"Alfred Hitchcock Presents" The Dusty Drawer (TV Episode 1959) Poster

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7/10
Fun from beginning to end
ctomvelu16 January 2013
A youthful Dick York,later of "Bewitched" fame, plays a professor residing in a boarding house. One of his fellow boarders is a stuffy bank teller (Coolidge) whom the professor is convinced cheated him on a deposit some months before. The professor keeps after the teller to own up to it and return the money. The teller refuses and the professor decides to ratchet matters up a notch, which involves a toy gun and a forgotten desk drawer at the bank. Since the episode was less than a half hour in length, events are compacted, such as the initial deposit snafu, which takes place before the episode begins. So when the curtain goes up, the professor is already trying various means to get the teller to fess up. This is a relatively lighthearted story, although pulling out a toy gun in a crowded bank won't go over well in our violent modern times. York is charming and affable and the prissy Coolidge makes the perfect foil.
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7/10
Far from dusty
TheLittleSongbird27 January 2024
'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' "The Dusty Drawer" (1959)

Opening thoughts: Herschel Daugherty was responsible for some exceptional 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' episodes, standouts being "The Creeper", "Little White Frock" and "The Last Dark Step". He was though also responsible for the disappointing "Father and Son" and the big time miss "Sylvia" (one of my least favourites of the series). He really excelled in the creepier episodes and he also excelled in the few that had more of an emotional impact, less so in the slighter plotted, more soapy ones.

"The Dusty Drawer" is good, though does fall short of greatness. It is not one of Daugherty's very best 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' episodes and is not in the same league as the mentioned exceptional episodes. It is also nowhere near close to being one of the disappointments. As far as Season 4 goes, "The Dusty Drawer" is not one of the high points. Instead it is somewhere around solid middle. It is also not one of the low points. It is not exactly for those who don't like characters being treated or behaving too cruelly, but it is interesting to see a lighter side to Daugherty.

Bad things: The weak link is the ending, which for my tastes is rather too cruel and doesn't really resolve (almost anti-climactic).

As a result it is very difficult to feel much sympathy for the person we are supposed yo feel sympathy for because of how far the cruelty goes.

Good things:It, the epsode that is, does have in its favour though a lot of intrigue and suspense. And further elevated by the wonderfully sly lead performance of Dick York. Daugherty's direction never tries to do too much while keeping the drama tight.

Furthermore, the production values are slick and atmospheric enough and Hitchcock's bookending is suitably droll. Gounod's "Funeral March of a Marionette" is a great choice for the theme music. Most of the writing is thought provoking and intrigues, nothing coming over as superfluous. Hitchcock's bookending is typically droll and fun, in perfect keeping with the episode's tone. Moreover, the story always compels and the light heartedness is done amusingly and charmingly.

Closing thoughts: Good if not great.

7/10.
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7/10
Old York
Archbishop_Laud26 November 2013
This is Dick York's second appearance on AHP (three more to come). In his first, he played a wise guy. This one seems a little more natural for him. I have to say, he really gives me a Jim Carrey vibe.

In a bit of period detail, we have two men (with jobs, nonetheless) living in a boarding house. York wants to get his vengeance on a stuffy bank teller. We only hear about and don't see the original transgression, and I think this is what made me sympathetic to the bank teller. The revenge goes too far, but we are also made to see that York's character has no selfish motive beyond that. The story also seems unrealistic, the way the gun is handled.

Ultimately, it plays for kicks, and is fairly effective at that. By Season 4, AHP risked repeating itself, and this episode at least isn't guilty of that.
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Don't Mess with the Professor
dougdoepke17 June 2011
Fuddy-duddy banker Tritt (Coolidge) and droll Professor Logan (York) share a dinner table at a respectable boarding house. Logan claims Tritt has shorted him two hundred-dollars to cover a mistake at the bank. Tritt however denies it, but judging from his smug demeanor we suspect the worst. Still, Logan is not one to forgive; plus, he's resourceful as heck. If I were Tritt, I'd give the money back, as the next 20-minutes shows.

Cleverly offbeat premise plays out rather humorously. York is so good at being sly, while Coolidge is perfectly cast as a priggish banker. Suspense comes from wondering what Logan will do next since the twists are anything but predictable. All in all, the entry fits in perfectly with the series emphasis on dark humor.
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10/10
AND EVERYONE LIVED HAPPILY EVER AFTER.
tcchelsey14 November 2023
A Hitch Christmas episode, if there ever is such a thing?

