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AND THEN THERE WERE NONE {aka AGATHA CHRISTIE’S TEN LITTLE INDIANS} (1974)

SUMMARY:                     RUNNING TIME: 1 Hour, 38 Min.

Directed by Peter Collinson, producer Harry Alan Towers’ second remake of the same-named 1945 film now shifts Agatha Christie’s legendary whodunnit to an empty luxury hotel deep in the Iranian desert. 

Like the two cinematic adaptations before it (1945 and 1965), the movie is set in the present day, with various character names, nationalities, and/or their crimes loosely altered from Christie’s novel (as well as her own stage play adaptation) to better accommodate the cast.  Still, there’s no mistaking that Towers relies heavily upon the 1965 film’s script.

For instance, secretary ‘Vera Claythorne’ (the novel & the 1945 film) becomes 1965’s ‘Ann Clyde’ and now ‘Vera Clyde.’ Condescending British spinster Emily Brent (the novel & the 1945 film) is replaced by a conceited German film actress (1965) and then an equally conceited French actress (1974). The novel’s obnoxiously stupid British playboy Anthony Marston becomes a boozy, free-loading Russian expatriate for the 1945 film before transforming into Fabian’s obnoxious 1965 pop-rock star. For 1974, Fabian’s ‘Michael Raven’ is re-imagined as Charles Aznavour’s smarmy French pianist, ‘Michel Raven.’  Similar revamps further apply to the general, the ex-police detective, and the married servants. 

Transported by helicopter to an abandoned Iranian resort hotel two hundred miles from civilization, eight European strangers ostensibly attend a private house party.  Left to entertain themselves, the guests and a married servant couple are mortified by accusations of ghastly crimes from the ominously recorded voice of their absent host, ‘U.N. Owen.’ 

Loosely adhering to the “Ten Little Indians” nursery rhyme (a copy of which appears in each guest room), the ten captives are then targeted for death, one by one.  Alliances are inevitably made, but can anyone evade a predator’s vengeful wrath?   

Hugh Lombard: Oliver Reed                                                               

Vera Clyde: Elke Sommer  

Judge Arthur Cannon: Richard Attenborough                                     

Dr. Edward Armstrong: Herbert Lom

Ilona Morgan: Stéphane Audran

Wilhelm Blore: Gert Fröbe

General André Salvé: Adolfo Celi

Otto Martino: Alberto De Mendoza                         

Elsa Martino: Maria Rohm

Michel Raven: Charles Aznavour (Note: the character’s name is a slight tweaking of the same role Fabian played in the 1965 film.)

U.N. Owen’s Voice: Orson Welles

Notes: Serial shlock film producer Harry Alan Towers bizarrely filmed And Then There Were None (aka Ten Little Indians) three times in a quarter-century: the other instances being 1965 and 1989.  Set in a wintry chalet in the Alps, the headliners for his 1965 black-and-white potboiler are Hugh O’Brian, Goldfinger’s Shirley Eaton, & Fabian (suffice to say, the pop star’s death scene is laughably amateurish). 

Towers’ low-rent 1989 rehash shifts Christie’s plot to a 1930’s South African safari camp, with Lom now playing the General and Sylvester Stallone’s kid brother, Frank, cast as the macho Lombard. Though it is Towers’ worst-produced rendition, ironically, the 1989 film sports two advantages over his two previous efforts: 1. Christie’s original character names, crimes, etc. are mostly kept intact; and 2. In spite of eye-rolling ineptitude, this South African caper tries to invoke the gore and the captives’ growing sense of terror, as described in the novel. 

Yet, of Towers’ increasingly muddled remakes, none of them bothers imitating the 1945 film’s classy, almost spoofy sense of humor.

REVIEW:

Impressing no one, producer/co-writer Harry Alan Towers lazily resorts to a script mash-up plundering the original 1945 film and, even more so, his own 1965 remake (entitled Ten Little Indians”).  Beyond an authentic Iranian locale, this 1974 version’s other distinction is a diverse, heavily-accented European cast – many of them possessing famous credits.  The bleak reality, however, is that the hotel’s musty furniture is more compelling to stare at for ninety minutes than witnessing this half-hearted ensemble bore viewers to death. 

Aside from zero romantic chemistry percolating between Reed’s creepy Lombard and Sommer’s Vera, only Aznavour briefly manages to affect a welcome ounce of charisma.  Like two iconic Bond villains (Fröbe & Celi) in this same cast, even the reliable Lom merely winces his way through the motions, so to speak. 

Worse yet, it’s unsurprising that the ominous psychology permeating Christie’s novel is again disregarded in this retelling.  Tiresomely lacking necessary depth and even basic logic (i.e. an explanation for the culprit’s international scheme), this would-be whodunnit translates as cinematic cardboard. 

Let’s rate the four film adaptations this way: directed by René Clair, 1945’s black-and-white And Then There Were None merits 8 or 9 stars as a clever black comedy with a game cast of character actors – even in its worst moments, the original movie falls to maybe a 7.  1965’s black-and-white Ten Little Indians (Towers’ first remake) hovers between 5 and 7 stars, as crass violence and dull performances replace the original movie’s viewer-friendly charm.

No matter how dubiously, this ultra-bland 1974 adaptation only surpasses Towers’ rock-bottom 1989 cheapo due to its better production values. It’s an instance of Hollywood’s slippery slope to mediocrity; by spawning far too many remakes, Christie’s surefire source material for a big-screen suspense thriller is gradually reduced to unwatchable dreck.

