"Alfred Hitchcock Presents" Vicious Circle (TV Episode 1957) Poster

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7/10
"You deserve everything you get!"
classicsoncall23 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The title of the story is sort of a give away to the ending which isn't much of a twist. I've mentioned in some other review how much Dick York resembles actor Jim Carrey, or the other way around since York came first. The question mark in this story is why girlfriend Betty (Kathleen Maguire) stuck around for as long as she did, never figuring that she might have been a marked woman in the eyes of gangster Williams (George Macready). It would have been interesting to see whether Manny Coe (York) could have actually killed Betty, but the script went in another direction. I get what other reviewers mention regarding the subliminal subtext of this episode, but I didn't pick up on it myself. I was just waiting for Manny to get what he had coming.
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7/10
This is a remarkable episode for a couple of reasons.
r_d_finch2 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
One is the clearly homoerotic subtext of the plot. Several plot details point in this direction: the languid, chain-smoking, flower-tending portrayal by George Macready of the crime boss; his succession of boyish favorites, each eventually replaced by a younger version; his demand that Dick York kill his own girlfriend; and especially the choice of a black leather jacket as the present to be given to the new "favorite boy" after completing his first hit job, which is always to assassinate the previous "favorite."

Another noteworthy thing about "Vicious Circle" is that it is one of only two TV episodes credited to the noted (and frequent Academy Award nominee and one-time winner for "Laura") cinematographer Joseph LaShelle, who gives the episode a high-contrast film noir look very different from the typical episode of this series. The other TV episode he shot is the first "Twilight Zone" ever broadcast, called "Where Is Everybody?"
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6/10
He doesn't like the way you slipped up on the jewelry job!
sol-kay10 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** Clean cut boyish and leather clad hit-man Manny Coe, Dick York, is really making a name for himself in the business of organized crime in the city. Working for his effeminate and sissy-like crime boss Mr.Vincent Williams, George Macready, Manny always gets the job of knocking off those that Williams orders him to done without as much as blinking an eye.

It's when Williams gives him a contract on his girlfriend Betty, Kathleen McGuire,that Manny backs off a bit. Betty has been going around town shooting her mouth off about Williams being a blight and disgrace to the neighborhood. All this talk on Betty's part is starting to get the attention of the local police department as well as D.A's office. Seeing that Manny has trouble and second doubts carrying out his orders to knock off Betty Williams concocts this cock & bull story in that Betty is about to rat Manny out to the police. That's in Manny's recent hit of gangster Gallegher, Paul Lambert, who screwed up on a job,a jewel robbery, Mr. Williams had assigned him to.

Of course this is all BS, Betty ratting Manny out, on Williams' part but orders are orders and Manny has no choice but to follow them. Lest he ends up like the late Galleger did: Dead and buried! As luck would have it Betty instead of being rubbed out by her boyfriend Manny ends up getting killed in a car accident! That's after she ran for her life when Manny was about to pull the trigger on her!

***SPOILERS*** Now back in the good graces of his boss Mr. Williams Manny is really living it up. Living it up so well that another of Mr. Williams young clean cut and Fonzie like leather boys Georgie, George Brenlin, wants to replace him as Williams #1 hit-man or better yet hit-boy. It's now obvious that the smart and not so easily fooled Mr. Williams has his doubts about Manny's ability to follow orders as well as him spending all his free time with gorgeous blond bombshell Ann Nash, Kathleen Houghes,instead of with him. And like changing his socks Mr. Williams changes hit-men with Manny ending up on the short end of the stick or gun barrel.
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6/10
Murder For Hire
telegonus13 July 2017
I found Vicious Circle to be just a so-so entry in the Hitchcock series. Overall, it's below par in my book because while the story its adapted from, written by Evan Hunter, may be first rate the script for the television adaptation is simply below par, unusual for a Hitch half-hour.

