The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

Discussion in 'TV & Media' started by The Old Mixer, Jan 11, 2016.

  1. publiusr

    publiusr Admiral Admiral

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    Ongowah (yes)
     
  2. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    I don't remember that scene, but they didn't use greenscreens back then, at least not normally. Green is preferred for chromakey compositing today because it works well with digital cameras, but before the turn of the century, bluescreen was the most common color for matte shots. (Although early productions often used black screens, and Disney had a matte process using sodium-vapor light, which gave cleaner mattes than bluescreen but was reliant on the properties of a unique lens that nobody ever figured out how to duplicate, so it wasn't used often.) But bluescreen use was rare in television at the time -- pretty much Star Trek, The Invaders, and the second season of Land of the Giants are the only '60s shows I can think of that used them. Background footage in a car scene would've been done with a rear projection screen -- no compositing, just literally running the footage on a screen behind the car windows. That was the most common way of doing such effects at the time.
     
  3. The Old Mixer

    The Old Mixer Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si Xim. Moderator

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    Maybe the car just had a really, really small rear window, but there was a conspicuous, greenish space behind the actors' heads where you'd expect to see that rear projection footage.

    Still no word on what the hand-cranked movie viewer is called? It occurred to me that, as Briggs had to crank it to play the briefing material...
     
  4. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Perhaps a Kinetoscope or Mutoscope.
     
  5. The Old Mixer

    The Old Mixer Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si Xim. Moderator

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    Looked more like the latter.

    ETA: Ooh, looks like Decades is doing a neat bit of 50th anniversary business on 08/29--Airing both parts of The Fugitive's finale on the anniversary of the date that Part II aired, plus several other episodes. I was tentatively planning to include that in my viewing depending on YouTube availability...now I can just record it. But I'll have to watch Part I on the wrong week. :p

    And it looks like Weigel now has Mr. Ed, if anyone cares.
     
    Last edited: Aug 14, 2017
  6. The Old Mixer

    The Old Mixer Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si Xim. Moderator

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    Mission: Impossible

    "A Spool There Was"
    Originally aired November 12, 1966

    This one has Dan taking his briefing in a hotel suite with the maid as a contact. The recording is on a record again, with the extra gimmick that he has to develop the photos instead of just getting them in a packet.
    I clocked the decomposition as starting 1 minute and 42 seconds after the breaking of the seal. (@Christopher timed it 11 seconds slower, but oddly enough, that was roughly my initial math as well until I double- and triple-checked it.)

    This is definitely a format-bender in using only two operatives. It also seems unusual for them to have a contact at the mission location for them to get all expository with. And Rollin sure did hit on the location of the wire early. Getting to that point seemed a bit too easy.

    In general, this just didn't seem like an Impossible Mission...it seemed like more traditional spy fi business with agents assuming covers and smuggling information. There was no elaborate heist scheme here, it was "Go here undercover, find something, and get it out." It's like they used a script that was written for some other spy fi series...it didn't have that M:I-specific quality to it.

    Realistically, the decoy tape of Cinnamon and Rollin shouldn't have ended just as things were getting interesting between their characters...but that's TV for ya.


    "The Carriers"
    Originally aired November 19, 1966
    A double treat for TOS fans, this one also guests Barry Russo in a prominent baddie role.

    Dan gets his briefing in a photo booth with a small reel-to-reel tape.
    There! Stop! Just tweak the language a little and you've got it!

    Interestingly, Christopher 2010 had questioned whether M:I popularized the term "self-destruct". The first Google result I got was:
    http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=self-destruct

    This result also tentatively credits M:I with that meaning of the term, though it was in use much earlier in reference to less literal self-destruciton of the personal kind (gradual suicide):
    http://www.dictionary.com/browse/self-destruct

    So he just may have been onto something that I never would have thought of.

    There's something vaguely funny about George playing a guy who's playing a guy who's playing a guy whose name is George.

    The fake training town is a good spy fi concept.


