Small House of Everything

Small House of Everything

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: REACHING FOR THE MOON

"Reaching for the Moon: by S. A. Lombino (Science Fiction Quarterly, November 1951; reprinted in American Science Fiction #12.1953; reprinted in Black Cat Weekly #102, 2023)

As per the FictionMags Index, this is most likely the author's first published story, several years before he legally changed his name to Evan Hunter, and before he began publishing the 87th Precinct novels as "Ed McBain."

As befits a first story, this one is short -- a mere three pages ending in a gimmicky and somewhat hoary  twist that might work well for The Twilight Zone.

And there is clunky writing, beginning with the first two sentences:  "The laboratory was brightly lit, and four men in business suits surrounded the large table.  They stared down at the blueprints on the table, some scratching their heads, others rubbing their chins in speculation." 

Scientist Dr. Saunders has come up with a rocket that can take mankind to the moon; all he needs now is the funding.  He meets the four richest men in the country but they poo-poo the idea as too fantastic.  There is no financial advantage to reaching the moon.  Earth is overpopulated as it is and the way to handle that problem is through war -- something that these men heavily finance.  Now, maybe if Saunders can fit a warhead on the rocket...  But as it stands, there is just no profit in going to the moon.

Half the people reading this review have probably already figured out the twist ending.

An interesting, albeit slight, little tale.  Today's businessmen may not differ much from those the author imagined almost seventy-five years ago.

The November 1951 issue of Science Fiction Quarterly can be found on the internet for those interested.

Monday, April 28, 2025

OVERLOOKED FILM: MANHATTAN LOVE SONG (1934)

 Most people who know the name Cornell Woolrich recognize him as the tortured author of Rear Window, The Bride Wore Black, Waltz Into Darkness, Deadline at Dawn, Black Alibi, and so many more.  But Woolrich began his career writing "jazz-age" novels influenced by the writings of  F. Scott Fitzgerald.  It was only after his seventh novel failed to sell, and a failed  attempt to break into Hollywood screenwriting, that Woolrich switched gears and began writing the pulp and detective stories for which he is justly known.  Today he is recognized as one of the greatest crime writers of his time.

Two of these jazz-age novels made it into pre-Code films,  Children of the Ritz, his second novel and the winner of a $10,000 writing prize, was filmed in 1929, featuring Dorothy Mackaill, Jack Mulhall, and James Ford.  His sixth novel, Manhattan Love Song, was filmed in 1934.  By the time the film was released, the jazz age had ended, America was in a Depression, and Woolrich had begun publishing storing in  Detective Fiction Weekly and Dime Detective Magazine.

Manhattan Love Song concerns itself with two sisters, Geraldine (Dixie Lee -- Bing Crosby's first wife) and Carol (Helen Flint) Stewart, who, despite living in a posh New York City apartment, find themselves broke due to poor investments.  Their servants Tom Williams (Robert Armstrong, King Kong, Might Joe Young, The Penguin Pool Murder) and Annette -- not sure if she has a last name -- (Nydia Westman) are about to leave when the sisters convince them that if they stay they will receive their back wages.  They stay, but insist that the sisters do their share of the household work.  Carol then elopes with a rich guy (Franklin Pangborn, a veteran of many Preston Sturges and W. C. Fields films), but this still leaves Geraldine alone with no money and only one job offer, as a stripper in a burlesque show.  Alas, the show is raided and Geraldine is arrested.  In the meantime, Williams is mistaken as a taxi driver by tourist "Pancake Annie" Jones (Cecil Cunningham -- don't let the stage name fool you, the actress was born Edna Cecil Cunningham), who has come to the city from Nevada to try to become part of New York Society.  Pancake Annie offers Williams a job in Nevada, just as Geraldine realizes that she is in love with Williams.

A romantic comedy with no much comedy, but it still remains a sweet little film.

Directed by Leonard Fields, whose career involved more writing and producing than directing.  Fields and David Silverstein adapted Woolrich's novel for the screen.

Enjoy.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXVRQ5fon7o

Sunday, April 27, 2025

SUPERHERO DAY

 Today is National Superhero Day!  With that in mind, please feel free to sing (or hum) along.