The episode is also vague as to the precise nature of its villain's apparently small and tidy empire of crime. Is it a hit man for hire service,--that's all? It appears that way. Yet honcho George Macready seems an incongruously patrician and Ivy League type to be running such an enterprise.

That Macready's character comes off as unambiguously gay makes the episode unique but doesn't raise it in quality. His hit men,--nearer to hit boys, it appears, as they're all quite young--are, it's inferred in the script but not stated outright, his boy toys as well. He appears jealous of his new kid on the block Dick York's girlfriend, who's also threatening to start a one woman campaign against him and his criminal operation, and he orders York to kill her!

This is where the episode falls apart in feeling unreal and contrived. It shies away from the provocativeness inherent in its setup in favor of extreme and difficult to swallow melodrama. That the story is melodrama to begin with makes this "doubling up" of improbabilities too much for it to bear. The ending feels both telegraphed and hurried.

Still, flawed as it is, there are good things in this one, among them the performances of Dick York, an unlikely seeming criminal at first, especially if one is familiar with his later work in comedy, he handles his part well; and George Macready, with his sunglasses,--nicely suggestive of his lifestyle of concealment and secrecy--and his need for eye drops, symbolic of moral blindness and possibly sexual difficulties most of us would rather not dwell upon.
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A Risky Departure
dougdoepke6 July 2009
Reviewer rd finch puts the subtext quite nicely, and that subtext remains about the only reason to catch up with this otherwise flaccid episode. The storyline has potential, but except for the riveting opening scene, the remainder flattens out before reaching an all-too predictable climax. Even Dick York's showdown with his girl is awkwardly staged. Light comedy was York's specialty, so fans of Bewitched (1964-69) may enjoy watching the zany comic as an almost cold-blooded killer, which he manages to bring off in suitably boyish fashion.

Younger viewers may not be aware of how forbidden the whole topic of homosexuality was in both movies and TV of the 1950's. In short, the topic was treated as though it simply didn't exist. A more obvious censorship example is the A-budget Cat on a Hoot Tin Roof (1958) in which the theme from the Tennessee Williams play is airbrushed from the screenplay, rendering the movie itself darn near incomprehensible. Now, I'm sure I saw this Hitchcock entry the first time around, but it was only on recent viewing that the subtext jumped out at me. Then too, I don't see how the innuendo could have been unintentional on the part of writer and producer, which makes me wonder why such a risk with time and money was taken. I expect there is an inside story here. But what would it be, except as another instance of this cutting-edge series pushing the envelope.
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6/10
"Vicious Circle" falls a bit flat
chuck-reilly21 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The 1957 Hitchcock entry "Vicious Circle" features, yet again, Dick York. This time he's playing a hired killer named Manny Coe---and that's a bit of a stretch for him. The obvious miscasting deflates this episode even though Dick certainly looks menacing in the opening scene. The plot revolves around Manny killing one of his bosses' associates for botching a jewelry job. The boss, a slightly sissified fellow named Mr. Williams (George Macready) calls the shots for Manny and when our hero's girlfriend (Kathleen McGuire) threatens to go to the police, he nonchalantly tells Manny to kill her too. Luckily for the utterly perplexed Manny, he doesn't have to pull the trigger on her. She accidentally gets run over by a car instead. Eventually, Manny screws up a job himself, and he's knocked off by another up-and-coming hoodlum. Apparently Mr. Williams has a never-ending store full of these guys. You might call it a "vicious circle." Despite some good acting and polished directing from Paul Henried, this episode never really gets moving after a promising start. Macready, playing a businessman/mob boss with effeminate qualities, isn't all that convincing and the indoor sunglasses don't help either. Look for Russell Johnson (the professor in "Gilligan's Island) in a brief role as a washed-up hood. The only surprise is that Mr. Williams didn't have him knocked off.
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6/10
He Could Have Got a Job Playing Darren!
Hitchcoc16 June 2013
This is pretty lightweight. Dick York plays the new favorite hit man for a sociopathic boss. He does well on a couple jobs and replaces his predecessor who carries a grudge. His girlfriend knows what he does for a living and does all she can to talk him into a new job. Of course, the big boss knows she has been blabbing and wants her gone. Guess who gets the job. Fate steps in and business is taken care of but it seems to put an end to the effectiveness of the young murderer. He becomes less than desirable to the boss. What strength this episode has is in some halfway decent acting and a fairly clever, though predictable, plot development. Dick York looks pretty buff as the murderer. The non- comedic role suited him pretty well. Otherwise, it's pretty forgettable.
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7/10
Darrin Stephens, Hit Man!
CammieinOz9 June 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This is indeed a very bizarre episode. Manny Cole played by the wonderful Dick York is a hit man who works for Mr. Williams. His boss demands death on command and Manny carries it out, including the murder of Manny's beloved girlfriend, when Mr Williams becomes aware that she's been bad-mouthing him all over town.

