"Perry Mason" The Case of the Fugitive Fraulein (TV Episode 1965) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
11 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
A different venue
bkoganbing24 April 2012
In this episode Perry Mason takes on a client in a different venue than the Los Angeles County Court. The clients are Wolfe Barzell and Jeanette Nolan who are after their granddaughter whom they've never met and who is behind the Iron Curtain. She's being used by the East German government to leverage a defection east by scientist Barzell.

The People's Court in East Germany does not have the protections of one in where the Anglo-Saxon system of jurisprudence is used. And he's up against a ruthless public prosecutor in Gregory Morton. Still when Nolan of all people is accused of murdering one of those Ugarte like scoundrels played by Ronald Long, Mason if not actually in the court itself where he has a much limited role in that rigged system does prove who actually did the deed.

Perry Mason still triumphs in a rigged system. And beats the Communists at a propaganda game. Who could ask for more?
16 out of 25 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
...Achtung, mein herr!!!...
gclarkbloom16 June 2022
...though many of the season 9 episodes featured highly implausible plot lines and rather stilted dialigue .. it is the ugly reality of Erich Honecker's deeply repressive and highly controlled society that is the main character here...

.. Honecker was a vain, deeply suspicious man; and his Stassi (security service) made spies out of nearly every German...with even the children and relatives of dissidents paid off with plum apartments for ratting out their iwn family members...

...as a modern day parallel...simply Google former German Chancellor Angela Merkel, raised in Perleberg, East Germany...you can observe first hand, her innate reluctance to speak forcibly or assertively...this comes from a childhood where literally anyone she spoke to could be speaking to might report their conversation..everyone had to proceed with deliberate suspicion and circumspection...whatever you might divulge unwittingly could cost someone their "privileges", their freedom, even their very lives...

...younger viewers should try to speak to a former East German to appreciate just how much if our " freedoms" we take for granted...

...veteran English actor Ronald Long turns in a stelkar performance as the uunctious opportunist Franz Hoffer, and French character actress Lilyan Chauvin is appropriately creepy as the orohanage matron...

...kudos to Earl Stanley Garner and famed director Arthur Marks for a timely, and suspenseful episode...
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
The Case of the Ersatz Germans
zsenorsock19 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
After her mother dies, the East Germans have little Elke Ritter (Eileen Bartel) the granddaughter of brainy Prof. Ritter (Wolfe Bartel). They want Ritter in their clutches so they offer to send the little girl to the west in exchange for the Professor, who will work for them. Mason intercedes at the request of Frau Ritter (Jeanette Nolan in her 6th appearance in the series) to try and find another way. In East Germany to try and buy Elke's freedom, Frau Ritter is accused of murder. Mason has to try a case where the rules are now all against him.

Although I enjoyed the concept of pitting Mason against a society where the state has all the power and the accused has no rights, the lovely Susane Cramer is the best thing about this episode. She's beautiful, she's sexy, and she's actually German. That can't be said for much else in this episode.

Note the cold establishing shots of Berlin and the leafless trees all round. Contrast these shots with the full leafed, California trees seen in all the outdoor shots at the orphanage and at the meeting place. Those type of trees don't grow in Germany. And why are they full while all the Berlin trees are bare? The accents are also very hit and miss. The worst of all is young Eileen Baral, who is a cute kid and a decent kid actress but is definitely NOT German.

More convincing is Jeanette Nolan as Emma Ritter and Gregory Marton as Herr Stromm makes a fine heavy. But Cramer is one of those actresses that demands your attention. Sadly after only a few more appearances, she died a couple of years later of pneumonia.
9 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Not the usual timeless Mason episode, and it shows ~
cranvillesquare27 March 2018
One of the many reasons I enjoy the Perry Mason franchise is because usually, it is NOT topical. These stories could as easily be set in 2018 as in the years 1957-66...except for this one (as well as episode #171, TCOT Two-Faced Turn-a-Bout.) In both instances, the story became topical and therefore dated rather quickly...especially after the Communist governments fell like dominoes behind the Iron Curtain after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. (I will remember to my dying day, my roomie and me watching that on the TV...his parents were Lithuanian escapees to the West in the early 1950s, shortly after he was born.) Mason had the deck stacked against him, but in the face of immutable truth even Herr Stromm had to see reality and let Frau Ritter free. There are a lot of people still alive who remember what it was like, to pass from Western Europe to the East - it really WAS like entering a prison - but making a TV show about the experience dated it immediately. Once us older viewers die off, future viewers will scoff at the animosity and distrust between East and West.

