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The Philo Vance novels are more than a bit dated these days, but at least the earlier ones are still considered important "Golden Age" mysteries. They were adapted into a long-running film series, four of which starred Creator/WilliamPowell. Perhaps most notably, they were an early inspiration for authors Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee, better known under the shared pen-name of "Creator/ElleryQueen".

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The Philo Vance novels are more than a bit dated these days, but at least the earlier ones are still considered important "Golden Age" mysteries. They were adapted into a long-running film series, four of which starred Creator/WilliamPowell. Creator/WilliamPowell.

The film series had three different distributors over the years - Creator/{{Paramount}}, Creator/WarnerBros, and Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer. The entries distributed by the former studio were among the pre-1950 sound features from Paramount sold to MCA in 1958 to end up with Creator/{{Universal}} in 1962. The WB entries were sold to Associated Artists Productions with most other pre-1950 WB releases in 1956, ending up with Creator/UnitedArtists two years later. UA and MGM merged in 1981, and five years later much of the combined company's library, including the WB and MGM Vance movies, was acquired by [[UsefulNotes/TedTurner Turner Entertainment]]. Turner Broadcasting System merged with Time Warner (now Creator/WarnerBrosDiscovery) in 1996, putting the Turner library under WB.

Perhaps most notably, they were an early inspiration for authors Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee, better known under the shared pen-name of "Creator/ElleryQueen".
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replaced image and added ellery queen mention


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[[quoteright:316:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/philo_vance.jpg]]
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The Philo Vance novels are more than a bit dated these days, but at least the earlier ones are still considered important "Golden Age" mysteries. They were adapted into a long-running film series, four of which starred Creator/WilliamPowell.

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The Philo Vance novels are more than a bit dated these days, but at least the earlier ones are still considered important "Golden Age" mysteries. They were adapted into a long-running film series, four of which starred Creator/WilliamPowell.
Creator/WilliamPowell. Perhaps most notably, they were an early inspiration for authors Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee, better known under the shared pen-name of "Creator/ElleryQueen".
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* InNameOnly: The 1948 radio show starring Jackson Beck, which, aside from keeping Markham and Heath, adapts none of the stories and changes the character from a faux-British Sherlock type into a very American P.I. with a personal secretary. Ironically, it has been received by many radio mystery fans as a case of AdaptationDistillation; as the series found its footing, Philo began to rely more heavily on deduction and evidence as well as psych profiling, and [[AdaptationalNiceGuy embodied the "gentleman" part of "gentleman detective"]] moreso than Van Dine's chummy but arrogant and condescending Vance, having genuine, warm friendships with Markham and his secretary Ellen Deering.
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* TaintedTobacco: In ''The Gracie Allen Murder Case'', criminal Benny the Buzzard is murdered by a poisoned cigarette.

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[[quoteright:316:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/philo_vance.jpg]]



* MagicalNativeAmerican: In The Dragon Murder Case, someone has been killed at a party and one of the suspects is a man who is half Native American, another suspect - a woman - accuses him of killing the victim using "His mystic Indian skills that allow him to become practically invisible." [[spoiler:He is not the murderer, and is not magic.]]

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* MagicalNativeAmerican: In The ''The Dragon Murder Case, Case'', someone has been killed at a party and one of the suspects is a man who is half Native American, another suspect - a woman - accuses him of killing the victim using "His mystic Indian skills that allow him to become practically invisible." [[spoiler:He is not the murderer, and is not magic.]]
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* MagicalNativeAmerican: In The Dragon Murder Case, someone has been killed at a party and one of the suspects is a man who is half Native American, another suspect - a woman - accuses him of killing the victim using "His mystic Indian skills that allow him to become practically invisible." [[spoiler:He is not the murderer, and is not magic.]]
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* AsianSpeekeeEngrish[=/=]ElectiveBrokenEnglish: Liang, the Coe family cook in ''The Kennel Murder Case'', has apparently been pulling this one on the Coes all along. Vance immediately calls him out on it, and Liang goes back to speaking standard English -- it was ObfuscatingStupidity, Liang went to Oxford.

