VIDEO ARCHIVES SEASON 2: Birds of Prey (1973)

VIDEO ARCHIVES NOTES: This movie was discussed on the November 12, 2024 episode of the Video Archives podcast. 

Directed by William Graham (Change of HabitCalendar Girl Murders) and written by Robert Boris (Steele JusticeSome Kind of HeroElectra Glide in BlueDoctor Detroit), Birds of Prey debuted on January 30, 1973 on CBS.

Harry Walker (David Janssen) is a war vet who is now flying a helicopter for the news, checking in on traffic. He finally gets the action he missed when he sees a bank robbery and learns from his former commander, McAndrew (Ralph Meeker), that the criminals — former Vietnam vets — have kidnapped teller Teresa Janice “T.J.” Shaw (Elayne Heilveil), who is due to be married in a few days.

Pilot Jim Gavin told Flying Magazine,  “Birds was a ground-breaking project. We took the helicopter out of its normal environment, put it in the city streets and did all the work with Janssen in flight for real. In fact, since he was a pilot Janssen did a lot of the flying, and I’d sit opposite him.”

If you watch this and wonder why Janssen is singing along to songs and his lyrics don’t match the songs, that’s because copyright issues caused the removal of the jazz standards that were originally in this movie.

As you can imagine, the IMDB trivia section for this movie is filled with deep cut helicopter facts.

Tales from the Crypt S5 E11: Oil’s Well That Ends Well (1993)

Directed by Paul Abascal, who started as a makeup artist, and written by Scott Nimerfro, who wrote eleven episode of this show, this episode starts with the Tales from the Crypt pinball machine.

“Tonight’s tale concerns a man with 3 balls. What do you know? Par for the corpse! 10 killion points! Is this fun or what? Oh, hello, kiddies. Don’t mind me if I’m carrion on, but I’ve really groan to love this game. I could goo all night! Which brings to mind tonight’s terror tale. It’s about a couple of game players who are about to find out what happens when you don’t slay by the rules. I call it “Oil’s Well That Ends Well.””

I’ve been wanting to share these pictures for a long time. They come from Hollywood Candy in Omaha, Nebraska, a movie-themed candy and variety store.

Carl (Lou Diamond Phillips) — or maybe his name is Jerry — and his girlfriend Gina (Priscilla Presley) just pulled off multiple scams, starting with convincing her husband Larry (John Kassir, The Cryptkeeper) to fake his death, then killing him, then convincing a bunch of Southern millionaires (Noble Willingham, Alan Ruck, Rory Calhoun and Steve Kahan) to buy a cemetery because there’s oil underground. But that’s not enough and the quest for oil ends up wiping out nearly everyone.

This is based on “Oil’s Well That Ends Well!” from Tales from the Crypt #37. It was written by Al Feldstein and William Gaines and drawn by George Evans.

25 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS CHALLENGE: The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus (1985)

Note: Obviously, I liked this enough to watch and review it twice.

We all know and love Rankin/Bass Productions from our childhoods, but have we ever stopped to consider the nightmare world of bureaucracy that their Santa Claus operates? That he enables the abuse of Rudolph, even after the movie in the sequel, learning nothing? That he sends toys to basically die on an island and punishes elves who may dream of another career path? Is he the Santa that we wrote to in our youth or some Old Testament version?

This special is based on The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus by L. Frank Baum, the writer of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and it goes even beyond that, asking us to imagine a Santa that comes from the world of Ronnie James Dio album covers.

The final Animagic special from Rankin/Bass, this first aired on December 17, 1985. It’s not in Rankin?Bass continuity and yes, that is a real idea.*

Long ago in the Forest of Burzee, the Great Ak tells the story of Santa Claus to all of the other Immortals in the hopes that the man who is Santa can join them. Ak found him as a baby sixty years ago, abandoned in the snow, and Santa was raised by a lioness before being stolen by a wood nymph. Oh, your parents didn’t teach you that about Santa? Or that the Great Ak allowed a lioness and a wood nymph to co-parent a human child?

Assisted by the many magical races of the forest, Santa starts making gifts for children. This alerts the Awgwas to him, as they want children to be bad and basically act like organized crime — the magical creature community would like me to inform you that there is no such thing as the mafia, despite what you may have seen in the media — and keep stopping children from getting gifts. How do you stop the Angwas? The Immortals, led by the Great Ak, go to war with them and later tell Santa that all of them have perished. That’s right. Santa started a war over gifts and had a better equipped army, kind of like how he was a banana republic working with the CIA, and the balance of power against Communism needed better toys.

