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AGATHA CHRISTIE’S LITTLE MURDERS: THE KNIFE IN THE NECK {aka LORD EDGWARE DIES} (Season 1: Episode 11)

SUMMARY:                RUNNING TIME: 1 Hour, 35 Min.

The French translation of the series title is les petis meurtres d’Agatha Christie. First airing in France on September 14, 2012, this episode loosely adapts Agatha Christie’s 1933 Hercule Poirot novel, Lord Edgware Dies. The version is entitled “Le Couteau sur la Nuque” (aka “The Knife in the Neck”).  Produced by Escazal Films, Renaud Bertrand directed this installment.

Set in 1930’s Northern France (in proximity to Lille), a lovestruck female fan expecting a clandestine meeting with acting heartthrob Julien Sobel (Alluguette) is brutally murdered.  Her severed foot is subsequently mailed to Police Superintendent Larosière (Duléry) to chillingly taunt him. 

After locating and identifying the victim’s corpse, the police descend upon a troubled stage production of Don Juan featuring Sobel.  Primarily, the play’s two major stars are long-estranged spouses – one is aging bombshell Sarah Morlant that Larosière admires and the other is a wretched alcoholic far past his vaunted prime. 

Expecting to promptly re-marry a wealthy French count, the self-involved Morlant (Detmers), is shocked that her decrepit husband (Winling) is then bloodily murdered.  Worse yet, Morlant finds herself identified as the prime suspect despite a high society alibi supported by at least a dozen witnesses.  Making seemingly little progress sleuthing multiple murders, Larosière, due to his long-standing familiarity with the play, reluctantly consents to fill in as the title character at the next performance. 

Meanwhile, the Superintendent’s runaway teenage daughter, Juliette (Isaaz), seeks to finally spend time with her workaholic father.  Initially helpful the case, Juliette’s whirlwind romance with Sobel makes her the serial killer’s next target following another backstage homicide.  With his daughter’s life at stake, Larosière and his faithful subordinate, Inspector Lampion, must now thwart one, if not two, ruthless killers stalking the theater.     

The episode’s language is French with easy-to-follow English subtitles.   

Superintendent Jean Larosière: Antoine Duléry

Inspector Émile Lampion: Marius Colucci

Ménard: Serge Dubois

Dr. Verdure: Olivier Carré

Juliette Larosière: Alice Isaaz

Sarah Morlant: Maruschka Detmers

Raoul Cochin: Guillaume Briat

Julien Sobel: Julien Alluguette

Lurie Fremont: Vinciane Millereau

Pierre Fougères: Jean-Marie Winling

Antoine Marin: Frédéric Longbois

Lilas: Flora Thomas

Comte (Count) de Tercoignes: Hervé Hague

Madame de Rémincourt: Barbara Monin

Lisa Debauche: Coline Marescaux

Charlotte: Victoria Quesnel

Other Cast Members: Thomas Debaene & Adrien Calandre

Play’s Production Staff: Uncredited

Theater Attendees: Uncredited

Note: The American title for Christie’s novel is Thirteen at Dinner.

REVIEW:

Given it is the last episode with the original cast, this incarnation of “Lord Edgware Dies,” unfortunately, is a mixed bag.  By shifting Christie’s storyline entirely into the theatrical world, the good news is that some plot elements now make better sense (i.e., co-mingling the personal and professional frictions between Sarah Morlant and her estranged husband). 

As for the script’s originality, the premise of befuddled father Larosière contending with a rebellious teen daughter while indulging a fantasy of playing Don Juan onstage is superbly conveyed by Antoine Duléry.  For such scenes, he and co-star Marius Colucci get terrific help from their guest stars, especially Alice Isaaz as an effervescent “Juliette.’  Hence, the delightful last scene speaks for itself.   

The flip side, however, is the lowest-common-denominator junk disguised as a fresh sub-plot.  Instead of Christie’s tongue-in-cheek jabs exploring British high society love affairs, this adaptation resorts to a deviant strangler, whose identity viewers know from the get-go. 

Wasting a potential second mystery, this gratuitous sub-plot is padding relying upon genre clichés – i.e., where the Superintendent pursues the culprit to save his abducted daughter.  Even worse is the unnecessary inclusion of ghoulish details (i.e., the severed foot sequence; a character bloodily impaled with a pitchfork, etc.) just for the sake of adding more grisliness.