Ultimately, 1974’s And Then There Were None should be viewed at one’s own peril.  This unrepentant snooze-fest ensures that viewers won’t be getting back the 98 minutes (or any other price of admission) spent on it.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                  3½ Stars

IMAGE NOT AVAILABLE

Categories
Comic Books & Graphic Novels Fantasy, Horror, & Science Fiction Independent Hardcovers & Trade Paperbacks Independent Publishers (Comic Books & Graphic Novels)

THE HOLLOWS: BLOOD WORK (DEL REY Books)

Written by Kim Harrison.

Art by Pedro Maia; Gemma Magno; Emam Casallos; Jan Michael T. Aldeguer; Jezreel Rojales; P.C. Siqeira; Mae Hao; & Zach Matheny.

Cover Illustration by Juliana Kolesova. Flap & Back Jacket Illustration by Pedro Maia.

SUMMARY:

Released by Del Rey Books in 2011, this 170-page hardcover graphic novel is a seven-chapter prequel to Kim Harrison’s The Hollows urban fantasy-horror series.  In an alternate-reality Cincinnati, Inderland Security (I.S.) polices the decadent  supernatural community.  As the I.S. equivalent of a plainclothes street cop, jaded vampire Ivy Tamwood is begrudgingly assigned as the senior partner of free-spirited witch Rachel Morgan. 

The twenty-something duo instantly clash over basic methodology, as they probe a werewolf’s ominous homicide.  Ivy is gradually impressed by Rachel’s investigative instincts, as their teamwork draws them closer to the deceptive truth. Yet, Rachel’s rebellious, good-natured allure triggers an underlying sexual current/blood lust from Ivy. 

Ominously, having arranged the duo’s I.S. partnership, others may share Ivy’s ulterior agenda to someday control Rachel’s destiny.   

REVIEW:

Blood Work isn’t necessarily a huge disappointment, but it still falls far short of impressive.  Though the style is reminiscent of Marvel’s Anita Blake adaptations, neither Blood Work’s rudimentary visuals nor Kim Harrison’s inconclusive plotting deliver much of anything worthwhile.  A semi-naïve Rachel Morgan is marginally likable; otherwise, Harrison’s one-dimensional cast provides minimal incentive to finish reading this storyline. 

More suggestive than flat-out gross as several of Laurell K. Hamilton’s Anita Blake stories are, Blood Work’s premise occasionally presents glimmers of potential.  The problem is that this supernatural-cop murder-mystery concocts an utterly blah read. To give Blood Work the comparative benefit of the doubt, trying one of Harrison’s Hollows novels first makes the most sense. 

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

Harrison presents a single-page introduction.  Brief bios on Harrison & artist Pedro Maia are provided.  Maia’s eleven-page project sketchbook explores the visual look he created for Blood Work’s pivotal characters (under Harrison’s supervision).  A three-page guide delves into Blood Work’s production.  Lastly, there’s a three-page Del Rey interview with Harrison.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                           3½ Stars

Categories
Books & Novels General Fiction History & Biographies (Books)

THE KILLER ANGELS

Written by Michael Shaara

SUMMARY:

First published in 1974 by David McKay Company, Inc., Michael Shaara penned this 374-page hardcover depicting the four days (June 30-July 3, 1863) encompassing the Battle of Gettysburg.  Starting on June 30th, a confederate spy delivers reliable word to General James Longstreet that Union cavalry has reached Gettysburg nearby, which infers its far larger infantry isn’t far behind.  General Robert E. Lee is skeptical, as he hasn’t received confirmation from General J.E.B. Stuart, who is evidently still roaming in the field somewhere. 

Meanwhile, at Gettysburg, Union General John Buford grimly concludes securing the best available high ground is his outmatched cavalry’s sole option until reinforcements arrive the next morning.  Complicating the Union’s predicament is a change in command to the starchy General Meade, which fails to boost morale.  Advised of this unexpected command shift, the Confederacy senses a historic opportunity to exploit vulnerable gaps amidst Meade’s reorganization of Union forces.

Told through rotating perspectives, the battle commences early on July 1st, as Buford’s troops barely withstand Lee’s initial strike.  The Union is soon stunned by the abrupt death of its best field general.  With the Union struggling to muster adequate leadership, the Confederacy seemingly wins the first day of the bloody engagement. 

Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain’s regiment from Maine joins in on the second day, as the Union defiantly refuses to budge any further.  Lee remains intent on keeping the Union Army’s largest force pinned down.  His endgame for the Confederacy is to discreetly breach Washington, D.C., to pressure President Lincoln into ordering the Union’s surrender.   

Heavy losses continue mounting on both sides, which later reveal an estimated near-50,000 casualties combined, making it the Civil War’s deadliest conflict.  Longstreet increasingly urges a tactical retreat, which conflicts with Lee’s wavering ‘now or never’ strategy.  Finally acknowledging bitter reality, Lee’s depleted forces withdraw on July 3rd.  Though the war would rage for nearly two more years, its ominous pendulum has at last shifted come Independence Day, 1863.    

Shaara’s novel inspired the faithful 1993 epic film adaptation, Gettysburg.

Notes: This title has also been released in paperback.  Please also be advised of some racial slurs appearing in the dialogue.

