Mike Hammer & Simon Templar have been-- since the 1980s-- 2 of my favorite characters. And they're so different. One of us needs to start a Hammer thread...
I remember seeing TV commercials for the Roger Moore series. but somehow, never watched a single episode back when that I can remember.
I'm not entirely sure which version I saw first. But I do recall my Mom once pointing out, shortly after I got my first VCR, that there was a double-feature on late-night, so I taped 2 movies and we watched both of them:
THE SAINT STRIKES BACK
THE FALCON STRIKES BACK
If that was where I really came in... man, what a freakin' weird place to come in.
In retrospect, George Sanders' 1st SAINT film (out of 5) is, in my opinion, the SINGLE WORST Saint film EVER MADE. It's awful. I had to see it 3 times before the plot made any sense at all. The dialogue was horrible. And... I CAN'T STAND Wendy Barrie. (I don't know what Bugsy Siegel saw in her... heh.)
Meanwhile... while many dissed it, I loved THE NEW AVENGERS. The following year, CBS ran RETURN OF THE SAINT. I watched every episode of that. By the time that one season was over... Ian Ogvily had become my FAVORITE ACTOR. #1. No kidding. His version of "Simon Templar" was that chaacter on TV I MOST wished I could have been like. No kidding.
I started catching some of the other SAINT movies on TV. All of them were better than "... STRIKES BACK". And then I saw "...IN NEW YORK". Whoa. Suddenly... suddenly... I felt like... this. THIS. This is why "THE SAINT" was memorable and became a success.
And then I started finding and buying the books. I'm still missing half of them. But of the ones I got, I started with what I believe is either the 3rd or 4th one (not sure)... "THE LAST HERO". Oh man. As Hayward was so different from what came later, this was even more different.
Templar is often described as "a modern Robin Hood". That book gave me my FIRST real glimpse of why. Though I've never read it described in detail, Templar was clearly born to a well-off family, went to the best schools, had a bright future before him... and instead, decided the world was full of WRONG that needed RIGHTING. So he and several close, like-minded friends got together and conspired to right those wrongs. Like Robin Hood and his merry men. And that included --OH MY GOD!!!-- Patricia Holm-- who he was IN LOVE with. How did they ever make all those later films and NEVER feature her, I wondered?
That first story involved a scientist who'd invented a "death ray", and intended to sell it to the highest bidder, brokered by a criminal who didn't care if they sold it to a country who'd use it to start a SECOND WORLD WAR. It's been decades, but I recall Pat got kidnapped. Simon would stop at nothing to get her back. They kidnapped the scientist, hoping to "convince" him of the error of his ways. HE REFUSED to see reason. And so... one of Simon's friends took it upon him to EXECUTE the scientist, and wound up getting killed in the process. The war broker-- "Dr. Rayt Marius"-- got away. Simon swore there'd be a reckoning.
When I read that book, the only actor I could see or hear in my head was Louis Hayward. Funny enough, whenever Rayt Marius was "onscreen", I kept picturing Lionel Atwill. He would have been perfect in that role. (Think "SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE SECRET WEAPON".)
I read several other books... years later getting "THE AVENGING SAINT", which was the direct sequel. Two scenes stick out in my head, decades later. The first, Simon sneaks into Marius' hotel room, hiding in the bathroom while eavedropping on a secret conversation. But while he's doing this, he takes a can of shaving cream, and writes a sarcastic message to Marius with it on the bathroom mirror. Hilarious! The other scene involved a chase between a 2-seater airplane and a speeding train. Simon JUMPED from the plane onto the roof of the train, then settled up wioth Marius. That scene was embedded in my head when I saw the 1989 movie "LICENSE TO KILL", where Timothy Dalton did the SAME thing. It's notable in that movie that James Bond was not on a mission for MI 6, but on a personal revenge mission. Was that scene inspired by the one in Charteris' book? MAYBE!
When CBS started running the Roger Moore episodes, I was going full-blast videotaping stuff off of TV. This may sound incredible-- but Roger Moore in those COLOR episodes did not seem as good of an actor to me as Ian Ogilvy was. He seemed "stiff". But I watched anyway.