Unlike other first season episodes, ”The Knife in the Neck” borders on R-rated material, in terms of its visual imagery.  In that sense, such sensationalism mirrors the glossier later seasons of Agatha Christie’s Poirot (not to mention, Agatha Christie’s Marple) where spicing up Christie’s old material meant pushing tawdry sexual themes to lure in more of a supposed contemporary audience.  Instead, this trashy creative risk affects a turn-off (or, at least, an incentive to reach for the fast-forward button).    

For adult fans, this season finale presents a potentially worthwhile whodunnit.  However, the program’s innate charm is sabotaged by one too many cold-blooded killers.         

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                   6 Stars

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AGATHA CHRISTIE’S LITTLE MURDERS: THE EBB AND THE FLOW {aka TAKEN AT THE FLOOD} (Season 1: Episode 8)

SUMMARY:                     RUNNING TIME: 1 Hour, 34 Min.

The French translation of the series title is les petis meurtres d’Agatha Christie. First airing in France on April 15, 2011, this episode loosely adapting Agatha Christie’s 1948 Hercule Poirot novel, Taken at the Flood, is entitled “Le Flux et le Reflux” (aka “The Ebb and the Flow”).  Produced by Escazal Films, Eric Woreth directed this installment. 

Set in 1930’s Northern France (in proximity to Lille), Police Superintendent Larosière (Duléry) is overjoyed at an unexpected post-war reunion with his former commander (and beloved mentor), Captain Delarive (Pignot).  Athis country estate, the Delarive family is far less so upon their elderly patriarch’s admission that that he has secretly married a far younger woman while overseas.  For the time being, the squabbling Delarive family will have to wait to meet their new relative, as she is on a shopping spree in Paris.

Legal repercussions from a tragic fire soon afterwards leave Delarive’s demure widow, Albertine (Bellavoir), and her ultra-abrasive brother, Gabriel (Zambeaux), in control of her late husband’s evident wealth and chateau.  With Larosière emotionally devastated and his professional judgment badly compromised, his immediate subordinate, the bumbling Inspector Émile Lampion (Colucci) assume command of the investigation. 

Two subsequent homicides (including of an enigmatic blackmailer) prompt the savvy Superintendent to circle back to his original suspects: the spiteful and greedy Delarives.    

The episode’s language is French with easy-to-follow English subtitles.    

Superintendent Jean Larosière: Antoine Duléry

Inspector Émile Lampion: Marius Colucci

Ménard: Serge Dubois

Dr. Verdure: Olivier Carré

Célie: Marie Denarnaud

Albertine: Blandine Bellavoir

Gabriel: Alexandre Zambeaux

Capt. Delarive: Yves Pignot

Ferdinand: Nicky Marbot

Léonce: Pascal Ternisien

Gìsèle: Luce Mouchel

Emilienne: Dominique Labourier

Lavallière: David Gabison

Madame Laurier: Marielle Duroule

Ulysse Argos: Francois Siener

Fire Captain: Eric Beluzé

Firemen: Uncredited

Club Members: Uncredited

Other Cast Members: Mickaél Wiame & Charles Antoine Decroix

Note: Bellavoir was subsequently recast as one of three new co-leads headlining Season 2 retitled “Agatha Christie’s Criminal Games.”

REVIEW:

With excellent production values and macabre wit, this incarnation of “Taken at the Flood” is well-played.  The primary cast’s spot-on chemistry with this group of guest stars provides a consistent asset.  More so, the scripting’s plot twists and relatable bits of humor add some welcome unpredictability to Christie’s somewhat bland source material. 

In terms of a comparison, the plot’s contents (including a few grisly post-mortem scenes) is more reminiscent of glossy stylistic changes occurring in later seasons of Agatha Christie’s Poirot.  If anything, this whodunnit concocts an entertaining gift for Christie’s international fanbase.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                7½ Stars

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AGATHA CHRISTIE’S LITTLE MURDERS: THE MOVING FINGER (Season 1: Episode 3)

SUMMARY:                    RUNNING TIME: 1 Hour, 31 Min.

The French translation of the series title is les petis meurtres d’Agatha Christie. First airing in France on September 11, 2009, this episode loosely adapts Agatha Christie’s 1948 Miss Marple novel, The Moving Finger. Produced by Escazal Films, Eric Woreth directed this installment entitled “La plume empoisonnée.” 

