A great story and the fact that it is in B & W adds to the whole suspense. Tom Conway's acting is superb. Such a shame that TV doesn't show these quality short movies today.
Gotta love every show....Don't touch anything!!!!..... as they handle everything before it's checked for prints. Guns, knives, anything he can reach the Inspector handles.
I always loved Tom Conway's movies and tv shows. He was such a wonderful actor, had a lovely voice and a great personality...always looking for more Tom Conway. Thanks a lot for sharing.
WOW, I was having a chat with my 93 year old dad the other day and got to the subject where did my name come from. He recalls watching many episodes of Mark Saber of the homicide squad and loved the name so much he named me after him. And now look where I am 🐶🐶🐶🐶🐶🐶
These old detective shows never get old or boring. I just love everything. The sets, the casts :those known to me & unknown. The plots. Many very original compared to the repetitive crap in movies & on tv for the last 30 yrs!
Please, if you can find more of the 25 minute shows, or more of this series, I would very much appreciate your posting them. God Bless you, for posting these.
@ Aries Waters--- thats why we all watch these beautiful b& w movies. I would Love if we all had time machines and could pick a 50s movie theatre to meet at back when these came out and visit ahead of the start of the movie to get to know each other, then go watch the movie together back in the 50s.
Indeed ! I don't understand people who hate to watch movies & TV shows in black & white. I don't mind it at all. B&W actually helps me focus on the story more. I'm not distracted by bright colors. My favorite movie genre is film noir and B&W photography helps mystery story lines become more powerful. At least I think so.
Tom Conway, one of my favorite actors from the 1940's and 1950's. He appeared in many horror / thriller movies such as: "The Cat People", " I walked with A Zombie", "Voodoo Woman", etc. He was the brother of George Sanders, a one time matinee idol. Both died tragically.
Sad but true. Chronic alcoholism led to Tom's passing in 1967 at age of 62. And five years later George would commit suicide at the age of 65 after years of failed marriages, poor investments & ill health.
This is one of those programs great for episode marathon viewing. No wonder my parents told me it was bedtime before it came on television. I am glad to see the now. Thank you for posting.
A 25 minute '50s cheapie with just a few characters presents a better story than many $100 million blockbusters in the 21st century. Doubtless the writer borrowed from Conan Doyle's "The Problem of Thor Bridge".
You certainty got that comment right. These old series and movies are so much better than those over the top car chases gun fights big muscle men etc. This is real life.
Great series. Tom Conway was always great. He shared that magnificent polished British voice with his brother George Sanders. It is sad that Tom died from too much drinking, and that George died from suicide. They are legendary.
Tom Conway great actor he also played the Falcon in the series took over from his brother George Sanders both born in Russia. Very sad deaths. Tom died broke in a boarding house his brother committed Suicide in Majorca he left a note "He was bored with Life" All so very sad.
From the producer of "MY LITTLE MARGIE", "THE BEULAH SHOW", Stu Erwin's "TROUBLE WITH FATHER", et. al. J. Donald Wilson previously produced "THE NEW ADVENTURES OF NERO WOLFE" for NBC Radio in the 1950-'51 season.
We got our first color tv in '72, a 13" Zenith. My dad got the big late '50s Zenith color console TV in the divorce so I watched TV on that on the weekends. That thing lasted almost 40 years.
Reminds me of the Hitchcock episode (that followed) where the murder weapon was a large frozen (lamb?) chop. When thawed and cooked, it was served to the men investigating the murder --all evidence removed. Another case of cold-blooded murder.
How right you are ! And in 1951 he took over the role of The Saint on radio from Vincent Price. Both men (and Tom's real life brother George) had WONDERFUL speaking voices !
Yes indeed ! He played a lot of nogoodniks in the movies & on TV, including a corrupt cop in 1964's "The Naked Kiss", which was written & directed by the iconic Samuel Fuller.
