Not sure how much of a demand there is, but I'm doing a watch-through now that I'm recording it from H&I....
The Green Hornet
"The Silent Gun"
Originally aired September 9, 1966
So, yesterday was indeed the 50th anniversary of this episode. Decades was playing episodes of TGH, The Time Tunnel, and one or two other shows that debuted on the same date.
I caught "The Silent Gun." The first completely serious TV superhero.
Like Batman, this one starts with a crimefighting career already in progress...in this case, without so much as referencing origin details (I'm not sure if TGH ever had one).
Not so much an origin, but Dozier's main title narration explains the hero's mission, how he's perceived by law enforcement, etc. That's more than his "across the street" cousin--the Dozier Batman.
I think I commented on this during an earlier TGH Binge, but the way all but one of the recurring cast are in on the hero's operation reminds me of the current CW superhero show formula. (Would I be coining an admittedly derivative term if I started calling them "Team Hornet"?)
The Green Hornet certainly launched that kind of team interconnectedness we see on CW shows. Even on the 1966 Batman, the heroes only had Alfred in on Bruce & Dick's superhero life, while they simply acted as agents of Gordon.
I found the plot somewhat hard to follow, such that I rewatched the first half of the episode after finishing. It was a bit too frontloaded with exposition about too many characters that we hadn't met.
Interesting. I thought the story needed that to not only sell the threat of the gun, but those who were using / demanding it.
Curiously enough, "The Silent Gun" is not TGH pilot. Like "The Man Trap" with the original Star Trek, or "Royal Flush" with The Monkees, this was aired out of order. All Class of 1966 premieres.
Also mildly amusing is that Kato's hand raised to Trump's face seems to be as much of a recognized threat as a gun.
That, and in-series, Kato and Hornet have a reputation for being brutal when necessary. Some criminals may not respect their methods of muscling in / extorting other criminals, but they kick so much butt that we have to assume fear of their physical abilities got around.
If the Hornet is riding with Trump's thugs, you have to wonder why they don't just try to take him down then and there. Even pretending to be one of the bad guys, a crimefighter with an identity to protect should be more careful about the situations that he walks into.
Perhaps James Kirk can answer that:
"Risk is our business!"
The hero has to put himself out there, as a measure of the hair-thin trust he's trying to build in the con; criminal are--by nature--hyper sensitive to being set up, so if the Hornet never involves himself, that would send up red flags that he's too much on the outside of a deal or arrangement.
When the tailing Black Beauty is chased by the police, we get a very unconvincing front seat shot of the squad car...you can see the entire body of the guy riding shotgun--almost like there's no dash!
Yes--they should have borrowed from the Jack Webb model: if you're using a car mock-up with no dash, the shot must be a close up. Leaving the entire seat exposed looked like behind the scenes footage.
The Green Hornet TV series has an odd history: at the time of its ABC debut, some critics tried to dump it in the same basket occupied by Batman. Dismissive journalists mocked ABC as being "the two car network" --implying that all the network was about were fantasy series with gadget-laden custom cars. Others thought the series had potential because it--at the same time as Batman--was (until its two-part series finale) an example of how serious superheroes could be effective.
Contrary to lazy, research-challenged writers (too many to count in this world) who have written something along the lines of "The Green Hornet was low rated--that's why it was cancelled," William Dozier and Van Williams have said the series was doing well, with Dozier claiming ABC was interested in renewing the series.
However, I paraphrase Dozier, who also claimed (and waffled a bit in various interviews) he wanted to expand the series to the one hour format, as he believed the series needed that kind of time to develop stories, but when ABC rejected that, he allowed the series to end. Again, that is just one story Dozier told over the post-1960s years, but there's some network evidence that supports the idea that TGH was winning its timeslot, and not the complete flop the aforementioned lazy writers have sold since TGH left the airwaves some 49 years ago.