The Case of the Wooden Nickels
- Episode aired Dec 10, 1964
- 1h
Minerva Doubleday asks Paul to complete a secretive deal for her uncle involving the sale of a rare coin. Paul follows the instructions but finds himself at the uncle's shop where he stumble... Read allMinerva Doubleday asks Paul to complete a secretive deal for her uncle involving the sale of a rare coin. Paul follows the instructions but finds himself at the uncle's shop where he stumbles into Minerva over a man shot to death.Minerva Doubleday asks Paul to complete a secretive deal for her uncle involving the sale of a rare coin. Paul follows the instructions but finds himself at the uncle's shop where he stumbles into Minerva over a man shot to death.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Lt. Tragg
- (credit only)
- George Parsons
- (as Hunt Powers)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
As with all 'Perry Mason' episodes, we are accustom to an ending where someone is painted into a corner and then they confess to end the show in the time alloted. In this episode we get a mess. It resembled a car crash than solving of a mystery.
The show begins with a homely looking women hiring Paul to delivery a very rare coin to a unknown person and follow directions like a scavenger hunt.
And to make a story short- we have a replica coin maker, a rich coin collector, a seedy con artist along with our homely Ms Doubleday. Well the con artist gets shot and Ms Doubleday is seen holding the gun over the body. And she get Perry to defend her against Mr Burger in court.
So just from this information we know we are going to have replica coins being sold as original rare coins in the episode. The story was actually interesting. We have some good acting from the cast and some good dialog that ties the entire show together in one good viewing. Then we have the end!
Perry, outside the courtroom, gathers the entire cast and then begins to explain how and why the murder happened. We are left shaking our heads because we have to take Perry's explanation of events as fact even without the slightest evidence of such things ever happening. Perry wraps the entire case up in that gathering and we are left befuddled trying to make sense of the entire show.
The first 40 minutes of the show was good. The last ten seemed out of place for such an interesting story. The ending made the entire episode seem useless. A middle of the road episode for sure.
I was led away from my original deduction a few times; this show had more twists, turns, and dead ends than an Iowa corn maze. Far from being a disappointment at the end, the way it fell together at the end was quite well done. Let's just say that, had the guilty party not been betrayed by one close to said party, his or her plan would have been airtight.
The only thing that made me laugh was the reference to a gold Fugio cent. No such gold coin exists, now or ever. If you've ever seen a gold dollar coin (about the size of a dime), imagine a coin one-one hundredth of that size..it'd be a waste of time and specie to make them!
All kinds of people, coin collectors are involved here with Kulava and there's a real rogue's gallery of suspects in the cast.
Even if this wasn't a Perry Mason story it is a given that only innocent clients get his services, I'd be hard pressed to believe mousy Phyllis Love could murder anybody. William Talman looks like a real bully in prosecuting her.
The perpetrator who is a real smooth article tried to pull something on the witness stand. Foolish man. You have to see what he tries.
Did you know
- TriviaThis was one of only two appearances by Penny O'Donnell (the cigarette girl) in either television or films.
- GoofsEverybody throughout the episode handles the valuable rare coin with their bare hands. Valuable rare coins are never handled with bare hands, as skin oil can damage the surface of the coin. What's more, everyone, including the coin collector Harry Hopkins, hold the coins on the front and back instead of on their edges.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Della Street: [talking on the phone] Not even one damsel in distress. No, Perry, not even a book salesman. It's been more like a morgue around here than a law office all morning. Paul? No, he hasn't come in yet. Mm-hmm. Okay, I'll tell him. 'Bye.
Details
- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1