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Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio)

 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio)
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Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio)
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Dickie Dick Dickens is a series of audio dramas and books by the German married couple Rolf and Alexandra Becker. The series, a spoof on American quasi-documentary crime series like Dragnet, tells the story of Richard "Dickie Dick" Dickens, a gentleman gangster in Chicago in The Roaring '20s as he goes from humble pickpocket to feared and revered gangster boss with the title "the most dangerous man in America," simply by being just a little smarter than both the police and his rival gangsters. He leads a small, but effective gang consisting of himself, his beautiful fiancée Effie Marconi, his elderly but enthisiastic friend Oliver "Opa" Crackle, and his small, superstitious henchman Bonco.According to the two Lemony Narrators who work in tandem to tell the story, the dramas are all based on Dickens' immensely successful memoirs, which he wrote in prison 20 years later, and which the narrators frequently quote.Five series and in all 51 episodes were produced between the years 1957 and 1976. The fifth series was more like a sequel series, taking place many years later where a now elderly Dickie discovers that he has an adult son, named Donald D. Doberman.Both books and audio dramas were translated to several languages, and were hugely popular in both Norway and Sweden. The Norwegian version was even so beloved that Norwegian radio listeners voted it "the best radio crime series ever," and (with the blessings of Rolf and Alexandra Becker) Paul Skoe, who had been the producer of the Norwegian adaptations, wrote two more sequel series (which seem to take place betweeen the fourth and fifth series) where Dickie and his gang visit Norway.
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Cool Old Guy
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Cool Old Guy: Opa Crackle. ("Opa" means "Grandpa" in German). His age doesn't hinder him from being the most enthusiastic and gung-ho member of Dickie's gang.
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Lovable Coward
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Lovable Coward: Bonco is a wimp and a coward, but loyal and genial.
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Green-Eyed Monster
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Green-Eyed Monster: Surprisingly, almost completely averted in Dickie's and Effie's relationship; jealousy doesn't seem to be a thing for them, even on occasions when they would have had good reason so be jealous. It's even subverted on a few occasions. In the first series, Dickie discovers that Effie has been "seeing Jim Cooper socially" and is quite angry... but he's not actually that bothered about the prospect of her seeing other men; he's angry because she chose Jim Cooper, who's his arch rival. And his anger fades almost immediately, when he realizes that if she keeps seeing Jim Cooper she can spy for him and report back about any plans Cooper may have. In the fifth series, Effie's shocked to discover that Dickie has a son with another woman... but she's not angry that he cheated on her, just mildly annoyed that nobody had told her or Dickie that he'd become a father.
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Heterosexual Life-Partners
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Heterosexual Life-Partners: Donald D. Doberman and Leonardo da Cinzano in the fifth series. They're practically inseparable, except when one of them has been kidnapped and needs to be rescued.
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Gentleman Thief
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In the final series, Dickie's son Donald D. Doberman is an even clearer example of the trope, being a refined and classy globetrotter and Gentleman Thief with an uncanny ability to be long gone whenever people start wondering where he's at. In his introduction he's even managed to avoid the narrators — they introduce him as being involved in a heist in Toledo, Spain... only to discover that he's not actually there, but has already fled to Baden-Baden, Germany.
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Iconic Sequel Character
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Iconic Sequel Character: Inspector Lionel Mackenzie is the franchise's most iconic Sympathetic Inspector Antagonist, but he wasn't introduced until a few chapters into the second series.
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Guile Hero
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Guile Hero: Dickie is an Anti-Hero version of this. He prefers to outwit his opponents rather than beat them physically.
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Batman Gambit
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Batman Gambit: One of Dickie's specialties. He's good at predicting how people will react in certain situations, and several of his plans rely on this. Usually the gambits work — but not always. Sometimes there's an unexpected Spanner in the Works, and sometimes it turns out Dickie's miscalculated, either because he didn't have all the info or because he either underestimated or overestimated his opponent.
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Took a Level in Kindness
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Took a Level in Kindness: Could perhaps be chalked up to Early Instalment Weirdness and Characterization Marches On, but Dickie is far more hard-boiled and ruthless in the first series. At a few points he even threatens to kill both Effie and Opa Crackle, something the Dickie from later series would never do.