REVIEW:

Michael Shaara’s poignant, well-researched account is an intriguing cross-section of gritty fact and historical romanticism.  He describes the battlefield’s scenery, as well as the various soldiers, down to every last vivid and/or bleak detail.  Readily acknowledging that he has tweaked the manner of speech for contemporary audiences, Shaara’s ensemble cast is relatable as down-to-earth mortals that most anyone can identify with.  To Shaara’s credit, virtually no one becomes a walking cliché.  Case in point: the sole person remotely vilified is an arrogant Confederate General that even his own superiors don’t like.

Trading off narratives are primarily Longstreet and Chamberlain representing moral compasses on opposing sides.  Buford is later supplanted by Lee as Shaara’s strongest supporting role.  Curiously, Shaarra relies on further ‘accounts’ by other Confederates (i.e. Lewis Armistead, Harrison the spy, & British observer Fremantle), but not from the Union. 

Hence, the novel’s sole letdown is not incorporating supplemental POV’s (no matter how brief) from Generals Hancock or Reynolds, let alone the bewildered ex-slave that Chamberlain encounters on Day 2.  Such additional perspectives would have further enhanced the novel’s readability.  Inevitably delving into outright gore, Shaara’s precise storytelling translates the battle’s tragedies as an increasingly horrific event that will forever haunt its survivors. 

Ultimately, a convincing argument can be made that The Killer Angels is the best Civil War novel ever written.  One may ponder Shaara’s accuracy channeling the Battle of Gettysburg’s various historical figures; yet, one is left concluding that he is likely close enough.      

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

Shaara’s brief word to the reader spells out his intent interpreting these historical figures.  A somber foreword introduces the novel’s most pivotal players, and, fittingly, an afterword briefly describes the survivors’ destinies.  Shaara includes a series of single-page maps updating troop tactical movements.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                  9 Stars

Note: Randy Edelman’s Gettysburg soundtrack might be an ideal accompaniment.

Categories
Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

V.I. WARSHAWSKI: KILLING ORDERS

Written by Sara Paretsky

SUMMARY:

First released in 1985, Dell Publishing reprinted this third V.I. Warshawski mystery as a 339-page paperback in 1993.  The plot is set in Chicago of January-early February 1984. 

Once a public defender and now a private investigator for eight years, Victoria Iphigenia “V.I.” Warshawski reluctantly aids her long-estranged Italian relatives, elderly Great-Aunt Rosa and wimpy, forty-ish Cousin Albert.  It appears that spiteful Rosa is implicated in the discovery of forged stock certificates possessed by a Dominican priory she works for.  Worth millions, these missing stocks quickly draw attention from both the FBI and the SEC.  V.I. later recruits her friend Lotty’s elderly Uncle Stefan to help bait the elusive counterfeiter.

Meanwhile, V.I.’s British boyfriend, business executive/reinsurance broker, Roger Ferant, is increasingly worried that an  unknown entity intends to acquire one of his firm’s biggest American assets, Ajax Insurance, by nefarious means on the stock market.  Once Albert dismisses V.I. from the forgery case, she suspiciously insists on digging deeper still. 

Already contending with old emotional wounds, the ever-savvy V.I. soon finds herself entangled in multiple assaults, arson, and homicide.  One taunting adversary evens threatens retaliation by blinding her with acid.  With a trusted friend executed for discreetly probing local brokerage firms, this case becomes intensely personal for V.I.

Amidst the winter’s brutal cold, she senses a complicated financial scheme is making shadowy figures sweat in upper-echelon Chicago and possibly even overseas.  Such steep odds means V.I. must rely on shrewd crime reporter Murray Rierson for help – especially as scrutinizing law enforcement would rather see her arrested.  Desperately risking everything she has, V.I. expects a fight to the ruthless end, especially if the Catholic Church and the Chicago mob are involved.   

Note: The ‘n’ word appears once in the text.

REVIEW:

For hard-boiled female detective fiction, Killing Orders concocts a fairly good read.  Keeping in mind genre contrivances (i.e. several of V.I.’s associates are conveniently linked to the case), the increasingly convoluted storyline becomes perhaps too ambitious late in the game.  Still, all the underlying sub-plots are neatly tidied up, as Sara Paretsky strives to make a perpetually snarky V.I. likable to readers.  

For V.I. Warshawski fans, Killing Orders is a formulaic winner, but, for others, it’ll more likely be deemed as one-and-done.            

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

Along with a chapter list, Paretsky includes her acknowledgements.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                 5½ Stars

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Anthologies Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

A DEADLY AFFAIR: UNEXPECTED LOVE STORIES FROM THE QUEEN OF MYSTERY

Written by Agatha Christie

Cover Art by Matt Griffin

SUMMARY:

In 2022, William Morrow (HarperCollinsPublishers) issued this 263-page paperback reprinting thirteen short mysteries.  In addition to two of her miscellaneous romantic tales, A Deadly Affair’s round-robin style rotates between Agatha Christie’s array of famous sleuths.  Specifically, the stories are:

1923 – The King of Clubs (Hercule Poirot):  Poirot & Captain Arthur Hastings probe a sensationalized English countryside murder where a famous dancer is either the prime suspect or its most pivotal witness. 

U.S. anthology: The Under Dog and Other Stories (1951)  / U.K. anthology: Poirot’s Early Cases (1974).