    It was a nice touch how Rollin deliberately had his character break character to sell the character that he was playing. Say, this is getting kind of confusing...and that makes it feel more like Mission: Impossible!

    It sure was convenient how their training supervisor warned them there'd be tests right before they were tested. Also convenient was how the possibility that their room might be bugged never came up, so they could speak freely there.

    So...George asking whether this was a suicide mission was foreshadowing the unexpected complication that the IMF operatives were playing people who were scheduled to be exposed to a plague. And then Rollin got a direct exposure while they were trying to nullify the plague. Furthermore, the operatives had to survive a Russian roulette interrogation before they were extracted.

    It was a clever angle having to make what they were doing look like an unsuccessful infilitration attempt (and it gave Dan and Willy a little something to do on the fringes of the mission). (In one early scene, Willy gets to play a paper boy! :lol: )

    Those angular frames in the corridor of the underground lab looked a little bit familiar....

    In the getaway scene, the car had some fog billowing by outside the rear window, and nothing else clearly visible. So revisiting that earlier not-green screen business, I guess they just didn't want to bother with rear projection on this show, at least in Season 1.

    Unlike some early installments, this one doesn't feel like the show hasn't become what it will be; what's more, it feels like what the show should have been, with the agents facing more dangerous complications in their missions...which isn't unique even in the Season 1 episodes to this point, but this one particularly feels like the show firing on all cylinders. It seems like George's character also had untapped potential as a recurring operative.

    _______
     
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  7. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Gee, I wonder if maybe he had some other recurring role that kept him too busy to return to M:I...
     
  8. The Old Mixer

    The Old Mixer Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si Xim. Moderator

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    And/or a part in a John Wayne flick the following season.

    I recall catching an episode in the background (which may be coming up in my viewing) that has George's photo in Dan's portfolio, so he sort of comes back....
     
  9. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    That portfolio scene might've included stock footage from this one. There was a fair amount of recycling of footage from those scenes, since it was mostly the same thing over and over except for the closeups on the dossiers. There were even recycled tape scenes several times per season, with new briefings dubbed over the same footage. Come to think of it, maybe the reason they set up the trope of delivering the briefings on audio was so that it would be easy to recycle the visuals.
     
  10. The Old Mixer

    The Old Mixer Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si Xim. Moderator

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    Now that you mention it, the photo booth setup seemed familiar...maybe that was reused in one of the later Season 1 episodes that I watched.
     
  11. Spider

    Spider Dirty Old Man Premium Member

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    Been watching a few episodes of Combat! That is still a good show and holds up well after all these years.
     
  12. RJDiogenes

    RJDiogenes Idealistic Cynic and Canon Champion Premium Member

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    I thought that a lot about super-villains in comics. With all their elaborate equipment and hidden lairs, they must be already rich, so why turn to villainy? I guess it takes money to steal money.

    I love that song. A nice little story, uniquely and eloquently told. Like a lot of songs of the period, it's very poetic.

    I don't remember that one. Reminds me of Gone With The Wind. :rommie:

    Monkee, coordinate!

    Ah, the true story behind the Monkees comes out: They are stranded Vulcans.

    He's at a peep show? :rommie:

    Barney or Willy?

    Yeah, and something they couldn't really overdo, otherwise we'd have to wonder why it never came up before.

    And that's the name of that tune.

    In which he discovers that Caine is no Finnegan.

    I remember not caring much for Ironside back in the day, but I don't really remember why. I wonder how it would look through the lenses of nostalgia.

    That's not impossible (no pun intended)-- scripts for one show were often used for another, sometimes even if it had already been filmed.

    "This tape will wallow in self pity, join a strange religious cult, and eventually die of a drug overdose. Good luck, Dan!"

    All those could-have-beens.....
     
  13. The Old Mixer

    The Old Mixer Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si Xim. Moderator

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    I've seen that one in the background at times, but never developed an attachment for it like I did for 12 O'Clock High. Just looked it up, hadn't realized it was still on in the '66-'67 season...looks like my window for exploring it as 50th anniversary business is passing.