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Stylistic Suck
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Stylistic Suck: Dickie fancies himself a bit of a musician and loves to play the piano, but whenever we hear him play it's immediately obvious that he's not particularly good at it. Even the narrators, usually so eager to exaggerate his virtues and tallents beyond the impossible, can't bring themselves to use bigger words than "not completely without talent" or "mediocre, but enthusiatic" when talking about his playing.
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I Just Want to Be Normal
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I Just Want to Be Normal: Parodied in the first series. Dickie repeatedly insists that he has no ambitions whatsoever and just wants to be a humble pickpocket. He treats it as an annoyance that his rivals keep "forcing" him to pull off bigger and bigger crimes.
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Banana Republic
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Banana Republic: Canastarica in the third series, a Central American republic where violent revolutions happen around twice a year. Almost by chance, Dickie and his gang end up involved in one of these revolutions, which leads to Dickie being appointed the new President of the republic. He quickly absconds when he learns that the President is always executed come next revolution (and that this was the main reason why his "allies" in the revolution were so eager to give him the position instead of taking it themselves).
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Affably Evil
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Affably Evil: Dickie, especially in the first series (he Took a Level in Kindness in later series). He's a notorious burglar and pickpocket without any scruples, and will occasionally delve into more serious crimes, even murder — in the first series he shoots and kills a number of rival gangsters, though later on he develops a fondness for setting them up so they duke it out and kill each other instead. But apart from this he's charming, polite and friendly to pretty much everyone he meets (when he doesn't play The Gadfly to them), he's loyal to his friends and fiancée, he always keeps his promises and honors his debts, and can be extremely generous when the mood takes him. Jim Cooper waivers a bit between this trope and Faux Affably Evil; he's got a nasty temper and has even less scruples than Dickie, but over time he shows himself as quite friendly and even a borderline Reasonable Authority Figure to his gang. It's never quite clear if he's genuine or not — Dickie certainly doesn't think he is.
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Phantom Thief
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Phantom Thief: Dickie has traces of this, using trickery, charm and his impossible skills as a pickpocket to reach his goal. It also helps that for much of the series he's mainly known by name and only people in his limited social circles know what he looks like. In the final series, Dickie's son Donald D. Doberman is an even clearer example of the trope, being a refined and classy globetrotter and Gentleman Thief with an uncanny ability to be long gone whenever people start wondering where he's at. In his introduction he's even managed to avoid the narrators — they introduce him as being involved in a heist in Toledo, Spain... only to discover that he's not actually there, but has already fled to Baden-Baden, Germany.
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Fleeting Passionate Hobbies
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Fleeting Passionate Hobbies: Leonardo da Cinzano from the final series seems to have a history of these, though only of the creative sort. Several times he mentions some great work of art (like a novel, an opera, a fable, or a painting) that he once started and never got around to finishing because he got busy with something else.
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Only One Name
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Only One Name: Bonco is only ever called "Bonco." Whether this is his first name, his last name, or merely a nickname, is never revealed. In the fourth series, while the gang is crashing a high society party, he is presented as "Achilles von Bonco," but this is probably not his real name.
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Justice by Other Legal Means
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Justice by Other Legal Means: Played with. At the end of the first series, Dickie fakes his death and takes on a new identity, having required the papers of a recently-deceased Irish immigrant named Maxim F. Poltingbrook. It's under this identity he marries his fiancée Effie Marconi... and then, a few months later, it turns out the original Maxim F. Poltingbrook was already married, and so Dickie — still under the name Poltingbrook — ends up arrested for bigamy.
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Lemony Narrator
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Lemony Narrator: Two of them. They narrate in tandem, are full of exaggerated admiration for Dickie, fill out details and sometimes disagree with each other about which details are unnecessary for the story. In the fifth series they end up arguing so much that one narrator at one point gets fed up, declares that there's no point telling this story, and starts reciting recipes for vegetable stew instead before the other narrator manages to get everything back on track.
