Perry Mason finds himself defending his private investigator Paul Drake against a charge of murder. It all began when Frank Thatcher hit a pedestrian walking on the side of the road and kill... Read allPerry Mason finds himself defending his private investigator Paul Drake against a charge of murder. It all began when Frank Thatcher hit a pedestrian walking on the side of the road and kills him. He hires Paul to payoff the widow.Perry Mason finds himself defending his private investigator Paul Drake against a charge of murder. It all began when Frank Thatcher hit a pedestrian walking on the side of the road and kills him. He hires Paul to payoff the widow.
- Joe Marsden
- (as Robert Lieb)
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One can see, in this show about three years into the series run, Mason's gradual evolution from an attorney who works on the edge of the law to that of greater respectability and acceptance by his fellow court officers. No more film noir, merely film grise. By Season Seven, he'd be wearing the white hat in full force. While I liked the first two seasons the most, Season Three still was full of shows worthy of the time to watch.
The Dameron family does not have any ethics, they take their cues from corrupt old family patriarch Basil Ruysdael. His son-in-law Bruce Gordon has been seeing his old girlfriend Vanessa Brown on the side. Not that he cares that much, he's like Joe Kennedy that way. But Gordon is good for the company.
But after a quarrel with Brown, Gordon leaves his love nest and runs down some poor innocent victim who was walking to a service station after his own car got a flat. What to do, but cover it up.
So Gordon hires William Hopper who does take outside jobs away from Perry Mason. He gives him a cock and bull story about staying anonymous but to deliver a $25,000.00 check for the widow. Hopper has a great scene with the widow Sheila Bromley and learns what Gordon has been feeding him.
Some private eyes have ethics and Paul Drake does not like being a messenger boy to deliver hush money. He and Gordon fight and Gordon sucker punches him and knocks him cold. It was in his love nest with Brown and when Hopper wakes up he's accused of Bruce Gordon's murder.
This was one of the best Perry Mason episodes ever done. Even defending his best friend Raymond Burr remains unflappable in his pursuit of the truth. And his final scene with Ruysdael is a great one.
On Frank's way home one night, after having a fight with his girlfriend over her unhappiness with the situation, he hits and kills a pedestrian, out in the country. He tells his wealthy father-in-law, and his in-laws arrange to have everything covered up, but say that Frank must pay the family - if there is one - 25 thousand dollars anonymously as a kind of restitution. Frank has this done through Paul Drake, telling him it is payback for some loan the deceased made to a person who is now a prosperous miner. But Drake figures out what happened when he goes to the widow's home, and is told that her husband was very recently killed by a hit and run driver. Drake confronts Thatcher, they fight, and Thatcher knocks Paul unconscious. He awakens to the police pounding on the door and Frank Thatcher dead in the next room, shot by Paul's gun. Paul is arrested for Thatcher's murder. Of course Perry is on the case.
The situation has the D. A. thinking this was murder over money Paul was trying to extort from Thatcher over the hit and run accident, after he found out that was what the money was for. The dead man's rich father-in-law, Henry Dameron, is helping this theory along by bribing everybody in sight because he thinks one of his children may have committed the murder. He's not troubled about an innocent man going to jail if it spares him embarrassment. Watch and find out how Perry figures this one out.
It's no surprise that Perry, Della, and Paul are very close, having a friendship that transcends their working relationship. But it appears that fondness for Paul Drake extends to the D. A.'s office and the police as well as both Tragg and Berger both tell Perry that they are so very sorry they have to prosecute Paul, but that the evidence indicates an open and shut case. I don't see these two normally shed any tears over people they arrest and prosecute, so they must have at least thought of Paul as an honest PI.
Wealthy patriarch Henry Dameron is a piece of work as he makes Scrooge look like Gandhi. Maybe that's a bad comparison as Dameron is not so much tight fisted as he is afflicted with a messiah complex. He thinks his money can rid him of any problem - and it almost could. He has his daughter marry a man who doesn't love her - this episode's corpse of the week - just so he can have somebody reliable to run his businesses. He's turned one son into a drunk and the other into a bagman. And Perry, the problem that he could not buy, has some harsh closing words for him.
Unfortunately this episode is relatively hard to find because it is one of several not available on Amazon Prime/FreeVee (where I normally watch Perry) nor on Paramount+. I was able to record it off of MeTV in cable.
Did you know
- TriviaThis was the first episode of the show that didn't have "The case of THE..." in the title. There would be two more.
- GoofsWhen Frank Thatcher is driving his 1959 Lincoln and is nodding off just before he runs down the pedestrian, the gear shift for the automatic transmission is way up in view over the dashboard, because the car is still in park even though he is supposedly driving down the road.
- Quotes
[last lines]
Perry Mason: You know, when I leave here, I'm meeting Paul Drake at a restaurant. He'll pick up the check for dinner. That'll be the fee for my services. He's just a friend, but I never once doubted his innocence.
Henry W. Dameron: What do you mean by that?
Perry Mason: Mr. Dameron... I've never before met a person so far removed from humanity that he believed every one of his own children capable of committing a murder.
Details
- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1