1927 – The Face of Helen (Harley Quin): Mr. Satterthwaite becomes caught up in an aspiring opera singer’s tragic love triangle with two young men.

U.S. & UK. anthology: The Mysterious Mr. Quin (1930).

1933 – Death on the Nile (Parker Pyne): A vacationing Pyne’s Nile cruise is interrupted by a wealthy couple’s quarrel, as the wife believes she is being slowly poisoned.   

U.S. anthology: Mr. Parker Pyne, Detective (1934) / U.K. anthology: Parker Pyne Investigates (1934).

1931 – Death by Drowning (Jane Marple): At Jane Marple’s behest, retired Scotland Yard Commissioner Sir Henry Clithering joins the police investigation of a local girl’s tragic drowning in St. Mary Mead.

U.S. anthology: The Tuesday Club Murders (1933) / U.K. anthology: The Thirteen Problems (1932).

1923 – The Double Clue (Hercule Poirot): A scandalous jewel heist brings Poirot into contact with the enigmatic Countess Vera Rossakoff for the first time.

U.S. anthology: Double Sin and Other Stories (1961) / U.K. anthology: Poirot’s Early Cases (1974).    

1924 – Finessing the King / The Gentleman Dressed in Newspaper (Tommy & Tuppence Beresford): At a London nightclub’s masquerade party, the Beresfords stumble upon a woman’s homicide.

U.S. & U.K. anthology: Partners in Crime (1929).

1928 – Fruitful Sunday: During their afternoon date, a young couple make an unexpected discovery at the bottom of their fruit basket.

U.S. anthology: The Golden Ball and Other Stories (1974) / U.K. anthology: The Listerdale Mystery (1934).

1928 – Wasps’ Nest (Hercule Poirot): Poirot senses a friend’s love triangle may end in homicide.

U.S. anthology: Double Sin and Other Stories (1961) / U.K. anthology: Poirot’s Early Cases (1974).

1942 – The Case of the Caretaker (Jane Marple): Dr. Haydock offers Miss Marple a chance to solve a bizarre true-crime murder that he is thinking of adapting into a novel.

U.S. anthology: Three Blind Mice and Other Stories (1950) / Miss Marple’s Final Cases and Two Other Stories (1978).

1924 – The Man in the Mist (Tommy & Tuppence Beresford): Impeded by a creepy fog, the Beresfords probe a homicide case involving a high-profile actress.

U.S. / U.K. anthology: Partners in Crime (1929).

1932 – The Case of the Rich Woman (Parker Pyne): Parker Pyne digs into his bag of unorthodox tactics to resolve a bored widow’s desire to dispose of her immense wealth.

U.S. anthology: Mr. Parker Pyne, Detective (1934) / U.K. anthology: Parker Pyne Investigates (1934).

1926 – Magnolia Blossom: A married woman must decide whether her future bliss belongs with her husband or with a discreet love affair.

U.S. anthology: The Golden Ball and Other Stories (1971) / U.K. anthology: The Agatha Christie Hour (1982).

1926 – The Love Detectives (Harley Quin): Mr. Satterthwaite and Harley Quin observe a homicide investigation where dramatic confessions by the victim’s wife and her lover contradict the evidence.

U.S. anthology: Three Blind Mice and Other Stories (1950) / U.K. anthology: Problem at Pollensa Bay (1991).

Note: The novel’s legalese indicates that the book’s text was “previously published in a different format” – presumably in the United Kingdom.

REVIEW:

Despite spreading the wealth amongst Christie’s detectives, the publisher’s inexplicable choice of material leaves far better stories off the table.  Before proceeding further, the worthy inclusion of “Wasps’ Nest,” let alone the chilling “Case of the Caretaker,” absolutely fit this anthology’s theme.  It’s the other eleven entries that range from good to middling to utterly blah, no matter how well-packaged the publisher makes them look. 

For instance, “Fruitful Sunday” is a forgettable doodle while “Magnolia Blossom” is straight-up soap opera dreck.  One should then be relieved that “While the Light Lasts” wasn’t included, as it presents another of Christie’s horrid post-war soap operas. 

Regarding the included detective stories, at most, they offer some decent reading.  Still, Parker Pyne’s “Death on the Nile” is this assortment’s worst choice.  Beyond predating one of Poirot’s most famous novel titles, the story is really an ultra-bland amalgam of Poirot’s “Problem at Sea” and “The Cornish Mystery.” Suffice to say, Pyne’s intuitive reasoning is sorely implausible, as compared to Poirot’s own later voyage down The Nile.       

Giving the matter due thought, here’s a partial list of classic Christie mysteries unfairly excluded from this anthology (including a few capers for some humorous relief):

  1. Hercule Poirot: either Mystery of the Spanish Chest, or its alternate version, Mystery of the Baghdad Chest;
  2. Hercule Poirot: The Affair at the Victory Ball;
  3. Hercule Poirot: Murder in the Mews;
  4. Hercule Poirot: Plymouth Express;  
  5. Hercule Poirot: The Cornish Mystery;
  6. Hercule Poirot: Problem at Sea;
  7. Hercule Poirot: Triangle at Rhodes;
  8. Hercule Poirot: The Stymphalean Birds;
  9. Colonel Race: Yellow Iris;
  10. Parker Pyne: The Case of the Discontented Soldier;
  11. Tommy & Tuppence Beresford: The Sunningdale Mystery;
  12. Harley Quin: Harlequin’s Lane;
  13. Harley Quin: The Man from the Sea;
  14. Harley Quin: The Harlequin’s Tea Set;
  15. Jane Marple: The Thumb Mark of Peter;
  16. Jane Marple: The Companion;
  17. Jane Marple: The Blood-Stained Pavement;
  18. Jane Marple: The Herb of Death;
  19. Jane in Search of a Job;
  20. The Girl in the Train;
  21. The Edge; and
  22. Witness for the Prosecution

