The New Adventures Of Sherlock Holmes The Case Of The Out Of Date Murder
# The Case of the Out of Date Murder
Picture yourself huddled near the radio dial on a crisp evening in the 1940s, the crackle of static giving way to the unmistakable violin strains and the crisp, authoritative voice of Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes. "The Case of the Out of Date Murder" draws you into a masterfully twisted puzzle where a crime committed years ago suddenly demands solving in the present day. As Holmes and his faithful Watson navigate the fog-shrouded streets of London, every clue seems to contradict the last—a victim nobody remembered, a killer nobody suspected. The tension builds through careful dialogue and atmospheric sound design: the scrape of a chair, footsteps on wet pavement, the distant wail of a street vendor. What makes this particular case so compelling is its central mystery: why would someone murder a man who was already thought dead? Holmes must peel back layers of deception and misdirection, separating fact from assumption in a case where time itself becomes the criminal's greatest accomplice.
This episode exemplifies why The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes became a phenomenon during its NBC and CBS broadcast years, drawing millions of listeners who craved intelligent entertainment. Rathbone's portrayal of Holmes became definitive for generations, his razor-sharp delivery perfectly suited to radio's intimate medium. The writers crafted stories that honored Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's legacy while creating entirely new cases that showcased the detective's unparalleled deductive powers—stories that proved radio drama could be just as gripping as any visual medium.
Don't miss this gem from radio's golden age. Tune in to experience the thrill of mystery solved through pure intellect and keen observation, where the greatest detective who ever lived confronts his most perplexing case.