What did Dashiell Hammett have to do with flying
saucers? Nothing, but the characters he created are a different story. One of them is remarkably similar to the legend of the alien bodies record at Roswell, New Mexico.
Dashiell Hammett is best known for his 1930
detective novel, The Maltese Falcon, which was later made into the
classic 1941 film starring Humphrey Bogart as Sam Spade. A few years later, The
Adventures of Sam Spade radio program that ran from 1946 - 1951. The
sponsor was Wildroot Cream-Oil, who also used Hammett’s character in a series
of single-page advertisements in newspapers and magazines disguised as comic strips.
Although he had nothing to do with the ads, the comics were called, “Dashiell Hammett’s Adventures of Sam Spade,” and the March
19, 1950 episode was titled, “The Case of the Flying Saucer.”
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Later the same year, another of Hammett’s
characters was drawn into an even bigger story, one about a captured flying
saucer and alien bodies - both dead and alive. But first, let’s skip ahead for a
moment to 1958.
The Thin Man
Hammett’s 1934 novel The Thin Man had
several movies based on the characters, Nick and Nora Charles, and was later
the basis for a television series on NBC from 1957–59, starring Peter Lawford
and Phyllis Kirk.
Opening credits to The Thin Man
Like with Hammett’s other characters, the series was
mostly detective stories, but once again, flying saucers entered the picture.
Episode 32 of season one was titled, “The Saucer People.” From a newspaper listing
from Aug. 29, 1958:
The Thin Man, starring Peter Lawford. Nick and
Nora Charles investigate“The Saucer People.” A scientist claims he has been
riding in a flying saucer – thereby hoping to devise a scheme for fleecing thousands
from their life savings.
Unfortunately, we were not able to locate a copy of the episode itself.
Secret Agent X-9 and the Captured Saucer of 1950
Along with artist Alex Raymond (the creator of Flash Gordon), Dashiell Hammett created the Secret Agent X-9 newspaper comic strip in 1934.
Hammett left the series after the first year, but it continued a successful run in the hands of other writers and artists until 1996. From 1945 to 1960, the series was written and drawn by Mel Graff, who finally gave X-9 a name, Phil Corrigan. In May to July 1950, Graff featured a story where X-9 was drawn into a sensational case involving a captured flying saucer and the aliens found inside.
STTF reader ISleepNow posted a video on YouTube titled, Secret Agent X-9 "The Day After Aztec," saying, “These panels of the Secret Agent X-9 comic strip… were originally published in May through June of 1950 making them the earliest significant flying saucer story as far as newspaper comic strips were concerned. But of greater concern was the possible truth lying behind them.”
4-minute video of X-9 on the captured saucer case.
The final strips were not included, but we've located some key selections to finish X-9's saucer adventure.
In the final episode, X-9 is briefed on the astonishing truth about flying saucers, but we readers lacked the security clearance to be included.
Mel Graff's story about little alien men was very much influenced by Frank Scully's 1950 book, Behind the Flying Saucers, and the hoax on which it was based. The book was also the basis for the legends of Hangar 18 and aliens found in crash near Roswell,
X-9 was back to dealing with more traditional spy business, but later there were at least two other UFO episodes. In Sept. 1966 by Robert Lubbers (aka Bob Lewis), the strip below shows X-9 with "Tracking Control" monitoring a UFO’s entry into the earth’s atmosphere.
X-9 was back to dealing with more traditional spy business, but later there were at least two other UFO episodes. In Sept. 1966 by Robert Lubbers (aka Bob Lewis), the strip below shows X-9 with "Tracking Control" monitoring a UFO’s entry into the earth’s atmosphere.
In the hands of writer Archie Goodwin and artist Al Williamson, in 1978, the series featured another UFO storyline, with Corrigan investigating the abduction of the USA's top scientists.
The Stuff that Dreams are Made of
No, Dashiell Hammett didn’t write about saucers,
but his novel The Maltese Falcon was about a struggle over a
priceless relic that turned out to be a counterfeit. That’s something very
similar to the situation ufologists often find themselves in, and a bit like the ending of the Humphrey Bogart movie version of Hammett's s novel.