As evidenced above by what isn’t included in A Deadly Affair, this anthology is at most a mediocre sampling of Christie’s love-themed mysteries.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

Entitled “Affairs of the Heart: Agatha’s Early Courtships,” a seven-page excerpt from Christie’s 1975 An Autobiography reveals two love affairs from her own youth.  A helpful bibliography specifies the original publication history of these stories.  Lastly, there’s a paragraph-length bio on Christie.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                    4½ Stars

Note:  Two other recent Christie themed-anthology titles are Midwinter Murder: Fireside Tales from the Queen of Mystery and The Last Séance: Tales of the Supernatural.

Categories
Blu-Ray Movies & Television (Videos) Sherlock Holmes-Related

(SHERLOCK HOLMES AND) THE HOUSE OF FEAR

SUMMARY:                          RUNNING TIME: 69:00 Min.

Inspired by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s short story, “Adventure of the Five Orange Pips,” Universal Pictures released this film directed by Roy William Neill in 1945.  It’s the tenth of fourteen Basil Rathbone/Nigel Bruce films released from 1939-1946, as the last twelve are set in the present-day. 

Residing at Drearcliff Manor, on a secluded clifftop not far from a Scottish coastal village, is an exclusive group dubbing itself the ‘Good Comrades Club.’  Each a distinguished older British gentleman bachelor, a macabre prelude of death begins targeting its members.  At dinner time, upon receiving an ominous packet of orange pips signifying the remaining number in the group, the packet’s addressee soon meets a grisly fate.        

Considering each ‘Good Comrade’ has vested his sizable life insurance policy in the others, the suspicious London insurer sends Sherlock Holmes from 221B Baker Street to investigate.  Holmes suspects there is at least one probable killer already lurking among them.  The formidable presence of Holmes & Dr. John Watson merely accelerates the culprit’s vile intentions of eliminating these ‘Good Comrades,’ one by one.  Per local legend, the haunted manor’s family curse that “no man goes whole to his grave” is coming true to chilling effect. 

As Holmes, Watson, and Scotland Yard’s Inspector Lestrade witness, this unseen predator has no mercy upon the desecrated victims.  Yet, Holmes grimly senses all may not be what it seems.

Note: This film has been released in VHS (as half of a Rathbone-as-Sherlock Holmes double-feature), and, as part of The Complete Sherlock Holmes Collection, in DVD and Blu-Ray formats.

Sherlock Holmes: Basil Rathbone          

Dr. John Watson: Nigel Bruce

Inspector Lestrade: Dennis Hoey           

Bruce Alastair: Aubrey Mather

Dr. Simon Merrivale: Paul Cavanaugh  

Capt. John Simpson: Harry Cording

Mrs. Monteith: Sally Shepherd        

Alan Cosgrave: Holmes Herbert

Alex MacGregor: David Clyde       

Alison MacGregor: Florette Hillier

Ralph King: Richard Alexander     

Guy Davies: Wilson Benge

Stanley Raeburn: Cyril Delevanti   

Angus: Alex Craig

Sgt. Bleeker: Leslie Denison           

Chalmers: Gavin Muir

REVIEW:

In essence, Fear lifts Doyle’s legendary crime-fighting duo into an ominous storyline more befitting Agatha Christie.  Given the ghoulish mayhem occurring off-screen, the filmmakers resort to comedy relief at the right moments; some of which is subtly clever.  Even the deliberately silly sequence of Watson alone safeguarding the manor on a clichéd dark and stormy night somehow works better than it should.  The same applies to Dennis Hoey’s perpetually-befuddled Lestrade. 

Mostly, it’s up to Basil Rathbone & Nigel Bruce anchoring a solid cast to overcome the plot’s contrivances; hence, the end result is undeniably entertaining.  Just don’t try overthinking it, and The House of Fear delivers Rathbone’s likable answer to And Then There Were None released that same year.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                   7½ Stars

Categories
Comic Books & Graphic Novels Fantasy, Horror, & Science Fiction Marvel Comics MARVEL's Hardcovers & Paperbacks

ANITA BLAKE: THE FIRST DEATH (MARVEL Comics)

Anita Blake: The First Death  Written by Laurell K. Hamilton & Jonathon Green.  Art by Wellington Alves; Color Dojo; & Bill Tortolini.

Anita Blake: Guilty Pleasures Handbook  Written by Stuart Vandal; Ronald Byrd; Michael Hoskin; Chris Biggs; & Ave Cullen.  Art by Brett Booth & Imaginary Friends.

Compilation Cover Art & Original Covers by Brett Booth & Ron Lim.

