Perry Mason: The Case of the Glass Coffin (TV Movie 1991) Poster

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8/10
Case of Glass Coffin Is Not Fatal ***
edwagreen25 September 2008
Perry is literally up to his old tricks defending a magician accused of murdering one of his workers. What a motive he had. The woman told him that she was pregnant with his child.

Naturally, there are others in the cast that can prove to be good suspects as well.

Bill Moses, besides being a private investigator as well as an attorney, shows that he can get physical here. The guy is always making it with the chicks. However, he actually talks in an intelligent fashion.

I was able to figure out who the real killers were right away. The killer and his cohort looked more like father and daughter rather than husband and wife. You just had to put the pieces together.

The adoption scene was lovely at the end but was it really necessary to put in? Love should keep this couple together period.
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7/10
Perry Mason Makes One Killer Vanish And Another Appear
boblipton1 February 2019
Nancy Lee Grahn tells magician Peter Scolari that unless he gives her the featured turn in his act, she'll tell his wife she's pregnant with his child. It's an elaborate trick, with her inside a glass coffin. When the coffin rises into the air and the lidis opened, she tumbles to her death; Scolari's "lucky wand" has jammed the escape mechanism and Scolari is on trial for First Degree Murder.

Fortunately, Scolari has his own escape mechanism in place with his friend Perry Mason (aka Raymond Burr) as his attorney. Perry and his associates, Barbara Hale and William Moses, make other suspects appear and, we are confident, the least likely one will confess on the stand.

It's always good to see Mr. Burr in his signature role, and there's a nicely tangled mystery to be unraveled. Unlike others in this series of TV movies, there aren't many well-known actors outside the trio: Mr. Scolari, Bob Gunton as the doomed Assistant District Attorney, Julie Sommars and Kate Vernon; although doubtless there are fans of many of the performers involved.
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7/10
We have no rebuttal! The prosecution has just established premeditation!
sol12185 January 2011
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** The made for TV movie "The Case of the Glass Coffin" seems to be the first case that defense attorney Perry Mason, Raymond Burr, handled that he not only won which is like almost 100% of the cases he takes on but was actually an eye witness to!

It's when world famous magician David Katz, Peter Scolari, did his flying coffin act at Denver's famous Paramount Theater that when the latch opened to show that no one was in it the coffin girl Kate Ford, Nancy Lee Grahn, suddenly popped out and fell some 30 feet to her death by breaking her neck! As things soon came out it was Kate who blackmailed David in getting her to be the coffin girl which may well have been the reason for him to do her in!

Threatening to go public in David having an affair with her on a cold night back in Portland, after having one too many shots of Yukon Jack, Kate has the evidence in her being impregnated by him! Now with both his marriage to his faithful wife Judy, Kim Barden, as well as career in jeopardy David may well have been driven to murder Kate in order to keep her from talking! What ended up in saving David from taking a trip to the Colorado State death house was Terry Weidner, Kate Vernon, who secretly videotaped the entire glass coffin event that in the end proved that David was in fact innocent! ***SPOILERS**** Innocent in him not knowing that he was set up to take the rap by something who was part of the glass coffin act! Someone who had it in for Kate and waited eight years to get the chance to kill her for something she did back in her home town of Hasting when she was then known as Greta Eisner!

It's both Perry's legman and human punching bag Ken Malansky, William R.Moses, as well as Terry who tracked down Kate's previous existence as Greta Eiseman and what it had to do with her being murdered as Kate Ford eight years later. Malansky for his part really gets worked over by some local homeboys for his snooping around in Hastings into business that Kate's pop Mr.Henry Eisner, Richard Jury, wants him to keep his nose out of! In the end the truth comes out in what exactly Kate or Greta did back there that had someone go so far as to get a job with David's magic show so that he or she can get their hands on her and put Kate in the local hospital morgue! Something that was covered up back in Hasting and kept from seeing the light of day until Malansky and Terry finally unearthed it!
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How could other comment skip Julie Sommars ??
rew321128 February 2003
This babe has got to be the most appealing woman I have seen anywhere in a long time. I think she is just absolutely wonderful on the Matlock series. Thank goodness they are still running Matlock.. So wholesome, so exciting, such interesting stories.
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7/10
Perry Mason pulls a rabbit out of his courtroom hat once more
coltras3514 May 2023
David Katz is a world famous magician and he comes to Denver with his group to perform for a charity gala for disabled children. Also there is Perry and Della as all three are supporters of the charity. Kate Ford, an assistant with an arrogant attitude, tells David that she is, from now on, going to do an illusion in which an assistant is raised in a glass coffin only to disappear when the coffin is opened up in the air (while the assistant climbs out before the coffin is raised.) After a one night stand with David, Kate is pregnant and she blackmails David with this. David and his wife Judy can't have children so that comes as a double blow to them. However Kate, with her attitude, creates much hatred at her from the rest of the group. At the gala, the glass coffin is raised but when it opens Kate's dead body falls to the ground - strangled. While Perry and Della set out to try to find the killer, Ken and PI Terry Weidner set out to find out more about Kate but they discover that nobody in Kate's home town wants to talk about her for some reason...