"Superman" - Main Theme - John Williams

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=78N2SP6JFaI


"Batman" - 1966-1968

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kK4H-LkrQjQ


"The Flash" - 1990 Theme

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4__VW9TZuA


"The Incredibles" - Theme

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ZUHlrir4Og&list=PLvU3t3QkFPlvDs8lzaWL-CZPL1xJcYpLC&index=3


"The Green Hornet"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ScOAUQ9w6k


"Wonder Woman"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imc_qG8Re2Q


"Spider-Man"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=knL0aKGruUc


"The Fantastic Four"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2eLJIOfCQ84


"Captain  America"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1dWIPUuTPB4


"Marvel Rivals X Superhero Squad" - Theme

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1eF2Doasck


"Supergirl" - Main Theme

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JrpFKqV5oQ


"Mighty Morphin Power Rangers" - Season 1 Theme

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jratag5UTY


"The Greatest American Hero"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZ0U1Ri2uuM


"Buffy the Vampire Slayer" -- TV series

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3aLZcOHx_8Q


"The Six Million Dollar Man" - Intro and Theme

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0CPJ-AbCsT8

Saturday, April 26, 2025

Thursday, April 24, 2025

FORGOTTEN BOOK: GOOD BEHAVIOR

 Good Behavior  by Blake Crouch  (2016)

This is a collection of three novelettes detailing the published exploits of Letty Dobesh, an alcoholic, drug addict, and thief extraordinaire.  This was the basis of the TNT television show starring Michelle Dockery which ran for two season (20 episodes) from November 2015 through November 2018.

Letisha Dobesh is in her mid-thirties, the victim of a horrible and abusive childhood.  Now self-destructive, she has been in prison three times; a fourth conviction could have her locked up for life.  Not that her life might last very long -- her addictions might soon well kill her.  Alas, Letty can only function well if she is high or if she is stealing something.  A part of her wants to reform and lead a straight life, if only for her young son, whose custody she lost to the boy's paternal grandparents in Colorado.  No matter how hard she wants to have a future life with her son, her addictions keep pulling her back.  On the bright side of things, when she is committing crime, she avoids alcohol and crystal meth (her preferred choice of destruction) in order to keep her mind clear.  Luckily, her vices have not yet robbed her of her good looks, but that might change in the not-too-distant future.  Despite her self-destructive behavior (and at least one suicide attempt) Letty sincerely wants to live.  A lady of contrasts is our Letty.

She premiered in the story "The Pain of Others" on Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, March 2011, which was later released as a separate title.  A second story, "Sunset Key," was also released as a separate tile -- I cannot find if it had any previous publication.  These two stories, plus a third -- "Grab" -- were included in Good Behavior, which was released to coincide with the first season of the television.  Each story is followed by Crouch's notes on the writing of the story and nits relation to the show.  Good Behavior is touted as a novel, and I suppose, if you squint really hard in a dark, dark room, it might be considered thus.  Burt actually, it's just a collection of stories -- each written a year or two after the previous ones, and laced with contradictions; not that that really matters.  These are Letty's stories and her path -- perhaps -- toward growth.  The minor details are not important; Letty's journey is. 

In the first story, we see Letty robbing a series of hotel rooms.  She's interrupted and hides in a closet where she hears a man engaging a hitman to kill his wife.  What to do?  She can't go to the cops.  She does not know who the two men are, or who the intended victim is.  But Letty is virulently against violence of any sort (her abused childhood, remember?).   Even after she manages to stop the murder, things take an unexpected twist...

The second story involved a wealthy businessman who has bilked billions and, in doing so, has destroyed thousands of lives.  Justice has finally caught up to him and he is scheduled to start a long prison term the following day -- he will likely die in prison  Letty is hired to steal a priceless van Gogh from his isolated and heavily-protected island compound off the Florida Keys.  It's a tricky caper, but Letty did not count on betrayal and a "Most-Dangerous-Game" twist.  Letty cannot get off the island -- she cannot swim and her biggest phobia is of drowning...

The final story has Letty pull into a sophisticated casino heist in Las Vegas.  At stake is $30 million in cash, give or take.  The crew that has hired Letty plans to double-cross the Richter, the "rock-star grifter' every thief wants of be, but Richter is just a myth, an unban legend, isn't he?  Between the casino thugs, Richter's hard-core gang, and the crooks she has thrown in with, and all the high-tech equipment needed to pull off the job, the odds are not great for Letty's survival.  Then Letty's therapist shows up, determined to commit suicide...