It's obvious that Manny is greatly affected by his job as a hired killer but he continues to work for the notorious Mr Williams, an evil man, who for whatever reason, is always washing his eyes out with alcohol.

An intriguing ALP episode but not one of the season's best. The story has some merit but it lacks any real depth. The ending was predictable hence the episode title.

I would've rated this episode a 5/10 but have given it a 7 as I'm a big fan of Dick York and think he gave a great performance.
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10/10
Excellent episode dealing with important themes
PWNYCNY22 November 2018
Excellent episode featuring Dick York in a non-comedic role. George Macready also stars in this chilling story about a weak man who cannot say no to his boss, in this case, a criminal. In a way, it is study of the mentality of those who will commit murder on command. Now, Dick York's character has misgivings and even warns his next victim, in this case his own fiancé, but that does not stop him from obeying orders. The story has larger political implications. History is replete with those who will do the most awful things, commit the most heinous crimes, if ordered to do so. They will act without hesitation or regrets, based on the belief that they do not bear final responsibility. Well, that just does not wash. What goes around comes around, as the saying goes. Today the executioner, tomorrow the executed, while those in charge keep control. As this episode so explicitly dramatizes, the hitman is merely the agent and is not indispensable. Just the opposite is the case. The episode leaves us asking this question: why do such awful work?
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5/10
Could have been a lot more vicious
TheLittleSongbird13 July 2022
Actor/director Paul Henreid, first introduced to me through one of my all time favourite films 'Casablanca', directed 28 episodes of 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents'. Of which "Vicious Circle" is the first. Like all the regular directors for the series (none of the prolific directors had all their episodes being consistently good and more, including Hitchcock himself), Henreid's 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' outings were up and down with none of them being as good as the best of Hitchcock and Robert Stevens for instance.

"Vicious Circle" is a less than promising start for Henreid's 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' and is a disappointing episode on the whole. Especially after being so blown away by the previous episode "One More Mile to Go", which was one of the best of the series whereas this was an undistinguished middling effort. It starts off great, but unfortunately goes downhill quite quickly and the rest of "Vicious Circle" doesn't live up to the opening's quality (the ending for example being the complete opposite).

The best thing about "Vicious Circle" is the opening, which is extremely effectively gritty and atmospheric. Not far behind is the suitably moody photography, with some nice stylish shots that show a higher budget than most episodes. The audio haunts and the theme music is some of the best use of pre existing music in television.

Furthermore, the supporting cast do well. The best performance coming from George Macready, effectively sinister. The bookending is suitably ironic.

Dick York for me however came over as out of his depth, the role required a grittier and more intense presence than what he gives. Here he came over as anaemic and one dimensional. His character is not as interesting as the synopsis indicated, very little complex or rootable here and too much of one shade. The script lacks tautness and can ramble, also leaving character motivations (especially the big one that is heavily centered around) too vague.

Moreover, the story doesn't contain that many surprises and is lacking in tension and suspense, atmosphere wise excepting the opening it's bland, too safe and needed a tighter pace. The showdown is agreed awkwardly staged and nothing really stands out about Henreid's direction. Worst of all is the ending, which is a damp squib anti-climax introduced too late and is incredibly predictable.

