Written by Mark Saltzman And Richard Stevenson
Directed by Ron Oliver
John: "Have you ever been shot, Don?"
Donald: "As a matter of fact, I have. I didn't care for it much."
John: "Neither did I. But that doesn't matter to you, does it? You probably think I should be shot, and killed."
Donald: "No, actually, John, I don't. But that probably puts me in exclusive company."
I can't believe it's been twenty years since this movie came out. I also can't believe it's taken me this long to actually watch the first in a series of adaptations of the books from Richard Stevenson Lipez's Donald Strachey detective novels.
Taking on the role of Donald Strachey was the delightful Chad Allen from Dr Quinn: Medicine Woman and I have to say, he's great casting for the troublesome private investigator. The first time we meet Strachey, he's getting punched in the face by the disgruntled wife of one of his clients. Of course not everyone disliked Donald Strachey.
Nope, he'd got a lovely live in boyfriend with Senator aide, Tim Callahan (Sebastian Spence) and a cute dog named Dr. Watson. Oh and they're currently renovating their house with a lot of focus being on a new fireplace. That's more of a light hearted subplot in a murder mystery movie of course.
The potential murder in question being of John Rutka (Jack Weatherall), a reporter if sorts with his own website called The Rutka Report where outing homophobic people in positions of power was the order of the day. It meant that he had a target on his back and it took a big enough money incentive for Donald to actually figure out who was trying to kill him.
The suspect list was pretty large and halfway through the movie, it appeared that Rutka had been burned to death. Donald did suspect that Rutka's muscled boyfriend, Eddie (Woody Jeffreys) was responsible while Detective Sean "Bub" Bailey (Daryl Shuttleworth) also pointed out that Rutka had form for lying. That was something that Bub was very much spot on about.
Anyways the deeper that Strachey went into solving Rutka's murder, the more characters that popped up with the intention of harming of silencing Donald. Characters like Linklater (Sean Carey), and Slinger (David Palffy) certainly added complications but it was the arrest of Father Morgan (Alf Humphries) brought other revelations to light.
It's the last few minutes where Donald managed to crack the case and discovered that Rutka played a very complicated long con in order to get justice for the abuse he suffered as a child that really explained his motives throughout the film. That and a rather revealing moment about Donald's military past added rather nice denouement to the whole story.
- There's a few supporting female characters, including Tim's boss, the house contractor and Rutka's sister. Tim's also got Irish blood in him.
- At one point in the movie, Donald's investigation had him interviewing porn performer, Dik Steele (Matthew Rush).
- Bub was a character that debuted in this movie and would be added into later book. The same applied to Kenny Kwon (Nelson Wong).
- Chronology: The book itself (the fourth in the series) came out in 1992 but given some of the updates added to this adaptation, I'm betting it's supposed to set in the 2000s.
Third Man Out was a very enjoyable debut in this detective series with a strong story, a complicated enough "victim" and a charming protagonist with Chad Allen being a delight as Donald Strachey. I'm looking to seeing the remaining movies in this series.
Rating: 7 out of 10