad she can't wait for him and Kol to become pals. Maudlin tale has nothing to highlight other than the bizarre Goldfarb/Baer alien design (think gorilla with air duct hoses for a nose).

"The Miser"
Jonas Cragee is "The Miser," a man so in love with money that he steals shoelaces from the bums in the park to sell at thrift stores, finds no shame in stealing pennies from children and, perhaps most egregious, eats for free at the local shelter. One day, he overhears the shelter supervisor turn down a sizable donation and becomes curious as to how the man keeps the poor fed and housed. Breaking in, Cragee discovers the supervisor has the legendary Greek "horn of plenty," a magical device that grants the owner anything he wants in huge portions. Cragee steals the device but runs into trouble when he wishes for gold and coins aplenty without knowing how to shut the gizmo off. He drowns in a sea of riches. Pre-EC Bernie Krigstein's art is so obviously different from any other artist who worked at Atlas (save, perhaps, Gene Colan) that it's surprising he found so much work at the House of Stan. The story itself isn't all that great, relying on the cliched heavy who will go to any extremes (some pretty silly) to attain his goal. The final story this issue, "Don't Make a Ghoul of Yourself!" is a silly little bit of nonsense about a man who stumbles across a ghoul in a graveyard and spares his life in exchange for a wish. Yes, "Don't Make a Ghoul..." adds a new spin on an old cliche but it's still four pages of bad art punctuated with a very obvious twist.




Heath
Adventures Into Terror #11

"Dead Man's Escape!" (a: Joe Maneely) 
(r: Fear #9)
"Under the Knife!" (a: Tony DiPreta) 
(r: Creatures on the Loose #18)
"He Who Laughs Last, Gets the Horselaugh" 
(a: Bill Benulis & Jack Abel)
(r: Where Monsters Dwell #16)
"Ed's Young Wife!" (a: Ben Brown & David Gantz) 
(r: Monsters on the Prowl #19)
"Island of Horror" (a: Joe Sinnott) ★1/2
(r: Monsters on the Prowl #17)

Prisoner Paris is intent on getting off the heretofore inescapable Dry Tortugas prison island and the only way to get off the island is to play dead in a sack. Since there's no room on the tiny island to bury the dead, the warden has the bodies tied up in a sack and dumped in the surrounding waters to serve as fish food. Paris tells the warden he'd rather not be digging the new well and would rather be the island's morgue attendant; the warden quickly agrees since there's not a lot of men lining up to handle the corpses. Paris hides himself in a body bag and waits to be tossed but, unfortunately for the dopey con, dumping methods are changed and his sack goes in the well... where the brand new octopus waits for food. "Dead Man's Escape!" is a variation on a very old plot line but at least it throws us an interesting curve. The octopus in the well method of body disposal seems a bit, oh I don't know, outrageous but if the warden was able to bypass all the rules and regulations, who am I to argue?

The short-short "Under the Knife!" is about a man having open-heart surgery who hallucinates he's in a boat on the River Styx, chased by a man clad in a mask. When he comes to, he discovers the surgeon working on him is the man in the mask. Nonsensical in the extreme, "Under the Knife!" might have represented something "deep" to its writer, but to its reader it's just a head-scratcher and nothing more. Joe has had it playing the horse's-ass (literally) to Eddie in their vaudeville act on TV and, when Eddie refuses to switch, Joe plonks him over the head and dumps his body in the river. Later, at the station, the horse costume comes alive and tramples Joe. Yes, it's just that simple, with no nuances or interesting twists or turns. This could very well be the stupidest idea realized in 1952 (hey, there's a lot of time left in the Atlas era so I won't make any rash proclamations like "Worst of All Time" just yet). 'Nuff Said.

An architect falls madly in love with the wife of his client and he and the smoldering redhead plan the demise of the old man. Unfortunately, the best laid plans... "Ed's Young Wife!" (an interesting choice for story title) takes one of the oldest twists in the book (the architect sabotages the old man's breaks but, at the last second, the wife takes the car) and does absolutely nothing with it. I was almost surprised at not being surprised. "Island of Horror" takes Best-of-Issue honors thanks mostly to Joe Sinnott's brilliant art. A cut-throat reporter investigates a series of grisly waterfront murders and their connection to an expedition to the legendary "City of Heads." A truly grisly climax (even if the reveal stretches the boundaries of what a simple face mask can hide), with the only downside being a preponderance of text. Interesting to note that when the story got reprinted in 1972, Code restrictions necessitated a title change to the tamer "Island of Fear!"

