To pay for his wife's operation, Mr. Crabtree takes a job working for the mysterious Mr. X, who asks him to manage a job involving a blackmailer.To pay for his wife's operation, Mr. Crabtree takes a job working for the mysterious Mr. X, who asks him to manage a job involving a blackmailer.To pay for his wife's operation, Mr. Crabtree takes a job working for the mysterious Mr. X, who asks him to manage a job involving a blackmailer.
7.71K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
Pretty decent episode despite a rather silly ending.
Mr. Crabtree is an elder man who has just been let go from his previous job due to his age. With his wife Mrs. Crabtree in poor health. He receives a call from an employer to whom he had written, and the employer sends his secretary to discuss the job with Crabtree. He gets the job and soon is making good money and living the good life. However one day he is paid a visit by his boss the mysterious Mr. X who wants Crabtree to do a new job for him for a whole years salary. That job murder a man. There's not to much to say about this one it's a fine little story that isn't to hard to understand even if a bit on the predictable side. It still doesn't ruin it though as John Qualan making his third and final appearance in the series is really enjoyable to watch, he plays the whole innocent guy role really good. A surprise appearance from Lorne Greene pre-Bonanza was a fun surprise as well. Like said the ending is a bit predictable, and oddly played off in a silly sorta way despite the situation that's just occurred.
Help Wanted
Even Alfred Hitchcock noted that this story has a delectable sting. A rather nifty twisted one.
Mr Crabtree (John Qualen) was fired from his previous job for being too old. Now his wife is ill and she needs surgery.
So a new job offer is a lifeline for Crabtree. He will be working on his own in an office writing reports. It is all very confidential and his employer remains mysterious.
Crabtree does not think much about the reports but it is a lucrative job and will help with the medical bills.
Then one day the employer shows up at the office. The mysterious Mr X (Lorne Greene) has a deadly proposition for Mr Crabtree, a well paid one.
The story is reminiscent of a Sherlock Holmes one and then it goes its own way.
Mr Crabtree (John Qualen) was fired from his previous job for being too old. Now his wife is ill and she needs surgery.
So a new job offer is a lifeline for Crabtree. He will be working on his own in an office writing reports. It is all very confidential and his employer remains mysterious.
Crabtree does not think much about the reports but it is a lucrative job and will help with the medical bills.
Then one day the employer shows up at the office. The mysterious Mr X (Lorne Greene) has a deadly proposition for Mr Crabtree, a well paid one.
The story is reminiscent of a Sherlock Holmes one and then it goes its own way.
Spare, but Solid
Well, it's all pretty mysterious. Middle-age unemployed Crabtree (note the name) with a sick wife suddenly gets a lucrative job. All he has to do is sit in a tiny office, copy corporation names, and mail the list each week to a box office. So who cares that his employer remains anonymous as does the purpose of the list. Is he being set up, but if so, for what.
Qualen's perfect as Crabtree, just the right inoffensive look and manner. Greene too shines, with his commanding look and demeanor, even without a Bonanza hairpiece. Good also to see regulars like Baer and Atterbury pick up a payday, even for brief walk-on's. In fact, had I looked closer at the cast list I might have figured out the upshot. Incidentally, note how Director Neilson ups suspense by withholding a facial view of Mr. X. The storyline is pretty spare, but the 30-minutes remains a solid Hitch entry, with Crabtree's inspired final line.
Qualen's perfect as Crabtree, just the right inoffensive look and manner. Greene too shines, with his commanding look and demeanor, even without a Bonanza hairpiece. Good also to see regulars like Baer and Atterbury pick up a payday, even for brief walk-on's. In fact, had I looked closer at the cast list I might have figured out the upshot. Incidentally, note how Director Neilson ups suspense by withholding a facial view of Mr. X. The storyline is pretty spare, but the 30-minutes remains a solid Hitch entry, with Crabtree's inspired final line.
Good plot
Nothing absolutely great here but quite entertaining for the audiences fond of ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS series. Good crime scheme with blackmail element and a story already told before and also after. Rather light hearted, but not a comedy either, the characters and plot will "talk" to audiences, I am sure. Many folks will more or less recognize themselves in those common American characters. Not exciting but not boring either. Not my favorite, not a milestone in the series. Not a highlight. But in a one hundred and forty episodes anthology show, it is impossible to have one hundred and forty masterpieces.
A very good remake.
"Help Wanted" is a remake of an episode from "Suspense" a few years earlier. I've seen both and think "Help Wanted" is a bit better. Some of this might be because John Qualen was so good in it....and this was his third "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" appearance in season 1.
Mr. Crabtree (Qualen) was fired from his last job due to his age. And, since then, he's had a horrible time trying to find work. To make matters worses, his wife is ill and needs surgery. So, when he receives a letter from one prospective employer offering work, he takes it...even though what he's going to do and why make no sense at all.
I'd say more about the plot but I don't want to spoil the suspense. All in all, a very good episode...well handled and very interesting from start to finish.
Mr. Crabtree (Qualen) was fired from his last job due to his age. And, since then, he's had a horrible time trying to find work. To make matters worses, his wife is ill and needs surgery. So, when he receives a letter from one prospective employer offering work, he takes it...even though what he's going to do and why make no sense at all.
I'd say more about the plot but I don't want to spoil the suspense. All in all, a very good episode...well handled and very interesting from start to finish.
Did you know
- TriviaThe two main actors in this episode, John Qualen and Lorne Greene, died one day apart on 11-12 Sept 1987, over three decades after this episode was made.
- GoofsWhen Mr X goes to see Crabtree at his office, he's wearing a hat that he removes and hangs up during the interview. After giving Crabtree the proposition, Mr X leaves the office without retrieving his hat.
- Crazy creditsLorne Greene is misspelled in the Opening Credits as Lorne Green. However, in the Closing Credits, his last name is spelled properly (Greene).
- SoundtracksFuneral March of a Marionette
Written by Charles Gounod
Details
- Runtime
- 30m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content