21:57 I think I just got a big piece of the puzzle here. The hung man was standing on a chunk of ice, jumped off, and the ice melted. That is why the shower floor was wet. I am thinking he killed himself and wanted his wife and her "boyfriend" to be charged with his murder. Okay, lets get back to the movie and see what happens. Edit: Ah Ha..... I guessed right!
I don't know if he played that role, but recall seeing him (actor Herb Vigran) in a countless number of TV shows as a guest star when growing up in the 60s & 70s. He was part of Jack Webb's acting ensemble, appearing many times on "Dragnet" & other shows that Jack Webb produced.
I don't see how it can be if you're not intending to steal or commit a crime. All in the line of duty, but I don't know why they just didn't ask to see the receipts.
The good old days when police entered wthout permission. Ha. I love early n late Marc Saber. Or anything to do with Murder, Scotland Yard and Mystery. British do it best. More pls.
When one has a bottle of what might be poison just put some on your tongue for the old taste test. Just like to avoid injury in a car accident just leap from the car before it crashes. I often wonder how many people these old movies have killed.
Store clerk wears a tie and wraps the rope in brown paper instead of a plastic bag, cops wear suits and the the housewife in a suit. . That's the 50s for sure.
@@gfitz6001 'Those days' were only "idyllic" when compared to the even-more-awful future that was waiting in the wings. The past was only o.k. if you had the means to survive it.
@None-zc5vg You mean the Vietnam War of the sixties and the subsequent invasions of the West Asia/Middle East? Sure, we had more (safe) free time as a kid in the 60s and 70s, better nutritious food, lower house mortgages, ect. But the evils that have always been were there. The only ones who had to worry about surviving were the men in the military!
A detective with a butler? Well, there is a tradition of fiction revolving around wealthy men playing detective. Lord Peter Whimsey, Poirot, maybe even Sherlock Holmes, who never seemed to have any income.
As I do when I take off my hat, you make a good point. A big city police inspector probably made good money in the 50s, but I doubt they'd be able to afford a butler. But yes, as you pointed out, Tom's character may have had some money of his own (such as Amos Burke did on the 60s police drama "Burke's Law").
Originally telecast on March 2, 1953, under the sponsorship of Sterling Drug {Bayer Aspirin, Phillips Milk of Magnesia, Molle Shave Cream, et. al.}. Verne Smith, announcer.
Bayer was one of the companies that joined the I.G. Farben conglomerate in the '20s: it put up money to fund the Nazi Party and Farben employed worked-to-death slaves in its extensive Auschwitz plants during WW2. Although the group's directors were identified as major war-criminals by the Nuremberg prosecutors, Farben has close links with sympathetic U.S. industrialists (like Du Pont) and with prominent politicians and social figures of German origin (even the two Wall Street lawyers who controlled post-war W. Germany had been Farben's representatives), so the various Farben (incl.Bayer) directors got away with it, as did the Krupps and other war-profiteers. It was mostly the Hitler regime's fanatics and front-men who did any real jail-time.
During the first World War, Bayer- and the rights to its name and manufacture- was acquired by Sterling Drug in the United States. It did not revert to its original owner until 1994, when Bayer acquired Sterling's drug products (from SmithKline Beecham).
I like this program and the actor, but it is different from the one-armed private detective Marc Saber that I've been watching. Does anyone know if the two shows are connected other than the name of the main character?
Yes ! Had a long life & prolific career. Appeared in films & TV from 1952 to 1991. Was especially busy as a TV guest star from the 50s on. I recall growing up & seeing him on LOTS of 60s & 70s TV shows !
What, no charges for assault on a police officer? There is no way a modern police officer would just forget about being hit on the head with a metal pipe and rendered unconscious.