I have watched this story for decades, and just love it. The reason is you get TWO prize Alfred Hitchcock regulars, Dick York, playing Norman, and Philip Coolidge, as Tritt. These two over the top characters live together in a boarding house, and what's worse, work together at the local bank.

The problem is that Tritt is one of the officers and Norman claims he short-changed him of two hundred dollars -- so he could cover a banking error. Norman refuses to forgive and forget, and believes in the "revenge is sweet" theory... and he's out to nail his adversary. Give the money back!

A terrific game of cat and mouse, and Dick York and Philip Coolidge compliment each other. They are just so much fun to watch, especially for some smug and suspicious expressions. Coolidge the same year this episode was released appeared as a doctor in Hitchcock's NORTH BY NORTHWEST. He was a long time stage actor and director and had quite a distinguished career.

Dick York, originally a radio actor, will always be remembered as Darren on BETWITCHED, but his various roles for Hitchcock are not to be forgotten, and this is one of them.

Recommended 10 STARS. From SEASON 4 EPISODE 33 remastered Universal dvd box set. 5 dvd set.
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7/10
Purposely Silly
Hitchcoc15 March 2013
Once in a while, the series just launched into silliness. This plot involves a supposedly wronged man played by Dick York, later of the show "Bewitched." York's character launches a full frontal assault on a fellow boarding house bank teller whom he feels cheated him out of two hundred dollars. The mans failure to acquiesce leads to a series of efforts by York to destroy him. His set ups result in the poor man embarrassing himself time after time. We never know if there ever was an inciting incident (the two hundred dollars) but we are expected to sympathize with York's Captain Ahab. I just couldn't do it. The bank teller is so badly treated that I couldn't overcome the tongue in cheek portrayal. Is two hundred dollars enough incentive to destroy a man's life and cause him to live in fear. Of course, I'm overreacting to an old TV show.
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5/10
Unresolved plot
cyndi_fan24715 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The premise of this episode centers on a dispute in which Dick York was supposedly shorted 200 dollars by his boarding house mate, which the banker strongly denies, but it is never confirmed in the story who was telling the truth, which seems like an obvious oversight. It's hard to sympathize with York's character's attempts at revenge when the viewer has no reason to believe him over the bank teller.
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3/10
I didn't like this one at all....it just seemed cruel and mean-spirited.
planktonrules4 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
"The Dusty Drawer" currently has a score of 8.0 and three favorable reviews. I am clearly the odd man out here, as I absolutely hated this episode...it just seemed cruel and mean-spirited.

Mr. Logan (Dick York) lives at a rooming house where Mr. Tritt (Philip Coolidge) lives. Ten months earlier, Logan claims that Tritt cheated him out of $200 when he deposited at the bank where Tritt is a cashier. The bank apparently found no irregularities and the matter was closed...at least by the bank. But Logan is a very strange and vengeful guy and he spends the entire episode trying to drive Tritt over the edge and into a mental assylum...as well as getting him fired.

There really isn't any more to the plot than this and by the end, Tritt has been ruined and you have no idea if he was even in the right in the first place. It's supposed to be funny...I just thought the whole thing seemed nasty...even by "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" standards. Had they shown that Tritt had actually cheated Logan, then it definitely would have worked better.
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5/10
"It's got to be here somewhere."
classicsoncall5 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I realize two hundred dollars was worth a lot more over sixty years ago than it does today, but still, Norman Logan (Dick York) went to a whole lot of trouble just to get that money back. We wouldn't have had this story if Logan, at the time he made the transaction that shorted him the money, simply called for the bank manager and showed him the deposit receipt next to the check he was depositing at the bank. Both documents would have been readily available and the mistake would have been taken care of right then and there. Instead, 'Hitchcock Presents' gives us a story that starts out wobbly right from the outset, especially with Logan and bank clerk Tritt (Philip Coolidge) taking meals together at the boarding house where they both live! How would a situation like that ever evolve in real life? This was a case of gaslighting by Logan to put Tritt over the edge and it worked within the confines of the story, but it doesn't pass a reasonable sniff test.
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