"Island of Horror"


Don't listen to Kovacs...
Come back in two weeks and we'll
discuss six more volumes of horror!
















Monday, August 5, 2019

Star Spangled DC War Stories Issue 161: June 1975





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


Kubert
Weird War Tales 38

"Born to Die"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by Frank Redondo

"The Renegade Dogface!"
Story by George Kashdan
Art by Jack Sparling

"The Return"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by E.R. Cruz

"The Man Who Would Be God"
Story by Jack Oleck
Art by Jess Jodloman




"Born to Die"
Peter: Nazi soldier Wilhelm Schneider believes he was "Born to Die," lying across his own grave. Schneider dreams he has died endless times, always in the same fashion. When his troop comes across a wooded area he recognizes, Schneider begs his lieutenant to turn back but the soldier scoffs at Wilhelm and the troop pushes forward. In the end, Schneider does die, draped across the grave of American William Taylor, killed in action during World War I. And, as the lieutenant relates in our final-panel expository, "In German, the name William becomes Wilhelm. And in English, the name Schneider means--a tailor."

How positively clever! Oh boy, these WWTs are getting more and more like Ripley's rejects every issue. What's the point of the story? We've seen this kind of plot dozens of times before and here the only effective use is to fill six pages before the deadline. Frank (Quico) Redondo's art is very good but, like Schneider's dream, there's almost a sense of deja vu to it. Almost as though Mort Drucker took a turn at inking Alfredo Alcala.

"The Renegade Dogface!" is a two-page cliche about a World War IV soldier who goes amok, killing everyone he comes in contact with. Why? Surprise... he's a robot! Did George Kashdan really believe that reader turnover occurs so frequently we wouldn't have seen that one coming? Perhaps I should just count my lucky stars Jack Sparling was given the two-pager to illustrate and move on. I'll do that.

Jack Oleck decides that mining the "prophesied death" twice in one issue is just fine but then forgets to write two engaging scripts to go with that hoary old chestnut. "The Return" finds George Gordon, a sea captain, fighting with Greek rebels against the Turkish cavalry. The Captain reveals to his men that he believes he died once before on Greek soil and will die here again but, naturally, the men dismiss such talk. As predicted, the captain does indeed die and his heart is buried on Greek soil. Our skeletal host reminds us that George Gordon was also the name of Lord Byron. How any of this ties together, I have no idea. Men with brave hearts or good imaginations are reincarnated throughout the ages? I guess so, but Oleck certainly could have whipped up a more interesting way of telling us than "The Return." But, as with "Born to Die," we're graced with nice art. E.R. Cruz contributes gorgeous, detailed images, so feel free to skip the words.

"The Man Who Would Be God"
Shamar the Barbarian takes yet another city but cities alone will not quench his thirst for power. Shamar wants to be ruler of the world and looks to his wizards for the answer. He is told there is but one being more powerful than he and that is Thorgeld the Terrible, who lives high in the nearby cliffs. Shamar ventures to Thorgeld's cave and confronts the gruesome God, with a long battle to follow. Thorgeld tells Shamar that within this cave, time means nothing and, when the barbarian emerges from the stronghold victorious, he discovers the true meaning of the demon's words.

From deep down somewhere, Jack Oleck finally pumps out a script worth reading and just in time, I should add. This title has been a disaster for so long, I automatically assume the next story is going to suck as well. Thankfully, "The Man Who Would Be God" elevates itself above most sword and sorcery tales of the era. Usually, the barbarian character is the hero but Shamar is a brutal and self-obsessed despot who doesn't get the girl (there is, in fact, no girl--another oddity for S&S) and is left, ironically, ruling a world of the distant future where nothing exists. Looking over a list of Jess Jodloman's credits (the artist died in early 2018), I'm surprised he wasn't used more frequently on Marvel's various barbarian titles, as he displays an obvious knack for the muscleman and creepy surroundings.

Jack: This issue seems like one that editor Joe Orlando threw together by gathering four stories intended as backups. "Born to Die" is decent but nothing special and, as Peter points out, the conceit is repeated in "The Return," which seems a lot longer than its three pages due to being overly wordy. "The Renegade Dogface!" is two pages of confusion but the best is saved for last in the seven-page "The Man Who Would Be God." The stories are six, two, three, and seven pages long, so it's hard to get any plot going in such brief space.