This is not so far removed from reality, but it is overdone a bit. Nevertheless, when truth conquers evil, even evil has to admit to it. Gregory Morton plays his usual, delightful bad guy and Ronnie Long gets his - nice and early. A good watch, all things considered.
15 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The case of the place called East Germany
XweAponX23 October 2023
This tries to be a sequel to the very interesting "the case of a place called midnight", and it fails to be as good as that episode was.

This is your basic Cold War episode where Perry Mason has to go up against the evil "East German Kangaroo Court".

I don't believe that courts even in eastern Germany or communist Russia back then were as depicted in this episode. Because nobody really knew? In America, all we really knew about Russia was what was told us by our own government. When you think about it, there were very few sources of real information about how life actually was in Russia. All that we had access to was Pravda, which gave us the official viewpoint of what Russian life was. Not the actual truthful version. Because no information ever came out of Russia, and usually people who went in to communist countries vanished. I had met people who were prisoners in Russia during that time, but I met them after the fall of the wall. The stories that they told me were not like what we were shown on television at all. We had no diplomacy with any of those countries, so on TV, we had to invent our own illustration of how Russian or East German life would be.

AND... a big AND here... We have to remember this was during the space race and the east Germans and Russia were trying to entice scientists to "come over to their side", and this episode is just one depiction of that process, where in this case it was a form of blackmail.

In fact, we don't really know how Russia or East Germany found people to come to their countries and work on their rockets, which then exploded. Oh, you didn't know? During the moon race, Russia built a rocket equivalent to our Saturn five- which had a gigantic and miraculous explosion, which ended their attempts to go to The Moon. I had watched the footage of that explosion on some documentary, where we had been given rare footage, it might be available on YouTube at this point, but I forget which documentary that was. I think it was referenced in James Michener's "Space", which was some fiction told in documentary style. And there might also have been an actual documentary called "space".

Everybody in the United States was behind the space race, and behind the moon trip, but the moment we get there, everybody loses interest. And without the space race, there really wasn't any more use for the cold war, except for posturing.

Which means that the United States did not necessarily win that little contest, nobody won. But you have to remember the importance of the space race and during this time, we were right in the middle of it.

This was during the most critical point of the space race, and both we the United States and Russia and satellite countries, were trying to get the best scientists to work with them.

And apparently the professor in this episode, was one of those geniuses who could have done a lot of good for either side, depending on where he went.

Granted, he would not have been very happy, going into East Germany- not with the situation that was set up.

This episode is very clever in that it sets up a MacGuffin - we are to follow the subject of a little girl, the professors granddaughter, and we, as we keep our eyes on her, we are missing what happens right in front of us at the very beginning of the episode.

Because the right hand is not telling the left hand what it is doing. And so we don't see what is actually going on at all until the very last moments of the episode. Sorry, I'm not even going to give you 1 inch of a clue you are going to have to watch this.

Starring the girl with the German accent who was also in "the case of a place called midnight"- we are given some pretty good imagery of what could have been east Germany. Also, the use of stock footage gives the illusion more weight.

Although not as good as "the place called midnight", which fools us into actually believing we are in Switzerland... we can believe that we are looking into east Germany.

The east German characters are just as nasty as they would have been in any Alfred Hitchcock Russian spy film.

And a number of other commentators are claiming that this episode was not very well directed. Au Contrare, it was directed very well. And the story was very well written. Because none of us saw what was right in front of us the whole time.

And that is what made Perry Mason great television for nine years.

