I remember watching reruns of the Boston Blackie TV series when I was a kid. The program was paired with the China Smith series.
Also mentioned prominently in the Jimmy Buffet song Pencil Thin Mustache - the Boston Blackie kind.
Favorite fictional early (before 1930) detective poll besides Sherlock Holmes
Collapse
X
-
This was a hard choice for me.. .but Boston Blackie wins just based on the Richard Kollmar version of the radio Boston Blackie... Chester Morris was fun in the movies.. but Kollmar was so much better on the radio (if not, more fun anyway)...
Happy 100th Boston Blackie!!!
Steadmund Brand
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Magpie View PostAgreed.
Isn't there some sort of copyright quagmire surrounding the character at the moment?
Did anyone see the recent big(gish) budget version of Arsene Lupine?
Jeff
Leave a comment:
-
Only one on the list is U.S. born which ties us with Belgium, China and France.
Leave a comment:
-
I really did not think I had any answer to this column. I could not think of any early writers I loved and who were considered among the detective genre.
But I realized there is one. He wrote Murders in the Rue Morgue.
Edgar Allan Poe
Leave a comment:
-
Nick Carter only has one vote here but by American radio broadcast episodes, he leads Sherlock Holmes by 726 to 657. They are only 2 and 3, however, behind Mr. Keene, Tracer of Lost Persons who has a whopping 1690.
Leave a comment:
-
A copyright more than 100 years old seems a little ridiculous to me.
Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: