Category Archives: classic TV

Classic TV: ‘Superman on Earth’

the adventures of superman

It’s hard to overstate just what an impact “The Adventures of Superman” had on America in the 1950s.

Kids were comic-book crazy back then and comics had sold millions of copies a year for more than a decade. Superman was one of the most popular and when the DC Comics superhero hit TV, a generations-long love affair with the Man of Steel became as solid as steel bars, breakable only by Superman himself.

A great deal of the credit for the impact of the series goes to “Superman on Earth,” a lean and sturdy telling of Superman’s origin directed by veteran helmer Tommy Carr. The series – which started in black and white, as befits a show that revolved around gangsters, hoods and other film noir staples more than science fiction – sparked millions of Superman toys, Halloween costumes and, eventually, more movies and TV shows over the course of six seasons beginning in the fall of 1952.

The debut episode hews surprisingly closely to the Superman mythos as they’d been created and fleshed out in the comics and radio show.

superman on earth jor-el rocket

The story opens on Krypton, as scientist Jor-El tries to tell the Kryptonian ruling council about the eminent destruction of the planet. They scoff at his forecast as well as his plan to build rocketships to transport the population to the planet Earth.

Before Jor-El can complete a rocket to take him, Lara and baby Kal-El to Earth, Krypton begins to tear itself apart. Jor-El and Lara wrap little Kal in a blanket and place him in the rocket.

in these first 10 minutes or so, the show plays like a “Flash Gordon”-style space opera – complete with, legend says, “Flash Gordon” leftover costumes.

After the rocket gets to Earth, it’s the heartfelt but hokey Smallville portion of the story, with Eben and Sarah Kent finding the rocket from Krypton and deciding to keep the baby. Flash forward to Clark at age 12, asking Ma why he’s different from the other boys. Then flash forward to Clark’s 25th “birthday” and Pa’s heart attack. As is familiar from so many iterations of the story, Clark decides to leave Smallville and go to Metropolis.

There’s a funny shot of George Reeves as Clark, “walking” down the sidewalks of Metropolis, putting on glasses as a disguise and deciding to become a reporter because newspapers were where the action is and Superman would know immediately when trouble broke out.

One of the strengths of the series was that Clark was a sharp guy who leveraged his powers as Superman in his everyday life. After gruff Daily Planet editor Perry White brushes him off – even after Clark shows initiative by entering his office through the window, 28 floors up – Clark hears Lois tell Perry about a man hanging from a dirigible out at the airport. Clark bargains with Perry: If he can get the man’s exclusive story, he’ll get a reporter job.

Superman shows up, rescues the man – played by Dabbs Greer, later memorable as the minister in “Little House on the Prairie,” and gets his story – frustrating Lois and winning the job.

The show wraps up with a customary joke by Clark – “Maybe I’m Superman” he taunts Lois – and bang, in less than a half hour, the show has introduced America to the the world’s greatest superhero.

RIP James Garner

james garner jim rockford

I can’t imagine a worse way to wake up this morning than with the news that James Garner had died.

Sure, the actor’s death is not a shock. Although he’ll always be young and handsome and wily if a bit careworn to all of us, he was, after all, 86. He had open heart surgery years ago and suffered a stroke in 2008.

The New York Times noted that Garner was something of a paradox, and that’s true. He was as handsome as could be but his leading men were smart, funny and self-deprecating. Most fans didn’t know, I bet, that he won two Purple Hearts in the Army during the Korean War. They probably also didn’t know he was active in the civil rights movement.

So many great roles mark his long career, from big-screen parts in “The Americanization of Emily” to “Support Your Local Sheriff” to “Victor/Victoria.”

But he’s no doubt best remembered for his roles in “Maverick” and “The Rockford Files,” two TV series separated by two decades but distinguished by Garner’s charm.

I matured during “The Rockford Files” – the show ran for six years beginning in 1974, when I was in my mid-teens – and wished I could have been half as affable and charming – even when exasperated – as Garner’s Jim Rockford.

A private eye who lived in a trailer in Malibu, California, Rockford had seen some tough times, including a prison sentence for a crime he didn’t commit. His private investigations practice was far from glamorous and more often than not involved dealing with liars and cheats – even when they were his clients, and sometimes even when they were attractive women who played him until he got wise – as well as con men, hapless marks and hostile cops.