Kirby/Royer
Our Fighting Forces 156

"Good-bye Broadway... Hello Death!"
Story by Jack Kirby
Art by Jack Kirby and Mike Royer

Jack: A Nazi submarine in the Hudson River is tricked into giving away its position when it torpedoes a decoy American ship. The Nazi sub is destroyed but the crew escape and are rounded up--all except Helmut Steger! The Losers are ordered to go on furlough but can't resist keeping a lookout for the escaped Nazi as they hurtle down Broadway in a taxi cab.

Spotting him making contact with an undercover Nazi spy, the Losers catch Steger and find, hidden in his hat band, news of a second Nazi submarine. That sub has reached Long Island shore and is about the launch a missile when the Losers burst upon the scene. A pitched battle erupts and the missile is launched, but the Losers manage to blast it out of the sky before it can do any harm.

Ben Grimm tells Johnny Storm to shut up!
("Good-bye Broadway... Hello Death!")
As far as I know, no Nazi subs got close to New York City during WWII, so this story is a bit of fantasy by Kirby. His art is as rough as ever, and it's once again hard to tell one Loser from another. Jack does love to stick pipes and cigars in the mouths of his characters, doesn't he? Suffice it to say, "Good-bye Broadway... Hello Death!" is no better or worse than any of the other recent entries in this series. In the letters column, the editor writes that "For all intents and purposes, this is a totally new book." Too bad it's not a good one.

Peter: Another dumb installment of an incredibly dumb series. The script reads as though Kirby opted to edit out any "slow spots" to heighten the action, with the result an incomprehensible mess. The idea that a group the Army calls "The Losers" would be jetted around the world for pert near every catastrophe is pretty darn silly (especially when you consider the Army is giving the same treatment to Sgt. Rock, the Jeb Stuart, and the Unknown Soldier). Kirby actually worked my interest up very briefly in the confrontation scene between Storm and Steger but then the moment passed. Such a big deal made about their past meetings only to end the tension with a thud. Could there be a follow-up in our future? Not according to my notes. Have I mentioned that every character resembles Ben Grimm?


Kubert
Our Army at War 281

"Dead Man's Eyes!"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Russ Heath

"Heads I Win, Tails You Lose!"
Story and Art by Sam Glanzman

Jack: A line of Italian peasants lead their mules down the snowy hill from the town of San Pietro, the beasts of burden carrying on their backs dead American soldiers. The corpses are laid out at the foot of the hill and among them is Sgt. Rock. Flash back to Rock finding other corpses on the ground and taking a group of soldiers with him to look for the Nazis who are responsible for the killings.

Rock breaks a neck
("Dead Man's Eyes!")
In the woods, Rock was ambushed and hit in the throat with a gun butt, which paralyzed his vocal cords. He is thought dead and left lying on the ground while the rest of his group of soldiers are executed by Nazi machine guns. The Germans leave without checking to make sure that Rock is dead and he makes them pay for this mistake by following them and killing them, breaking one's neck and machine-gunning others. Rock captures the cruel Nazi leader but spares his life; in return, the Nazi leads Rock through a mine field. A mine goes off but Rock survives and his opponent is killed.

Back in the present, Rock's voice suddenly comes back and he awakens with a start, much to the relief of the rest of Easy Co.

When I first read "Dead Man's Eyes!" I thought it was outstanding and, on second reading, I still think it's one of the best Sgt. Rock stories in recent memory. Russ Heath is largely responsible for the quality, of course, with his (by now) patented wordless sequences building tension and excitement. I also like that the cover--for once--is not a cheat; the men of Easy Co. really do think Rock is dead. I have but two minor quibbles. First, neither the Nazis nor the men of Easy Co. bother to check to see if Rock is really dead. Second, Rock takes a group of no-name soldiers with him to look for the Nazis and, when all of the American soldiers but Rock are executed, we don't know who they were and we don't miss them. What are the chances? I understand the need to keep Rock's usual companions alive for the good of the long-running series, but it strains credibility to think that none of them ever gets killed.