Santa then dies, telling his friends to decorate a tree every year to remember him. Luckily, he has fought orcs and slayed a dragon with a laser axe, so the Immortals allow him to deliver gifts forever. The Angwa are maybe not orcs but instead gorillas with fangs and horns. This was made at the same time as Thundercats, so if you wonder why Santa sounds like Mumm-Ra (and Vultureman, Captain Cracker and Jaga) and Mon-Star from Silverhawks, that’s because it’s Earl Hammond. Earle Hymon, who is the voice of King Angwa, was Panthro and Russell Huxtable, Bill Cosby’s TV dad). The Commander of the Wind is Larry Kenney, who was Lion-O and Bluegrass on Silverhawks. Lynne Lipton, the voice of Cheetara and Wilykit, is Queen Zurline. Peter Knook, one of the characters that aids Santa, is Peter Newman, who was Tigra, Wilykat, Tigra’s brother Bengali, Monkinian and many other Thundercats characters. Bob McFadden, the Tingler in this, was Snarf, as well as Commander Stargazer and Steelwill on Silverhawks.

*Oz and Santa are in the same shared L. Frank Baum universe with Santa being the ambassador for the North Pole to Oz.

You can watch this on Daily Motion.

Tales from the Crypt S5 E10: Came the Dawn (1993)

Norma (Brooke Shields) is stuck with a broken down truck when she’s picked up by Roger (Perry King), who is on his way to his cabin in the woods. Roger is a dream man, a lover of fine food, opera and antiques. However, he tells her that he hopes to get back with Joanna, who just so happens to get back sooner than our thieving woman — oh yes, Norma may not even be her real name — expected.

“Good evening, creeps. And welcome aboard Tales from the Crypt Scare-lines Flight 666, offering direct service from your living room straight to Hell. As we will be experiencing some tur-boo-lence, we recommend that you keep your seat belts fastened and your vomit bags handy. So slip on your dead-set and get ready for tonight’s in-fright entertainment. It’s a nasty tale about my favorite kind of ghouls: dread-heads. I call it: “Came the Dawn.””

Norma may be a killer who murdered her husband and his lover. Yet she’s come up against someone — maybe more than just a single person — instead of getting to steal everything in the house. Michael J. Pollard also shows up and Valerie Wildman appears as the first victim. This has a big twist that I will let you find out for yourself.

This episode was directed by Uli Edel, who made Christiane F.  How insane that he made his way to America — where he also directed Last Exit to Brooklyn and Body of Evidence — before working on TV shows like Twin PeaksOz and this episode. He also did The Little Vampire! What a strange career! Ron Finley, who wrote this, made five scripts for the series.

This is based on the story “Came the Dawn” from Shock SuspenStories #9, which was written by Al Feldstein and William Gaines and drawn by Wally Wood. The description of that story is a little different: “A man thinks that the girl he has met in the woods may be a dangerous escaped lunatic because she matches the description, but his girlfriend ends up meeting a grim fate as the latest victim of the true escapee.”

SEVERIN BLU RAY RELEASE: Dario Argento’s Deep Cuts (1973, 1987)

Severin is releasing this to retail on November 26, 2024. Until now, it has only been available on their site.

At the peak of his cinematic triumphs, horror legend Dario Argento created projects for RAI TV that broadcast his singular vision of terror into millions of Italian homes: Door Into Darkness was the top-rated 1973 anthology series produced and hosted by Argento. This set has three of the four episodes sourced for the first time from the original 16mm negatives. Argento’s popular 1987 variety/talk show Giallo has stories directed by Argento, Luigi Cozzi and Lamberto Bava, as well as behind-the-scenes tours from Tenebrae, Phenomena and Opera, and guests that include Anthony Perkins, David Gilmour, Nick Mason, and Fiore Argento newly digitized from broadcast masters.

This Severin set also has over 8 hours of new and archival special features, including commentary by Nathaniel Thompson and Troy Howarth, Dario Argento: My CinemaDario Argento: Master of Horror and interviews with Argento, Cozzi, Bava, Dardano Sacchetti and Antonella Vitale. 

You can order this from Severin.

