Third Man Out: A Donald Strachey Mystery

Third Man Out: A Donald Strachey Mystery(2005)

R
07/07/2005 (US)Crime, Mystery, Thriller, TV Movie1h 39m
5.6

"America's first gay detective."

Overview

Gay detective Donald Strachey is commissioned to protect gay activist John Rutka, known for "outing" prominent citizens.

Ron Oliver

Director

Mark Saltzman

Writer

Richard Stevenson

Story

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Part of the The Donald Strachey Collection

The collection of TV movies about Donald Strachey, private dectective.

Media

Trailer: Third Man Out

Trailer: Third Man Out

Trailer

Third Man Out: A Donald Strachey Mystery - Full Movie

Third Man Out: A Donald Strachey Mystery - Full Movie

Trailer

Strachey Theme

Strachey Theme

Featurette

Social

C
A review by CinemaSerf
6.0

Written on November 30, 2025

“Rutka” (Jack Wetherall) is a fairly outspoken gay advocate who thinks nothing of outing people, and who is consequently fairly unpopular. When he starts to fear for his life, he engages the services of very reluctant PI “Strachey” (Chad Allen) to look through his innumerable files and try to isolate a culprit. There’s isn’t exactly a shortage of potential assassins, indeed he himself might be one, but when the inevitable does happen he determines to find out whodunnit. Aside from one scene of entirely pointless gratuitous nudity, there is very little to distinguish this from your bog standard edition of the “Rockford Files” only, of course, there is a gay agenda as it taps into homophobia, closeted lifestyles, the duplicitous role of the church and politicians as well as maybe the most timely leak in a ceiling that you’ll ever see. Allen does fine with these “Strachey” adventures and aided ably by his beau “Timmy” (Sebastian Spence) there’s precious little jeopardy throughout for us to worry about as the investigation gathers pace and it uses the plot to expose some of the societal attitudes and hypocrisies facing people who are not open about their sexuality, or who take advantage of their position to abuse. I didn’t really like the conclusion so much. Aside from it being really quite predicable, it also had an element of an eye for an eye to it that perhaps could just have been left implied rather than demonstrated. Still, it’s a light-hearted mystery with a message and it’s worth ninety minutes.