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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Perry Mason. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Perry Mason. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, March 1, 2021

Perry Mason


Perry Mason: Official Trailer | HBO
HBO

This 2020 version of Perry Mason bears no resemblance to the original. In case you don't know, Perry Mason as a character has been kicking around since 1933. I know him from the popular TV (television) show that ran from 1957 to 1966. Those shows are available on YouTube.


Perry Mason Opening & Closing Theme
Danny Linden

In this current show Perry is a PI (Private Investigator), not an attorney like in the books and TV shows. Why the big change? I suspect it's because the writers had a good story and they needed a name for their lead character and picked Perry Mason because they liked the TV show. I dunno. They seem completely unrelated.

Regardless, it's a good show. It's set in 1931 in Los Angles. One of the first settings is the Angels Flight inclined railway that showed up in a Bosch episode. It's a very complicated show with all kinds of emotional entanglements. Some of those are what you expect in a crime show, but some are not. 

We have a bit of history in Tatiana Maslany as Sister Alice McKeegan, a stand in for the real Aimee Semple McPherson, an evangelical preacher who pioneered the use of radio to reach a broader audience.

HBO 8 Episodes, 1 Hour each

Update March 2021 corrected the number of episodes because everybody has a different screen layout.

Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Perry Mason

Justin Kirk as Hamilton Burger

We're watching the new Perry Mason and Della Street arranges a meeting for Perry with a guy who is going help him pass the bar exam, which hasn't changed since 1923. Perry asks his name and the new guy replies: Hamilton Burger. I almost fell off my chair! I hadn't heard that name since the last time I saw Perry Mason which must have been back in 1923. You're wondering how did we get to Episode 5 (or 6, which is where we are) without running into Hamilton before? Well, this new show is a prequel that starts before Perry is even a lawyer and the current DA is one slimey Maynard Barnes. Hamilton has an office just downstairs from the DA.

In case you didn't know, Hamilton was the district attorney who never won a case against Perry, king of the TV lawyers.

Saturday, April 8, 2023

Perry Mason Season 2 - HBO Series


Perry Mason Season 2 Trailer
Rotten Tomatoes TV

I've just recently figured out that the characters are what makes or breaks a show for me. I like knowing who the good guys are and who the bad guys are. I want to cheer for the hero and boo the villain. It's nice to have a coherent plot and spectacular scenery, but they aren't really necessary.

In this show we've got plenty of characters, both good guys and bad guys, and the principles are all old familiar characters. Of course they've been changed up, Della Street and Hamilton Burger (the District Attorney) are both gay and Paul Drake (the investigator) is black, but this isn't much of a stretch. Hamilton has always been a villain, so making him gay just makes him that much sleazier. I don't recall that Della ever had any men in her life, so making her gay kind of explains that. The original Paul Drake always struck me as too flashy in the original series. I mean, how is he going to slip in unnoticed anywhere? You want someone who is willing to get their hands dirty, so an unemployed black man during the Great Depression easily fits the bill.





Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Rumors of New Words

Execupundit put up this quote:

The data bank society is nearly upon us now. We must program the programmers while [there] is still some personal liberty left. - Senator Barry Goldwater, 1974

The 'data bank society'. That's a new term for me. Try and look up the quote but got almost nothing. I did find that 'data bank society' is the title of a book written by Malcolm Warner and Mike Stone, whoever they are.

Goodreads has this to say about it:

This study, written in the context of its first publication in 1970, discusses and documents the invasion of privacy by the corporation and the social institution in the search for efficiency in information processing. Discussing areas such as the impact of the computer on administration, privacy and the storage on information, the authors assess the technical and social feasibility of constructing integrated data banks to cover the details of populations. The book was hugely influential both in terms of scholarship and legislation, and the years following saw the Data Protection Act of 1984, which was then consolidated by the Act of 1998. The topics under discussion remain of great concern to the public in our increasingly web-based world, ensuring the continued relevance of this title to academics and students with an interest in data protection and public privacy.

The 'data bank society'. I suppose that's who we are now. We have computer records about all kinds of things. Is it going to be a threat? Depends on what we want to spend our money on.

Before the fall of the Berlin Wall, half of the people in East Germany worked for the secret police (Stasi). Okay, it wasn't half, but it was a heck of large percentage. You wanna keep the proles in line, you gotta have people out there with billy clubs making sure they're toeing the line. Not to mention the huge administrative complex you would need to accept and process all the reports of indiscretions. You want to run a totalitarian state, you have to divert a large portion of your budget into keeping the lid on the proles.

Espionage is very similar. It takes man-days to keep an eye on a person, follow them around and not get caught. This showed up in Perry Mason the other night. Mostly cop shows don't show you horribly boring stake outs, they just mention it passing. Occasionally we get a few seconds of a stake out where one of the characters makes a witty remark. In Perry, we've got Paul hiring his buddy to stake out a corner where the bad guys hang out. Cash money, by the hour, I think they were trading eight hour shifts, went on a for a couple of days at least. 

I was going to say something about how we are spending too much money on other things for any of the national agencies, the ones who have access to the data bases, to have the man power to bother everyone, but since all the money seems to being pulled out of thin air, I don't know if it makes any difference.


Monday, November 4, 2024

Gotham Trailer


Gotham Trailer
IGN

MAX. Pretty good show. Good production values, mostly realistic, but the characters and their actions are exaggerated, like somebody turned the dial up a couple of notches.

We've got all the standard Batman elements, 
  • a young Bruce Wayne, 
  • the murder of his parents, 
  • Alfred, the ever faithful butler, 
  • Jim Gordon, the straight arrow detective, 
  • the Maroni 
  • and Falcone crime families, and of course, the sleaziest weasel in all of gangster land, 
  • the Penguin.
I've been kind of avoiding all the Batman movies. I mean, I've seen a couple, back when the Batmobile was the star, but that was enough for me. Funny I don't remember the story from either of those two, other than what I related earlier. But I am enjoying this show and Penguin. It's kind of like Perry Mason, you get to see the same characters over and over again. Probably part of the attraction of Soap Operas.
 
A good show for me has to have some continuity. Actions in one need to have plausible consequences in another. It may take a while, but when so and so falls off the cliff, we need to know what happened to him, or at least know that someone went looking for him. You can't just run a car full of characters off a cliff and just forget about it. One problem with soap operas is they will just conjure a problem out of thin air, and any normal people would easily deal with it, but soap operas use this made up problem to provoke a small war which is somehow brought to a truce by the end of the episode.

I dunno how accurate any of that was, I was just attempting to set down my feelings on the matter.

Saturday, August 26, 2023

The Lincoln Lawyer | Season 2 Part 1 Official Trailer | Netflix


Clever courtroom drama, high powered lawyer with a bevy of beauties chasing after him. Now that I think about it, we've got the same three lead characters that we had in Perry Mason: the hot shot attorney, his hyper competent secretary (Lorna played be Becki Newton) and his own private snoop (Cisco played by Angus Simpson). Elliot Gould also appears as David 'Legal' Siegel, AKA the voice of experience. Very entertaining.

Update February 2026 replaced missing video.