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Sympathetic Inspector Antagonist
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Sympathetic Inspector Antagonist: Inspector Mackenzie quickly reveals himself as this. He's a grouchy, sarcastic and lazy Jerk with a Heart of Gold who ends up with a specific grudge against Dickie because Dickie has outwitted him and made him look like a fool so many rimes... but he's one of the few cops in the series who isn't corrupt or incompetent, and who has a set of moral standards. Even though he complains loudly about having to do his job, when he is on the job he's clever and meticulous and can even become quite the Determinator when he's angry enough. He and Dickie have the odd Enemy Mine moment; at the end of the first of these Mackenzie even laments still having to arrest Dickie after the man has helped him out. (Of course Dickie escapes anyway, so the arrest never happens.)
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Neighbourhood-Friendly Gangsters
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Neighbourhood-Friendly Gangsters: Dickie's gang, and to some extent Jim Cooper's gang, are generally pleasant enough and avoid unnecessary brutaliry or bloodshed. Other gangs, such as those led by James Topper, Alfonzo Capelli and Admiral Jefferson Harper, are far more ruthless and bloodthirsty.
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What Happened to the Mouse?
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What Happened to the Mouse?: Dickie's cat Sebastian plays a small but important part in the first series — but is never even mentioned in the second and third series. In the fourth series, Effie complains that "the cat" is playing with a dead mouse in the kitchen, but since this is a few years later, and a different house, it's never specified if this is Sebastian or a different cat. In the third series, while in Canastarica, the gang takes in an escaped parrot named Hannibal, which also plays a small but important role in the plot. When they return to the United States at the end of the third series, it's specifically stated that they take Hannibal with them, but he never appears again.
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Black-and-Gray Morality
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Black-and-Gray Morality: Dickie and his gang are thieves, con men and gangsters with no scruples — but they still come across as the good guys because, almost without fail, their antagonists are much worse.
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Villain Protagonist
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Villain Protagonist: As mentioned above, Dickie switches between this and Anti-Hero. He's more Villain Protagonist in the first series, more Anti-Hero in later series.
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Repetitive Name
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Repetitive Name: Dickie Dick Dickens, of course!
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Asshole Victim
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Asshole Victim: Anyone who's seriously harmed by Dickie's antics are generally shown to be terrible people who deserve everything that's coming to them.
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Faux Affably Evil
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Jim Cooper waivers a bit between this trope and Faux Affably Evil; he's got a nasty temper and has even less scruples than Dickie, but over time he shows himself as quite friendly and even a borderline Reasonable Authority Figure to his gang. It's never quite clear if he's genuine or not — Dickie certainly doesn't think he is.
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Ascended Extra
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Ascended Extra: Bonco has a fairly minor role in the first series; he was a smalltime crook who by chance got roped into Jim Cooper's gang and at the end of the first series was pressured into luring Dickie into an ambush. He couldn't bring himself to do it, partly because he felt bad and partly because he panicked and revealed the entire plan. After that he instead teamed up with Dickie, and from the second series on he's a trusted member of Dickie's gang and one of the main characters.
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MacGuffin
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MacGuffin: For the first three series, the gold bars Dickie stole from the Farmer's Bank. They're worth fifty thousand dollars, and everyone wants them, but circumstances keep intervening so that they never actually do anyone any good.
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Deadpan Snarker
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Deadpan Snarker: Inspector Mackenzie never runs out of sarcasms, a fair few of them directed at Sergeant Martin who isn't always the best at telling when someone's being sarcastic and when they're being sincere.
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The Ace
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The Ace: Zig-zagged with Dickie, who is very much presented as The Ace by the Lemony Narrators, who never run out of ways to call him awesome, but his actual dialogue and actions do show that while he is genuinely skilled and intelligent, he's not the infallible mastermind that the narrators constantly push.
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Anti-Hero Team
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Anti-Hero Team: Dickie's gang are a classic example. They're amoral thieves and scoundrels who'll readily lie, cheat and steal, but they'll also help out people in need — generally by tricking, robbing and incapacitating the much worse thieves and scoundrels who are threatening said people in need.