Set in 1930’s Northern France (in proximity to Lille), Police Superintendent Larosière (Duléry) is stunned by his chief assistant’s near-death in a fatal shootout.  Blaming himself, he escorts the critically-injured Inspector Lampion (Colucci) to a low-key village in the countryside to begin his convalescence. 

Secretly rife with gossip, the village has become inundated with anonymous poison pen letters viciously taunting locals for their suspected past sins.  A sympathetic Larosière is intrigued by the teenage Louise’s (Demoustier) introverted demeanor.  No one realizes that mousy Louise has been secretly befriended by the ethereal Clara (Pasquier) – a beautiful drowning victim from years before.

Three increasingly vile homicides pit Larosière and a still-injured Lampion against an ever-elusive culprit.  Larosière senses the long-reaching shadow of Clara’s death is the crux of this dangerous enigma.  More so, the Superintendent and Lampion recognize that there may well be multiple killers on the loose. 

The episode’s language is French with easy-to-follow English subtitles.   

Superintendent Jean Larosière: Antoine Duléry

Inspector Émile Lampion: Marius Colucci

Ménard: Serge Dubois

Louise Simonet: Anaïs Demoustier

Emilie Dubreuil: Françoise Bertin

Angélique: Corinne Masiero

Mathilde: Julie Ravix

Clara: Sara Pasquier

Père Hector: Cyrille Touvenin

Dr. Jean Villiers: Frédèric Pierrot

Rose Villiers: Laurence Côte

Monsieur Kochenko: Christophe Alévêque

Henriette Simonet: Catherine Wilkening

André Simonet: Olivier Rabourdin

Guite: Fanny Chevalier

Clémence: Cassandre Vittu de Kerraoul

Lucien: Franckie Defonte

Jeanjean: Maxime Lecluyse

Louise’s Brothers: Uncredited

Lampion’s Doctor: Uncredited

Larosière’s Girlfriend/Lunch Date: Uncredited

Lille Shop Clerk: Uncredited

Villagers: Uncredited

REVIEW:

For the most part, it is a high-caliber pendulum effectively balancing classic suspense and risqué, practically absurdist humor.  Ironically, this wily French effort surpasses the more faithful Agatha Christie’s Marple TV series, in terms of making the most of Christie’s premise.  Not only do headliners Antoine Duléry and Marius Colucci shine, the same applies to their exemplary supporting cast.  For instance, young Anaïs Demoustier shines conveying the evolution of her complex ‘Louise,’ as the Superintendent’s temporary protégé. 

Most significantly, this ensemble’s appeal easily surpasses sporadic logic gaffes – i.e., the reality of a deteriorating corpse’s impossible-to-miss stench is ignored until the dramatic moment finally preceding the corpse’s discovery.  The same applies to a hilarious yet utterly nonsensical gag about sharing a bed with a corpse – let alone then a subsequent swapping of bedrooms to accommodate this same corpse. 

Trying to analyze this outrageous sequence further is pointless vs. merely enjoying its inspired and decidedly macabre wit.  Either way, a subsequent sight gag is hilariously predictable.  Also, given the episode’s undercurrent of gay and lesbian themes, its clever in-plot mockery of close-minded bigotry-meets-hypocrisy becomes unmistakable.   

Provided one is not easily offended (including spurts of coarse language and a scene depicting fully-clothed intercourse), this almost-anything-goes take on “The Moving Finger” is eminently entertaining.     

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                  8½ Stars

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AMERICAN EXPERIENCE: BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID (Season 26, Episode 9)

SUMMARY:                 RUNNING TIME:  53:00 Min.

Directed by John Maggio and narrated by actor Michael Murphy, this American Experience documentary first aired on PBS-TV on February 11, 2014.  Following a reenactment of a nocturnal train heist, the backstories of Robert LeRoy Parker (aka ‘Butch Cassidy’) and Harry Longabaugh (aka ‘The Sundance Kid’) are revisited. 

Upon joining forces, Cassidy and the Sundance Kid’s infamous turn-of-the-century banditry would also include their Wild Bunch/Hole-in-the-Wall Gang and the enigmatic Etta Place.  Upon the duo’s eventual escape to South America, the documentary spells out their subsequently bleak historical destinies.

