Philip Marlowe 50 06 28 Ep090 The Pelicans Roost
# The Pelican's Roost
When the rain hammers against the neon-soaked streets of Los Angeles, Philip Marlowe knows trouble always finds its way to his office door—and on this sweltering June evening in 1950, it arrives with blood on its hands. A mysterious woman in a green dress, a waterfront dive called The Pelican's Roost, and a corpse that refuses to stay buried draw our hard-boiled detective into a labyrinth of double-crosses and desperate secrets. Van Heflin's weary, world-weary narration guides you through dingy hotel corridors and shadowy back alleys where every cigarette glows like a dying star, and every handshake might be the last thing you feel. The script crackles with the authentic vernacular of Raymond Chandler's noir underworld—sharp, cynical, and utterly unforgiving.
*The Adventures of Philip Marlowe* stands as one of radio's finest detective programs, a faithful adaptation of Chandler's iconic private investigator that captured the literary sophistication of its source material while embracing the intimate immediacy that only radio could deliver. During its prime run on CBS, the show earned critical acclaim for its unflinching moral ambiguity and atmospheric sound design, transforming the listener's living room into the dark heart of Los Angeles. This particular episode exemplifies the program's mastery: a tightly plotted mystery wrapped in existential dread, where the solution matters less than the moral compromises Marlowe must make to reach it.
If you're craving an evening steeped in classic American noir—where the dialogue cuts like broken glass and the mysteries cut deeper—*The Pelican's Roost* demands your attention. Pour yourself a drink, dim the lights, and let Van Heflin's voice pull you into the shadows. Philip Marlowe is waiting, and trouble never sounds so good.