Actually a lot of these old shows are probably partly responsible for a lot of deaths, they make it look like you can hit someone on the head with a gun butt or metal pipe and they are just rendered unconscious for a while and wake up with no side effects, when in reality you would be highly likely to kill them, or give them brain damage, not just knock them out for a while, people do take on board the things they see and hear in movies and on TV, especially if they see it in every movie they watch, similar to subliminal smoking, even in this show Mark Saber is often seen smoking when smoking has Zero to do with the plot, it is Subliminal advertising and it killed many millions of people who thought all the good looking sexy people smoked, every one in Hollywood smoked on screen....even if they were in fact non smokers in real life, in fact all smoking did was make them stink and be repulsive....but people believed it
@@im1who84u Lucy's shows were sponsored by Philip Morris (q v.). Maybe the actors had to keep to themselves any feelings about whatever damage would be caused by the crap that their programs were helping to sell to the suckers who watched them.
Yes. Sanders did not speak to him because of Conway's alcoholism.Then,sadly, Sanders committed suicide.Two talented,successful people who could not cope.
This is interesting for several reasons. First off, the wife's lover gets to knock out Saber without punishment? Second, I'm not sure how this is related to the British series, called The Vise, which also stars "Mark Saber", but all different actors. Most of all is the star Tom Conway, who IRL is the brother of George Sanders. You can really see it in his face and voice. His bio on IMDb is really interesting- I recommend reading it. PS, this is called The Hanging Man, not The Hanged Man.
When Saber bent down to touch the liquid below the hanged victim all I could think was… …Urine At least he didn’t taste it. But it’s the 1950’s America, no pee, poo and certainly married couples don’t sleep in the same bed!
🔵THE DETECTIVE TOM CONWAY WHO LOOKS A LOT LIKE GEORGE SANDERS DIDN'T CHARGE THE WOMAN'S LOVER WITH AGRABATED ASSAULT FOR HITTING HIM OVER THE HEAD WITH A PIPE. BY THE WAY, I LIKE SABER OF LONDON BETTER.🔴
In answer to the person who wondered how many stunt men had been killed while making a movie. At least one ☝️. While making the movie The Flight ✈️ of the Phoenix stuntman Paul Manx was killed in an unexpected crash 💥 of the plane ✈️. Two stuntmen were in the crash but the other man survived. 😮😢
1. That Sergeant Maloney looks as thick as two short planks - he'd never have got to Sergeant status in the real Police!! 2. We all worked out how the bloke hanged himself waaaayyy sooner than both Mark Saber and Sergeant Maloney (and why!!)
Very little appreciation for SUCH PERHAPS A 🔥🐍 White Knight of A BRAIN STURM METHOD OF GETTING TO THE EXPLAINING OF THE KNOW HOW WITH THE ICE SUCH PERHAPS HEAT AS UN USUALLY HEARD OF FAME. 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 WUNDERBAR
I really appreciate these shows late at night,pure escapism, love it ❤.
Me too !
Same here,
Yes, when everything is quiet and dark outside they are best.
Never seen Conway doing Mark Sabar these shows r much better than the ones of today thanks for sharing this with us all to enjoy
Our pleasure!
A great story and the fact that it is in B & W adds to the whole suspense. Tom Conway's acting is superb. Such a shame that TV doesn't show these quality short movies today.
Gotta love every show....Don't touch anything!!!!..... as they handle everything before it's checked for prints. Guns, knives, anything he can reach the Inspector handles.
I always loved Tom Conway's movies and tv shows. He was such a wonderful actor, had a lovely voice and a great personality...always looking for more Tom Conway. Thanks a lot for sharing.
He also did Sherlock on radio.
@@nedludd7622 Yes, I knew he did radio shows. I heard his charming voice on ''The Saint" when Vincent Price left.
Brother to George Sanders.
The similarity is striking.
Their brother movie was clever too.
love these short mystery theater cases since many times I cannot sit for very long before I have to get back to work. Thanks,
Our pleasure!
@@MoviecraftInc❤
WOW, I was having a chat with my 93 year old dad the other day and got to the subject where did my name come from. He recalls watching many episodes of Mark Saber of the homicide squad and loved the name so much he named me after him. And now look where I am 🐶🐶🐶🐶🐶🐶
Thanks for sharing your story!
These old detective shows never get old or boring. I just love everything. The sets, the casts :those known to me & unknown. The plots. Many very original compared to the repetitive crap in movies & on tv for the last 30 yrs!