Larry Rounds loved games of chance, but he never learned how to play dice. He joined the Navy and, while on the U.S.S. Stevens, some African-American sailors gave him a lesson in dice and he lost $200. One of the sailors later taught him how to make the dice do what he wanted. Larry soon found himself the lone survivor of a landing craft that was destroyed while approaching a Philippine island and he struck up a friendship with his captor over their shared interest in the game of Go. When it came time for Larry to be executed, he convinced his captor to give him a shot at freedom based on a roll of the dice, but a shell fired by a guerrilla killed both men before they could roll.

I'll say this for Sam Glanzman: he can't draw very well but, once in a while, he can tell an engaging story. In four pages, he packs a lot of plot and entertainment, enough to make me wonder (not for the first time) how many of these Stevens tales are based on true events.

Peter: The Rock story is a confusing and confounding mish-mash. So, Rock devolves into a Charles Bronson-inspired vengeance machine, shooting Nazis in the back and sparing no one, until he comes face-to-face with the man who ordered the killing of Rock's men and... spares him? WTF? The finale is confusing as well; are we to assume that Easy believes their Sarge to be dead until he tears up (a la Joseph Cotten in the Hitch episode, "Breakdown")? And I'm no doctor but I gotta believe a rifle butt delivered to your throat is going to result in something a little more serious than injured vocal chords. First Stevens installment in quite a while is a decent one with a nasty punch in the tail.


Kubert
G.I. Combat 179

"One Last Charge"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Sam Glanzman

"Night Without End"
Story by Robert Kanigher
Art by Ric Estrada

Peter: After a particularly fierce tank battle, Jeb and the boys are ordered to stand their ground and give the impression that there's a fleet of tanks ready to blow any stinkin' Nazi tin cans to hell. Best laid plans and all that... A regiment of Germans atop a nearby cliff delivers a death blow to Commander Jeb's "Haunted Tank II" and, after the boys climb the cliff and toss some TNT pineapples at the enemy, they're off to the tank graveyard for some parts for the still-smoldering wreck. What they find instead is the original Haunted Tank, still intact and waiting for demolition. Jeb requisitions the tank (at gunpoint) and the boys head on down the road, happy but still confused about their commander who talks to ghosts.

The previously stand-up Commander Jeb pulls a gun
on fellow G.I.s just doing their jobs...
I'm still waiting for another good "Haunted Tank" installment but I guess I'll have to resign myself to the fact that it ain't coming. There's no forward motion to this title; we're stuck in a Bob Kanigher-induced suspended animation. Last issue, Big Bob made a big hullabaloo about a Haunted Tank II, only to destroy the new model and, oddly, have the boys make their way back to the original. I thought that old thing was a pile of useless nuts and bolts after being blown out of its treads by a Focke. Now it not only works but, while the Army was stripping it for parts, some kind fella managed to tend to the burned paint. And let's just talk about that scene where Commander Jeb holds a gun on a fellow G.I. and demands the return of Jeb I. Seriously? Like this would just stand; the other soldiers would laugh it off with an "Ah, you know these guys!" and then get back to work like nothing happened. Fat chance. This series gets more inane with each successive chapter.

But, evidently, it's all good!

Dropped into a small French village with orders to destroy the local Gestapo headquarters, a paratrooper becomes entangled on a church spire and must watch the blazing combat from up high. Obviously inspired by the Red Buttons character and his predicament in The Longest Day, "Night Without End" is entertaining enough and reminiscent of the 1950s DC war stories. It's certainly more tolerable than the main event this issue.

Jack: I thought the highlight of the Haunted Tank story was the two-page sequence where the ghostly general relates an event from the Civil War similar to the one happening in WWII. At least it was a break from the monotony of the tank battles. Glanzman's art is just unpleasant to look at. The backup story's art, by Ric Estrada, looks good in comparison to Glanzman's work and the story is fairly entertaining in that '50s DC War Comics way you pointed out.