Here’s an overview of what you’ll find:

In 1973, Dario Argento was invited to RAI television and delivered Door Into Darkness, a show that he would host and even guide some of the episodes. Argento says, at the start of one of the episodes (translated into English) “As for Door Into Darkness, which is the title of the series, you will wonder what it means. Well, it means many things: opening a door to the unknown, to what we don’t know and which therefore disturbs us, scares us. But for me it also means other things. It can happen, and it has happened once, even just once in a person’s life, to close a door behind them and find themselves in a dark room… looking for the light switch and not finding it… trying to open the door and not being able to Do. And having to stay there, in the dark… alone… forever. Well, some of the protagonists of our stories have closed this fatal door behind them.”

The first episode, Il vicino de casa (The Neighbor) was the second directing job for Luigi Cozzi, who had debuted with Il tunnel sotto il mondo (The Tunnel Under the World). It’s the tale of a young couple by the names of Luca (Aldo Reggiani) and Stefania (Laura Belli). They arrive at their new home late at night with their infant child and barely meet anyone, other than knowing they have a neighbor (Mimmo Palmara) but otherwise, they live in a very isolated neighborhood.

On one of the first evenings they are there, as they watch Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, they start to see a stain in the corner of the ceiling that starts to leak from upstairs. What is it? And should they tell the neighbor they have never met? When they go up there, no one is home. However, they soon find the dead body of their neighbor’s wife just in time for him to come back and tie them up.

This story was also written by Cozzi and it has plenty of tension, such as the couple hiding in the dark and then realizing that the husband has dropped his lighter in the killer’s room. It also has a dark non-ending that doesn’t give you much hope, as well as an Argento cameo as a hitchhiker.

For the second episode of Doorway to Darkness, Dario Argento himself would direct and write. Il Tram (The Train) under the name Sirio Bernadotte (thanks to the incredible Italo Cinema).

A young woman is murdered on a train in the seconds that the lights go out and before they return. The murder baffles everyone except for Commisario Giordani (Enzo Cerusico) who seeks to solve it. He thinks that it has to be ticket taker Roberto Magli (Pierluigi Aprà), except that he’s never satisfied. It seems too simple. That’s when he brings his girlfriend Giulia (Paola Tedesco) to ride the train and try to lure out the true murderer.

A very Hitchcock-influenced story, this moment was originally going to be part of The Bird With the Crystal Plumage but it took away from the story. Argento would return to the dark mystery of a train and how frightening it can be in probably the best sequence of his post-Opera films in Sleepless. This may not have the insane energy and madness of his usual style, but the story is well-told and I loved how the hero must overcome his own shortcomings — he’s too cocky, which may be because of his youth — if he wants to save his lover and solve the mystery.

There’s also a striking scene where the killer chases Giulia through the train and into a station and down an immense hallway, all POV, all with her staring back at us. It’s incredible.

The third episode of Doorway to Darkness was directed by Mario Foglietti (who wrote the original story for Four Flies On Grey Velvet) and Luigi Cozzi and was written by Foglietti and Marcella Elsberger.

Argento informs us, in his introduction, that someone has escaped from a sanitarium, saying “…a sick mind wandering a small town, apparently normal, in matter of fact incandescent… Its aim: to kill.” That sick mind may be Robert Hoffman, who has checked into a hotel with an attache case before wandering the streets. One redhead is already killed when he meets Daniela Moreschi (Mara Venier) and follows her back home.

This feels like ten minutes of story shoved into an hour and sadly doesn’t work. But hey — Erika Blanc is in it and if the worst thing you do is watch a giallo with her in it, your day isn’t all that bad. Foglietti gets the look of Argento but doesn’t have the same ability to make art out of a flawed script.

Directed by Roberto Pariante (who was the assistant director for Argento on The Bird With the Crystal PlumageThe Cat o’Nine Tails and Four Flies On Grey Velvet) and Dario Argento, who wrote the script with Luigi Cozzi, Testimone oculare is my favor episode of Doorway to Darkness. It’s so simple and yet succeeds as an example of giallo.

Roberta Leoni (Marilù Tolo, Las trompetas del apocalipsis) is driving on a dark and rainy night when she sees a woman dive in front of her. She doesn’t hit her, but does find her dead body. She’s been shot in the back. That’s when she sees the glint of a gun and runs through the storm to a diner where she breaks down. The police, led by Inspector Rocchi (Glauco Onorato), take her back to the crime scene but there’s no body and no blood.

