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List of Fallen Angels episodes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

List of Fallen Angels episodes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gary Oldman as Lt. Kelley in Dead End for Delia.
Gary Oldman as Lt. Kelley in Dead End for Delia.

Contents

[edit] Background

The following is a list of episodes from the Showtime anthology series Fallen Angels. The first six episodes aired in 1993. There were no first-run episodes in 1994, and the rest were aired in 1995.

There were fifteen episodes in all. The series was in color and ran approximately thirty minutes with no commercials.

[edit] First Season (1993)

# Episode Title Overview Original airdate
1 Dead End for Delia Hard-boiled Detective Kelley (Gary Oldman) is called to investigate a murder and we discover his wife Delia (Gabrielle Anwar), a dance-hall hostess, has been murdered. We learn of Kelley's past involvement with Delia and what happened via a very convoluted point-of-view. The story ends in true noir fashion.
8/1/1993
2 I'll Be Waiting Eve Cressy (Marg Helgenberger) is a gangster's moll who awaits the return of her lover from prison. She meets Tony Reseck (Bruno Kirby), the hotel dick, whose attempt to protect her, end in violence.
8/15/1993
3 The Quiet Room In the 1940s and 1950s a few members of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) had more interests than their slogan suggests: to protect and to serve. In this episode, sadistic Streeter (Joe Mantegna) and brutal Creighton (Bonnie Bedelia) are corrupt cops whose antics lead to a nasty and tragic end when a shakedown plan goes awry.
  • Director: Steven Soderbergh
  • Story: Jonathan Craig aka Frank E. Smith
  • Writer: Howard A. Rodman
  • Director of Photography: Emmanuel Lubezki
  • Other Cast:
  • Awards: One Emmy nomination -- Bonnie Bedalia, Outstanding Guest Actress/Drama.
8/29/1993
4 The Frightening Frammis When we meet the anti-hero, grifter Mitch Allison (Peter Gallagher), he is disheveled and walking by the side of the road. He tells in a flash back narrative how he stole $25,000 from his con-artist wife Bette (Nancy Travis) and jumped on a train hoping to double the money in a gambling scam. Later, he meets sultry Babe (Isabella Rossellini) and gets involved in more than he bargained for. The twists and turns never stop in this fast paced fatalistic and humorous tale.
  • Director: Tom Cruise
  • Story: Jim Thompson
  • Writer: Jon Robin Baitz and Howard A. Rodman
  • Director of Photography: Peter Suschitzky
  • Other Cast:
  • Awards: One CableACE Awards nomination -- Isabella Rossellini, Outstanding Actress.
  • Note: This episode marks the first and only time Tom Cruise went behind the camera to direct.
  • Note: The opening scene, when we see character Mitch Allison walking by the side of the road, is a homage to the 1945 classic film noir Detour (1945), directed by Edgar G. Ulmer.
9/5/1993
5 Murder Obliquely Annie (Laura Dern), in true noir fashion, fatalistically falls in love with a millionaire who the audience discovers is quite bewitched by another lover and is not afraid to show it. In a flashback narrative Annie explains how she met Dwight Billings (Alan Rickman) six weeks earlier and how she discovered Dwight's obsession with the "other woman." How far will Dwight go to win and keep the love of his adored Bernette vixen (Diane Lane)? What must Annie do to win Dwight's love?
1/19/1993
6 Since I Don't Have You In this comic noir, based on a James Ellroy short-story, where Los Angeles historical characters are used. Fixer and bag-man Buzz Meeks (Gary Busey) is hired by two of his bosses: the multi-talented Howard Hughes (Tim Matheson) and the LA mafia gangster Mickey Cohen (James Woods). After investigating, Meeks discovers, oops, the woman whom they have both fallen crazy in love with. This humorous episode, narrated by "Buzz" in flashback, is peppered with many tales about the characters that made Los Angeles in the 1950s interesting.
8/15/1993

[edit] Second Season (1995)