    I know that it was brought up at times that classic mad scientist Luthor could have done very well for himself and the world if he'd used his scientific genius for legal pursuits. And I remember a post-Crisis story or two commenting on how the Silver/Bronze Age Flash Rogues had these fantastic gadgets and orchestrated elaborate, property-destroying schemes just to rob banks.

    Gah, yes, I meant Willy--I knew I'd do that sooner or later! Too easy to mix those names up. Willy looks more like a Barney than Barney does.

    Decades is showing it again this weekend if you want to give it a try, though they'll be picking up starting in the '70-'71 season.

    Part of the appeal of that show for me is that like Adam-12, it has its roots in the late '60s, but aired long enough that I remember seeing it first-run.

    :lol:

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    Kung Fu

    "A Small Beheading"
    PC 166254
    Originally aired September 21, 1974
    The Shat is almost unrecognizable here with his colorful period face fuzz and equally colorful Irish accent; France Nuyen plays his wife; and their reunion is almost upstaged by James Hong, who seems to be appearing as a different character in every episode now. This time he's a Flashback Shaolin master.

    It's an interesting touch how Caine is already in a work/living situation at the beginning of the episode (with a female employer who's being all flirty with him)...they don't often do that on this show that I've noticed. And there's a bit of a woman's lib angle in the way Caine deals with her desire to be wifey to him.

    There's also a mysticism angle with the crow playing a symbolic role both in the flashbacks and in triggering the flashbacks.

    Spoiler alert: The Emperor's offer is a lie...a scheme of Cap'n Shat to collect the reward on Caine. Ultimately Kwai Chang and Cap'n Shat go mano a mano. Watch out for that flying butt slam, Caine!

    Caine badass moment: In the general melee that ensues, Caine takes out two of Shat's crewmen by repeatedly kicking one into the other.


    "The Predators"
    PC 166255
    Originally aired October 5, 1974
    They got a Singaporean actor to play the Indian this time, which is an improvement over Don Johnson.

    This one's flashback thread involves another Shaolin monk who stands out a little too much from the rest.

    Caine's situation in the present is presented as an in media res situation...it turns out that he's already looking for Rafe (Anthony Zerbe back as a new character) to clear him for something that happened pre-episode.

    At one point, Caine's bags get thrown off a cliff...I'll remember that the next time he pulls a fragile-looking memento from his pouch. Going to commercial on a freeze-frame of Caine and Rafe tumbling off the cliff reminds me a little too much of Dukes of Hazzard.


    Next up for Kung Fu will be the "Blood of the Dragon" two-parter, which actually aired as one episode and as the season premiere. Production-wise, "The Vanishing Image" comes before it, but I read that it should be watched out of order because it includes an assassin from the Order of the Avenging Dragon, which is introduced in "Blood of the Dragon". I wonder if "Blood of the Dragon" isn't meant to be watched earlier in the season even if one is otherwise going by production order, but I guess I'll find out.

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    Last edited: Aug 16, 2017
  14. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    The thing about pre-Crisis Luthor is, he could've done well for himself by human standards, yes, but he couldn't stand the fact that Superman would always surpass him no matter what he achieved. So his criminal career was motivated by the need to defeat Superman. If Superman had been a criminal, Luthor would probably have become the world's greatest crimefighter. (Hey, I wonder if they ever did that as an "imaginary story.")

    Then, of course, there's the classic panel:

    https://scans-daily.dreamwidth.org/5068738.html
     
  15. RJDiogenes

    RJDiogenes Idealistic Cynic and Canon Champion Premium Member

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    :rommie:

    I'll try to watch a couple. I like being transported back to the 60s and 70s (especially these days).

    I remember that so well. :rommie:

    The clone storyline would have come to a head if the show had lasted one more season.

    Caine represented Hippiedom.