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Good Stepmother
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Good Stepmother: A slightly downplayed version since Donald D. Doberman is already an adult when meeting her, but Effie in the fifth series is arguably a better parent to Donald than Dickie is. Even though she's not his mother, she's 100% supportive and understanding with him, and when Dickie is reluctant to help his newly discovered son out of trouble, Effie is the one who insists they do everything in their power to help poor Donald.
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Anti-Hero
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Anti-Hero: Dickie switches between this and Villain Protagonist, but he has enough noble qualities that for the most part he lands on the Anti-Hero side. He may be a thief, a swindler and a cheat, but he's also generous and even kind, and most of his victims are Asshole Victims.
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 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_cda501da
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Killed Off for Real
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_cda501da
comment
Killed Off for Real: A number of one-shot characters and antagonists end up dead (usually shot), but in general main and recurring characters are safe. The exception is Mummy Tobo-Dutch, who plays an important supporting role in the first series and the early parts of the second series, before she's killed off by James Topper's gang.
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 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_e2c4b927
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Dub Name Change
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_e2c4b927
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Dub Name Change: For some reason, in the Norwegian translation, Bonco has been renamed "Bonzo."
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_e2c4b927
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 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_e5e6640b
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Flanderization
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_e5e6640b
comment
Flanderization: Sergeant Martin, in the first series, he sometimes gets loud when he's excited, and when the Commissioner tells him to lower his voice, he does. From the second series on, nothing can get him to lower his voice: he shouts nearly all his lines; he even whispers loudly.
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Damn, It Feels Good to Be a Gangster!
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_ecc8b108
comment
Damn, It Feels Good to Be a Gangster!: Exaggerated until it becomes parody. While there are a few moments showing that life as a gangster isn't all fun and games, there are many more moments insisting that yes, it is. Dickie himself becomes like an exaggerated hero, with the Lemony Narrators falling over themselves with comically exaggerated praises and descriptions of how awesome he is.
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Impossible Theft
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_f0084ee5
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Impossible Theft: Dickie has a knack for these. In the very first episode, learning that Jim Cooper has sicced the police on him, Dickie gets away from the fifty cops pursuing him because, as it turns out, he's stolen all their guns without them noticing. The embarrassed cops call it a day; Dickie dumps the weapons in Lake Michigan.
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Brainless Beauty
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_f26d5e66
comment
Brainless Beauty: Effie will occasionally play this role. While she definitely has a brain, and is capable of drawing conclusions, she's got a tendency to Comically Miss the Point, focus on the wrong things, fail to understand obvious hints, and miss obvious connections — mostly so Dickie can explain his plans and reasoning to her in details.
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Suspiciously Similar Substitute
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_f5a3e496
comment
Suspiciously Similar Substitute: In the first series, Dickie's main police antagonist is the self-glorifying but not particularly competent Commissioner Hillbilly. In the second series, he transfers out of Chicago and is replaced by Inspector Mackenzie, who is both a Suspiciously Similar Substitute and a Foil to Hillbilly. He takes on roughly the same role as Hillbilly, but is actually a good deal smarter and more competent — he's just too lazy to really put in much effort unless there are some sort of personal stakes for him involved.
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 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_f9876f7e
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Faking the Dead
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio) / int_f9876f7e
comment
Faking the Dead: Dickie does this a couple of times, most notably at the end of the first series where he makes it seem like he's been killed in the big shoot-out with Jim Cooper's gang. Made easier by the fact that up until then he's been a Phantom Thief that the police doesn't even have a proper description of, so any of the unidentified bodies could have been him. Jim Cooper is also revealed to have faked his death in the same shoot-out; in the first series it's stated that he was shot and killed while trying to escape — in the fourth series it's revealed that he did escape and laid low in Missouri for a few years.
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Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio)
hasFeature
Impossible Theft / int_a06fe5a2
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio)
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Narrator / int_a06fe5a2
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio)
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Phantom Thief / int_a06fe5a2
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio)
hasFeature
Radio of the 1950s / int_a06fe5a2
 Dickie Dick Dickens (Radio)
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Repetitive Name / int_a06fe5a2