MovieChat Forums > Peter Gunn (1958) Discussion > Shelly Berman rivals Hickey in 'The Comi...

Shelly Berman rivals Hickey in 'The Comic'


I know I am probably overstating the case but I have been trolling for this particular PETER GUNN episode for years; it's not available on DVD to my knowledge and yesterday afternoon on Retro-television in Lehigh Valley Pa. I was miraculously able to catch it. It's called, "The Comic," and the plot involves a neurotic stand-up comic (Danny Arnold) who is convinced that his wife is about to murder him. In a role tailored to his peculiarly creepy talents, the show is ALL Shelly Berman confiding in detective Gunn his worst fears and suspicions regarding his spouse and imploring him to save him from what he perceives to be inevitable death. The episode ends unforgettably with Gunn and Lieut.Jacoby waiting in the wings for Arnold to finish his last stand-up act on stage, the content of which is a coded message to the two men who are waiting for him that it is he who is predator and not the prey. Craig Stevens as Gunn serves basically the role of analyst in this, just letting Berman reveal the truth about his pathology until the horribly pathetic "Iceman Cometh" like climax.

It's the simplest, most distilled, most concentrated thing Blake Edwards ever accomplished in his career; and perhaps the most personal if one knows anything about his emotional battles with paranoia and depression. How Shelly Berman's performance is not in the pantheon of every film and TV lover's knowledge of truly triumphant acting jobs is a sin (what? no Emmy!!) that ought to be corrected. Considering that Mr. Berman is still alive is it would be decent if somebody came to him in the form of a in-depth career interview and asked him for a comment regarding his memory and opinion about it. It's a spell-binding, spine-chilling tour-de-force.

Jace Gaffney

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Keep looking: I've seen the episode on VHS tapes paired with another episode, and on foreign dvd as part of a complete season set. It is possible to find it.

Sometimes I think the entire series is too good, too smart, and too disruptive of notions about the popular culture of the past to be allowed free access, lest the audience start to question today's offerings too closely. Every excuse I've heard about why Peter Gunn is not available sounds pretty thin.

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"The bonsai: the ultimate miniature." —Will Hayward, Twin Peaks.

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Thanks for responding to my post on Berman in the classic PETER GUNN episode, "The Comic." Amen on the show being "disruptive of notions about the popular culture of the past . . . lest the audience start to question today's offerings too closely," and about the program being "the ultimate miniature." I believe however I am probably alone in thinking PETER GUNN to be in the final analysis Edwards finest creation in terms of the artful expression of a very stylish but fragile sensibility within the Hollywood dream machine apparatus. He was the heir apparent to Hawks at the time of the PETER GUNN show because the manner in which he mixed so many juicy elements: sex and comedy and the macabrely suspenseful was, like Hawks, uniquely dry and sophisticated; but by the time of the horrid movie version of the same material, GUNN ((1967, Blake seemed to capitulate to a decline in standards dictated by popular taste. And then there was his nutty infatuation with Julie Andrews - as far away from Lola Alright as a man's erotic imagination can get!

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The Berman episode is available in the 5-DVD set from Liberation Entertainment in the UK. This is currently the cheaper of the two sets sold at amazon.co.uk (seasons one and two), both of which seem to go in and out of print.

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http://www.mjq.net/petergunn

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That'a the episode that got me interested in actually watching the show while it was still on the RETRO channel--only got to see two episodes of it before the channel went off the air. The show can still be seen on the new DECADES channel now.

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The Comic is one of the best episodes of the series, I agree; and Shelley Berman sells it. He was a fine actor as well as an excellent comedian.

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