    The pouch is lined with special Chinese herbs that absorb distress.
     
  16. The Old Mixer

    The Old Mixer Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si Xim. Moderator

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    I dunno know about that in this context. The '60s counterculture wasn't big on gender equality...women's lib came along in the next decade.

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    Kung Fu

    "Blood of the Dragon"
    PC 166257 & 166258
    Originally aired September 14, 1974
    (The description is mistaken in one area...it's a story point that Grandpa Caine had traveled back to California from his home in Lordsburg.)

    Having watched this, I'm definitely of the impression that however much of a mess the general airing order may have been this season, this installment was meant to be viewed as the season opener. It's a double-sized event episode that provides a more dramatic re-ignition of the Fugitive Premise and Brother Quest, which includes the use of flashbacks to key origin beats. Also, if this episode has to be moved in front of "The Vanishing Image" as reported, it makes dramatic sense for there to be more space between the appearances of the Order of the Avenging Dragon assassins. From what I've seen of the season so far, I'd say that one should watch this installment first, then go with production order for the rest of the season.

    Another recurring guest, Clyde Kusatsu, is back as the point man of the Order's contingent who come to America to hunt down Caine. How convenient for them that Caine happens to be hanging out on the coast this episode!

    The hooded head of the order with his bits of narration was a little OTT. And Kusatu's character and Flashback Llama give us by and far the most demonstrative examples of mysticism on the show to date. Caine fighting an evil manifestation of himself was pretty cool, though.

    There's a flashback to the scene of Grandpa Caine giving Kwai Chang his family heirlooms...it looks like the one that belonged to Caine's father was a ring. In the reused flashback of the events surrounding Master Po's death, they edited out my favorite Po moment, when he hears and recognizes Grasshopper's footsteps in a crowd of people.

    The syndication episode break is pretty clumsy...you can tell that the first episode is just quitting in the middle of a scene that wasn't edited to be split.

    I'm divided about Patricia Neal's character...she has some gravitas and makes a good antagonist for Caine, but her methodically paced scenery chewing seems designed to fill time.

    Trivia points: An episode in which Caine dons his bitchin' gold fighting togs; and according to the tombstones in the coda, it's 1874 at this point in the show.

    I didn't spot any noteworthy TOS guests, but we got this...
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    Last edited: Aug 18, 2017
  17. RJDiogenes

    RJDiogenes Idealistic Cynic and Canon Champion Premium Member

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    About ten years earlier, actually. The Women's Lib movement can be traced in large part to the introduction of the pill, and was named sometime in the mid to late 60s.
     
  18. The Old Mixer

    The Old Mixer Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si Xim. Moderator

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    It had its roots in the '60s, but hippie men didn't seem to be much for it...they expected their "old ladies" to cook and have babies.

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    Mission: Impossible

    "Zubrovnik's Ghost"
    Originally aired November 26, 1966

    Briggs gets this assignment from a dictation machine in a hospital room, with pictures hung on the X-ray viewing box.
    So he puts the disk in the sink and pours acid, I presume, over it--That's not the usual manner! The usual manner is a furnace! Well, maybe there's a usual manner for each type of recording. They need to simplify this system....

    This story had the potential to be what we've previously discussed, a mission to expose somebody else's scheme. (Indeed, Christopher 2010 had the same idea.) But the IMF operation plays as solving a mystery, not a heist scheme. The silly bit of business with the projected head comes off as an afterthought to add a distinctly M:I touch to the story, and doesn't work, getting upstaged by an improvised con on the part of Ariana (the IMF spiritualist), combined with what we're led to believe are actual supernatural occurrences...!

    It's certainly a novel angle to have a spiritualist on the IMF team. I guess that fact that her powers were a sham explain why the initially skeptical Rollin starts buying into her insights a little quickly...they're just informed intuitions, and he quickly catches on to what she does.