Watchable for completest sake but pretty forgettable. 5/10.
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9/10
The Boss With The Shades
ellenirishellen-6296212 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Thought this was pretty good,did seem like an awful lot of "stable-boys" for Mr Williams,a Wayfarered Macready who takes ?Boric Acid treatments for what appears to be an eye infection.Thought Macready his usual menacing type.York very good in his role,Russell Johnson in a bit part as a former Williams "boy".Paul Henreid directed,maybe why Macready is the crime boss,as he & Henreid seemed to work well together.Saw on AntennaTV this morning,this is third time watching,and definitely pick out more each time.May or may not be seen as gay subtext,don't find "the boss" anything more than demanding cooperation from his underlings,and his dressing of his "boys" as an image thing,not slave/master,as in GILDA with Macready's Ballin to Ford's Johnny.Except for death of his beloved,this was a good episode.
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5/10
Where's the twist???
planktonrules24 February 2021
"Vicious Circle" is an episode of "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" that is missing something...an interesting twist at the end. Instead, its sole aim seems to be to tell us that crime is bad!

The show stars one of the more improbable actors for this role, Dick York. Manny (York) is a young punk who wants to move up in organized crime so he does everything his boss (George Macready) tells him...and that sometimes involves killing people. But Manny's girlfriend is a liability...and Mr. Williams, the boss, wants her dead.

No twist at all in this one....just Dick York being vicious and ultimately getting his just reward at the end. So disappointing.
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10/10
LET ME KNOW WHEN YOU'RE DEAD!
tcchelsey30 November 2022
Alfred Hitchcock hired Dick York to do some fine roles on his show because he had "the look"... He'd either play the biggest fall guy in the world or the guy who'd put a knife in your back with a smile! Clever casting, long before his kooky "mortal" role in BEWITCHED.

York, not a particularly good guy here, is employed by none other than dapper villain George Macready. Macready was made for this role (who incidentally was best friends with Vincent Price), portraying the "man" who heads a league of assassins. York is one of the crew, albeit the star quarterback, who may be resting on his laurels. To get him off and running again, Maccready makes an offer he can't refuse --kill your fiancee, because she is cramping his style.

This is potent stuff, written by Bernard Schoenfeld, who wrote the classic women's prison film CAGED in 1950. He also wrote a slick film noir, starring Lucille Ball, called THE DARK CORNER (1946). Watch this film for Lucy in a non-comedic role.

I agree with another reviewer, there's a faint gay theme here, strictly tabu in the 50s. Macready's character, as much as he is domineering and arrogant, may also have been snubbed by York's character and the fact that he has a female companion?

Applause for the acting, especially George Macready, and directed by actor Paul Henreid (CASABLANCA) who gets the most out of his two leads.

SEASON 2 remastered Universal dvd box set. 2006.
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10/10
Ten out of ten.
tsn-4873016 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This one gets a ten from me for a few different reasons. First of all, as I'm not the first to notice, are the subtle homoerotic undertones of the script and the acting. There had always been a gay presence in film and TV, but it wasn't always apparent on the surface. Many of the writers wrote the characters as such quietly and many members of the audience (both gay and straight) recognized what was being said, without perhaps the majority of the viewers even picking up on it. Hitchcock had already addressed this in what was (IMHO) one of his best films of all in "Rope" in which the two main characters were obviously a gay male couple (Leopold and Loeb) living together, though it was never explicitly said so. This episode would have also made an exceptional 120 minute feature.

Second of course is that it's an early Dick York vehicle and he's one of Hollywood's most tragic figures who deserves more credit as an actor than he received (Inherit the Wind comes to mind) and, when he was disabled and penniless, certainly deserved to not have all of his old Hollywood fair weather "friends" turn their collective backs on him so he ended up dying in near poverty because of their heartlessness.
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