Through it all, Rockford would roll with the punches – literally – taking his lumps and coming out ahead in the end. All the while, he would grump and growl and roll his eyes and sarcastically sound off at the idiots and jerks who stood between him and closing a case. He got into more than once case reluctantly but always solved problems – even if it meant taking a few lumps.

What made Garner so good and such a great personality was that he seemed so genuine. If what we saw on the screen wasn’t the real Jim Garner … well, I would be shocked.

In an appearance on Johnny Carson’s show after an infamous incident in which Garner got into a fight in real life – and I will never forget this – Garner shrugged off the incident, saying, “The guy said shut up and I thought he said stand up.”

“The Rockford Files” had great writers but I have to believe that much of Jim Rockford’s heart and wit and tenacity and no-nonsense attitude came from Garner himself.

Maybe more than any other star of his era, Garner was the guy I wished I could meet, just once. I imagined him as cool without trying, funny without effort and a stand-up guy without question.

RIP Eli Wallach

eli wallach mr. freeze

We all remember Eli Wallach, who died this week, for his roles in “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” and “The Magnificent Seven” and mourned his passing at age 98.

But I had forgotten, until I had MeTV on tonight, that Wallach had played the frosty villain Mr. Freeze in the 1960s “Batman” TV series.

Wallach was the third actor to play the role, following George Sanders and Otto Preminger.

eli wallach mr. freeze seal

Thanks for entertaining us, Mr. Wallach.

 

‘Mad Men’ sets up the final pitch with ‘Waterloo’

mad men waterloo don peggy

Don Draper is one of the biggest mysteries, as well as one of the most anti-heroic anti-heroes, on TV.
Through six and a half seasons of “Mad Men” on AMC, we’ve rooted for Don (as payed by Jon Hamm) even though we probably wouldn’t want to work with him and we certainly wouldn’t want to be married to him.

The temperamental artist, serial philanderer and distant father has been undergoing a transformation in the seventh season, however. After hitting rock bottom – rejected by his latest lover, despised or pitied by coworkers, left behind by his latest wife, who’s off in California to pursue her dreams – Don seems to be trying to remake himself.

He offers to do the right thing by Megan. He hands off a successful pitch to Peggy, who had, probably rightfully so, grown tired of the behavior of her mentor. He turns down offers from women who fling themselves at him (well, mostly; does the threesome that included Megan count?). He even inspires loyalty from Roger Sterling, who – in this week’s final episode of the year, before the final seven episodes of the series play out next year – rallies after a season of restlessness and experimentation to save not only Don but the partners in the agency.

It’s difficult to tell where “Mad Men” creator Matthew Weiner is going with the series, but then it always is. While we might have had a sense of forbidding about Lane Pryce a couple of seasons ago, this past season or two Weiner has been stringing us along with foreboding balconies and Sharon Tate hints. Who would have thought we would reach the final episode before the last seven episodes only to find that Don has mostly righted himself?

“Waterloo” was satisfying in the way that good “Mad Men” episodes are. Almost every character gets his or her moment, from Pete’s goofy comparison of Don to a thoroughbred to Peggy’s version of Don’s classic pitches to clients to Roger’s newfound steel – and his punchlines – to young Sally’s continuing voyage through teenagerhood.

mad men waterloo bert cooper

I still don’t think the series knows what to do anymore with Don’s estranged wife, Betty. And old Bert Cooper was never more alive, ironically, than at the end of “Waterloo,” a moment that let vintage song-and-dance man Barry Morse shine.

What do we want to see in the final seven episodes, coming in 2015?

A clear path for Sally. Will she rebel or follow her mother into conservative stuffiness?

A bright future for Peggy as the queen of Madison Avenue.

Roles that feel comfortable for Roger and Joan. Maybe even together.

Maybe a successful comic strip for Lou Avery. Anything to get him out of the ad business.

Enough success to choke schemers and graspers – even enjoyable ones – like Pete and Harry.

And maybe redemption for Don following a lifetime of deception and deceit and self-loathing.

Tune in next year.

‘Community’ canceled; it burned bright while it lasted

community modern warfare

When “Community” debuted five seasons ago, it looked like it might be just another NBC sitcom. A bunch of friends sit around a study table at a community college and yak at each other? It sounded like another “time porn” sitcom in the tradition of “Friends” or “How I Met Your Mother.”

