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Each week it featured a short murder-mystery drama enacted in front of a panel of four celebrity guests who then had to establish who the murderer was. One week there was a smuggling mystery and no murder. The panel members could interview the remaining characters, with the proviso that only the guilty party or parties could lie.
Who Killed Who? is a 1943 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film noir [1] animated short directed by Tex Avery. [2] The cartoon is a parody of whodunit stories and employs many clichés of the genre for humor; for example, the score is performed not by the MGM orchestra but by a solo organ, imitating the style of many radio dramas of the era.
A whodunit follows the paradigm of the traditional detective story in the sense that it presents crime as a puzzle to be solved through a chain of questions that the detective poses. [2] In a whodunit, however, the audience is given the opportunity to engage in the same process of deduction as the protagonist throughout the investigation of a ...
A collection of characters apparently drawn directly from old English detective fiction arrive for a party in an old country house. Among them there is an old Navy man, a ditzy woman, and a flamboyantly eccentric butler who keeps trying to serve up his own cocktail creation, the "Zombie Whammy".
The mole comes across a bird, a horse, a hare, a goat, a cow and a pig and they all poop to show what theirs looks like, and finally the mole receives some assistance from some flies who help him identify the pooper: Hans-Heinerich in the German original (who is named Basil in The Story of the Little Mole Who Knew It Was None of His Business ...
Cave and Shadows is a 1983 [1] whodunit [2] and Martial Law era “metaphysical” thriller [3] [4] novel written by Philippine National Artist Nick Joaquin.The setting of the novel is during Ferdinand Marcos’s martial law in the Philippines, [5] [6] including the time in Manila when activism was alive and demonstrations were frequent before August 1972 (described as Joaquin’s ...
The rest of the story deals with Frank and Joe traveling to New York City to unravel the mystery of the blond man. In New York they are pick pocketed and have to spend a night sleeping in a park, while listening to the clock strike midnight. While hitchhiking back from New York, the boys meet two Department of Justice men who are investigating ...
Who Dunnit is a Midway pinball machine with a 1940s style and a murder mystery theme. The playfield features up to five different murder mysteries in which the player must find clues and evidence by making indicated shots. The machine accepts up to four players, and features four-ball play. [1]