The stories are interesting and fast-paced.  Letty is a (very) flawed character one can root for.  Will she be able to extricate herself from her worst urges and begin to lead the life she truly wants?  Well, you have to read the book to find out.  The television series was evidently cancelled before that question was answered.

THE CRIMSON COMET #17 (1956)

The Crimson Comet (created by John Dixon) was actually Secret Service agent Ralph Rivers (later to become Colonel Rivers, and still later [as Rivers] to run the Australian government's super-hero unit, the Southern Squadron).  Although completely human, he has this nifty skin-tight, bullet-proof red suit that does little to hide his powerful, rippling muscles.  He's got a hood (black this time; it used to be red), gauntlets, dark shorts (like any self-respecting hero, the underwear is worn on the outside), mid-calf boots, and a fancy futuristic gun.  And he can fly.  (Did I mention he can fly?  Yep, he's got workable feathered wings as part of his costume.)

In the first story, foreign agents although not named, they're Chinese) are being dropped by submarine  off Singapore to organize Wing Chang and his gang of bandits to build a powerful army.  The Crimson Comet manages to isolate the invaders and the local crooks to a small part of the island, but he is caught in a landslide and buried (gasp!).  Fear not, he's okay, and helps to round up the bad guys, while Australian fighter planes blast the heck out of the submarine.  -- All in time for Rivers to catch his plane back to the drome as his leave ends.

Rivers is fogged in at Panang, after having delivered some equipment to the R.A.A.F. in a spotting plane.  Meanwhile, Sergeant Bronson and he men, who are patrolling the area, have not reported in and it is feared they may have run into terrorists.  Since Rivers is already in the area, he is asked to see if he can spot the patrol from his plane.  He spots a lone wounded man in the depths of the jungle; it's the only survivor of the patrol -- the rest have been captured or killed.  No sooner does Ralph locate the survivor than they are both captured, and Rivers is knocked unconscious.  The terrorist are kind of dumb; they do not realize that Rivers has his costume hidden on him and, instead, think he is a hunchback.  Big mistake!  The Crimson Comet caves the patrol and keeps the baddies busy until. the army can come in and clean up.

And...there's an advertisement for a "Davy Crockett Style Coon Hat" (Made of the finest slink skin with draw-string to fit any head.)  For just 17/6 (post free).

A combination of typical Australian comic book plotting and mid-Fifties anti-Communist xenophobia. 

Enjoy.

https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=96461&comicpage=&b=i

RANGER BILL, WARRIOR OF THE WOODLAND: TWENTY FATHOMS UNDER THE SEA (MAY 26, 1954)

 "Ranger Bill, Warrior of the Woodland, struggling against extreme odds, traveling dangerous trails, fighting the many enemies of nature.  This is the job of the guardian of the forest, Ranger Bill.  Pouring rain, freezing cold, blistering heat, snows, floods, bears, rattlesnakes, mountain lions.  Yes, all this for the exchange of satisfaction and pride of a job well done."

Park Ranger Bill Jefferson is the chief forest ranger of Knotty Pine in the Rocky Mountains, where Jefferson, a former marine, lives with his mother.  Miron Canaday starred as Bill, while also voicing Bill's co-worker, Stumpy Jenkins, an old forest ranger

Ranger Bill was a Christian radio program produced by Moody Broadcasting Network and the Moody Bible Institute.  Fifteen-minute episodes ran from 1952 to 1954 on Chicago's WMBI, followed by half-hour syndicated shows from 1954 to 1962.  Over 200 episodes were recorded; repeats are still being aired in syndication.  The problems Bill and his friends faced over the years ranged from the mundane to the fantastic, but all were solved while stressing positive Christian values for young people.

In this episode Bill and his friends go deep-sea fishing with an old salvage man, Ben Benson.  An old Navy training submarine is stuck on the bottom, but Ben refuses to help because his son had died in an underwater salvage operation...

I suspect a moral with show up here eventually.

Enjoy.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FtP5-Nl72Rg&list=PLlUoyloCGlWxz_1Q5-ziI8gPVY8-RQiFQ&index=5