"Perry Mason" The Case of the Nebulous Nephew (TV Episode 1963) Poster

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10/10
One of the better episodes in the entire series. Highly interesting.
kfo949410 October 2012
This is one of the most interesting episodes in the entire series. An excellent start to season seven.

Ernest Stone and John Brooks have a scheme that will bring them loads of money. What had happened many years ago was the a rich man's son, Caleb Stone III, had a baby which was named Caleb Stone IV. Right after the conception of the baby Caleb the 3rd dies in an airplane accident. The family of the rich man goes all out to prove that the baby was out of wedlock so that the mother and the baby will inherit nothing. And when the mother of the child dies, the baby is placed in a Catholic home for orphans.

Now Ernest Stone bring John Brooks in to say he was a friend of Caleb Stone IV and that Caleb died. Two older ladies Sophia and Nineveh really believe that John Brooks is actually Caleb. So the two older women want to change their wills so that John Brooks, who they think is Caleb Stone IV, will inherit all their fortune.

Since the women are so nice, John Brooks wants out of the scheme. When he talks with Ernest they get into scuffle. Ernest is hit with a butt of a shotgun but seems fine. Later Ernest is found dead and John Brooks is charged with murder and Perry will defend him in court.

This is a very good show. The murder was not the highlight of the show but trying to find the true Caleb became the lead. And it will be a surprise when the viewer learns the whereabouts of Caleb Stone IV. With some great acting by the entire cast this episode is worth the watch. A highly interesting story.
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8/10
Goofs
oldiesdude195621 June 2014
At the end of the this great episode on the DVD the ending credits are from 1965. This episode was made for television in 1963. I looked to see if a character in this episode was the late Ivan Dixon from the television show Hogans Heroes which started in 1965, and it obviously was. But surprisingly the credits at end of the show are not from this 1963 episode. Recently I have noticed a lot of these "wrong" credits on a lot of television DVDs from other shows. They probably lost them and replaced them with other credits thinking the public would not notice them. I particularly like this episode because it uses race when it was a taboo subject at the time of its release. I also like the judge in this episode because he always played a crook in earlier movies especially with the "Three Stooges" and other earlier films of the 1940's and 1950's.
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9/10
Not a REAL Imitation, but an Imitation Imitation ~
fjalexiii7 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I loved this episode, after seeing it a few times on reruns and then on DVD. Let's just say that "Arsenic and Old Lace" meets Perry Mason. A young man who pays a visit to two older, delightfully dotty spinsters seems to be pretending to be a family member...put up to it by a scheming relative (Hugh Marlowe) who gets his just desserts in due time. The rest of the show is devoted to family, the law and Perry Mason all trying to figure out just what really happened - and who this young man actually is. Turns out, the dotty old sisters' feminine intuition is right on the money, as Mason eventually divines and proves in court. In the end, he turns out only to be an imitation imitation.

Not sure if my oblique clues are too much of a giveaway, so I am declaring the presence of spoilers for those faint of heart. If, as my kids constantly tell me, my explanations are more confusing than clarifying...then I've done my job. :)
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My Favorite Mason episode
fbm727517 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I won't go into a synopsis of it as the 3 previous reviews do so and nicely. Rather I'll reflect on it from a personal viewpoint. This one does not have the usual storyline of PM episodes as it is a combo of both humor & drama. This was one of a number of 1963 to 1966 episodes that were withheld from syndication for a number of years until 1987 when WTBS started showing them, albeit heavily edited. After watching it a second time, I can tell that Brooks is a bit emotional when he sees the photo of little Caleb and his mother. Later when he points out other things that Ernest Stone didn't previously tell him, that said more than meets the eye (if one has a photographic memory, it is not uncommon to remember things at age 5) The scene at the Catholic school really brought it home to me as at the time I was in one and we dressed the same as the kids in the scene(uniform pants & white shirt/blouse) Sister Theresa (Irene Tedrow) was a dead ringer for one of the nuns there at the time. Highly unusual for 1963 is the revealing of a long standing, rock solid friendship between a white and a black man. This was the height of the civil rights era. As usual, Mason's battering cross examination revealed the real culprit. At the end, both Caleb & the two elderly ladies summed it up correctly, the former mentioning love and the latter having faith. Virtually forgotten today is Kate Manx (who plays Mrs. Ernest Stone) She only had a few film & TV credits and died about a year later at age 34. Very little is written about her.
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10/10
How subtly subversive this show got in its latter years...
AlsExGal14 October 2023
... and I'll get back to that later.