But the show, in the hands of creator and producer Dan Harmon, quickly distinguished itself.

“Community” proved to be offbeat and hilarious and sometimes poignant and often surreal.

If audiences in 2009 didn’t recognize that and embrace it – or shun it – by the the late-first-season episode, “Modern Warfare,” a half-hour ostensibly about an on-campus paintball war to win priority class registration at Greendale Community College, they likely never would.

The episode was a note-perfect homage to action films – action film cliches, really – that showed just what Harmon and his cast were capable of. From the opening moments, when the campus looks post-apocalyptic after only an hour of paintball war, to the ending, which managed to take a shot at “Glee” and be sentimental at the same time, the episode was soooo good.

Other first season episodes – like “Physical Education,” in which attorney-turned-student Jeff Winger (Joel McHale) plays an epic game of pool with a crusty phys ed teacher – were better, more clever, more laugh-out-loud funny than much of what was on TV at the time.

And while later seasons had their highs and lows, almost every single one had some great episodes. The claymation-like Christmas special. The pillow fort episode. The trampoline episode.

Maybe, just maybe, best of all: “Advanced Dungeons and Dragons,” in the second season. That heartfelt, funny, geektastic episode might actually top “Modern Warfare” in my mind. Maybe.

Or maybe “Remedial Chaos Theory,” in which alternate realities and “the darkest timeline” were introduced.

Damn. I don’t know which I love more.

The show faltered in its fourth season, after Harmon – reportedly a difficult genius – was ousted from the show.

This past season, the fifth, showed a good return to form and return to the set by Harmon. It didn’t reach the heights achieved by the show at its best. But little else on TV did.

Since a couple of seasons into the show, when “Community” was threatened with cancelation nearly every season, the idea of “Six Seasons and a Movie” has been the mantra of cast, crew and fans. And a Twitter hashtag.

With todays’ news that NBC had canceled the series, goal is unlikely to be reached.

But I guess it’s possible. Really, the show was too funny, too odd, to have lasted five seasons on a major network anyway. So maybe the unexpected will happen and we’ll see more of Jeff, Britta, Annie, Shirley, Abed, Troy, Dean Pelton and all the rest.

In a timeline that’s not nearly as dark.

Vintage: Davy Crockett flashlight

davy crockett flashlight

Just like the King of the Wild Frontier used.

The Davy Crockett craze was well before my time, but it’s hard to overstate how popular the Disney version of the real-life frontiersman was in the 1950s.

Really, coonskin caps were flying off store shelves.

So what better accessory for a kid than a Davy flashlight?

Online sources date this to 1955 and the United States Electric Manufacturing Corp.

 

Cool ‘Batman Beyond’ short for 75th anniversary

batman 75th anniversary logo

This will really only whet your appetite for more Dark Knight.

DC Comics is celebrating Batman’s 75th anniversary this year – like it marked Superman’s 75th anniversary last year – with some cool stuff, including some short films.

The latest is comic book artist Darwyn Cook’s tribute to Batman Beyond, the sequel series to the original Bruce Timm Batman animated series.

batman beyond short

Kevin Conroy and Will Friedle return to voice the roles of aging Bruce Wayne and young Terry McGinness, his protege.

batsuits batman short

Cool action, cool shots of the former Bat-family costumes …

batman beyond short batmen

And, at the end, a tribute to a bunch of former movie/TV Batman portrayals and actors.

Good stuff.

The late, great late night

colbert-letterman

Yes, back in the 1980s, I was a huge fan of David Letterman. Yes, I stayed up for his 12:30 NBC show – after Carson’s “Tonight Show” – every night. Yes, I videotaped Letterman as I was watching. Yes, I excised commercials.

Yes, in a hall closet that’s been the repository of most of my VHS tapes over the decades – a closet that should be devoted to some more productive use, as I’m sure my wife is thinking as she reads this – are those tapes, buried along with videos recorded over the air of “The X-Files” and “Lois and Clark.”

Yes, I acknowledge it’s strange that I sat up and taped those Letterman shows.

I regret nothing. (Even though I haven’t watched the tapes in years.)

That’s because, back in those days, Letterman was the cutting edge of late-night comedy.

As I’ve noted here before, I was watching Carson from my late childhood or at least early adolescence. Carson was and will ever be the king of late-night. Nobody did it better.