Everyone treats Roberta like a hysterical woman, including her husband Guido (Riccardo Salvino), even after someone breaks into their house while they’re out for their anniversary and the next day when someone tries to shove his wife into traffic. Then the phone calls start and never seem to stop.

One night, while all alone, the killer calls and says that they will finally kill Roberta. Guido comes home just in time and says that instead of leaving — the killer cut the phone line — they are going to wait for them and he will shoot whoever is after her. As you can imagine, this isn’t the way things end up happening.

Sometimes, a simply told mystery is exactly what you need. That’s what this episode gave me. Supposedly Argento disliked the work that Pariante did and went back and filmed a lot of this himself — the tracking of the killer by footsteps is definitely him — and then not putting his name on it.

Gli incubi di Dario Argento (Dario Argento’s Nightmares) was a TV series created and directed by Dario Argento that was part of the RAI TV show Giallo by Enzo Tortora. He’s probably most famous for the show Portabello that had viewers call in to buy or sell things, present ideas or try and look for love. And if they could get the parrot who was the show’s namesake to say his name, they would win a prize. He was also arrested in 1983 and jailed for 7 months as it was thought he was a member of an organized crime family, the Nuova Camorra Organizzata. It was a case of mistaken identity and he got out of ten years in jail thanks to the Radical Party. They offered him a candidacy to the European Parliament, which he won in a landslide. He was cleared of all charges the year this show ran and brought this show — on which he discussed unsolved murder cases — and Portabella to RAI.

The main draw of these episodes are nine new mini-movies made by Argento. They’re three-minute shorts shot on 35mm that show off some wild effects but one of them, Nostalgia Punk, so upset viewers that it has rarely been shown since. The stories are:

La finestra sul cortile (The Window on the Court): This is Argento’s tribute to Alfred Hitchcock and Rear Window. After watching the film, a man named Massimo watches his neighbors fight. He runs down with a knife to stop them, but falls on his own weapon and is blamed by the police for killing the woman. If you recognize the music, it’s part of the Simon Boswell score from Phenomena.

Riti notturni (Night Rituals): This is also missing from some online versions of the film, but has a maid conspire with a voodoo coven to murder and devour the couple that she works for.

Il Verme (The Worm): A woman who goes by the name of Bettina is reading Dylan Dog (the comic book that Cemetery Man comes from) when she overhears a story about parasites that go from cats to humans. As she explores her nearly nude body in a mirror, she notices a worm has grown out of her eye, which she stabs out.

Amare e morire (Loving and Dying): Set to Michael Jackson’s “Bad,” this story has Gloria assaulted and left for dead. As she recovers, she believes that the man who raped her is one of three neighbors. She sleeps with each in an attempt to learn who it is and get her bloody revenge.

Nostalgia punk: The most controversial segment, this has a woman’s water become poisoned. She begins to vomit multicolored liquids and then parts of her body before she finally tears her own body to pieces and her organs rain out of her destroyed carcass. It got so many complaints that Argento was told to settle down in future segments.

La Strega (The witch): Using Morricone’s score from The Bird With the Crystal Plumage, this has Cinzia’s party guests playing a game called “The Witch” that ends with children screaming and holding a bloody head.

Addormentarsi (Falling asleep): A man is possessed by a demon just before he falls asleep and then devours his dog. This uses “Anarchy in the UK” by the Sex Pistols.

Sammy: Sammy is a young girl who is frightened when Santa enters her room. Then Santa removes his face and reveals a monster. It’s simple but it really works.

L’incubo di chi voleva interpretare l’incubo di Dario Argento (The Nightmare of the One Who Wished to Explain Dario Argento’s Nightmare): A young man comes to REI to be part of this series and when he stays at a hotel, he soon learns he’s in a room with foreigners who steal everything he has and then threaten to kill him. It turns out that it’s all a set-up by Argento.

At the beginning of every episode, Argento appears, often with Coralina Cataldi-Tassoni (Demons 2Il Bosco 1Opera) all gothed out and acting as his starry-eyed assistant.

