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Sleuth
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Sleuth is Simon's Tracker Ball. It used to be a bald old tennis ball until Simon picked it up and incubated it, which apparently makes Simon dangerous because Aunt Zelda says: "If he's incubated a Tracker Ball, than who knows what else he's capable of?" A Tracker Ball is a Darke object. At one point, Simon told it to put a Tag on Jenna (that is, follow her around) until Simon reformed and Removed Sleuth's Darkenesse. Sleuth can melt down and become a pile of melted rubber but to do this it must heat up first, therefore enabling it to burn somebody or something. When it does this, it glows green. Based on a play of the same name and also written by the playwright as well, this story features Oliver as andrew Wyke whose wife has an affair with Milo Tindle. {Caine}. Wyke proposes to Tindle that they stage a fake Jewelry robbery so that Wyke can get the insurance money and Tindle can use the jewels to afford to keep Wyke wife in money. However it appears that Wyke shoots and kills Tindle. In a series of plot twists it is revealed that Wyke shot Tindle with a blank bullet. Tindle gets his revenge first by disgusing himself as a plodding Police Inspector and subjecting Wyke into thinking that he has really killed Tindle; then he reveales himself and further humiliates Wyke into thinking that Tindle has left clues that inplicated Wyke in the killing of a woman he has been having an afa A 1970 play by Anthony Shaffer, which became a 1972 film, also written by Anthony Shaffer, and a 2007 film adapted by Harold Pinter. Andrew Wyke, a mystery writer, realizes his wife is having an affair with hair salon owner Milo Tindle. He finds in Milo the opportunity to divorce his wife, but he needs to avoid having to pay alimony. So, he challenges the younger man to rob his house; Milo can get rich off his loot, while the insurance company will handsomely reimburse Andrew. Milo complies; but just as he pulls it off, things get really complicated.
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Based on a play of the same name and also written by the playwright as well, this story features Oliver as andrew Wyke whose wife has an affair with Milo Tindle. {Caine}. Wyke proposes to Tindle that they stage a fake Jewelry robbery so that Wyke can get the insurance money and Tindle can use the jewels to afford to keep Wyke wife in money. However it appears that Wyke shoots and kills Tindle. In a series of plot twists it is revealed that Wyke shot Tindle with a blank bullet. Tindle gets his revenge first by disgusing himself as a plodding Police Inspector and subjecting Wyke into thinking that he has really killed Tindle; then he reveales himself and further humiliates Wyke into thinking that Tindle has left clues that inplicated Wyke in the killing of a woman he has been having an afair with just before the police are to arrive. Tindle reveales the truth that he has actaully killed no one and that he has revealed the fake jewelry plot to the Police. He then does the one thing Wyke cannot ever forgive-he sneers at Wyke greatest fictional creation Sir John Lord St Meridew. As Tindle is about to leave with Mrs. Wyke fur coat, Wyke shoots him for real this timeā€”just as the Police come to the front door. As Tindle is dying, he tells Wyke to rember to tell the police it was all just a game..and presses a control box which sets all of Wyke inventions to laugh at him...just as the Curtain comes down in a cliffhanger ending...while Wyke will be arrested..it is unknown if he is going to be acquitted or not. A 1970 play by Anthony Shaffer, which became a 1972 film, also written by Anthony Shaffer, and a 2007 film adapted by Harold Pinter. Andrew Wyke, a mystery writer, realizes his wife is having an affair with hair salon owner Milo Tindle. He finds in Milo the opportunity to divorce his wife, but he needs to avoid having to pay alimony. So, he challenges the younger man to rob his house; Milo can get rich off his loot, while the insurance company will handsomely reimburse Andrew. Milo complies; but just as he pulls it off, things get really complicated. Sleuth is Simon's Tracker Ball. It used to be a bald old tennis ball until Simon picked it up and incubated it, which apparently makes Simon dangerous because Aunt Zelda says: "If he's incubated a Tracker Ball, than who knows what else he's capable of?" A Tracker Ball is a Darke object. At one point, Simon told it to put a Tag on Jenna (that is, follow her around) until Simon reformed and Removed Sleuth's Darkenesse. Sleuth can melt down and become a pile of melted rubber but to do this it must heat up first, therefore enabling it to burn somebody or something. When it does this, it glows green.