Another top notch mystery that has Perry Mason defend an illusionist who is accused of murdering a rather horrid woman he impregnated- but there's plenty of people who had motive to do her in such as the magician's wife who overhears her with her husband, another assistant whose trick she takes, the prop guy she annoyed and a stage hand she nastily turned down when he asked her out, and another magician which accuses David of stealing his tricks.

It's an enjoyable mystery with a gripping courtroom scene with Perry Mason doing what he does best.
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9/10
In case...
tommysandman13 January 2009
they decide to post a list of "special extras" - I just wanted to inform IMDb that I was the usher at the beginning of the movie. Pretty silly to mention, but hey - that's just 10 seconds of my 15 minutes of fame, and I'm not letting it go unmentioned. I was in Denver when they shot the earlier parts of the episode at the Paramount Theater in Denver, Colorado. Peter Scalari worked very hard on the magic sequences and it was quite entertaining for all who were lucky to be invited to "work" as the audience. Although I never got to see Raymond Burr in action that day (they shot his parts a few days later), he returned to shoot another of his movies I signed up to work on but it never came to see the light of television. I know this makes for quite the biased commentary on my view of the film, but I enjoyed watching every minute. (even all the other ones that I wasn't in.) Cheers! Tommy Sandman
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2/10
Not a Bad Episode but the Acting...
kaydee191912 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This episode is mildly entertaining but the supporting acting, particularly Nancy Lee Grahn was a tough watch. Of course, Raymond Burr, Barbara Hale & the regular crew were great & it wasn't a complete waste of 2 hours. Peter Scolari was certainly entertaining. However, it was tough to watch Nancy bumble her way through one of the very few decent prime time roles that she ever had. It is no wonder she has been relegated to soap operas/daytime TV for 25 plus years. Nancy seems to play the same type of character which is not a real stretch from her real personality. Glad it was a short appearance & that no one casts her in anything other than ABC soap operas.
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As standard as all the Mason films, but quite enjoyable – `wasn't it? WASN'T IT?'
bob the moo31 August 2002
David Katz is a famous stage magician who is putting on a charity show to benefit a children's charity supported by Perry Mason. On the day of the show one of his assistants, Kate Ford, tells him she is pregnant due to an affair they had, and tries to blackmail him. Later that night a trick appears to go wrong and Ford is killed and Katz arrested. Mason takes the case and tries to find out who else had a motive for murder. Meanwhile Ken Malansky travels out to Ford's hometown to get background information, only to find that some people want to cover something up.

If you've seen one of these things then you've seen them all. The legal realism of these shows are always very doubtful but the drama is still enjoyable. Here for example the whole court is moved to the scene of the crime for some reason or other! Mason does his usual ripping into the witness stuff which is good but can get a bit tiresome because you know that they're all red herrings and the real person is only really examined at the end. Ken's investigation is better than usual here and it does have a genuine feel of PI work as facts are uncovered which expose the truth. It's nothing special but enjoyable.

Burr, Hale and Moses are all very comfortable and don't try too hard. Moses loves his role as he gets to be an action hero and jump around despite his daft hair. The support cast all skulk around looking a little guilty in attempts to try and throw us all off the scent – they do alright. The usual `surprise face' in the Mason TVM's this time is Bob Gunton who does a good job as the Asst DA, but I always felt David Stiers was a better foil for Mason

Overall this is nothing special and is pretty basic when compared to much more sensational courtroom dramas.
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4/10
Learning The Magician's Secret
bkoganbing13 April 2008
Perry Mason: The Case of the Glass Coffin finds Raymond Burr defending David Copperfield/Rick Blaine like magician Peter Scolari from a murder charge involving one of his assistants. A trick involving a suspended glass coffin in midair goes awry and the body of Nancy Grahn comes a tumbling out.

