"Mannix" Death Has No Face (TV Episode 1974) Poster

(TV Series)

(1974)

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6/10
Stop me if you heard this one, Joe Mannix goes to a small town and...
Guad4227 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The cliché of a bad small town has been used on Mannix before as well as every other show, or so it seems. It is the pilot episode for Cannon and showed up on Rockford Files, Simon and Simon, Gunsmoke, Bonanza, Kung Fu, the Wild, Wild West and probably several others.

Joe receives death threats and then has a near miss with a bomb and a sniper. He goes to a small town to see a recent parolee, Ira Beecher, who had once threatened Joe. Joe is set up and ends up shooting the parolee when the guy shoots at him with blanks. Joe barely escapes the sheriff and his deputy. While on the run, Joe has conversations with the son of a rancher killed in stampede and Ira's girlfriend. Joe learns the rancher may have been shot and a reporter investigating the event was shot. Ira agreed to take a manslaughter rap for killing the reporter for money but now he was blackmailing the actual killer so he had to go. Joe get taken prisoner and gets away with the standard car chase. How and why the state patrol would have a road block set up is a question. I think Peggy did call Lt Malcolm but he and the state people worked mighty fast. Why would they set up a road block rather than come into town?

Since people in the town took care of the father and then a reporter, why did they need Joe at all? Another episode where bad guys have an elaborate scheme to get someone when the simple, direct approach would have worked.

There are always a few questions about logic and timelines in most Mannix episodes so no point in dwelling on it.

The conversation between mother and son is a bit stilted but overall, the cast is fine but no big names as is usual with this show. Maybe cutting back on the budget in the last year. Speaking of money, Joe doesn't get any again. A routine episode with the bad town getting their comeuppance in the end. It is a decent way to pass an hour.
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8/10
Some explanations (like California English)
belanger758 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
One poster complained that the episode has California residents wrongly sound like southerners. But California in fact has several accents and places out there like Kern county do have accents that sound like ones from anywhere from Texas to Kentucky.

Now to other points. Mannix has a great prominent friend in Lt. Art Malcolm and in a moment we did not see (after Peggy called Art) he convinced the State Police and Sheriff's office that Mannix was framed into looking guilty of brutal cold-blooded murder. The woman who played the young man's mom in this episode BTW is sexy lady and talented and wonderful. This episode has many high points.
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4/10
It's like two entirely different episodes spliced together...
planktonrules16 April 2017
When the show begins, some psychotic sort of guy phones Mannix and begins ranting about how he hates the detective and is out to torment him...before ultimately killing him. While this sounds like some sort of crank, this guy definitely means it and also seems to REALLY enjoy this...as he laughs and laughs in a menacing manner throughout the call. He insists that Mannix must 'pay him back'for what he's done to him...but for what?! Who is this man and what slight does he feel was done to him?! All we do know initially is that he loves what he's doing AND he knows how to build bombs, as one nearly takes Mannix's head off as he heads up the stairs!!

Following a VERY tenuous lead, Mannix travels out into the country to look for a guy named Ira Beecher who just got out of prison. Here's where the episode seems NOTHING like the first portion. There are no more scary phone calls or threats...just Mannix somehow thinking Ira might be responsible for the phone calls (this is very tenuous). What actually occurs is that Mannix was lured her to KILL Ira...to get this guy out of the way.

So is it any good? Not really. The two portions of the show are two disparate but worse yet is the ending....where Mannix STILL hasn't proved he didn't kill Ira...but somehow the police arrest all the baddies and everything magically worked out...with no explanations about HOW. Badly written and confusing...which stinks as it started off so well.
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10/10
THERE MUST BE A FULL MOON?
tcchelsey22 November 2022
I'll never forget Joe's office getting blown up, even after all these years, and who would ever do a thing like that. Someone creepy is after Mannix -- even going as far as to mess with his new Camaro. As offbeat as a story could be, and exactly WHO is the notorious mastermind?

The chase takes him to "another" remote town with trigger happy cops and suspicious folks around every bend. Keep your eye on co-star Lynn Carlin, whose career was short, but memorable, earning an Academy Award nod for her very first film, FACES (1968). She later played Eve Plumb's mom in DAWN, PORTRAIT OF A RUNAWAY.

Peggy takes this one to heart, especially the office being in shambles. Watching Peggy through the years, you often got the feeling she was family, and just as vulnerable as Joe. This is camp stuff, the perfect example of excellent direction, thanks to Don McDougall, who headed many tv adventures, even DUKES OF HAZZARD. Shimon Wincelberg wrote the story, also five other episodes, also doing scripts for POLICE WOMAN. Perfect combination.

If some of the old town sets look familiar, they were used on MISSION IMPOSSIBLE from time to time. Veteran actress Ann Doran plays the hotel manager, cast in many cop shows in the 1970s, also a comedian who acted with the THREE STOOGES.

Guessing the bad guy will take awhile, which is fun. On location shots were done in Ventura County, probably near Ojai, replete with some beautiful scenery and lots of back roads.

True, the weird phone calls are tried and true after all these years, but still fun. Listen carefully to the voice and try to guess who.

SEASON 8 EPISODE 6 remastered color CBS/Paramount dvd box set. 6 dvds. Released December 2012. Classic front cover portrait of Mannix, very similar to CANNON Season 5 box set. Excellent artwork.
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2/10
All the usual cliches
nbrice1813 June 2018
As always when one of these California based episodes features a small town all the usual clichés are employed: corrupt sheriff, secrets, faux southern accents in California (WTH?), nasty people. Yep, this episode had them all. All the characters were so loathsome that I honesty didn't even care who did what.
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1/10
Another dud
zombiemockingbird9 July 2023
Every sheriff in every small town is corrupt. All the people in every small town are either crazy, killers or just stupid. This whole episode made no sense whatsoever.

The beginning, some crazy sounding person is phoning Mannix and threatening to kill him. Mannix thinks it might be this one guy, so he heads off to yet another small town to find him (even though he was obviously in LA, because he planted bombs in Mannix's apt and a picture in his car). When he gets there, everyone is weird, and the story dives into the non-sensical. I won't bother explaining the plot because it's incredibly stupid, and at the end suddenly they're arresting the bad guys, with no explanation, after spending the whole show believing Mannix was the murderer. Huh? Did I miss something?

Along with this absurd story, we have some really bad acting. Tom Stern was awful. So were Lynn Carlin and Diane Shalet. Warren Vanders was passable, and Ron Thompson was actually pretty good. Overall, a skippable episode.
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