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* AsianSpeekeeEngrish[=/=]ElectiveBrokenEnglish: AsianSpeekeeEngrish[=/=]ElectiveBrokenLanguage: Liang, the Coe family cook in ''The Kennel Murder Case'', has apparently been pulling this one on the Coes all along. Vance immediately calls him out on it, and Liang goes back to speaking standard English -- it was ObfuscatingStupidity, Liang went to Oxford.
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* AsianSpeekeeEngrish: Liang, the Coe family cook in ''The Kennel Murder Case'', has apparently been pulling this one on the Coes all along. Vance immediately calls him out on it, and Liang goes back to speaking standard English -- it was ObfuscatingStupidity, Liang went to Oxford.

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* AsianSpeekeeEngrish: AsianSpeekeeEngrish[=/=]ElectiveBrokenEnglish: Liang, the Coe family cook in ''The Kennel Murder Case'', has apparently been pulling this one on the Coes all along. Vance immediately calls him out on it, and Liang goes back to speaking standard English -- it was ObfuscatingStupidity, Liang went to Oxford.
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* CasinoEpisode: ''The Casino Murder Case'' isn't exclusively set at Kinkaid's Casino, but several major scenes take place there. Vance goes there in the second chapter because he got an anonymous letter warning him of danger to another patron.
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Philo Vance was the primary character of a series of twelve mystery novels written between 1926 and 1939. The novels were written by Willard Huntington Wright under the pen name "S.S. Van Dine".

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Philo Vance was '''Philo Vance''' is the primary character of a series of twelve mystery novels written between 1926 and 1939. The novels were written by Willard Huntington Wright under the pen name "S.S. Van Dine".
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The Philo Vance novels are more than a bit dated these days, but at least the earlier ones are still considered important "Golden Age" mysteries.

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The Philo Vance novels are more than a bit dated these days, but at least the earlier ones are still considered important "Golden Age" mysteries.
mysteries. They were adapted into a long-running film series, four of which starred Creator/WilliamPowell.
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* TheDogBitesBack: Literally in ''The Kennel Murder Case''. [[spoiler:The murderer had previously abused a dog, then given it away. At the end of the novel, Vance, the dog's new owner, and the murderer meet up in a park. The dog pulls its leash free and kills the murderer.]]
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moving one entry to Trivia


* ScienceMarchesOn: Vance's primary approach is to work out the psychological makeup of the suspects, and compare it to the psychological makeup that would be needed to commit the murder in question. Fine and dandy, but some of his psychological analysis consists of looking at physical traits and generalizing; "a man with those ears would be willing to shoot someone".
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* BitterAlmonds: The improvised chemistry lab in ''The Bishop Murder Case'' smells of this. And yes, this is where the CyanidePill mentioned below came from.


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* DoomedAppointment: Tony Skeel misses his appointment in ''The "Canary" Murder Case'', and Vance immediately (and correctly) assumes he's dead.


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* FingertipDrugAnalysis: Vance does this in ''The Scarab Murder Case'' to find the opium in [[SlippingAMickey Dr. Bliss' coffee]]. The coffee cup is promptly packed up for a ''real'' analysis, which confirms the opium.
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* TheMagicPokerEquation: During the poker game in ''The Canary Murder Case'', one round ends with Vance holding four kings and losing to Cleaver with a jack-high straight flush. Another round ends with Vance (four aces on the initial deal) being "bluffed" into folding. Justified in that Vance snuck a card sharp into the game, and paid him to deal those specific hands.

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Upper Class Wit was merged into Gentleman Snarker. Bad examples and ZCE are being removed.


