ebertip
Joined Sep 2018
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ebertip's rating
Perry goes to Mittlenacht to check out the girlfriend of the son (an army lieutenant) of a client/good friend, as a personal favor. The son's superior, a captain, is found dead, with the son holding a gun at the scene, by girlfriend and Perry. A Swiss inspector (played by Klemperer, aka "Colonel Klink") is instantly on the scene, but only wants son to come to "his place." Klemperer wants the US Army to take over the killing of one American by another American. Perry believing the son truthful suspects something else. We have a bad crook scamming greedy people. Perry reasons the situation out. Episode ends with Klemperer asking Perry for help in a different case.
A truly period piece with the girlfriend being what would be called a displaced person.
This "Mittlenacht" is in Switzerland, as inferred in a late scene at the Mittlenacht train station in which Perry tells girlfriend her passport is bad, but girlfriend says she needs work in (West) Germany where the jobs are.
Perry defends Fuller's mother via lack of mental capacity; Burger agrees and the case is dismissed. The conniving "bad guy" accountant/junior partner of the episode Clement is murdered and Fuller is charged. In the background, it seems that Fuller's mother wss shortchanged in a partnership dissolution and Perry, acting as an estate lawyer, goes after Dickinson, the crooked lawyer for the partnership, with a show cause order, knowing this will stir the pot. One non-courtroom scene shows the bad behavior of the Brownes and Dickinson. Another non-courtroom scene, an entrapment engineered by Perry, fingers the killer. Fuller never appears in court. Francis X. Bushman (of the 1925 Ben Hur) is about 80 playing the role of the about 70 Philip. There is an over-the-top Burger coming down hard on Fuller, who had many reasons to kill the conniver. But this episode plays out as greedy and greedier.
In an odd coincidence, this episode, with a theme of society's indifference to older people, was re-broadcast on January 30, 2021, the same day that the New York Post ran a cover story about the "Who cares" remark of Governor Cuomo. Within the episode, the nursing home manager says "Who cares" as to the deaths of the residents. The scene in which life in the nursing home is likened to life in prison is priceless. The struggles "Donald Baxter" faced to get someone to listen evoke the 2021 issues in Covid vaccination. Some things never change.