Perspectives are included from historian Paul A. Hutton; authors Gerald Kolpan, Michael Rutter, Thom Hatch, Anne Meadows, and Daniel Buck; journalist Ken Verdoia; and artist Thom Ross.  Among the reenactment participants are Robert Jensen, Lee Jensen, and Joshua Marrufo.

REVIEW:

Unlike the glamorized 1969 film co-starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford, this solidly-paced documentary explores the unvarnished (and not kid-friendly) truth of this desperado duo’s criminal notoriety.  More so, time is not wasted pondering unprovable claims re: Cassidy and/or the Sundance Kid somehow eluding Bolivian military forces and supposedly living to old age. 

Overall, as anchored by Michael Murphy’s top-notch articulation, American Experience provides likely the most well-researched and convincing documentary on these Old West icons yet produced.     

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                       9 Stars

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MURDER, SHE WROTE: SHOWDOWN IN SASKATCHEWAN (Season 4, Episode 20)

SUMMARY:                APPROX. RUNNING TIME: 47:00 Min.

First broadcast by CBS-TV on April 10, 1988, Vincent McEveety directed this episode off Dick Nelson’s script. 

Jessica Fletcher (Lansbury) is visiting her lovestruck niece, Jill Morton (McNichol), at a rodeo in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.  Unbeknownst to Jill, her cowboy boyfriend, Marty Reed (Houser), is already married with a wife and young son.  Marty’s two friends and mentors, Boone (Wilcox) and Luke (LeMat), are soon injured during the rodeo. 

Subsequently, Luke barely escapes an overnight fire in the medic’s trailer, but Dr. Schaeffer (Dorsey) succumbs to fatal smoke inhalation.  Jessica and the investigating Royal Mountie (LeGault) suspect murder once arson is determined as the cause of the fire.   

Jessica Fletcher: Angela Lansbury

Jill Morton: Kristy McNichol

Marty Reed: Patrick Houser

Boone Talbot: Larry Wilcox

Luke Purdue: Paul LeMat

Consuela Schaeffer: Rosanna DeSoto

Doc Schaeffer: Joe Dorsey

RCMP Inspector Roger McCabe: Lance LeGault

Wally Brice: Terry Kiser

Carla Talbot: Cassie Yates

Mona: Devon Williams

Buster: Uncredited

Warden Burns: Thomas H. Middleton

Medic: Michael Frederic

Bartender: Ed McCready

Secretary: Eileen T’Kaye

Policeman: Conrad Hurtt

Intern: Richard Molnar

Female Fan: Lisa Long

REVIEW:

Though the culprit is not a surprise, this average Murder, She Wrote wins on generally good performances and a change-of-pace locale.  Suffice to say, “Showdown in Saskatchewan” is a very watchable whodunnit. It, however, doesn’t leave a lasting impression.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                  5½ Stars

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MURDER, SHE WROTE: WHO THREW THE BARBITALS IN MRS. FLETCHER’S CHOWDER? (Season 4, Episode 12)

SUMMARY:             APPROX. RUNNING TIME: 47:00 Min.

First broadcast by CBS-TV on January 3, 1988, John Llewellyn Moxey directed this episode off Robert Von Scoyk’s script. 

Sheriff Tupper (Bosley) is bewildered when his distraught sister, Winnie (Meara), shows up in Cabot Cove, with her ornery husband (Stockwell) and mooching in-laws (Gibson & Lewis) not far behind. 

Seeking solace, Winnie innocently flirts with Seth (Windom) while staying at Jessica’s (Lansbury) home.  Attempting to deescalate the Tuppers’ estranged family relations with a dinner invitation, Jessica’s homemade chowder is evidently poisoned with an extra fatal ingredient. 

Further complicating the subsequent homicide investigation is a shifty private detective (Rhodes) and Tupper’s new gung-ho deputy (Camp).  Yet, Jessica senses the crime’s motive is indeed close to home.  