* UpperClassWit




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* TheCasino: One of the main locations for ''The Casino Murder Case'' (though the actual murder didn't take place there).
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* PoliceBrutality: Sergeant Heath often suggests beating a confession out of the current suspect (legal at that time period). It doesn't ''happen'', but it's suggested.
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* LastNameBasis: Standard for the time period, thus standard in these novels.
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* CyanidePill: At the end of ''The Bishop Murder Case'', the murderer takes homebrewed cyanide.
** Crossed with SerialKillerKiller -- he ''intended'' the cyanide for his final victim, but Vance switched the glasses.

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* BadassBookworm: Vance was an art scholar, translated Greek plays, and bred championship Scotties. He was also skilled at ju-jitsu, and won the ''Croix de Guerre'' during WorldWarI.

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* BadassBookworm: Vance was an art scholar, translated Greek plays, and bred championship Scotties. He was also skilled at ju-jitsu, and won the ''Croix de Guerre'' during WorldWarI.UsefulNotes/WorldWarI.



* ScienceMarchesOn: Vance's primary approach is to work out the psychological makeup of the suspects, and compare it to the psychological makeup that would be needed to commit the murder in question. Fine and dandy, but some of his psychological analysis consists of looking at physical traits and generalizing; "a man with those ears would be willing to shoot someone".



* ViewersAreGeniuses: Neither Vance nor Van Dyne translate any of Vance's foreign quotes.

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* ViewersAreGeniuses: Neither Vance nor Van Dyne Dine translate any of Vance's foreign quotes.
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minor edit - typo


Philo Vance was the primary character of a series of twelve mystery novels written between 1926 and 1939. The novels were written by Willard Huntington Wright under the pen name "S.S. Van Dyne".

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Philo Vance was the primary character of a series of twelve mystery novels written between 1926 and 1939. The novels were written by Willard Huntington Wright under the pen name "S.S. Van Dyne".
Dine".
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* AsianSpeekeeEngrish: Liang, the Coe family cook in ''The Kennel Murder Case'', has apparently been pulling this one on the Coes all along. Vance immediately calls him out on it, and Liang goes back to speaking standard English -- it was ObfuscatingStupidity, Liang went to Oxford.


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* UpperClassWit
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The Philo Vance novels are more than a bit dated these days, but at least the earlier ones are still considered important "Golden Age" mysteries.



* AlwaysMurder: At least one corpse per novel, and sometimes more.



* EverybodySmokes: If Vance isn't lighting up one of his imported ''Regie'' cigarettes, Markham is handing out cigars to anyone who ran an errand for him.

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* EverybodySmokes: If Vance isn't lighting up one of his imported ''Regie'' cigarettes, Markham is handing out cigars to anyone who ran an errand for him.him.
* FairPlayWhodunnit
* FriendOnTheForce: John Markham, District Attorney and friend of Vance, fills a similar role. Most of the novels start with Markham bringing Vance in on a case.
** By a few novels in, Sergeant Heath has warmed up to Vance and provides a closer match.
* GenteelInterbellumSetting
* GentlemanDetective
* {{Jerkass}}: Vance starts out this way. He doesn't bother to mention the one observation that completely demolishes the police assumptions about Alvin Benson's murder because he's amused by watching them flail about trying to solve the case. (He gets better.)
* ViewersAreGeniuses: Neither Vance nor Van Dyne translate any of Vance's foreign quotes.
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Philo Vance was the primary character of a series of twelve mystery novels written between 1926 and 1939. The novels were written by Willard Huntington Wright under the pen name "S.S. Van Dyne".

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'''These novels contain examples of:'''

* BadassBookworm: Vance was an art scholar, translated Greek plays, and bred championship Scotties. He was also skilled at ju-jitsu, and won the ''Croix de Guerre'' during WorldWarI.
* CelibateHero: Vance.
** In his essay "Twenty Rules for Writing Detective Stories", Wright argued that this should be a requirement for all detective fiction.
* DirectLineToTheAuthor: Wright used his pen name as the name of the books' narrator.
* EverybodySmokes: If Vance isn't lighting up one of his imported ''Regie'' cigarettes, Markham is handing out cigars to anyone who ran an errand for him.

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