SUMMARY:

Released by Marvel Comics in 2008, this 128-page hardcover reprints the two-part First Death, which is supplemented by Anita Blake’s Guilty Pleasures Handbook (in the style of Official Handbooks of the Marvel Universe).  The original issues were first released in 2007-08.  Co-writing the franchise prequel with her husband, Laurell K. Hamilton’s First Death explores one of Anita Blake’s supernatural cases prior to the events occurring in Guilty Pleasures

Consulting for the St. Louis police on a vampire gang’s serial killing spree, Anita can barely stomach viewing the latest grisly corpse.  It’s confirmed that one ghastly culprit’s preference is preying upon pre-teen boys.  Probing a potential suspect’s alibi, she warily visits the Guilty Pleasures nightclub for the first time.  Several of the franchise’s initial supporting characters are ‘introduced,’ including homicide cop, Sgt. Dolph Storr. 

Meeting Jean-Claude, Anita must later team with the ruthless hitman, Edward, and her mentor, Manny, in a fateful showdown against possibly the most sickening adversaries she’s ever faced.  Come the end, Anita won’t be the same vampire hunter she was before. 

Extremely detailed, the Guilty Pleasures handbook consists of the following biographical profiles:

  • Anita’s World;
  • Vampire Murders;
  • Animators, Inc.;
  • Aubrey;
  • Anita Blake;
  • Burchard;
  • Church of Eternal Life;
  • Dead Dave’s;
  • Edward;
  • Freak Parties;
  • Ghouls;
  • Guilty Pleasures;
  • Jean-Claude;
  • Malcolm;
  • Willie McCoy;
  • Nikolaos;
  • Phillip;
  • Regional Preternatural Investigation Team;
  • Robert;
  • Ronnie Sims;
  • Theresa;
  • Valentine;
  • Vampires;
  • Bert Vaughn;
  • Wererats;
  • Winter;
  • Zachary;
  • Zombies;
  • Bruce;
  • Buzz;
  • Beverly Chin;
  • Circus of the Damned;
  • Jamison Clarke;
  • The District;
  • Irving Griswold;
  • Hav;
  • Luther;
  • Catherine Maison;
  • Rebecca Miles;
  • Edith Pringle;
  • Rafael;
  • Sigmund/Penguins;
  • Sgt, Dolph Storr;
  • Monica Vespucci; &
  • Other Dramatis Personae (three pages profiling minor characters).

Note: This title is also available in paperback.  The handbook readily acknowledges that pivotal details of Guilty Pleasures are revealed.

REVIEW:

Meant for hardcore Anita Blake fans, the unsavory First Death should satisfy them, but it won’t likely retain newcomers.  Impressively, the visuals live up to prior Marvel adaptations of Hamilton’s Anita Blake novels.  One still has to balance this consistent asset against a gross storyline posing as gothic horror/fantasy entertainment.  Details revealing a less cynical, inexperienced Anita present an intriguing prospect; yet, First Death’s icky plot doesn’t necessarily make this story a keeper. 

As for the Guilty Pleasures handbook, it’s impressively well-produced in terms of both text and artwork (lifted from Marvel’s faithful adaptation).  For readers seeking clarifications in Marvel’s version (let alone Hamilton’s erotic source novel), the handbook offers an ideal reference.  In particular, Anita Blake’s own profile is top-caliber.  The flip side, however, is that virtually everything from Guilty Pleasures is explained ad nauseum multiple times, leaving few mysteries to the reader’s imagination. 

For adults who covet Marvel’s Anita Blake adaptations, this First Death compilation should solidify their collection.  Still, other consumers perusing First Death may justifiably deem Hamilton’s blood-soaked plot (not to mention the handbook’s explicit details) as repulsive. 

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

Including First Death # 2’s variant, all four covers appear in full-page format.  Accompanied by an image of Anita Blake, there’s a single-page glossary.  Lastly, Booth provides his cover pencil sketch for The First Death # 1.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                    5½ Stars

Categories
Books & Novels Fantasy, Horror, & Science Fiction STAR WARS-Related

STAR WARS (LEGENDS): SCOUNDRELS

Written by Timothy Zahn

Cover Illustration by Paul Youll

SUMMARY:

Released by Del Rey Books in 2013, this 512-page paperback is set several weeks after Star Wars, Episode IV: A New Hope.  With their hard-earned reward recently stolen by pirates, Han Solo & Chewbacca are laying low from the Rebellion, not to mention Jabba the Hutt’s well-publicized bounty.  Desperate for a big score, their new gig is collecting an aggrieved client’s enormous stash of credits from a mobster’s impregnable vault

Solo & Chewbacca recruit a crew of eight other mercenaries: twin sisters Tavia & Bink Kitik (high-tech burglars aka ‘ghost thieves’); surly Dozer Creed (ship thief); Zerba Cher’dak (sleight-of-hand expert); super-efficient Rachele Ree (intel & acquisitions); Kell Tainer (explosives); Winter (surveillance & a perfect memory); and their agitated client, Eanjer Kunarazti, who is funding the job.  Joining them is Lando Calrissian, who still sports lingering doubts re: the brash Corellian smuggler’s judgment from their past team-ups.  Still, assuming all goes well, they’ll be equally splitting the take as if it’s a mega-millions lottery ticket. 

Complicating their seemingly impossible heist are the nefarious Black Sun crime syndicate, Imperial intelligence, and who- knows-who-else with their own covert stakes in this ruthless game.  As it’s revealed, another invaluable prize is sequestered in the same vault that others will gladly kill for.  Worse yet for Solo’s Scoundrels is that somebody close may really be a double-agent with an ulterior motive that Han & Chewbacca will never see coming.