    The stock stormy night backdrop is a bit cliche. They could have played the atmosphere a bit more straightforwardly suspenseful and less "Monkees spending the night in a haunted house".


    "Fakeout"
    Originally aired December 3, 1966
    Lloyd Bridges doesn't strike me as the drug kingpin type..but it's too bad he didn't return for the Peter Graves seasons. Looks like he picked the wrong year to stop doing Mission: Impossible!

    Briggs gets his mission via a small reel-to-reel tape at a rooftop pigeon coop.
    Well that's a little open-ended, isn't it? Also, it's unusual for Dan to listen to a recording within earshot of a contact.

    They're back to including main title regulars in the portfolio scene (something they haven't done for a few episodes)...though that could easily be a vagary of airing vs. production order.

    Well, it's not every episode that a baddie winds up at the mercy of a polar bear!

    Barney was pretty busy in this one. Had Willy been in the episode, sign-excavation duty would have been right up his alley! Not to mention the cartoon-style sign-turning, which was handled by a recruit in the field!

    In the climax, it seemed that the IMF had been working directly with the Chagueo authorities.


    Those three missing M:I episodes recorded on schedule today, so I'll be able to roll right over into the last two episodes of Season 1 after I've watched the last two episodes that aired in 1966.

    _______

    This Week's 50th Anniversary Viewing

    _______

    Dark Shadows

    Episode 296
    Originally aired August 14, 1967
    DARK SHADOWS--BACK IN BLACK AND WHITE!

    I assume that it broadcast in color, it's a kinescoper.

    Grayson Hall is on narration again.

    Continuing from last week's climax, Doc Woodard grills Maggie about what she remembers of recent events, and Maggie seems to have become more upset about her amnesia. Woodard establishes that her disappearance was only over a month ago...that seems a bit too short of a time frame for the abduction storyline and its aftermath. Sam comes into Woodard's office to share a scene with his daughter after so long. Woodard shares his bewilderment at Maggie's sudden loss of memory with Dr. Hoffman, blind to the fact that she was responsible. Hoffman wants Maggie to return to Windcliff, but between the two of them, Sam and Woodard have enough of a spine to stand up to her for once.

    Back home at last, Maggie is acting very jumpy when Joe visits. As part of their reunion, the two share a long, romantic kiss. Funny, I can't remember having seen anyone kissing like that in all the episodes I've seen. It is a soap opera, after all.

    At the Old House, Barnabas is acting fretful when Hoffman comes by and reports her success in burying Maggie's memory. Hoffman insists that Barnabas not try to harm Maggie, or she'll expose him. After Hoffman's left and the crowing of the cock has signaled that it's too late to squeeze any further activities into this night, Barnabas promises out loud that he'll deal with Maggie nonetheless the following night.

    In her room, Maggie awakes to find Sarah's doll on her nightstand, which she doesn't recognize.

    During Hoffman's conversation with Barnabas at the Old House, I got a giggle when she pulled out a cigarette and lit it on a candle!


    Episode 297
    Originally aired August 15, 1967
    DARK SHADOWS--WE'RE REALLY IN COLOR NOW, WE PROMISE!

    IMDb confirms that it was Kathryn Leigh Scott on narration this time. Her narration voice is almost unrecognizable compared to her performance as Maggie.

    At the Evans home, Sam and Joe discuss Maggie's safety given that her unknown abductor is still on the loose. The new color makes the afghan on the couch a bit of a distraction. Maggie seems a lot more chipper after what must have been a good night's sleep for once...but Sam has to go and burst her all-too-brief bubble by telling her about her kidnapping and its aftermath.

    Back in her room, Maggie is still wondering about the doll when Sarah comes in through the open French doors. Maggie doesn't remember the little girl, but is happy to play with her. Even singing "London Bridge" doesn't bring any memories to the fore, despite its use as an ominous music cue throughout the captivity storyline. Maggie's amnesia triggers the sort of abandonment issues that you can only have if you're a small child who's been dead for going on 200 years, so Sarah takes her doll and leaves.