Argento also created another segment for GialloTurno di notte (Night Shift), which was about what happens to cab drivers at night. Episodes were also directed by Lamberto Bava and Luigi Cozzi. He also shared how he filmed several big moments in his most famous movies, such as the Loma camera sequence in Tenebrae; the bird attack in Opera, the transformation scenes in Demons 2 and how he directed Goblin to create the score for Suspiria. These scenes are worth watching and also appear in the Luigi Cozzi-directed Dario Argento: Master of Horror.

While this is by no means necessary watching for those with a passing interest in Italian horror, for devotees of the form and Argento, it is required viewing. It’s the chance to basically get nine new stories even if they are very short.

Tales from the Crypt S5 E9: Creep Course (1993)

Directed and written by Jeffrey Boam (Funny FarmThe Phantom), this episode stars Jeffrey Jones as Professor Finley, a teacher of Egyptology. His latest lesson is about a mummified monster named Ramseth, who makes an annual return from the grave to search for his lost lover Princess Nefra.

“Hello, creeps! I’ll be with you in a moment. I was just in the middle of cramming for my final exams. Bet you didn’t know your pal the Crypt Keeper was still in s-ghoul. As a matter of fact, I’m at the top of my class at Horror-vard! Which brings us to tonight’s all-frighter. It concerns a couple of college kids who’ve got their own ideas about higher dead-ucation, in a bit of hack-edamia I call: “Creep Course.””

Finley has it in for the dumb jock Reggie Skulnick (Anthony Michael Hall) and is in love with a student named Stella Bishop (Nina Siemaszko), who may know as much about Egypt as him. Everything leads you to believe that Reggie is using her to get answers for the test, but he’s actually working with the professor, all so they can have her be the latest sacrifice for Ramseth (Ivan E. Roth), who Finley has been keeping in his basement.

Remember how I said that she knows more than her teacher? That’s true. And she knows how to get to Ramseth, too. Well, she has to make love to the undead thing, but if that’s what it takes to live, she’ll do it.

This episode is based on “Creep Course” in Haunt of Fear #23. It was written by Al Feldstein and William Gaines and drawn by Graham Ingels. The story does have a college class, but it’s more about a girl trying to use her good looks to get a better grade and paying the price for it.

Tales from the Crypt S5 E8: Well Cooked Hams (1993)

Miles Federman (Billy Zane) may be the protege of Zorbin the Magnificent (Martin Sheen), but he can never equal his master. He blames everyone he can, including his assistant Greta Kreutzel (Maryam d’Abo). When he fires her, she notices that he has Zorbin’s medallion. She asks if he murdered him and he laughs as he shakes his head yes.

Bon soir, kiddies! I was just in the middle of my French lesson. Your pal, ze Crypt Keeper, has decided to see Le Mans! Imagine me in gay Scaree, sitting in a nice little café on the rot bank, sipping a glass of Cha-bleed while I write ghost-cards home to all my fiends. Or I could stay home and tell you tonight’s tale. It concerns an ambitious young magician who wants to expand his gore-izons, too, in a tasteless trick called: “Well Cooked Hams.””

Greta is hired by another magician, Franz Kraygen (Martin Sheen), who invites Miles to his show and shares a trick known as the Box of Death, where he is stabbed numerous times and yet lives. Miles wants the trick for himself, so he killed the older illusionist.

Using the box, Miles becomes a major star and Thomas Miller (Martin Sheen), a Hollywood director, wants to make a movie of his act. Of course, all of these people are all Zorbin and they’ve all faked their deaths, all to get revenge while the audience applauds the death of Miles.

Directed by Elliot Silverstein (The Car) and written by Andrew Kevin Walker (Se7en), this is a fun episode with a great ending for the villain.

This episode comes from the story “Well-Cooked Hams!” in Tales From the Crypt #27. In that tale, written by Al Feldstein and William Gaines and drawn by Jack Davis, two American producers want to bring Paris’s Grand Guignol to Broadway. When the owner won’t give them the rights, they kill him but he comes back from the dead to get his revenge on stage.

The Golden Gate Murders (1979)

Detective Sergeant Paul Silver (David Janssen) and Sister Benecia (Susannah York) are on the case when Father John Thomas (Regis Cordic) jumps off the Golden Gate Bridge. That’s not unique, as at least thirty people a year do that. The difference? He was a priest and she claims that as part of his Catholic faith, he’d never commit suicide.