John Brooks is being coached by Ernest Stone in all of the things that long lost and ousted heir of the family, Caleb Stone, would have known if he was still alive - facts about the family and childhood memories. Brooks then appears at the Stone mansion and presents himself to Sophia and Ninevah Stone as a friend of their deceased nephew, Caleb, who knew him in the orphanage and into adulthood.

What actually happened is that Caleb was the Stone sisters' nephew, but his father died before he was born and his mother could provide no proof that she and the father were ever married, so at a young age he and his mother were cast out from the family home by the Stone sisters' father and disinherited. When his mother died he was placed in an orphanage, and that is where Brooks says he knew him. I know this all sounds so very weird 60 years later, but you have to remember that at this time no well-dressed person left the house without a hat either, and out of wedlock children were considered shameful.

So Brooks is always adamant he is NOT Caleb, but he knows so many details that Caleb knew that the Stone sisters become convinced that he IS Caleb and go to Perry Mason to change their will to make Brooks their heir. Perry knows he's most likely dealing with an imposter, but the problem is that the imposter is making no claims. It truly is a cunning plan.

But Brooks does have a conscience, and the Stone sisters are being so warm and kind to him that he has second thoughts that his partner in crime Ernest does not want him to have. The two fight and Brooks hits Ernest in the head. Ernest is OK when Brooks leaves the room, even talking to him, but less than five minutes later one of the elderly Stone sisters says that Ernest is dead, and Brooks is charged with the murder. So now the scalawag is Perry Mason's client.

When I say that Mason could be subversive, the final twist is very clever and uses a plot device the implications of which probably made the entire state of Mississippi faint dead away at the time. What do I mean by that? Watch and find out. This is truly one of the best of the series.
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10/10
Among the best episodes
kenstallings-6534613 February 2022
Truly among the best episodes of the series, and for Perry Mason, that says quite a lot. It is unusual in that about 75% of the episode does not feature a murder, and when one finally happens it remains very much a side story.

The focus is instead on the endurance of family, and the way in which the pieces are woven makes the episode so very special and outstanding.

Ivan Dixon of Hogan's Heroes makes a late, but crucial appearance, that helps wrap up the story in its brilliant and inspirational conclusion.
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9/10
Good Beginning
Hitchcoc5 February 2022
The beauty of this episode is that a man recovers his humanity. The two elderly women, incredibly rich, are the targets here, but their unflappable resolve is endearing. They aren't made to be ridiculous as is often the case. There is also a wonderful conclusion to the trial, rather daring for 1963.
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9/10
Arsenic and Old Inheritances
zsenorsock8 May 2008
Warning: Spoilers
A terrific script opens season seven. It's full of twists and surprises, even though Perry never actually even makes it into court.

The story is all about a couple of older women who are thrilled at the idea of their late brother's son Caleb Stone returning to them. Young Caleb had been dropped into a orphanage by his mother after his father died in World War Two and the family accused the woman (a maid at the family house) into faking the birth certificate and the child's patrimony. The interesting thing is the man who shows up at their house one night insists he is NOT Caleb Stone, but a friend. The ladies insist he IS Caleb Stone. Is he or isn't he? Who is playing whom? The show is well acted and well directed, with an intriguing story a bit different than your typical "Perry Mason" fare.
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7/10
A pair con games going
bkoganbing28 January 2013
Young Ron Starr is Perry Mason's client in this episode, he's been contacted by Hugh Marlowe to help with a con game involving Starr pretending to be the long lost heir of a patent medicine fortune. He gets two maiden sisters, Meg Wyllie and Beulah Bondi to believe him to be their long lost nephew and the idea is for them to change their respective wills.

But Starr backs out and when Marlowe is found clubbed to death with a favorite shotgun of his, it's Starr who's looking real good for the homicide. Raymond Burr who's been brought in by the aunts in the first place, takes Starr's defense at their behest. In fact they're willing to say they killed Marlowe who was not a favorite relative of their's.

The back story here is quite interesting with the young Starr being put in an orphanage in South Carolina where his mother was from and making friend's with a kid who grows up to be Ivan Dixon. When Dixon is called on the stand, he has quite a tale to tell himself. Seems that Starr and he had their own con game going.

This was one of the better Mason episodes of this particular season.
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END CREDITS
guildwayne6 June 2021
Another reviewer on this forum has correctly stated that the end credits(actors real names) do not match those appearing in this episode . In effect to add to that reviewers contribution, the end credits of the NEBULOUS NEPHEW are in reality the end credits to the episode known as THE CASE OF THE SAD SICILIAN. Both episodes are fine as is the acting in each. The SAD segment of the NEBULOUS NEPHEW relates to Irene Stone-a character played by Kate Manx. This attractive middle thirties woman-fragile in real life-committed SUICDE several years later by taking a sleeping pill overdose. What a waste.
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