    Looking at his sketch of Sarah, Maggie questions her father about the girl. After Maggie leaves the room, Barnabas drops by for a social call via the front door, and proceeds to pump Sam for info about what Maggie remembers of her ordeal. Barnabas tests Maggie's memory by asking to see her, and for the first time in too long, Maggie doesn't have a traumatic reaction to him, but acts as she did when she first met him at the coffee shop. Maggie is passing her test splendidly when she brings up her encounter with Sarah, mentioning her by name. This time, Barnabas makes it clear to the audience that he knows who and what the strange little girl that he's been hearing about really is.

    Unfortunately, his way of dealing with this news is to make an uninvited visit through the French doors while Maggie's sleeping. He's approaching her with a pillow (not a particularly vampirish method) when the sound of Sarah singing "London Bridge" literally spooks him, causing him to back out of the house while whispering questions about Sarah's motives that she doesn't answer.


    Episode 298
    Originally aired August 16, 1967
    The stained glass in the Great House really pops in color.

    Carolyn tells Elizabeth that she has a feeling that something terrible is going to happen very soon. Burke comes by to offer to buy the Seaview property from Liz...which is the first that we learn the name of Vicki's dream house, that it belongs to Liz, and that it's a few miles up the beach from Collinwood....despite Burke's previous implication that hopping on a jet would be a practical way to get there! If it were only a few years later, I might give him the benefit of the doubt and assume that he'd been talking about jet ski travel...!

    Anthony George seems to be doing something different with his voice...he sounds less whiny in color. Actually, the audio in this episode seemed lower-quality than usual, so I suppose that was working in his favor.

    Burke, Liz, and Carolyn go to survey the house. At the Evans home, Victoria describes the night that she stayed with Maggie for the benefit of the amnesiac girl and forgetful audience members, and also mentions having glimpsed Maggie in the cemetery. The mention of Josette Collins seems to be triggering Maggie's memory when Undercover Hoffman comes by, ostensibly to see Sam, and overhears Vicki pressing Maggie to remember more. Hoffman interrupts to show Maggie her hypnotic medallion, and puts it to use after Vicki leaves the room.


    Episode 299
    Originally aired August 17, 1967
    Vicki is admiring the night from a Collinwood terrace set that I haven't seen before when Barnabas startles her. In the conversation that ensues, he tests the water regarding how she'd feel about existing only at night. He tries to set a date for her to come over and look at family histories, but gets cock-blocked by her plans with Burke. Undercover Hoffman tag-teams with Vicki and pointedly questions Barnabas about his intentions toward Miss Winters, stoking the flames of his jealously of Burke along the way.

    Hoffman visits Vicki in her room to find her picking out a dress for her date. The undercover doctor tries to warn Vicki off of accepting invitations from Barnabas while framing his interest in Vicki in terms that don't spill the beans about his true nature.

    Zzzzzzzzzz...whu--huh? Oh, are Vicki and Burke done talking about their respective childhood caregivers? Their tender, moonlight conversation moves on to subjects like his desire for revenge against the Collins clan, while a concerned Barnabas eavesdrops on them. More romantic kissing ensues...a memo must have gone around to the writing staff recently. After the couple are done saying goodnight, Burke takes the opportunity to have a private conversation with Hoffman about not encouraging Vicki to focus on the past...a reminder that he has his own jealousy angle.

    At 3 a.m., Barnabas sneaks into Vicki's room from the inside of the house and does the whole "I should give her one of my special hickeys, but I--I can't!" routine yet again. So he opens the music box instead while she slumbers on. I feel like I've seen all of this before, but it wasn't in color then.


    Episode 300
    Originally aired August 18, 1967
    Speaking of color--not today, we've got another kinescope episode.

