In
“No Face,” Walt and his monster friends are shocked when Chief Running Nose
(Sid Haig) uses an old clause in a long-standing contract to buy the city for a
mere twenty-four dollars.
Although
the Mayor (Edward Fleming) complains, No Face cannot be swayed. “The city is my reservation now,” Running
Nose informs his new employee. His first order of business: disarming the
police.
When
Walt and the Monsters investigate further, they learn that Chief Running Nose
has actually been replaced by the diabolical criminal master-mind known as No
Face, a genius with make-up whose next task is to imitate the Mayor, and make
all crime in the city legal…
Although
all the persistent pidgeon English “Chief Running Nose” shtick is highly
questionable, if not downright offensive to some, today, “No Face” is nonetheless
a slightly better-than-average episode of Monster Squad (1976).
This
so largely because of Sid Haig, one of my favorite actors, and a man who can
make the most ridiculous dialogue sound plausible, or -- as he does here -- even
menacing. In short, there are some
moments in the episode with Sid Haig as No Face in which he seems legitimately
fearsome. Most villains on the series
are not drawn in so effective fashion.
The
episode also provides some nice history about Walt’s group. When the Mayor (really No-Face) tells the
Monster Squad he doesn’t need its help, Frankenstein notes that “We’ve saved this city once a week for at least
five years.”
It’s
nice too that Edward Fleming is back as the Mayor, after originating the role
in “Mr. Mephisto.”
If
we look to the familiar formula that Monster Squad has established, one
can see how “No Face” conforms. The Squad learns about the villain of the week on
TV (as in ‘Music Man”), and heads off to defeat him. The cliffhanger threat at the villains’
headquarters (A movie studio) is a giant candle. Specifically, the Wolf Man is
put inside the giant wax tube, and it is actually lit! Finally, the villain is hoisted by his own
petard, by bottles of his hair spray “Forever Hold” and make-up putty.
Finally,
another crib from Batman (1966 – 1969): “No Face,” a make-up master with the ability
to change his appearance, seems like a reflection of Malachi Throne’s villain
on the Dozier series, False Face.
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