Plot:
Kelly and Scotty try to protect and to recruit an eccentric professor who has developed a theory vital to missile defense.
Problem is, the scientist is absent-minded in an unusual sort of way. He thinks he's Don Quixote, trying to fight windmills and things, and refuses to give up the discovery to anyone, not being able to trust them...
And, of course, the Americans aren't the only ones aware of his little discovery, there's a German agent on the loose...
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D. P. Cole's most memorable
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D. P. Cole's review and rating:
When I first saw this two years ago, I loved it to pieces. Upon re-watching, what form of mind-altering drug was I using? It's too silly. Some moments are cute, yes, but overall it's too silly with nothing happening inbetween. There's this cute German guy who wants the formula and our heroes escape him, but the end of act 3 shows our heroes being taken away in a police car (since Don freed 6 criminals previous to this thinking he was being chivalrous, a truly sparkling moment in this episode, what appeared to be police came to take the trio away), they end up at some deserted shack with -- guess who -- waiting for them. Were we supposed to be surprised? Why didn't they insert a caption at the bottom of the screen saying "Be surprised and shocked at the following tone" followed by an appropriate beep. That might have helped!
I'll give the story some credit, Boris Karloff is exceptional in his role and gets a great moment at the end when running down the bad guys. Also, he plays the role as if his scientist character is only half-pretending to be Quixote, our Don knew enough about what was going on to play the Quixote game over the top in order to fool everyone. That's my take on it. And the story idea itself is rather interesting, an "absent-minded" scientist deliberately acting like a fictional character to fool potential kidnappers.
Overall, this story contains great acting by the two regulars and Karloff and great location work, but the plot simply fails at a 1 hr episode. There's too much needless humor. Maybe as a 30 minute show it would work. Still, some of the plot concepts (and the acting) are sheer brilliance and therefore I am compelled to give it a very good score.
Rating: 8/10
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