Compilation/Packaged Set: Donald Strachey Mysteries
There were fifteen novels in the Donald Strachey Series written by Richard Stevenson, of which four were adapted for film.

Third Man Out
Insight Film Studios (2005)
Crime, Mystery, Queer Themes/Interest, Thriller
On Order
#2124
6*
Seen ItYes
(04/16/2020 home)
796019795128
IMDB   6.6
99 mins Canada / English
DVD 
Chad Allen Donald Strachey
Sebastian Spence Timmy Callahan
Jack Wetherall John Rutka
Woody Jeffreys Eddie Santon
Sean Young Ann Rutka
April Telek Alice Savage
John Moore Bishop McFee
Alf Humphreys Father Morgan
P. Lynn Johnson Senator Dianne Glassman
Guy Fauchon Newspaper Photographer
James Michalopolous Dark Glasses
Moneca Delain Nurse
Kirsten Williamson Allison
David Palffy Congressman Bruno Slinger
Colin Lawrence Cole
Mary Belle McDonald Eleanor
Anthony O'Clery Redd Koontz
Daryl Shuttleworth Detective Bub Bailey
Andrew Moxham Dark Figure #1
Warren Takeuchi Dark Figure #2
Sean Carey Ronnie Linklater
Claudine Grant Caroline Clark
Matthew Rush Dik Steele
Mark Acheson Fake Dik Steele Male
Lisa Dahling Fake Dik Steele Female
Director
Ron Oliver
Producer Paul Colichman
James Shavick
Writer Mark Saltzman
Richard Stevenson
Cinematography C. Kim Miles


Gay detective Donald Strachey is commissioned to protect gay activist John Rutka, who is known for "outing" prominent citizens. Strachey abandons bodyguard duty when he feels that Rutka is staging the threats against himself. When Rutka turns up dead, Strachey is faced with an extensive list of enemies all with enough motive to kill.
Edition Details
Distributor here! Films
No. of Discs/Tapes 1
Personal Details
Purchase Date 04/13/2020
Location Personal Library
Owner Deitz
Store EBay - Troy Curtis
Condition Used Good
Order Order# 111-6981650-8658642
Links ± Review: CGiii ([Anderson Cutler])
+ Review: Gay Essential [David Hall 2013]
IMDB
TheMovieDb.org

Notes
Third Man Out Rating: on the cusp between a 6 and 7. When released in 2005, I likely would have given it a 7, fifteen years later, a 6. PCing - it tends to trivialize gay "outing" issues. What are the boundaries of personal privacy?