GOK
One Too Many
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- Raxacoricofallapatorius
OK so not a film but still moving pictures nevertheless. Who remembers it?
Anyone got the DVDs? What is the quality like?
LaMedicine said:
Doctor Strange said:but unless you were an impressionable kid (and I was already in my late 20s), it was really pretty low wattage... I have a feeling it would seem embarrasingly lame these days, with our higher standards.
drafttek said:I'd rather it live on the way I remember it rather than go through the whole "H.R. Puff-n-stuff crushing of childhood memories" thing again (I can't believe that was my favorite show. Sid & Marty Croft were on some serious drugs).
from the FAQ said:Original Title: Tales of the Brass Monkey
Changed a couple of months prior to the premiere. (Guess it didn't sound classy enough)
Original Choice to Play Jake: Bruce Boxleitner
His agent had a deal with CBS that gave the network a first shot at any of his clients. So Bruce Boxleitner did Bring 'em Back Alive (similar, yet highly inferior) instead, thus ensuring that he and Stephen Collins would be confused with each other for the rest of their lives.
ABC rejected the series in 1979 after Don Bellisario refused to update it. The network executives thought that no one would watch a show set in the 1930s. They quickly changed their minds after the enormous success of "Raiders of the Lost Ark" in 1981.
Despite the Indiana Jones-clone label, Bellisario always insisted that he got his inspiration from the 1939 film, "Only Angels Have Wings", starring Cary Grant, Jean Arthur, Thomas Mitchell and a young Rita Hayworth. It's obvious that he also was influenced by other classic films of the '30s and '40s such as "The Maltese Falcon", "To Have and Have Not" and "Casablanca" ("As Time Goes By" is played three times in the pilot).
After being grounded for almost nine years, "Cutter's Goose" flew again (sort of) in 1992 in an episode of Quantum Leap entitled 'Ghost Ship'. The episode, which was entirely set on the plane and heavily featured Gold Monkey stock footage, was co-written by Don Bellisario, who was also QL's (and of course Gold Monkey's) creator and executive producer.
The only primetime series in television history (as far as I know) to be ripped off and turned into a Disney cartoon. (There's no way that "TaleSpin" is a mere coincidence.)