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This is (as I type) the final entry in James Lee Burke's
"Billy Bob Holland" series. In this episode, Billy Bob is a defense
attorney, settled down near Missoula, Montana, and
has married Temple Carrol, a private investigator. Life is good.
But not for long. An evildoer from the previous book, Wyatt Dixon,
has been sprung from prison on a technicality. Since his previous
exploits involved burying Temple alive, Billy Bob is concerned.
But in addition, there's Johnny American Horse, a Native American
given to seeing things in his dreams that predict troubles ahead.
Amber, daughter of a U. S. Senator, arrested on drunk and disorderly
charges; she's sweet on Johnny. Darrell, a speed freak cop,
who's dangerously infatuated with Amber.
And above it all is a dark conspiracy involving a research
facility robbed by persons unknown.
Burke's writing is colorful as always, and his characters undergo
unusual amounts of physical and mental anguish.
An Alfred Hitchcock movie from 1938, and it seems even older
than that. It's an oddball mixture of romantic comedy,
mystery, and spy thriller.
Young Iris is off in a central-European ski resort with a couple
girlfriends, a last fling before she gets married. The night before
she's due to leave, she meets up with a seemingly ditzy but pleasant
elderly woman, Miss Froy (played wonderfully by Dame May Whitty).
She also encounters (in fact, meets-cute)
Gilbert (Michael Redgrave, father to Vanessa and Lynn), an irritating
musician.
After they all pile on a train, Miss Froy—you might have
guessed—vanishes mysteriously. Even more mysterious,
a number of passengers in the compartment insist that that Miss
Froy was a figment of Iris's imagination. Iris begins to doubt
herself, but Gilbert believes in her.
Their investigation reveals that nothing
is as it seems.
The movie has a number of other colorful characters: a pair of
Brits that are anxious to get word of an important cricket match,
frustrated at every turn. And there are a couple of scandal-shy
lovers married to other people; he turns out to be a total weasel.
Things move slowly. Today, they could fit this plot into a 60-minute
episode of Bones.
Consumer note: the cover art/link at the right goes to the Criterion
Collection edition of the movie. Which is not what Netflix sent;
instead we got a cheapie from a no-name publisher
containing an intro by Tony Curtis, stumbling
over his trite cue card lines. Bleah.
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