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"The Alfred Hitchcock Hour" episode "Blood Bargain" from 1963
Over the years - going as far back as the early '70s, when I was a young kid staying with my grandmother and we'd watch these shows on her old B&W TV late on Saturday night - I've seen most of them (and the "Alfred Hitchcock Presents") episodes several times and they are almost all good and bad at the same time.
They are formulaic - clearly trying to profit on Hitchcock's, then, huge popularity - with plots full of holes and way too many variation on the same few themes, but somehow most of them are also engaging. As a kid, they were scary and fully sucked me in - but as an adult, I see them for what they are, but still enjoy them both as time travel and for an earnestness, despite the subject matter (usually murder, embezzlement or something similar), that is almost charming today.
And there are a lot of actors who later became famous showing up as young unknowns which is why I watched this particular episode. It has Richard Long and Ann Francis playing out, what must be, Hitchcock's variation number sixty of a "one spouse cheats and the other finds a way to kill him or her" plot. While this one was even more forced and unbelievable than usual - a hit man hired to kill the husband for cheating the mob (remember what I said about the plots) gets to know the couple and decides to help them as he believes they are still in love, uh-huh - you are still engaged in the weak plot as the actors take it so seriously and the pacing is fast if, sometimes, awkward.
Away from that, the other beauty for Fedora Lounge members is the time travel to the late '50s / early '60 where the clothes, cars, architecture and general culture capture a moment right before the pre-late-'60s social change would unwind all of it.
Over the years - going as far back as the early '70s, when I was a young kid staying with my grandmother and we'd watch these shows on her old B&W TV late on Saturday night - I've seen most of them (and the "Alfred Hitchcock Presents") episodes several times and they are almost all good and bad at the same time.
They are formulaic - clearly trying to profit on Hitchcock's, then, huge popularity - with plots full of holes and way too many variation on the same few themes, but somehow most of them are also engaging. As a kid, they were scary and fully sucked me in - but as an adult, I see them for what they are, but still enjoy them both as time travel and for an earnestness, despite the subject matter (usually murder, embezzlement or something similar), that is almost charming today.
And there are a lot of actors who later became famous showing up as young unknowns which is why I watched this particular episode. It has Richard Long and Ann Francis playing out, what must be, Hitchcock's variation number sixty of a "one spouse cheats and the other finds a way to kill him or her" plot. While this one was even more forced and unbelievable than usual - a hit man hired to kill the husband for cheating the mob (remember what I said about the plots) gets to know the couple and decides to help them as he believes they are still in love, uh-huh - you are still engaged in the weak plot as the actors take it so seriously and the pacing is fast if, sometimes, awkward.
Away from that, the other beauty for Fedora Lounge members is the time travel to the late '50s / early '60 where the clothes, cars, architecture and general culture capture a moment right before the pre-late-'60s social change would unwind all of it.