Filmed as Specter on the Bridge, which was also the name it played at in other countries as a theatrical release, this feels like it could have been the pilot for a series. Directed by Walter Grauman (The Old Man Who Cried Wolf) and written by TV veteran David J. Kinghorn, this has Janssen being his crusty self, but also teaching the young nun how to make a sandwich with bagels and taking her grocery shopping, which surprise is mostly him buying booze. He also has a cat named Dirty Harry, which is cute, and oh yeah, they nearly forget that they have to catch the killer, who is given the krimi name The Creeper.

This is familiar and comfy TV watching. In fact, Tim O’Connor and Richard Bull play a homicide bureau captain named Capt. Dan Bradley and deputy coroner who are very similar to their roles as Lt. Roy Devitt and Harry the coroner on The Streets of San Francisco. Plus, Zira herself, Kim Hunter, is the Mother Superior. This is the kind of movie that would randomly come on in the middle of a snow day or a late night and I’d just zone out as a kid and love every twist and turn.

You can download this from the Internet Archive.

Tales from the Crypt S5 E7: House of Horror (1993)

Directed and written by Bob Gale, this is the tale of three pledges of the Gamma Delta Omega fraternity — Waters (Keith Coogan), Arling (Wil Wheaton) and Henderson (Jason London) — and the abuses they suffer at the hands of Les Wilton (Kevin Dillon).

“Fright Court is now in session. Will the defendant please approach the bench? You stand accused of watching too much Tales from the Crypt. Do you understand the charge? Neither do I. But I’ll tell you this: if convicted, you’ll receive a stiff sentence. You may even do a little horrid time. How do you bleed? Alright, then. Let the trial begin. Our first piece of evidence is a tale about a couple of college boys who are about to undergo a little trial and terror of their own, in a writ of habeas corpses I call: “House of Horror.””

To make it into the fraternity, the three pledges must enter the abandoned Cougher House, a place where an axe murderer’s ghost is said to haunt. Les has it all wired up thanks to techie Sparks (Michael DeLuise).

At the same time, the frat is working to find a sister sorority with Delta Omega Alpha by meeting with their leader Mona (Meredith Salenger). President Tex Crandell (Brian Krause) accepts her invitation and asks her to watch the pledges be abused. However, the house seems to have scares that they didn’t plan on. But what if the girls are in on it? And what if they have a chainsaw?

If you recognize the house in this story, that’s because it’s the Valkenvania Court House from Nothing But Trouble. That’s also Courtney Gaines as one of the frat brothers.

This is a really fun one with a quick set-up and lots of shocks.

It’s based on the story “House of Horror” from Tales from the Crypt #21. That was written by Al Feldstein and William Gaines and drawn by Harvey Kurtzman.

Tales from the Crypt S5 E6: Two for the Show (1993)

Andy (David Paymer) and Emma (Traci Lords) are having the same dinner and the same conversation about work and finally, Emma has enough and tells her husband she wants passion, so she’s running away. He chokes her and as she tries to fight back, he stabs her, leaving her for dead.

“I tell you, ladies and germs, that ghoul-friend of mine makes me so crazy. She told me she thought she’d look good in something long and flowing, so I threw her in the Mississippi! Hmm. And how about that Ernest Hemingway, always shooting his mouth Oh. Hello? Anybody? I know you’re out there, folks. I can hear you bleeding! Is this on? Hmm. I know what this crowd wants. A little slay on words! Maybe a couple of nasty fright gags? Something along the lines of tonight’s nasty nugget? It’s a little tale about marriage, or if you prefer, about wife and death. I call it: “Two for the Show.””

He’s soon being questioned by Officer Fine (Vincent Spano) about what has happened to Emma. Afterward, as he loads a box with her body in it on a train for Chicago, Andy has to get on board, as Office Fine asks what’s in the trunk. He says that he’s going to meet his wife, which means he must take the train and sit next to the cop, who keeps asking him about killing his wife. After all, Fine has a wife he’d like to murder.

What would the odds be if their wives were having an affair with one another?

Directed by Kevin Hooks (Passenger 57) and written by Gilbert Adler and AL Katz, this has some good twists and turns. And you knew I’d like it just because Traci Lords is in the cast.

“Two for the Show” is based on a story in Crime SuspenStories #17 that was written by Al Feldstein and William Gaines and drawn by Jack Kamen. Actually, that story works alongside another story in the same issue, “One for the Money,” as the corpse in that story pays off this one.