Nancy was one of six female assistants who work with the act and we learn two things about her. First in a moment of drunken weakness, Scolari got seduced by her and she claims she was impregnated. Secondly she is living under an assumed name and had a secret from her past.

Billy Moses who probably never thought he'd be doing such rough stuff back in law school gets to tangle with a couple of good old boys when goes seeking the truth in Grahn's home town. A little more action than usual for Ken Malansky, he almost gets himself killed.

One big flaw in this mystery is simple forensics. The medical examiner's report should have provided concrete evidence that the victim was killed in such a way that Scolari could not possibly have done the deed. The police should have been looking in a different direction for the killer.

When you see who the killer is you won't blame the individual, but you'll also see how the investigating officer James McEachin got it wrong from the start. It kind of spoils this particular Mason film.
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Standard, strictly to formula Mason TVM, but enjoyable nonetheless.
jamesraeburn20032 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
A world famous illusionist called David Katz (Peter Scolari) is arrested for the murder of his assistant Kate Ford after a magic trick involving a floating glass coffin goes horribly wrong. Katz is a married man but had a one night stand with the murdered woman who attempted to blackmail him when she became pregnant with his child. Witnesses overheard an argument between them in which Katz threatened her, and as always, the prosecution believes it is an open and shut case. Yet, with ace defence attorney Perry Mason (Raymond Burr) on the case, there is most certainly going to be several other people with motives for wanting the selfish, mean and vindictive Ford dead coming out into the open. They include Katz's wardrobe assistant Betty Farmer (Julie Sommars) whose sister was fired from the show at Ford's hand. Then there is Max LeMar (Dennis Lipscomb), a rival magician and former Katz mentor, who believed that Katz was plagurising his work and wanted revenge. And Katz's wife, Judy (Kim Braden), was enraged that Kate Ford was pregnant with her husband's child...

A standard, strictly to formula but still very enjoyable Perry Mason revival TVM. If you can get around the predictable plot development it is quite satisfying with a very good denouement with Burr still a commanding presence as the world's best defence attorney. As ever the client is an old friend of Perry's - 'How many old friends could he possibly have?', you will doubtlessly ask . Nevertheless, there is a more emotional centre to it this time since as well as trying to clear Katz for murder, Perry is also helping him to save his marriage to Judy which had been on the rocks for quite some time.

William R Moses' Ken Malansky's action man part is more enjoyable here than usual. This time he is hounded by a young, attractive, rookie private eye called Terry Weidner (played by Kate Vernon who turns in a likeable performance) who thinks she can give her career a boost by helping Perry Mason crack his case. Of course, Ken is not too keen and doesn't like people getting in the way and stealing his thunder. Yet, the budding private eye is always one step ahead of him and stumbles upon important leads before he does and even saves his life. The pair journey to a rural Colorado town called Hastings where the murdered woman grew up to gain evidence for the defence. The result is some amusing knockabout as they have to do battle with the close knit community who don't like outsiders poking their noses in and turn some heavies on them to drive them out of town. Kate Ford's father owns a salt mill, which provides the town with its prosperity, and many years before, a crime connected to the murdered woman was covered up due to her father's position. Could it be connected to the murder? The feel for the close knit town and its hostility to outsiders is nicely conveyed in Brian Clemens' (The Avengers) script, and combined with some nice location work, is very effective under Christian I Nyby 11's direction.

The acting, writing and all other technical aspects are up to par here and Clemens' script plays fair with the audience with all the clues running neatly into a logical whole so that the impact of the solution is not diluted by plot holes and absurdities.
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5/10
Average Perry Mason mystery, padded out a bit too much
Leofwine_draca6 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
THE CASE OF THE GLASS COFFIN is one of the late-stage Perry Mason movies put out by NBC. This one's about a magician's act which goes horrifically wrong with tragic consequences, a story which has been done to death over the years in the mystery and detective genre, although there's enough involvement in the storyline (and enough red herrings and suspects in the cast) to keep it watchable, albeit not the best of its type.

The main problem this story suffers from is the writing, which is needlessly convoluted in places. As usual, the character William R. Moses plays seems completely extraneous to the main thrust of the story and the action clichés he gets involved in (fist fights, car chases, and the like), although amusing, seem like padding. The main story is better although the final explanation is a bit lacklustre, throwing in a ton of material that threatens to overwhelm the viewer. I also found the decision to hold the court proceedings in the magician's theatre a bit ridiculous. Burr and Hale bolster the story as always and the familiar Bob Gunton is good value as the prosecutor.
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