Friday, November 7, 2008

Mini-Review: Saddled Wtith Trouble

Saddled With Trouble, by Michele Scott, 2006 - is the first in the "Horse Lover's Mystery Series" - another one of those series where the heroine/detective knows nothing about police work, but nevertheless always gets mixed up in murders.

The author, Michele Scott, is also author of the "Wine Lovers' Mystery Series."

Well, I have to say I didn't care for it very much. The heroine, Michaela Bancroft, is a horse trainer, with a husband who has cheated on her and wants a divorce. The hubby's mistress, a beauty pageant winner, is not shy about harassing Michaela to sign the divorce papers, which she doesn't want to do until her soon-to-be ex owes her a great deal of money.

Michaela's uncle, Lou, another horse trainer, is found murdered in a stall, trampled by a horse.

Michaela sets out to find out who did it. She lives in her house with a new roomate, Camden, a beautiful woman who goes around marrying men for their money. Her latest husband, however, had been too smart for her, and she ended up not getting enough money in the divorce to support her in the habit she'd become accustomed, so she's freeloading off Michaela. (Not that Michaela thinks of it that way - that's my take on it.)

I didn't care for the characters, I didn't care for the soap opera -- I want detectives who don't have personal problems or who have solved them long ago -- and I wasn't very impressed with the writing, either. It just didn't seem to flow.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Warren William as Perry Mason


November, 2007 was "Programmer Month" at TCM, and they showed a lot of the classic crime dramas from the 30s and 40s.

For the first time, I saw Warren William (December 2, 1894 - September 24, 1948) - as Philo Vance, Perry Mason, and Michael Lanyard aka The Lone Wolf.

And I quite like him! He's an excellent actor, handsome, with a sense of humor. Sadly, though, one can see him aging rapidly in the later Lone Wolf pictures (he died at the age of 54 of multiple myeloma (bone cancer)).

The IMDB points out:
Personally, Warren William was a shy and retiring type. Speaking of him, five-time Warners co-star Joan Blondell said that William "was an old man even when he was a young man." According to San Francisco critic Mick LaSalle's 2002 book "Dangerous Men: Pre-Code Hollywood and the Birth of the Modern Man" (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2002), William, who quite unlike his early Warner Bros.' stereotype as a heartless "love 'em and leave 'em"-style seducer, remained married to one woman throughout his adult life. He was an active inventor with multiple patents, designing one of the first recreational vehicles, reportedly so he could continue to sleep while being driven to the studio in the morning.


In future blog entries I'll discuss Warren William's characterizations of Philo Vance, Perry Mason, and The Lone Wolf.