A Close Call for Ellery Queen (1942) Poster

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7/10
A VERY close call - for Nikki!
binapiraeus7 February 2014
When William Gargan took over the role of 'Ellery Queen' from Ralph Bellamy (with the rest of the steady cast remaining the same), the series obviously became more serious again after the comical 'intermissions' especially of "Ellery Queen and the Murder Ring". Murder DID become a serious matter again - and not only for the people involved in the case Ellery for once takes over as a private investigator, but also for our beloved protagonists themselves...

An old country house on an isolated island is the ideal setting for a rather complicated plot with a father searching for his long-lost daughter - and just when Ellery is on his way there to start his investigations, the daughter DOES turn up, and tells her story to Nikki whom Ellery has left behind in his office. And Nikki, curious and fearless as ever, decides to play the daughter's part and head for the island by herself to see what's going on there; and not even SHE can imagine what perils are waiting for her there!

Although the story doesn't sound too convincing, it's still immensely imaginative - and suspenseful... And Nikki, with her false identity, becomes of course the center of interest - and of danger! This one's for mystery fans with strong nerves, no doubt; but it's absolutely worth watching - if you feel up to it...
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7/10
Long Lost Daughter
bkoganbing13 July 2013
William Gargan takes over the role of Ellery Queen as the mystery writer turned detective in A Close Call For Ellery Queen. He has a couple of close calls, but it's Margaret Lindsay who really puts herself in jeopardy with a masquerade.

Edward Norris private secretary to millionaire Ralph Morgan asks for Ellery's help in getting rid of a pair of unwanted guests who have planted themselves at Morgan's estate. Norris suspects blackmail of some kind, but before Gargan can go to work the guests Andrew Toombes and Charles Judel wind up shot to death in the back room of a waterfront dive.

Lindsay insinuates herself in the case by masquerading as a long lost daughter who with her 'sister' Kay Linnaker stands to inherit a fortune from Morgan. Still yet another murder occurs before all is revealed.

A Close Call For Ellery Queen is one of the best of the series. Gargan acquits himself well in the part though I do like Ralph Bellamy better. Though none of the screen Queens fit the author's conception of the part as Jim Hutton did on television, I still like the structure and direction of this film and the performances the director got from his cast.
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5/10
Shouldn't the title be "A Close Call For Nikki Porter"?
gridoon202411 May 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Because she's the one who gets herself into the most trouble here, by impersonating one of the two long-lost daughters of a rich man with a shady past; after seeing her father's ad in the paper, the REAL daughter travels all the way from Tahiti to America to meet him, but she runs into Nikki first, and when Nikki sees a strange letter that warns the real daughter NOT to return, she decides to take her place and find out what's going on. Ellery Queen is unaware of most of this, but a double murder soon brings him (and his father, of course) to the same household. This film marks a turning point in the series, as William Gargan replaces Ralph Bellamy as Ellery Queen; to be honest, the change is barely noticeable, as both actors are agreeable without really bringing much personality to the role. As usual for this series, it's Nikki Porter who steals the show; Margaret Lindsay, this time getting to pose as a French-speaking girl, is the best thing about this dense but rushed mystery. ** out of 4.
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6/10
Convoluted but fun
coltras352 October 2022
Two mysterious seamen come from Alan Rogers' past to blackmail him as he seeks to locate his missing daughters. Ellery Queen is called in by Stewart Cole, Rogers' secretary. Queen goes to the estate and finds one daughter already there and the second one expected. When she arrives, it is Ellery's secretary Nikki Porter posing as the daughter as Ellery had her intercept the real heiress after learning of a plot to swindle Rogers. The blackmailing seamen are killed at a waterfront café after getting the blackmail money, Rogers is suspected and Inspector Queen arrives to arrest him, but he is also found dead.

Convoluted at times and a slight strain to keep up with the twist in the plot, however it's quite fun and imaginative with Margaret Lindsey going undercover. There's some humorous scenes.
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7/10
There's a new Queen in town.
mark.waltz29 December 2023
Warning: Spoilers
William Gargan takes over the role of Ellery Queen in the series of B Columbia mysteries, and it's a good one. He's out of town attempting to see wealthy Ralph Morgan on a case and assistant/girlfriend Margaret Lindsay decides that she wants to handle a new client on her own, mysterious French girl Micheline Cheirel who claims that Morgan is her father but that business associates of Morgan's have been trying to keep them apart. Lindsay decides to step in, impersonate the daughter, and a mystery is created when Chierel disappears.

A good transition for the series for its last few entries gives Lindsay some great material and plenty of suspects for possible murder including another daughter (Kay Linaker), spooky Mrs. Danvers lookalike housekeeper Claire Du Brey, creepy butler Milton Parsons and some oddball associates who automatically create suspicion. Charley Grapewin is back as Ellery's very smart pops, always a delight with his no nonsense manner. Fast moving and smart, giving enough clues to keep the viewer intrigued but never giving anything important away.
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5/10
Should've Been A Short Subject
boblipton3 August 2021
Ralph Morgan is a rich man, but a careless one. He's trying to locate his two missing daughters, and two men come to him to blackmail him.... so he starts the process of having his lawyer transfer all his property to the young women, and hires mystery writer Ellery Queen to investigate.

Almost exactly half of this late entry in producer Larry Darmour's series is spent in vamping, usually for comic effect, as William Gargan has his grammar corrected by girlfriend/secretary Margaret Lindsay, gets soaked in the shower, and other assorted hilarity, while Miss Lindsay goes undercover as a fake daughter. At that point the first corpse shows up under the care of series coroner Charles Lane, and Inspector Charley Grapewin goes to investigate while Gargan kibitzes.

The mystery is a fair one, with a gigantic red herring, but there's no more than a novella's worth of story in this one, comic relief aside. Gargan isn't well cast.
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