And don't forget the clothes!
Please, if you can find more of the 25 minute shows, or more of this series, I would very much appreciate your posting them. God Bless you, for posting these.
Working on it!
I agree. I can't do hour shows anymore. I blame Sesame Street.
@@MoviecraftInc Thank you ever so much. I live in bed, now, and like the old shows, much better than the shows of today. God Bless you.
I love it the look of black and white the suspenseful music the whole thing
@ Aries Waters--- thats why we all watch these beautiful b& w movies. I would Love if we all had time machines and could pick a 50s movie theatre to meet at back when these came out and visit ahead of the start of the movie to get to know each other, then go watch the movie together back in the 50s.
Indeed ! I don't understand people who hate to watch movies & TV shows in black & white. I don't mind it at all. B&W actually helps me focus on the story more. I'm not distracted by bright colors. My favorite movie genre is film noir and B&W photography helps mystery story lines become more powerful. At least I think so.
Tom Conway, one of my favorite actors from the 1940's and 1950's. He appeared in many horror / thriller movies such as: "The Cat People", " I walked with A Zombie", "Voodoo Woman", etc. He was the brother of George Sanders, a one time matinee idol. Both died tragically.
Sad but true. Chronic alcoholism led to Tom's passing in 1967 at age of 62. And five years later George would commit suicide at the age of 65 after years of failed marriages, poor investments & ill health.
Ironic that Tom’s brother died of suicide since this movie was about a man who committed suicide due to failed marriages. 🤔🤔🤔
@@jubalcalif9100😊 Thank you for your comment! That was exactly what I was wondering about after that other comment.
This is one of those programs great for episode marathon viewing. No wonder my parents told me it was bedtime before it came on television. I am glad to see the now.
Thank you for posting.
Glad to oblige...
A 25 minute '50s cheapie with just a few characters presents a better story than many $100 million blockbusters in the 21st century. Doubtless the writer borrowed from Conan Doyle's "The Problem of Thor Bridge".
You certainty got that comment right. These old series and movies are so much better than those over the top car chases gun fights big muscle men etc.
This is real life.
@@marirothbauer5407 Indeed ! I'd rather watch vintage stuff from yesteryear like this than most of what's produced today.
Well said!!!!!!!!
You said it!
Well said.
Great series. Tom Conway was always great. He shared that magnificent polished British voice with his brother George Sanders. It is sad that Tom died from too much drinking, and that George died from suicide. They are legendary.
That was a really good plot/story! Ingenious. Thanks for sharing this.
Perfect. Please upload more if you have them.
Nothing like a well placed pun. Great lil film.
Yes ! I laughed out loud at those puns at the very end ! 🙂
Good upload. Conway was great. Would love to see more "Mystery Theater".
Tom Conway great actor he also played the Falcon in the series took over from his brother
George Sanders both born in Russia.
Very sad deaths. Tom died broke in a boarding house his brother committed
Suicide in Majorca he left a note "He was bored with Life"
All so very sad.
Just finished binging on your Dragnet episodes. Now I see you have Mystery Theater too?! Aww, I love you, Moviecraft. ♥️
Thanks for visiting!
Love these!!
From the producer of "MY LITTLE MARGIE", "THE BEULAH SHOW", Stu Erwin's "TROUBLE WITH FATHER", et. al.
J. Donald Wilson previously produced "THE NEW ADVENTURES OF NERO WOLFE" for NBC Radio in the 1950-'51 season.
Saber was also played by another great actor who took over from Tom he was a war hero lost an arm great actor too very handsome.
The marvellous Donald Gray.
We didn’t have a 📺 until 1957-58
We got our first color tv in '72, a 13" Zenith. My dad got the big late '50s Zenith color console TV in the divorce so I watched TV on that on the weekends. That thing lasted almost 40 years.
Reminds me of the Hitchcock episode (that followed) where the murder weapon was a large frozen (lamb?) chop. When thawed and cooked, it was served to the men investigating the murder --all evidence removed. Another case of cold-blooded murder.