Jessica Fletcher: Angela Lansbury

Sheriff Amos Tupper: Tom Bosley

Dr. Seth Hazlitt: Wiliam Windom

Winnie Tupper Banner: Anne Meara

Henry Banner: Henry Gibson

Deputy Marigold Feeney: Colleen Camp

Deputy Grover: Dennis Bailey

Elmo Banner: Guy Stockwell

Kenny & Flo Oakes: Geoffrey Lewis & Barbara Rhoades

Ed Bellamy: Donnelly Rhodes

Ralph: Joseph V. Perry

Deputy: Uncredited

REVIEW:

Despite depicting a dull mystery, this episode is still enjoyable.  Curiously, given several reliable comedians on hand, the tinges of humor do not necessarily fit the serious-minded script (i.e. inferences of potential domestic abuse). 

For instance, Colleen Camp’s presence offers welcome comedic relief, but her scenes don’t contribute much to the plot itself.  Had she been phased into a recurring role (vs. this mere one-shot), Camp likely would have had delightful chemistry with Bosley as his character’s self-appointed second-in-command. 

Generally, the chemistry Lansbury and her regular co-stars share with this guest cast (particularly, Meara and Camp) share make up for the story’s sluggish storytelling. Without much of a whodunnit to unravel, this episode wins primarily on charm and the cast’s classiness.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                      5 Stars

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THREE STOOGES: “MEN IN BLACK” (1934)

SUMMARY:      RUNNING TIME: 18:06 Min. (Black & White)

Directed by Raymond McCarey off Felix Adler’s script, this 1934 comedy is the Stooges’ sole Oscar-nominated work.  At the Los Arms Hospital, the Stooges are among the facility’s new physicians supposedly dedicated to their professional motto: ‘For duty and humanity!’  Yet, the trio’s sheer ineptitude during their first shift causes non-stop chaos. 

Dr. (Moe) Howard: Moe Howard

Dr. (Larry) Fine: Larry Fine

Dr. (Curly) Howard: Jerry “Curly” Howard

Dr. Graves: Dell Henderson

Maintenance Worker (Glass Door Repair): Hank Mann

Doctors: Bud Jamison & Charles Doherty

Nurses: Jeanie Roberts, Lucile Watson, Eve Kimberly, Irene Coleman, Kay Hughes, Betty Andre, & Carmen Andre

Mentally Disturbed Patient: Billy Gilbert

Diminutive Female Patient: William H. Rhodes

Anna Conda: Phyllis Crane

Anesthesiologist (Surgery Sequence): Charles King

Nurse (Surgery Sequence): Ruth Hiatt

Western Union Messenger: Bobby Callahan

New Doctors (Opening Sequence): Uncredited (including Arthur Rankin)

Additional Doctors & Nurses: Uncredited

Uncredited Role: Pat West

Note: The episode’s title spoofs 1934’s controversial hospital drama, Men in White, co-starring Clark Gable & Myrna Loy. 

REVIEW:

Far more reminiscent of Marx Brothers-style screwball comedy, “Men in Black” cleverly earns its Oscar nomination.  Playing off unpredictable wackiness instead of cartoony slapstick, a young Larry, Moe, & Curly are in vintage form parodying Hollywood hospital melodramas. 

Even if “Men in Black” isn’t LOL hilarious, this Stooges caper is still a black-and-white gem approaching ninety years old.    

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                     8 Stars

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THREE STOOGES: “OILY TO BED, OILY TO RISE” (1939)

SUMMARY:     RUNNING TIME: 18:23 Min. (Black & White)

Directed by Jules White, this Three Stooges comedy was scripted by Andrew Bennison & Mauri Grashin.  Upon being chased off a job chopping wood, wandering vagrants Moe, Larry, and Curly next approach kindly Mrs. Jenkins for a free meal.  It quickly comes to their attention that she has just been swindled out of her farm by three greedy hustlers.  Discovering a gushing oil well on the widow’s property, the Stooges race off to intercept the conceited crooks to retrieve the Jenkins farm’s deed. 

Meanwhile, by sheer coincidence, Curly’s every pivotal wish is conjured up seemingly out of thin air.  Among such wishes is the revelation of Mrs. Jenkins’ three lovely daughters … and an imminent showdown with their new enemies.

Moe: Moe Howard

Larry: Larry Fine

Curly: Jerry “Curly” Howard

Mrs. Jenkins: Eva McKenzie

April Jenkins: Dorothy Moore

May Jenkins: Lorna Gray

June Jenkins: Dorothy Comingore

Farmer Johnson: Richard Fiske

Clipper (Swindler # 1): Dick Curtis

Briggs (Swindler # 2): Eddie Laughton

Swindler # 3 (The Driver): James Craig

REVIEW:

Though it isn’t LOL hilarious, “Oily to Bed, Oily to Rise,” succeeds in some feel-good storytelling vs. merely a formulaic series of slapstick gags.  Suffice to say, it’s a well-played Stooges caper!   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                 7 Stars

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THREE STOOGES: “POP GOES THE EISEL” (1935)

SUMMARY:      RUNNING TIME: 18:07 Min. (Black & White)

Directed by Del Lord, this early Three Stooges comedy for Columbia Pictures was scripted by Felix Adler.  Desperate for work, the vagrant Stooges borrow a store’s brooms to try advertising their services.  Mistaking them for thieves, the shop owner sends a plainclothes policeman in hot pursuit of the fleeing Stooges. 

Chased into an upscale art class, the trio is forced to play several rounds of duck-and-dodge with the tenacious cop.  Impersonating artists, the Stooges ultimately incite a clay-flinging melee inside the studio. 

Moe: Moe Howard

Larry: Larry Fine

Curly: Jerry “Curly” Howard

Plainclothes Cop: Louis Mason

Professor Fuller: Bobby Burns

Artistic Models: Phyllis Crane & Geneva Mitchell

French Artist: Leo White

Shop Keeper: Billy Engle

Bearded Man: Jack Duffy

Motorist # 1 (with Larry): Al Thompson

Panhandled Pedestrian (with Curly): William Irving

Motorist # 2: Grace Goodall

Female Motorist Seeking Social Secretary (with Moe): Uncredited

Rival Vagrant (with Moe): Uncredited

Hopscotch Girls: Joan Howard & Phyllis Fine (cameos)

Art Students & Patrons: Ernie Young, Blanche Payson, Elinor Vanderveer, George Ovey, Delo Jewkes, Jack Kenney, Art Rowlands, Lew Davis, Neal Burns, Harold Breen, & Bob Callahan

Note: Larry’s daughter & Moe’s daughter make their only film appearances.

REVIEW:

Making the most of its simplistic premise, this episode serves up a vintage Stooges caper.  More specifically, the gags often come off as more humorously clever than hilarious (i.e. the hopscotch sequence).  Substituting globs of clay (resembling Play-Doh) for cream puffs and pies, the messy finale is well worth waiting for.  Well-played!    

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                       7½ Stars

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THREE STOOGES: “SCRAMBLED BRAINS” (1951)

SUMMARY:     RUNNING TIME: 15:51 Min. (Black & White)

Produced and directed by Jules White off Felix Adler’s script, this Stooges comedy has Moe & Larry supervising Shemp’s home rest upon release from a psychiatric ward.  Hallucinating that his adoring nurse is an attractive blonde, Shemp becomes engaged.  At home, Larry & Moe contend with Shemp’s failed efforts at recuperation.  Among the trio’s antics is a close-quarters brawl inside a telephone booth with an irate stranger, whose groceries are ruined. 

On an oblivious Shemp’s wedding day, Moe & Larry are mortified to find out who his new father-in-law is.  A rematch with the Stooges is the first thing on this guy’s mind.

Moe: Moe Howard

Larry: Larry Fine

Shemp: Shemp Howard

Nora the Nurse: Babe London

Nora’s Dad: Vernon Dent

Dr. Gseundheitt: Emil Sitka

Marybelle: Royce Milne

Fantasy Nora: Pamela Britton

Orderly: Johnny Kascier

Stooge Stunt Doubles: Johnny Kascier, B. Edney, & Joe Murphy

REVIEW:

One might pause at the thought of the Stooges parodying mental illness, but this episode isn’t half-bad.  Aside from a crass biting gag, the phone booth melee is a gem, as Larry scores some terrific laughs.  Otherwise, the plot for “Scrambled Brains” is somewhat middling, as are most of the gags.  Along with the phone booth fistfight, Shemp’s piano playing sequence setting off another round of his hysterics is still worth catching.    

The dubious upside to “Scrambled Brains” is that it isn’t another cheapo cut-and-paste job that Columbia Pictures cobbled together during that era.  This one features original material start to finish, even if the storytelling treads on mediocrity. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                       4½ Stars