Letterman – another Indiana guy, who spent time here in Muncie, working at the radio station I always listened to and going to college where I later went – was innovative and funny and awkward in all the right moments.

I haven’t watched a lot of Letterman in recent years and maybe it’s ironic that Jon Stewart’s “Daily Show” and “The Colbert Report” have taken over my late-night viewing – when I can stay awake that late: The days of staying up until the 1:30 a.m. sign-off of Letterman’s old show are long gone.

So I was pretty pleased at this week’s news that Stephen Colbert was going to take over for the retiring Letterman on “The Late Show” next year. Colbert is sharp and funny and heartfelt and he’ll make a great host. I’ll probably check out at least the start of his show after Stewart’s sign-off.

I’m curious if Colbert’s right-wing ass character will “appear” at all on his new show. I’m curious how Comedy Central will replace “Colbert Report.”

You can bet I’ll be checking out Dave’s victory lap in this final year.

Heck, I might even break out some of those 30-year-old tapes and relive Dave’s glory days.

I can always watch those at 7 p.m., when I’m not too sleepy.

‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’ – ‘Yesterday’s Enterprise’

Enterprise-d_bridge_yesterday's enterprise

“Yesterday’s Enterprise” might not be my favorite episode of “Star Trek: The Next Generation” – that top spot might go to “Best of Both Worlds” or “Starship Mine” or “Inner Light” or a handful of others – but it’s one that I stop and rematch every single time it’s on.
“Yesterday’s Enterprise” was the 15th episode of the third season of “TNG,” airing in February 1990. The series had found its footing by that point. What seemed like an awkward, stilted attempt to reboot the “Star Trek” franchise became its own show, with relatable characters and a cohesive, intriguing universe.
That said, “Yesterday’s Enterprise” took a risk that a few series take at some point in their run: Twisting that established universe and showing fans what might have been. The original “Star Trek” did it, most famously, with its “Mirror, Mirror” universe. “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” did it better than almost anyone. Heck, in recent years, even “Community” did it, with its “Darkest Timeline” stories, in which beloved Abed suggests everyone adopt Spock-style goatees to signify the twist.
With “Yesterday’s Enterprise,” “TNG” went in a fascinating direction. A team of writers – four are credited with the screenplay and two with the story – and director David Carson took us to a dark place: An alternate universe in which the Federation has been at war with the Klingon empire for many years.
The familiar Enterprise, under the command of Captain Picard, encounters another ship coming out of a rift in time. The ship is the Enterprise-C, and its appearance in the “TNG” reality catapults Picard and the crew of the Enterprise-D from the show’s familiar setting to the war-torn universe.

 

Castillo_and_Yar_yesterday's enterprise
The change in timeline means more than a change in the look of the ship. Klingon officer Worf is, obviously, no longer on the ship. But Tasha Yar (Denise Crosby, most recently seen in “The Walking Dead”) is back. Yar has been dead for a couple of years in the mainstream universe, but no one knows this in the rebooted, twisted universe, just like no one knows the Federation really isn’t at war with the Klingons in “our” universe.
No one but Guinan (Whoopi Goldberg), the enigmatic alien who tends Ten Forward, the Enterprise-D’s bar.
Against all probability, Picard finds that Guinan’s warnings of the disrupted timeline make sense and has a fateful decision to make. If he sends the Enterprise-C and its crew, including Captain Rachel Garrett and helmsman Richard Castillo, back into the time rift and certain death. But doing so might “correct” the twisted timeline.
It’s a fascinating, spooky “what might have been” episode.
Random thoughts:
The crew did a lot to suggest the wartime Enterprise-D with darker sets, more “war room” type display panels and a few minor costume adjustments. Neither “TNG” or any TV series of the time had money to burn on individual episodes, so a little had to go a long way.
“Yesterday’s Enterprise” was an example of what “Star Trek” always did best: Raising the stakes and building to a suspenseful climax.
The weight of Federation history weighs heavily on this episode and the writers, director and cast rise to the occasion.
The guest cast was good. Richard McDonald played Castillo in a kind of Ryker-ish style. McDonald has been a good character actor for years now, and he’s maybe best known for this and his role as the idiot husband in “Thelma and Louise.” Not to mention Shooter McGavin in “Happy Gilmore.”
And I’ve always loved Tricia O’Neil, who played Captain Garrett. She’s gorgeous and authoritative. I wish we had seen more of her adventures. Or more of her in this episode, for that matter. Her early death leaves her ship in the hands of Castillo and Yar.