Taken from a short story by Roald Dahl.
@@jacquelineharrod6386 Didn't know - thanks!
Really enjoying these shows. Mr Conway was a handsome man. Thanks for the showings. Im subscribed.
Welcome!
24:40 “He stole a 100 pound block of ice” really?!? Ok 👍🏼 🤦🏻♀️
And then the driver/delivery man tried to blame the kids! How are the kids going to carry 200 lbs. of ice?
Tom Conway also played Sherlock Holmes on radio very well.
Indeed ✔️
How right you are ! And in 1951 he took over the role of The Saint on radio from Vincent Price. Both men (and Tom's real life brother George) had WONDERFUL speaking voices !
The lover of the widow is Anthony Eisley who went on to star in and play a private detective in the early 1960's ABC series Hawaiian Eye.
Billed as Fred Eisley here.
Yes indeed ! He played a lot of nogoodniks in the movies & on TV, including a corrupt cop in 1964's "The Naked Kiss", which was written & directed by the iconic Samuel Fuller.
Wonderful!
Many thanks!
When the clues point to an answer, then there's a great chance that must be the answer.
21:57 I think I just got a big piece of the puzzle here.
The hung man was standing on a chunk of ice, jumped off, and the ice melted.
That is why the shower floor was wet.
I am thinking he killed himself and wanted his wife and her "boyfriend" to be charged with his murder.
Okay, lets get back to the movie and see what happens.
Edit:
Ah Ha..... I guessed right!
Didn’t that plumber play Ricky Ricardo’s manager on I Love Lucy?
I don't know if he played that role, but recall seeing him (actor Herb Vigran) in a countless number of TV shows as a guest star when growing up in the 60s & 70s. He was part of Jack Webb's acting ensemble, appearing many times on "Dragnet" & other shows that Jack Webb produced.
@@jubalcalif9100 thanks for the info!😊
Breaking and entering is not against the law in those days?
It was against the law in those days, as was hitting a cop with a pipe and stealing evidence, but anything for entertainment!
5:00 Or apparently not needing a search warrant.
I don't see how it can be if you're not intending to steal or commit a crime.
All in the line of duty, but I don't know why they just didn't ask to see the receipts.
Nothing was off limits for cops. Then and now!
The good old days when police entered wthout permission. Ha. I love early n late Marc Saber. Or anything to do with Murder, Scotland Yard and Mystery. British do it best. More pls.
Excellent movie !!!
When one has a bottle of what might be poison just put some on your tongue for the old taste test. Just like to avoid injury in a car accident just leap from the car before it crashes.
I often wonder how many people these old movies have killed.
James Burke is in The Maltese Falcon - as hotel house detective.
Also a hotel house detective in a Charlie Chan movie "Murder Cruise." (1940)
Yes indeed ! His scene with Bogie & Elisha Cook Jr is short but sweet !
Hmm. Mark moved to America and grew a new arm! Amazing!
Maybe he was part starfish....
Store clerk wears a tie and wraps the rope in brown paper instead of a plastic bag, cops wear suits and the the housewife in a suit. . That's the 50s for sure.
Plastic bags didn’t exist, yet.
I grew up in those lovely, idyllic days. It’s nice to be able to revisit that time for a few minutes.
@@gfitz6001 That makes two of us.
@@gfitz6001 'Those days' were only "idyllic" when compared to the even-more-awful future that was waiting in the wings. The past was only o.k. if you had the means to survive it.
@None-zc5vg You mean the Vietnam War of the sixties and the subsequent invasions of the West Asia/Middle East? Sure, we had more (safe) free time as a kid in the 60s and 70s, better nutritious food, lower house mortgages, ect. But the evils that have always been were there. The only ones who had to worry about surviving were the men in the military!
Love Tom Conway
Me too ! One of my all time fave screen stars !
A detective with a butler? Well, there is a tradition of fiction revolving around wealthy men playing detective. Lord Peter Whimsey, Poirot, maybe even Sherlock Holmes, who never seemed to have any income.