Chan
Star Spangled War Stories 188

"Encounter"
Story by David Michelinie
Art by Gerry Talaoc

Peter: Heading home from Monte Grande (seen last issue), the Unknown Soldier is thrown into intrigue yet again aboard the ship he's traveling on. It's not long into the voyage that US discovers the Nazis have taken control of the barge with some sinister plan in mind. Luckily, US has packed his "Make Any Face" kit and, after doing away with a German the hard way, he assumes the Nazi's appearance and snakes his way into the operation. The Germans plan to sink the ship at the entrance to Bourgin Harbor, a port important to the American fleet. The Nazi's secret weapon aboard is Nazi Captain Johann Kraus, disguised as a wheelchair-bound war vet, who has gained the trust (and love) of a nurse named Molly. When the inevitable showdown occurs and US is forced to sink the ship before it gets to its destination, Molly gets the drop on the battling war heroes, pointing her pistol at the shocked pair. Despite his pleas, Molly ventilates Johann and then helps US evacuate the sinking ship. US thanks Molly for saving him but the girl confesses she's never used a handgun before and she wasn't aiming at Johann.


Despite some soap opera trappings and a few clumsy expositions ("You see, men, even though I've explained our mission a dozen times before, let me explain it yet again..."), "Encounter" is another winner from the Michelinie/Talaoc team. Michelinie seems compelled to toss in some cliches ("Eat steel, Fritz!") that, in the hands of a skilled surgeon, come off as a wink and a nod at the seasoned war readers. The crowning achievement is, of course, Molly's shocking confession. I assumed the girl had been overcome by a sense of duty and realized that even love must suffer in war but no... perfect climax. And nice that there's no back-up, giving David and Gerry some extra breathing room.


Jack: Two four-star stories in one month! This one was going along just fine until the first ending, which was satisfying, and then the second ending, which was completely unexpected! Writing and art are firing on all cylinders and I love the full-length format. No wonder the Nazis lost the war--they keep missing US with a machine gun at about ten paces!

Next Week...
We bid a very fond adieu to Archie
and gird ourselves for the valley below us.

Thursday, August 1, 2019

The Hitchcock Project-Arthur A. Ross Part Four: Ten Minutes from Now [9.26]

by Jack Seabrook

Jack Ritchie's short story, "Ten Minutes from Now," is an exciting tale of a series of bomb threats with an ending that is wholly unexpected. First published in the October 1963 issue of Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, it was quickly purchased for The Alfred Hitchcock Hour and adapted by Arthur A. Ross into a show that was broadcast on CBS on Friday, May 1, 1964. Unfortunately, in expanding  the story for television, Ross's script lost much of what makes the story entertaining.

Told in first-person narration by a man named James Bellington, the short story begins with the narrator entering City Hall, carrying a 9" x 9" x 9" package wrapped in brown paper and demanding to see Mayor Pettibone. Police Lieutenant Wymar confronts Bellington and grabs the package, immersing it in a sink filled with water and summoning the bomb squad. Wymar shows Bellington a threatening note that had been sent to the mayor by someone who signed his name as the Avenger; in the note, the writer vows to blow Mayor Pettibone to kingdom come due to his actions regarding the Veterans Memorial development.

"Ten Minutes from Now"
was first published here
The box that Bellington held is revealed to contain nothing but a ticking alarm clock and Bellington leaves, vowing to return. He visits a newsstand and complains about the adult magazines on sale there, commenting that a well-placed bomb could blow the stand sky-high. Bellington observes that he is being followed and purchases another alarm clock, along with batteries and wire; he then walks to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where he enters and proceeds to a gallery of modern art, where he complains about the paintings and says they should be blown to bits. He takes steps to lose a man who is following him and buys milk, bread, cold cuts, and sugar before returning to his hotel room, where he eats a sandwich for lunch and reads an article about the Veterans Memorial Center: it seems that Mayor Pettibone changed the proposed building site and speculators lost their shirts. A man named Geoffrey Mipple telephones Bellington to ask about his visit to the mayor's office.

Taking a taxi back to City Hall, Bellington visits the mayor's office, again carrying a box. Lt. Wymar intercepts him and the box is x-rayed and thought to be a bomb; Bellington spends four hours in jail before Wymar returns to admit that what was thought to be a powder charge was just the bag of sugar that Bellington had purchased earlier that day.

Donnelly Rhodes as James Bellington
Psychiatrist Dr. Sam Burton interviews Bellington and suggests that he must be working his way up to a real bomb that will be detonated by a push button. That evening, Bellington buys a push button, visits his friend Geoffrey, and spends the night in uneasy dreams. The next morning, he and Geoffrey prepare the third and final package and Bellington calls Dr. Burton to say that he has bought a push button and may never see the doctor again.