# Episode Title Overview Original airdate
7 Love and Blood A boxer's wife (Mädchen Amick) is unhappy with her marriage and leaves her husband Matt Cordell (Kiefer Sutherland) for another man. Later she wants to give the marriage another chance. Yet, fate touches Cordell when he is framed for a murder.
  • Director: Kiefer Sutherland
  • Story: The story is credited to Evan Hunter, but does not give an alternate title and no story titled "Love and Blood" appears in Hunter's bibliography.
  • Writer: Frank Pugliese
  • Director of Photography: Robert Brinkmann
  • Other Cast:
  • Awards: One CableACE Awards nomination, Frank Pugliese, Screenplay.
10/08/1995
8 The Professional Man Johnny Lamb (Brendan Fraser) has two jobs: he's an elevator operator by day and a hit man by night and he's very good at both jobs. His Boss (Peter Coyote) sends him on a job that makes Lamb confront his conscience; maybe for the first time. The episode has male relationship overtones seldom touched in hard-boiled novels nor found in film noir.
  • Director: Steven Soderbergh
  • Story: Davis Goodis
  • Writer: Howard A. Rodman
  • Director of Photography:
  • Other Cast:
  • Awards: One CableACE Awards nomination -- Steven Soderbergh, Directing a Drama Series.
10/15/1995
9 A Dime a Dance A police detective (Eric Stoltz) investigates the untimely death of a nightclub dancer at a local hang-out but his investigation is called off by the police brass. The problem: the killer is still on the loose.
11/22/1995
10 Good Housekeeping In the noir world you never know how certain people you come in contact with can change your life forever. In this episode a housewife (Dana Delany) is transformed when she falls for a wise guy (Benicio del Toro).
  • Director: Michael Lehmann
  • Story: Bruno Fischer
  • Writer:
  • Director of Photography: Robert Brinkmann
  • Other Cast:
10/29/1995
11 Tomorrow I Die In pure noir fashion, where fatalism plays its untimely hand, Hollywood actor Rich Thurber (Bill Pullman) gets off the bus and enters a bar to quench his thirst. The bar is abruptly taken over by tough bank thieves. The robbers mistake Rich for a local politician and take Thurber and Carol (Heather Graham), the daughter of Los Angeles' top cop, for a ride they won't soon forget. Look for a surprising and riveting end.
11/05/1995
12 The Black Bargain It's in the nature of noir stories to never know who your friends are. In this tale, a mobster (Miguel Ferrer) is hiding out in a hotel room and one by one his thug friends, like Augie (Peter Berg), abandon him.
11/19/1995
13 Fly Paper A well known socialite (Kristin Minter), known to hang out at nightclubs and involved with gambler Babe McClure (Michael Rooker), is missing. The famed shamus, The Continental Op (Christopher Lloyd), is hired by the family to help find their daughter. In this story of lust, blackmail, murder, and double-crosses takes the Op to Los Angeles and takes place in 1929.
  • Director: Tim Hunter
  • Story: Dashiell Hammett
  • Writer: Donald E. Westlake
  • Director of Photography: Robert Brinkmann
  • Other Cast:
  • Notes: According to Benet's Readers Encycylopedia of American Literature, 1991, edited by George Perkins, et al, "Many critics today feel that the first full fledged example of the hard-boiled method was Dashiell Hammett's story 'Fly Paper' . . ."
Unknown
14 Red Wind In this episode, famed Los Angeles private dick Philip Marlowe (Danny Glover) investigates a series of murders in noir fashion.
  • Director: Agnieska Holland
  • Story: Raymond Chandler
  • Writer:
  • Director of Photography:
  • Other Cast:
  • Awards: One Emmy Nomination -- Danny Glover, Outstanding Guest Actor.
  • Notes: This was the first and only time that the Philip Marlow character was played by an African-American.
Unknown
15 Fearless In a tale that takes place in south-central Los Angeles, Fearless Jones (Bill Nunn) and Paris Minton (Giancarlo Esposito) become involved with a femme fatale nightclub jazz singer (Cynda Williams). They try to help out Deletha by planning to steal her singing contract from the nightclub manager. Not all go as the wily sleuths planned.
  • Director: Jim McBride
  • Story: Walter Mosley
  • Writer:
  • Director of Photography:
  • Other Cast:
  • Notes: Walter Mosley would write two novels featuring Fearless Jones and Paris Minton: Fearless Jones (2001) and Fear Itself (2003).
Unknown

[edit] Original Story Sources

# Episode Title Original Source[1][2]
1 Dead End for Delia Episode based on the William Campbell Gault (1910-1995) novelette of the same name and published in Black Mask Magazine, November 1950.
2 I'll Be Waiting Episode based on the Raymond Chandler (1888-1959) short story of the same name and published in The Saturday Evening Post, October 14, 1939.
3 The Quiet Room Episode based on the Jonathan Craig (the pseudonym of Frank E. Smith (1919-1984)) short story of the same name and published in Manhunt Magazine, December 1953.
4 The Frightening Frammis Episode based on the Jim Thompson (1906-1977) novelette of the same name and published in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, February 1957.
5 Murder Obliquely Episode based on the Cornell Woolrich (1903-1968) novelette Violence, published in 1958. The novelette was based on Woolrich's short story Death Escapes the Eye and published in Shadow Magazine April-May 1947.
6 Since I Don't Have You Episode based on the James Ellroy (1948-) novelette of the same name and published in the mystery and suspense anthology A Matter of Crime, edited by Bruccoli and Layman, and published in 1988. The story was later included in a noir anthology series Ellroy published named Hollywood Nocturne in 1994.
8 The Professional Man Episode based on the David Goodis (1917-1967) short story of the same name and published in Manhunt Magazine, October 1953.
9 A Dime a Dance Episode based on the Cornell Wollrich (1903-1968) novelette The Dancing Detective and published in Black Mask Magazine, February 1938.
10 Good Housekeeping Episode based on the Bruno Fischer (1908-1992) novella No Escape! and published in Detective Tales, January 1949.
11 Tomorrow I Die Episode based on the Mickey Spillane (1918-) short story I'll Die Tomorrow and published in Cavalier Magazine, March 1960.
12 The Black Bargain Episode based on the Cornell Woolrich (1903-1968) story The Night of February 17, 1924, published in Justice Magazine, January 1956. In 1958 the story was included in a collection of stories written by Woolrich titled Hotel Room.
13 Fly Paper Episode based on the Dashiell Hammett (1894-1961) novelette of the same name and published in Black Mask Magazine, August 1929. Hammett wrote a series of The Continental Op stories.
14 Red Wind Episode based on the Raymond Chandler (1888-1959) novella of the same name and published in Dime Detective, January 1938.
15 Fearless Episode based on the Walter Mosley (1952-) novelette of the same name and published in the mystery and suspense anthology Spooks, Spies, and Private Eyes, edited by Paula L. Woods, 1995.

[edit] Reprints

Stories from the second season are reprinted in various volumes:

  • "Flypaper" in The Big Knockover, and several Hammett collections.
  • "Dancing Detective" in the Ibooks edition of Rear Window.
  • "Professional Man" published in New Crimes, edited by Maxim Jakabowski.
  • "No Escape!" published in As Tough as they Come, edited by Will Oursler.
  • "Tomorrow I Die" in A Century of Noir.
  • "Red Wind," in several Chandler collections.

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ FictionMags Index Data Base.
  2. ^ Mystery Short Fiction Index Data Base.

[edit] External links


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