CBS never even ran all the color episodes. Years later, I got the rest off of Channel 9 in NYC (thank God for cable). I also taped RETURN OF THE SAINT off the same channel. Stupid bastards were running it at 2:30 in the mornings. They repeatedly SKIPPED one out of the 24 episodes. So I'm missing it to this day. They also ran the 2-part Roger Moores as "movies", separately. And, eventually, they ran the B&W episodes. Now THOSE blew my mind.
Most of the B&W episodes were adaptations of Leslie Charteris' short stories, many of which I'd read by then. I could see, they took what could have been 30-minute stories and padded them out to 50. 2 things really struck me about those earlier episodes. The WRITING was WAY better, on average, than when the show first switched to color. Also-- Roger Moore's ACTING was THE BEST I'd ever, ever seen from him. Purely on the B&W episodes alone, I'd rate him as one of the best Templar's ever. 2nd or 3rd, hard to say.
George Sanders grew on me. He did 5 films of variable quality. 1 AWFUL... 2 AVERAGE... and 2, GREAT.
I think what happened was... "STRIKES BACK" was written with Hayward in mind. But he quickly moved on to better and better-paying roles. Sanders was COMPLETELY wrong for the part. And it showed in that first film. (Of course, the whole script was a confused jumble, and nearly impossible to follow or make sense of.)
I'm convinced somebody realized this... and realized the folly of trying to adapt a novel in 60 minutes. So the 3rd film (his 2nd), they took a short story... and CUSTOMIZED the dialogue to better match Sander's personality. Sanders, to me, was all wrong for "Simon Templar". Despite this, I now rank "THE SAINT IN LONDON" as the single BEST Saint film EVER MADE. It's the only one from back then that totally encapsulates Templar's "world". London. His flat with the secret entrance to the car garage. His habit of employing ex-convicts. Chief Inspector Claude Eustace Teal, so perfectly cast an captured in the form of Gordon MacLeod, my choice the for BEST Teal ever. I love the scene where it looks like Simon's about to be arrested for murder, and Teal tells Templar he's KNOWS it's a frame-up. So they conspire together to have Simon "escape" and bring the culprits to justice.
Oh yeah, and then there's SALLY GRAY. Until her, Annette Andre was my favorite "Saint girl". Gray REALLY should have played Patrick Holm. She was in the story "LONDON" was adapted from. Somebody at RKO must have had a thing for Wendy Barrie. She appeared in 3 SAINT films (playing a different character each time) and 2 FALCONs.
"THE SAINT TAKES OVER" is my 2nd-favorite Sanders film. I strongly suepct it was loosely adapted from "ANGELS OF DOOM". The 2nd time, they got it more right. A woman seeking revenge for the death of her cop father, and gangers being bumped off, with Templar concerned they need ONE of them alive to clear someone's name. The added hilarity was having Henry Fernack framed of a crime, and repeatedly turn up after someone's been killed. HE's accusing Simon, and Simon is having too much fun allowing his sidekick to accuse Fernack. I believe this was the only one of those 9 films Charteris wrote the screenplay for. No wonder it was good.
Another fave of mine is "THE SAINT'S VACATION". Hugh Sinclair is TOO skinny... and had NO business wearing a moustache. But other than that, he's PERFECT in this film, a jaunt thru several countries, with Sally Gray as a newspaper reporter, and Cecil Parker as Rudolph, MY vote for the BEST Saint villain EVER. Man, he was so smooth, he could have been a BOND villain.
It's sad that "THE SAINT MEETS THE TIGER" was such a disappointment... among many other things, who the hell gave Sinclair such a LOUSY wardrobe in that film? I've seen photos of him clean-shaven-- he would have looked WAY better as Templar that way.
I recently read that Sally Gray dropped out of the biz for a bit due to a nervous breakdown because of the war. She got back in for a few years... but then, she met, fell in love and married some titled guy in Europe. They were happily married for OVER 50 YEARS!!!! Wow. that's the kind of story you don't mind reading about.