Bellington takes a cab to City Hall, where he finds the street roped off and cleared of people. He begins to walk toward the building but changes direction and is chased by Lt. Wymar, Dr. Burton, and other police until he runs into the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Racing to the gallery of modern art, he announces that in ten minutes he will release the push button on the box he carries, blowing up the entire building. The minutes tick by and Bellington advances toward the others, driving them out of the building. After a few minutes, he emerges from the front door and removes his finger from the button, to no effect. He displays the alarm clock and wire that were the only contents of the box and discards it all before telling Lt. Wymar that he plans to sue the city. Bellington finally meets the mayor face to face and complains about noise outside his hotel room window.

Lonny Chapman as Lt. Wymar
Bellington then takes a taxi to the West Side, where he discards his false beard, walking stick, and hat, and turns his coat inside out. He takes a taxi to the airport and meets Geoffrey in St. Louis the next day. Geoffrey displays seven modern art paintings that he stole from the museum while the building was empty and, finally, Bellington's goal becomes clear.

"Ten Minutes from Now" is a clever tale of misdirection, with plenty of humor and excitement. It seems tailor-made for filming, and the light, comic tone appears perfect for Arthur A. Ross, whose prior teleplay for The Alfred Hitchcock Hour had been a successful adaptation of Ritchie's "Anyone for Murder?" Ross takes a different approach this time, one that removes almost all of the humor from the story and adds an element of protest that was timely in 1964 but which has dated badly today.

Lou Jacobi as Dr. Glover
The show begins with Bellington watching a TV news report about letters threatening the life of Thomas Grindley, the Commissioner of Recreation and Parks, who has replaced the mayor of Ritchie's short story. There are paint supplies on a table next to the TV and, as the camera pans around the room to land on Bellington's face, we see that he is in an art studio. He then visits City Hall, much as he does in the story and, after Lt. Wymar has submerged the box in the sink and the man from the bomb squad has concluded that it was not a bomb, we learn that Bellington is a disgruntled painter whose artwork was passed over by Grindley for inclusion in a public exhibition. This takes the place of the financial loss that is ostensibly the driving force behind the bomb threats in the short story, and Ross continues throughout the episode to portray Bellington as an angry, unsuccessful artist.

In the story, Bellington is made to seem like a crank when he complains about the adult magazines at the newsstand and the modern art paintings in the museum. In the TV show, he speaks in an affected, educated manner that makes him seem pompous and arrogant; his dialogue is almost a parody of the sort of dialogue Rod Serling would often write to much better effect. Ross rearranges some of the events of the story: Bellington is sent to see Dr. Glover, the psychiatrist, after the first bomb threat, and the two engage in verbal fencing that serves as exposition.

Neile Adams as Sgt. Marklen
A scene is added where Lt. Wymar and his men search Bellington's hotel room and Dr. Glover joins them, commenting favorably on Bellington's technique as a painter and warning Wymar that the painter will know that his room has been searched and be more likely to carry out an attack as a result. Instead of being set in New York City (though the city is never named in the story, some of the action takes place in the Metropolitan Museum of Art), the TV version of "Ten Minutes from Now" takes place in an unnamed town that happens to be home to the Memorial Museum, a building that houses more great paintings than one would expect outside a metropolitan area.

On his first visit to the museum, Bellington strikes up a conversation with a shy, mousy woman and explains to her that the box he carries contains paint supplies, items that he would like to use to paint copies of the masterworks displayed on the walls if only the authorities would let him. The scene, like the search of his hotel room, feels like padding but does foreshadow the show's surprise ending by introducing the idea of Bellington painting copies of what his confederates will later steal.

Ed Peck
The longest added scene is the most unexpected. After Dr. Glover and Lt. Wymar discuss the likelihood that Bellington has resolved to carry out his final attack, they bring in Sergeant Louise Marklen, a pretty, young policewoman, who is sent undercover to try to get clues to where and when Bellington's real attack will occur. The next scene is rather long and takes place in a bar, as Louise strikes up a conversation with Bellington. It is very much of its time: Bellington is the angry young man, protesting authority, and the two trade words and phrases associated with the protest movement. Louise remarks that "'I admire anybody who can make the fat cats jump and run,'" a comment that typifies the dialogue in this scene. Yet the scene is the most interesting in the episode, mainly due to the performance of Neile Adams as Sgt. Marklen; even though she is playing a part, her character seems more genuine and natural than anyone else in the show, certainly more so than Bellington.

