MisterCairo
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 7,005
- Location
- Gads Hill, Ontario
The last three nights have seen me watch Sharpe's Rifles, Sharpe's Eagle and Sharpe's Company. Thank you Jenn, for the lovely Christmas gift of the special boxed set...
"The rules say you have to retire at 63." Abe Vigoda was only 56 years old when that episode was filmed, but he was always one of those actors who looked older than he really was. Rumor has it some producers in the mid-1980s were heard to say something to the effect of "I need an Abe Vigoda type" because they thought he was dead, particularly after a magazine referred to him as "the late Abe vigoda" around the same time.There have been some touching television episodes over the years. I was watching Barney Miller - 'Good-bye, Mr. Fish,' the last episode with Abe Vigoda as Sgt. Phillip K. Fish. Brings a tear to my eye every time I catch it, this scene in particular.
The episode is Season 4, Episode 2 - unusual in a TV show to 'retire' a major character so early in a season.
Right, I recall the "Space Family Robinson" series -- that was what Dell/Gold Key called it, right?They're doing a rerun of the 1965 TV SciFi show Lost In Space and I just watched the first episode where the Robinson family, their pilot, Major West, a robot and the bad guy, Dr. Smith, have left Earth (on 16th October, 1997!) to journey to a planet in the Alpha Centuri system. The plan is to eventually colonise the planet due to overpopulation on Earth. The bad guy, played by Johnathan Harris, sabotages the spaceship, the ship is hit by a meteor storm and the adventure really begins! Complete with bad acting (and some impressive overacting by Jonathan Harris) but some rather decent special effects.
The show makes a pleasant respite from modern SciFi shows and had I been a ten year old in 1965 I would have probably loved it.
I didn't see the original run of the show as I was born the same year it aired but I did catch some of the later color reruns back in the 1990s. However, when I was a teen I did read the Gold Key Lost In Space comics, so I was well aware of the characters (in fact, the comics first came out in the early 60s, before the TV show, and lasted well into the 70s).
Right, I recall the "Space Family Robinson" series -- that was what Dell/Gold Key called it, right?
They're doing a rerun of the 1965 TV SciFi show Lost In Space and I just watched the first episode where the Robinson family, their pilot, Major West, a robot and the bad guy, Dr. Smith, have left Earth (on 16th October, 1997!) to journey to a planet in the Alpha Centuri system. The plan is to eventually colonise the planet due to overpopulation on Earth. The bad guy, played by Johnathan Harris, sabotages the spaceship, the ship is hit by a meteor storm and the adventure really begins! Complete with bad acting (and some impressive overacting by Jonathan Harris) but some rather decent special effects.
The show makes a pleasant respite from modern SciFi shows and had I been a ten year old in 1965 I would have probably loved it.
Surely you know this but, for anyone who doesn't, a long-standing rumor was that Dr. Smith was supposed to be a "temporary" villain who was going to be written out of the show after a handful of episodes, and that Smith's rather abrupt change in personality from "menacing" to "comedic" was due to Jonathan Harris wanting to make a memorable exit; this rumor was supported by the fact that Mr. Harris was billed as a "Special Guest Star". The reality was that Mr. Harris, known at the time for playing "outrageous" characters, grew bored with playing it straight and took it upon himself to give Dr. Smith more "presence"....The thing that I find fascinating about Lost In Space now is that that pilot and some of the first season episodes are so dramatic (*) and serious (I mean, in the pilot Dr. Smith is a Russian agent sabotaging the mission!) The show very quickly devolved into a kiddie show, and by the second season - when it went from b/w to color (not that we had a color TV yet!) and was influenced by the camp of then-huge-hit Batman - it was a popular hit, but you couldn't take it seriously. Carrot-men, green girls floating in space, cowboys in spaceships, an intergalactic department store... Not to mention Dr. Smith's prissy character's idiotic dialog (e.g., to the Robot: "You bubble-headed booby!") Anyway, seeing what the show became for most of its run, the pilot is strikingly serious...
In a similar vein, I just finished the 8 instalments in the Hornblower series staring Ioan Gruffudd. Sure wish they had made more.Sharpe's Enemy and Sharpe's Honour. I had forgotten most of Honour, it was like watching it anew.
In a similar vein, I just finished the 8 instalments in the Hornblower series staring Ioan Gruffudd. Sure wish they had made more.
In a similar vein, I just finished the 8 instalments in the Hornblower series staring Ioan Gruffudd. Sure wish they had made more.
Is that the Welsh (?) actor who was in Ringer a few years ago with Sarah Michelle Gellar?In a similar vein, I just finished the 8 instalments in the Hornblower series staring Ioan Gruffudd. Sure wish they had made more.