 

We’re still friends, ‘Veronica Mars’

Veronica_Mars camera

As sure as “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” was a drama about high school filtered through horror movie trappings like vampires and demons, “Veronica Mars” was a drama about real-life horror show elements – murder, rape, STDs and, most of all, betrayal – filtered through the high-school experience.

“Buffy” and “Veronica Mars” were sisters of the same mother – as a throw-away line in the “Veronica Mars” movie that debuted just this weekend testifies – and are, ultimately, stories about surviving not just people with murderous intentions but the people who love you and the people you love. Betrayal hurts a hell of a lot worse than a stake to the heart or the zap of a Taser.

veronica mars cast

As TV shows, “Buffy” and “Veronica Mars” ended before their time. Sure, it can be argued that “Buffy” had more weak moments than strong ones in its last couple of seasons, but the most bitter pill for fans is that the show ended before pop culture’s full-on fixation with vampire stories began, with far lesser tales like “Twilight” hogging the spotlight that should have gone to the show that started it all.

And while “Veronica Mars” had the benefit of an online Kickstarter campaign that brought it back as the big-screen incarnation that debuted this weekend, its three seasons – again, admittedly, with some uneven stories late in its run – just missed out on the shared online community of Facebook, Twitter and name-your-social-media that generates – or at least proves to the world – the dedication of fans.

So we come to the new “Veronica Mars,” a big-screen movie that follows up, seven years later, on the heroine who gave the series and movie their names.

Director Rob Thomas, creator of the series, duplicates the success of the series in creating an unlikely protagonist in Veronica: A female protagonist who acts and talks like the tough-guy hero of a hard-boiled detective story but is still, realistically, a young woman trying to navigate the caste system of a small California town.

Neptune – “It really was built on a Hellmouth,” as one character says in the movie, in a nod to “Buffy” – is still a town full of haves and have nots. Thanks to the corruption that rules the town, the haves – politicians and software makers and movie actors and the police who do their bidding – push the have-nots down and keep them down.

Veronica – the former high-school outcast-turned private investigator, still played with toughness and vulnerability by Kristen Bell – returns to Neptune when former antagonist, former boyfriend Logan (charming, as always, Jason Dohring) is accused of killing his girlfriend, a former classmate who’s become a pop celebrity.

the guys fight veronica mars

The trip means leaving boyfriend Piz (Chris Lowell) and a promising job at a law firm behind in New York. And it means a reunion with friends like Wallace (Percy Daggs III), Mac (Tina Majorino) and Weevil (Francis Capra). There’s also that most dreaded function of “all these years later” plots – an actual high school reunion.

veronica and keith mars

Much more welcome is the reunion between Veronica and her dad, private investigator Keith Mars (Enrico Colantoni). It’s the relationship between Veronica and Keith – heartfelt and quippy, with the warmest and sometimes thorniest parent-child dynamic on TV – that made the show more than a rehash of Nancy and Carson Drew.

Well, that and the more-than-a-little caustic look at a town that seems more relevant today, frankly, than it did in the comparative boom days of the early 2000s. Neptune feels like a jaundiced and corrupt town from the best noir, full of biker gangs, seedy motels and people with either too much to lose or nothing at all.

The heart of the movie is Logan’s dilemma and Veronica’s puzzling out a solution, but there are a lot of nice moments with most of the cast. And there are some nice surprise appearances for fans of the show – mostly along the lines of glimpses of favorite supporting characters, with the notable exception of one who was written out of the story when it was on TV – and a fun and unexpected cameo or two.

The surprises emphasize, in a way, just how focused the movie is on fans – including those tens of thousands who helped fund it through Kickstarter  but also those who fondly remembered the series, its plucky and wry heroine and its jaded look at relationships and a town’s caste system.

The movie’s clubby anti-club slant probably limits its appeal to people who never watched the series. The point of rebooting an old TV show or movie is to bring in new fans, but like the “Serenity” follow-up to Joss Whedon’s “Firefly” series, “Veronica Mars” isn’t likely to engage new followers.

But for the faithful, the fans of the young sleuth and her world, “Veronica Mars” is a welcome reunion.