Sandra Gould
The scene ends when Bellington runs his hands over her shoulders and down her arms, causing her to drop her purse. He picks it up and discovers a reel-to-reel tape recorder hidden inside, and he knows that he has been tricked. The final scene plays out much as it does in the short story, but with an important change: after the museum is cleared and Bellington is seemingly left alone, he walks to an art gallery and finds his two confederates removing paintings from their frames and replacing them with copies he has painted. The scene is played so matter of factly that it loses any element of surprise, and the show ends with Bellington going outside and revealing that his push-button bomb was another fake.

David Carradine
"Ten Minutes from Now" could have been a comedy, had Ross's teleplay stuck closer to the tone of Ritchie's story, or it could have been fifty minutes of suspense, portraying a mad bomber coming closer and closer to destruction. Instead, it is dull and padded, with a particularly wooden performance by Lonny Chapman as Lt. Wymar and an odd, almost comic performance by Lou Jacobi as Dr. Glover, who seems at times to be casting a skeptical eye on the proceedings. Donnelly Rhodes, as Bellington, is never anything but pompous, and his flowery dialogue does not help.

Donnelly Rhodes (1937-2018) was born in Canada as Donnelly Rhodes Henry and had a long career onscreen from 1956 to 2016, appearing more often on TV than in film. This was one of his two appearances on The Alfred Hitchcock Hour.

Tommy Kirk
Lou Jacobi (1913-2009) was also born in Canada, as Louis Jacobovitch, and was on the stage starting in 1924. His film and TV career lasted from 1953 to 1994 and he was also in "Dear Uncle George" on The Alfred Hitchcock Hour.

Lonny Chapman (1920-2007) played numerous roles on TV from 1951 to 2000 and also appeared in many films, including Hitchcock's The Birds (1963). This was his only role on The Alfred Hitchcock Hour.

Going undercover as Sgt. Marklen came naturally for Neile Adams (1932- ), who was born Ruby Neilam Salvador Adams in the Philippines and who served as a young spy for the resistance during World War Two. She was on screen from 1952 to 1991 and appeared in three episodes of the Hitchcock series, including "Man from the South" with her husband, Steve McQueen.

In smaller roles:
  • Ed Peck (1917-1992) as (of course) a policeman; he played many such roles in a screen career from 1950 to 1983, including a recurring role as a policeman on Happy Days and three memorable appearances on The Odd Couple.
  • Sandra Gould (1916-1999) as the secretary to the Commissioner of Recreation and Parks; she was on screen from 1942 to 1999 and is best remembered as Gladys Kravitz on Bewitched from 1966 to 1971.
  • David Carradine (1936-2009) as Bellington's partner in crime who is removing paintings from their frames; this uncredited role was one of his earliest and he went on to a long and successful career in such TV shows as Kung Fu (1972-1975) and such films as Death Race 2000 (1975) and Kill Bill (2003-04).
  • Tommy Kirk (1941- ) as the other art thief with David Carradine; also uncredited here, he was a child star for Disney who had major roles in films like Old Yeller (1957) and The Shaggy Dog (1959) but few roles after the end of the 1960s.
Jack Ritchie (1922-1983) was profiled in the last post, "Anyone for Murder?" Born John George Reitci, he wrote over 500 published short stories and three of them were adapted for the Hitchcock TV show.

Director Alf Kjellin (1920-1988) was born in Sweden and worked mainly as a TV director and actor. He appeared in one episode of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour and directed one Hitchcock half-hour and eleven hours, including "Where the Woodbine Twineth."

Like most episodes of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, "Ten Minutes from Now" is not currently available on DVD in the U.S. or online.

Sources:
Grams, Martin, and Patrik Wikstrom. The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. OTR Pub., 2001.
IMDb, IMDb.com, www.imdb.com/.
Ritchie, Jack. “Ten Minutes from Now.” Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories to Stay Awake By. Random House, 1971, pp. 355–371.
Stephensen-Payne, Phil. Galactic Central, philsp.com/.
“Ten Minutes from Now” The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, season 9, episode 26, CBS, 1 May 1964.
The FictionMags Index, www.philsp.com/homeville/FMI/0start.htm.
Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, www.wikipedia.org/.

In two weeks:

Triumph, starring Ed Begley and Jeanette Nolan!