As I do when I take off my hat, you make a good point. A big city police inspector probably made good money in the 50s, but I doubt they'd be able to afford a butler. But yes, as you pointed out, Tom's character may have had some money of his own (such as Amos Burke did on the 60s police drama "Burke's Law").
15:33 Don't these guys ever get search warrants?
As soon as i saw the ice truck, I knew.
1:28 Did he really just put an unknown substance in his mouth after being told it was poison?
The ice man cometh. 🌫🌫🌫🥶🥶🥶😳😳😳😱😱
Originally telecast on March 2, 1953, under the sponsorship of Sterling Drug {Bayer Aspirin, Phillips Milk of Magnesia, Molle Shave Cream, et. al.}.
Verne Smith, announcer.
Verne Smith has a great voice. Recall hearing him as an announcer on many radio shows. As for me, people tell me I have a great face for radio ! 😀
Bayer was one of the companies that joined the I.G. Farben conglomerate in the '20s: it put up money to fund the Nazi Party and Farben employed worked-to-death slaves in its extensive Auschwitz plants during WW2. Although the group's directors were identified as major war-criminals by the Nuremberg prosecutors, Farben has close links with sympathetic U.S. industrialists (like Du Pont) and with prominent politicians and social figures of German origin (even the two Wall Street lawyers who controlled post-war W. Germany had been Farben's representatives), so the various Farben (incl.Bayer) directors got away with it, as did the Krupps and other war-profiteers. It was mostly the Hitler regime's fanatics and front-men who did any real jail-time.
During the first World War, Bayer- and the rights to its name and manufacture- was acquired by Sterling Drug in the United States. It did not revert to its original owner until 1994, when Bayer acquired Sterling's drug products (from SmithKline Beecham).
That was COOL 😎!
I like this program and the actor, but it is different from the one-armed private detective Marc Saber that I've been watching. Does anyone know if the two shows are connected other than the name of the main character?
Love these but cant help notice how stiff these characters appear. Kind of funny. Of course i never noticed back in the day.
5:00 Just wondering.
Did you bother to get a search warrant?
Good one ! Real cool. . . :) 🥶
Glad you like it!
awesome
7:37 No kidding?
Boy, nothing gets by this guy.
Im 80yrs old and i remember the ice man.
Fred Eisley later changed his first name to "Anthony".
Yes ! Had a long life & prolific career. Appeared in films & TV from 1952 to 1991. Was especially busy as a TV guest star from the 50s on. I recall growing up & seeing him on LOTS of 60s & 70s TV shows !
Does anybody else think Mark's partner looks just like LBJ?
Um, LBJ was 6'4" and had a strong southern accent
Naughty Mrs. Williams is a bit of a peach!
She's no Marie Dressler, but she indeed is one lovely lady ! Hubba hubba !
@@jubalcalif9100 Now I’m gonna have to rewatch this to remind myself what she looks like.
That guy is still guilty of violent felony assault
prove it!
Good movie
Really enjoyed this Episode Excellent.
Me too ! I like this early 50s series, despite the low budget look. Good casts, especially the lead, the late great Tom Conway.
What, no charges for assault on a police officer? There is no way a modern police officer would just forget about being hit on the head with a metal pipe and rendered unconscious.
Actually a lot of these old shows are probably partly responsible for a lot of deaths, they make it look like you can hit someone on the head with a gun butt or metal pipe and they are just rendered unconscious for a while and wake up with no side effects, when in reality you would be highly likely to kill them, or give them brain damage, not just knock them out for a while, people do take on board the things they see and hear in movies and on TV, especially if they see it in every movie they watch, similar to subliminal smoking, even in this show Mark Saber is often seen smoking when smoking has Zero to do with the plot, it is Subliminal advertising and it killed many millions of people who thought all the good looking sexy people smoked, every one in Hollywood smoked on screen....even if they were in fact non smokers in real life, in fact all smoking did was make them stink and be repulsive....but people believed it
@@georgemoore7186 Even Lucy smoked on her show, "I Love Lucy".
Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble also did smoking commercials.
He felt guilty about nearly killing that guy at 13:20.😮
'The modern police officer' would be the one doing the hitting, considering how low police standards have sunk since 'the olden days'.
@@im1who84u Lucy's shows were sponsored by Philip Morris (q v.). Maybe the actors had to keep to themselves any feelings about whatever damage would be caused by the crap that their programs were helping to sell to the suckers who watched them.
Good movie 🤩🤩💖
The Butler did it @!!
7:08 Just wondering here.
I am guessing they've taken the "body" out of the house at this point.
Ice see what he did there... what a blockhead
Ha ! I'm surprised the sergeant didn't end the show humming that delightful ditty of yesteryear, "I Only Have Ice For You"....
I just loved y’all’s clever puns. Thanks 🙏🏻 for the chuckles. 🤭🤭🤭😅😅😅
look this is poison...
immediately tastes it
WTF!
That ice is so hygienic!
Tom Conway...George Sanders' brother?
Yes. Sanders did not speak to him because of Conway's alcoholism.Then,sadly, Sanders committed suicide.Two talented,successful people who could not cope.
@@renacorey5877 Sad but true.... 😞
great
Tom Conway was a Russian Aristocrat!
Indeed he was. But the Russian Revolution forced him, his brother George & the rest of the family to flee to the UK.
This is interesting for several reasons. First off, the wife's lover gets to knock out Saber without punishment? Second, I'm not sure how this is related to the British series, called The Vise, which also stars "Mark Saber", but all different actors. Most of all is the star Tom Conway, who IRL is the brother of George Sanders. You can really see it in his face and voice. His bio on IMDb is really interesting- I recommend reading it. PS, this is called The Hanging Man, not The Hanged Man.
Thanks for the correction and interesting comment. We now list the correct title. 👍
I would like to know WHY he knocked out Saber in the first place. And why he came back there at that time of night
@@Boogaboioringale Danged if I can remember- I'd have to watch it again.
Tom Conway played The Saint’s Brother and became The Saint.
Mark Saber in London is complete crap. Ridiculous stories and an American sidekick who dumb as a stump played by a bad actor.
Solving a murder without search warrant lol
When Saber bent down to touch the liquid below the hanged victim all I could think was…
…Urine
At least he didn’t taste it.
But it’s the 1950’s America, no pee, poo and certainly married couples don’t sleep in the same bed!
Very perceptive! Everything lets go after death! ( I thought he might have jumped through the ceiling to hang himself.)😢
🔵THE DETECTIVE TOM CONWAY WHO LOOKS A LOT LIKE GEORGE SANDERS DIDN'T CHARGE THE WOMAN'S LOVER WITH AGRABATED ASSAULT FOR HITTING HIM OVER THE HEAD WITH A PIPE. BY THE WAY, I LIKE SABER OF LONDON BETTER.🔴
Preferred the UK versions with Donald Grey, homiside is now being used here in the UK.
In answer to the person who wondered how many stunt men had been killed while making a movie. At least one ☝️. While making the movie The Flight ✈️ of the Phoenix stuntman Paul Manx was killed in an unexpected crash 💥 of the plane ✈️. Two stuntmen were in the crash but the other man survived. 😮😢
That was rather ghoulish.
Yikes 😰
1. That Sergeant Maloney looks as thick as two short planks - he'd never have got to Sergeant status in the real Police!!
2. We all worked out how the bloke hanged himself waaaayyy sooner than both Mark Saber and Sergeant Maloney (and why!!)
No Botox Beautiful❤
Weak.
Very. Very short man. Exceptionally high ceiling. Cold feet. Heater on.
Very little appreciation for SUCH PERHAPS A 🔥🐍 White Knight of A BRAIN STURM METHOD OF GETTING TO THE EXPLAINING OF THE KNOW HOW WITH THE ICE SUCH PERHAPS HEAT AS UN USUALLY HEARD OF FAME. 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 WUNDERBAR