Just watch how this episode develops we are thinking Perry can use his own cleverness to influence an East German Court. But he can't, and so there is one person, and one person only who can affect the result that we want. But who is that? How?

And then the ending drags us along until the twist becomes crystal clear. This is the case of the twice told twist, except it's the first told twist...

This kind of television writing was not very common, but it had its first examples right here. In Perry Mason episodes, like this. So, when you watch it again, give it a chance, let the story tell itself.
3 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Perry takes on the commies- should have stayed in LA
kfo94943 January 2012
Perry takes on the commies in this dated episode as he travels to East Germany to dish out some justice- Mason Style.

Professor Hans Ritter (Wolfe Barzell) and his wife Emma Ritter (Jeanette Nolan) have been contacted by the East Berlin authorities that their grand-daughter is in a orphanage. And if Prof. Ritter agrees to return to East Germany they will release the child to Emma so that she may live in the United States.

The Ritter's contact Perry to see if he could help in the exchange of the child. Perry does not agree with the decision for Prof. Ritter to return so he goes over to East Berlin to help negotiate a a better deal and to also prove that the child in indeed their grand-daughter.

And because the Ritters did not take Perry's advise- Prof. Ritter is in the hands of East Germany and Ms Ritter is in the East Berlin Jail accused of murder. Plus the child is still in the orphanage. So it went from bad to worse.

However through some nifty work, Perry is able to make everyone in the NATO region happy and everyone in East Berlin disappointed.

I am sure that at the height of the 'cold war' that this episode played well to viewers. But for todays audiences it played as well as watching a silent movie. It was not a bad script but just so out-dated and unreal. It was so far-fetched that at times seemed almost comical. About the only thing interesting was trying to find out who in the crew was providing information about the Ritters to the East Berlin authorities. Other than that we knew at the beginning how this was going to end.

Not one of the better episodes.
18 out of 41 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Sub-par
wcgreen-6586526 March 2016
I was surprised that the other three reviewers gave this episode a good review. I am an addicted fan of Perry Mason and had high expectations of this episode but was very disappointed. Bottom line, this episode fell well short of the usual standards I have come to expect from the program.

To begin with, the script was naive and implausible. It was obviously an attempt to exploit the cold war tensions that existed between the east and west at that time. Good idea but very badly handled. There are just too many plot defects to even try to list.

All the fake accents were bad enough but what made it a complete farce was the court hearing being conducted entirely in English. Even if all those East Germans involved could speak English .... next to impossible at that time... they would speak German in a German court, and Perry would have had to utilize an interpreter.

Had the plot been even remotely believable, I could have overlooked that glaring defect, but it wasn't. There was little regard for what we Americans take for granted as justice in East Germany. There was essentially no concept of the right to a fair trial. Being accused of a crime was usually sufficient cause for being imprisoned or facing a firing squad. Thus the lame attempt to depict an American style trial in a communist bloc country was bad enough. But to do so in English.... laughable.
11 out of 25 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Another World
Hitchcoc2 March 2022
I won't say much more than considering the realities of East Germany at this time, it would never have happened. Perry seemed to have free rein of the closely watched place, making demands which would have been ignored. Maybe the worst episode I've seen.
4 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Perry Mason, Superman!
mehfre17 August 2022
This was a really stupid episode. The series jumped the shark on this one. The clients go to Mason because he's better than US State Department despite his being nothing more than a criminal attorney. Please. Just a dumb, implausible premise.
3 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Bad direction
forryjesse21 August 2019
Another very bad episode due to the director - 99% and writers 1%. Every episode that Marks directed was badly done. The actors were not believable from start to finish.
4 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Laugh-filled and utterly ridiculous.
pmike-1131219 May 2022
Perry goes to communist East Berlin to conduct an investigation and practice law.... OF COURSE HE DOES! Never mind that he never would've been allowed in the country (East Germany) for the stated purpose in the first place! Head-shakingly funny and preposterous. Situation normal in the world of Perry Mason.
1 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed