"The Wild Wild West" The Night of the Ready-Made Corpse (TV Episode 1966) Poster

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8/10
Archie Bunker Ditches The Dingbat Before She Sings
DKosty12311 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
In a bit of a ghoulish plot, Caroll O'Connor prior to being Archie is a mortician named Latimer who is in the business of taking crooks and operating on them to create new identities. He also does some gruesome murders when people get in his way.

Artie tries to fool him in disguise but winds up on his table & nearly snuffed out before Jim rescues him late in the episode. A solid performance by O'Connor is not wasted here as he seems to be just the right type for the role he assumes in this show. You can almost smell the formaldehyde in the main room prior to his first operation.

The new ID for a gun man is the main thing that makes Jim & Artie look into this as the guy they are chasing appears to disappear once he reaches Lattimer's Funeral parlor.
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9/10
Before Archie Bunker ...
tforbes-219 November 2016
"The Night of the Ready-Made Corpse" remains an episode that Robert Conrad isn't fond.

And for what may be good reason. Happily, though, it's for the benefit of the viewers.

Carroll O'Connor was one busy actor before his signature role as Archie Bunker. He plays a cultured mortician who apparently has extracurricular activities that attract the attention of James West and Artemus Gordon.

This role shows how far removed Carroll O'Connor was from Archie Bunker, and how skilled an actor he was, right down to his mannerisms. I can see why Robert Conrad was concerned about being upstaged. The episode has other cast members who do a great job, and I can say that I have met one of them (Paul Comi) in person.

Overall, an excellent entry in the series.
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Good story, poor execution
aramis-112-80488022 February 2023
I like this story but . . .

G. K. Chesterton wrote a story about a doctor who could make one look fully twenty years . . . Older. This was to help criminals escape justice. This story is similar: when a criminal wants to escape an obliging undertaker gives them a nineteenth century version of plastic surgery, kills someone of like build, and buries them.

But there's a catch.

The guest star is Carroll O'Connor, an actor I've never respected. Watch him traveling through time in "The Time Tunnel." He looks ridiculous. And what was he doing in "Cleopatra"? He looked awful in a toga. The only performance of his I come close to liking is in "Kelly's Heroes" and that's an overacted extension of his performance in "What Did You Do in the War, Daddy?" But "Kelly's Heroes " with its WW2 hippies firing paint from tanks and the rest, was larger than life except Eastwood's uber-cool performance.

I'd rather see almost any actor (male or female) in the undrtaker's role. Especially since O'Connor uses a weird voice. He stinks.

Also, the girl with the Irish accent doesn't seem to be mourning much for her father. I don't buy her. The story is good but the actors muck it up.
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