REVIEW:

Timothy Zahn’s obvious arithmetic is adding Star Wars and Ocean’s Eleven together.  Hence, it’s no coincidence that Han Solo’s magic number is eleven ‘Scoundrels.’  Slowly building up this audacious heist, Zahn develops his cast with deliberate care, i.e. Solo is far more the cool Danny Ocean here than A New Hope’s impulsive hero-for-hire.  The same applies to exploring Lando & Han’s wary friendship, as subtle hints towards The Empire Strikes Back are winked.  For the most part, readers get a well-played Star Wars caper, complete with a jaw-dropping twist reminiscent of The Usual Suspects.  

The flip-side is Zahn’s overindulgence for depth.  For instance, there’s far too many sequences where Han’s cronies are holed up in their hotel suite updating various logistics.  This unnecessary slog becomes increasingly tiresome, especially after the fifth or sixth time this scenario happens.  Yet, for all the time Han’s crew spends in their suite, Zahn offers minimal insight re: the Corellian rogue’s savviness for devising such complex schemes and contingency plans. 

Even Zahn has Han acknowledge that he’s a smuggler and not some world-class burglar, which is at least consistent with the reckless character George Lucas created.  Hence, it’s difficult to reconcile Scoundrels’ ‘elite strategist’ take on Han with the improvised, not-so-bright bravado he displays in A New Hope and Return of the Jedi … that is, aside from an ultra-obvious homage to ‘who-shot-first?’ in a shady cantina early on.   

Further bogging down the storyline’s pace are multiple criminal underworld sub-plots where the Empire is ironically construed as the galaxy’s ‘law-and-order.’  Hence, Scoundrels’ surprising density plays far more to hardcore fans familiar with Star Wars’ galactic mob rivalries (the Empire, the Black Sun syndicate, the Hutts, etc.) than to casual readers.  Zahn, at least, inserts enough understandable heist lingo to help justify his plotting excesses.  For instance, it’s a welcome help when grasping his descriptions of various items of alien technology. 

In Scoundrels’ better moments, though, one can readily visualize this double-crossing and even triple-crossing storyline as a live-action series co-starring Harrison Ford, Billy Dee Williams, & Peter Mayhew.  Zahn certainly knows how to make Han & Chewbacca’s gang of thieves come off as likably greedy and fun to ride along with.  By this reckoning, for Han Solo fans, Scoundrels is an anything-goes, get-rich-quick scheme worthy of his legendary exploits.          

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

A standard Star Wars novel chronology is included.  There’s a short list of characters, so readers will mostly know who’s who without a scorecard.  Included as another solid read is Zahn’s 2012 sixty-seven page prequel novella, Loser Takes All, starring Lando Calrissian.  During a high-stakes sabacc tournament, Lando partners with three other future Scoundrels (Tavia, Bink, & Zerba) on their own Mission: Impossible-like heist.      

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                 7 Stars

Note: Recommended is another fun Han Solo adventure: Empire and Rebellion – Honor Among Thieves, which follows after Scoundrels.  Its plot is about as close as one gets to ‘Indiana Solo.’   

Categories
Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

AN FBI THRILLER: BOMBSHELL

Written by Catherine Coulter

SUMMARY:

Jove Books re-released this title as a 451-page paperback edition in 2014.  Previously seen in 2012’s Backfire, FBI Special Agent Griffin Hammersmith has nearly completed his cross-country drive from San Francisco to join Dillon Savich’s elite unit in Washington, D.C.  Hammersmith intends to first stop over and briefly visit his kid sister, Delsey Freestone, who is a promising student at the prestigious Stanislaus School of Music in Maestro, Virginia. 

During the night before her brother’s arrival, an inebriated Delsey is nearly killed after she glimpses an unknown bloody corpse in her own bathtub.  With his severely-concussed sister hospitalized, Hammersmith finds himself assigned to the case. All isn’t what it appears, as he soon suspects that someone at Stanislaus may be involved in illicit schemes extending far beyond a local break-in.  Complicating Hammersmith’s probe is one of Delsey’s classmates, with secrets of her own.  

Meanwhile, amidst the bitter cold of the nation’s capital, Dillon Savich & Lacey Sherlock’s FBI squad investigate a bizarre murder after a frozen nude corpse is left overnight at The Lincoln Memorial.  A grotesque image of the crime is subsequently uploaded on the internet by presumably the culprit making this crime a sensationalistic topic amongst the public. As the victim was the college-age grandson of the Federal Reserve Bank’s controversial former chairman, the squad find this grisly homicide may be linked to other crimes, both in the past and the imminent future. 

Along with Sheriff Dix Noble and the DEA, the team aids Hammersmith, as he is outmatched by dark forces still seeking to kill Delsey.  Included for good measure are brief references setting up The Final Cut – A Brit in the FBI (the first book in a series spin-off starring Nicholas Drummond).

Note: Bombshell was previously released as a hardcover in 2013. This title is also available digitally.

REVIEW:

Catherine Coulter’s consistency slickly writing this series is evident, as Bombshell provides routine proof.  Granted, would anyone really believe that a real-world FBI Speial Agent would be officially assigned to investigate his own sister’s near-homicide?  Or that married agents actually work together in the same investigative unit (let alone have one supervise the other)? Or that previously evasive witnesses will conveniently buckle at the right moment and confess vital evidence to the FBI without an attorney present? Or that two major cases would simultaneously resolve inside of a week?  

Of course not – but Coulter’s literary talent and years of experience honing her ongoing cast of FBI personnel makes it an enjoyable read suspending one’s sense of disbelief at the novel’s fast pace.  Where she falters, however, is over-indulging a tendency to pitch unnecessary throwaway details that, to varying degrees, may test a reader’s patience. 

For instance, depicting a frozen corpse as totally nude is a salacious element that is utterly irrelevant to the plot. Or extra tidbits like: Hammersmith, by sheer coincidence, owns classical CD’s of two of his homicide case’s main suspects; Savich & Hammersmith are both grandsons of famous female artists (one a painter and the other a singer); Delsey quickly recognizes Savich & Sherlock’s young son due to his ‘internet’ fame, etc. Such storytelling winks might work for Nora Roberts and Jayne Anne Krentz, but, in Coulter’s Bombshell, the abundance of such eye-rollers hampers her storyline’s credulity.   

In spite of formulaic plot contrivances and glaring instances of self-promotion (i.e. repetitively hyping The Final Cut), Bombshell, for the most part, provides the necessary suspense.  Coulter’s knack for constructing a relatively complex plot is a plus, since Bombshell maintains dual storylines that intersect only as necessary.  She also makes Griffin Hammersmith and presumably his future partner a likable crime-fighting duo; one could readily infer that Bombshell is meant to explore interest in them as another potential spin-off. 

If anything, Coulter delivers reliable entertainment to keep stashed at one’s desk or for those long airport layovers.        

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

A three-page sample previews the series’ next entry: Power Play.  In a reverse-chronology, a list of Coulter’s FBI Thriller titles is provided.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                      7 Stars

Categories
Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

THE THIN MAN (NICK & NORA CHARLES)

Written by Dashiell Hammett

SUMMARY:

First published in 1933-34, this 201-page Vintage Crime/Black Lizard reprint was issued in 1992.  As narrated by a world-weary Nick Charles, he and his young wife, Nora, are presently enjoying an extended Christmas holiday in 1932 New York City.  Some five years before, the forty-ish war veteran Nick had retired from his life as an ace private detective there upon marrying into Nora’s wealthy San Francisco family.  Taking a break from the West Coast, Nick has brought Nora to revisit some of his old haunts. 

In a 52nd St. speakeasy, Nick is approached by young Dorothy, who is the daughter of his quirky ex-client, inventor Clyde Miller Wynant.  Along with her mother – Wynant’s unsavory ex-wife, Mimi, the two are evidently hard up for money.  They ask for Nick’s aid finding the elusive Wynant, who has quietly been withdrawing large sums of cash.  Initially, the best Nick is willing to do is refer Dorothy to her father’s attorney, Herbert Macauley. 

The violent homicide of Wynant’s secretary, Julia Wolf, subsequently has both the local police and potential witnesses seeking Nick’s reluctant help.  Among them is the prime suspect, Wynant, who sends written messages to Macauley and Nick requesting the former detective’s expertise finding Julia’s murderer.  Stuck being the case’s unofficial consultant, Nick deduces that the shadowy killer won’t settle for just one victim.

Note: The title itself refers to the stick-like Wynant rather than Nick Charles.    

REVIEW:

One might presume The Thin Man is a tongue-in-cheek precursor to contemporary mystery works featuring romantic couples as amateur sleuths.  Imbued with witty repartee, six 1930’s-40’s comedic mystery films inspired by the novel certainly attest to the enduring charm of Nick & Nora Charles.  The literary originals are indeed likable, but William Powell & Myrna Loy’s light-hearted Hollywood schtick adapting Nick & Nora is sorely missing upon reading the source material. 

While Dashiell Hammett’s novel is hyped as “a sophisticated comedy of manners,” that description doesn’t deliver a Prohibition-era cozy mystery.  Thumbing his nose at The Depression, Hammett’s idea of sophisticated humor equates to Nick & Nora sipping cocktails (with or without company) and trading quips amidst evidently free refills.     

Unlike Agatha Christie’s Tommy & Tuppence Beresford mysteries, Hammett’s darker tone deploys traditionally gritty noir peppered by Nick & Nora’s marital banter.  Specifically, an excitable/semi-tipsy Nora is utilized prodding her husband (cynical wisecracking aside) into revealing his deductions.  In that regard, The Thin Man’s storytelling structure is sufficient when the time comes for Nick’s down-to-earth reasoning to explain why all isn’t what it seems.

Hammett’s caper, however, is so drenched in booze from the get-go (i.e. characters are swilling practically every other page) that this intriguing whodunnit grows tiresome.  It also doesn’t help that Hammett resorts to caricatures (i.e. the hapless Dorothy Wynant) rather than actual characters to help peddle his snarky dialogue.  Aside from blatantly glamorizing alcohol, casual inferences to police brutality and physical abuse of Wynant’s two children are unsettling, to say the least. 

The novel’s final stretch resolves various plot threads satisfactorily, no matter how convoluted and gruesome the culprit’s scheme becomes.  Hence, the underlying motive, let alone the killer’s identity, isn’t much of a surprise; by genre standards, it’s practically standard-issue.  Though the novel has solid moments, The Thin Man’s brand of detective noir doesn’t age particularly well for a 21st Century audience. 

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

The first page is a short author bio.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                    5½ Stars