    At Collinwood, Vicki relates to Hoffman how she felt that somebody was in her room, and must have opened her music box while she slept. Odd how she always senses people being in her room while she's asleep, but it never, y'know, wakes her up. Hoffman convinces Vicki that she opened the music box herself. Liz comes to Vicki to report that the selling of the Seaview estate to Burke is going smoothly, and seems very happy about it, even though he's sworn to destroy her clan and all of that.

    At the Old House, Barnabas take a report from Willie, who's been spying on Burke and Vicki for him. Later, Hoffman reports to Barnabas that her treatment seems to be working on him. (And it wasn't just me, the folks at Dark Shadows Before I Die also seem surprised to learn that he has a heartbeat.) She uses her leverage over him to take him to task for breaking his word to her about Vicki.

    Burke's a man of means...why is every date with Vicki on the Collinwood terrace? She seems surprised when he reveals that he's buying the house for her, and oh yeah, the proposal thing. She says that she loves him, but is very hesitant to accept his offer, scrounging for excuses not to. As she finally seems to warm to the idea (while not yet formally accepting), we see that Willie has been eavesdropping. He bettah get outta theah!

    Inside, Barnabas is paying a social call on Liz, and we learn that he still claims to be thinking of starting a shipbuilding business. He presses his host for information about Burke's purchase of Seaview, and seems genuinely surprised when Liz suggests that Burke plans to marry Vicki.

    Back at the Old House, Willie reports that Burke did in fact take Vicki to a restaurant off-camera, and oh yeah, the proposal thing.
    No, he really said that.

    _______

    50 years ago this coming week:

    New on the charts:

    "Purple Haze," The Jimi Hendrix Experience


    (#65 US; #3 UK; #17 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time)

    "Twelve Thirty (Young Girls Are Coming to the Canyon)," The Mamas & the Papas

    (#20 US)

    "Gettin' Together," Tommy James & The Shondells

    (#18 US; this week's song at 3:47+)

    "Never My Love," The Association

    (#2 US)


    And new on the boob tube:
    • The Fugitive, "The Judgment: Part I" (review to come the following week)
    • Dark Shadows, episodes 301-305
    _______
     
    Last edited: Aug 19, 2017
  19. RJDiogenes

    RJDiogenes Idealistic Cynic and Canon Champion Premium Member

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    Depends on the people. A lot of women felt the same. As always, there was a whole spectrum. But Civil Rights, Women's Lib, and the Sexual Revolution were all part of the same movement.

    For a dictation tape, the usual method is to be misfiled and never seen again.

    The IMF meets the Monkees. Another could-have-been.

    They should have put a picture of the polar bear in the portfolio scene thereafter. :rommie:

    I've never been a big Jimi fan, but "Purple Haze" is part of the cultural landscape, that's for sure.

    This stirs some vague memories. Nice one.

    I absolutely love "I Think We're Alone Now." "Gettin' Together" is not so impressive.

    This, of course, is an absolute classic.
     
  20. The Old Mixer

    The Old Mixer Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si Xim. Moderator

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    Feb 4, 2002
    Location:
    The Old Mixer, Somewhere in Connecticut
    I think that's a considerable oversimplification of the actual history.

    The IMF's mission, should they choose to accept it, is to pose as a rival group in a "battle of the bands" episode.

    There's potential for a cheap shot at Willy in there, but I won't take it.

    Their last Top 20 hit, though they've got another Top 30 coming later in the year, in addition to Mama Cass's solo hit the following year.

    Yeah, following the classic hit didn't do the new song any favors there....

    Yep.

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    The Monkees
    "Your Friendly Neighborhood Kidnappers"
    Originally aired October 3, 1966
    The Four Swine seem like a bit of a pseudo-50s throwback visually, though we don't see much of them. Their manager, who cons the Monkees while pretending to be a slick publicist, is named Trump. Now that's a name that I don't need to hear in my nostalgic, escapist entertainment these days.

    Signs o' the times: A rocket blast-off spoof and a Cassius Clay reference.

    The best gag was that the winner of the contest turned out to be the businessman who'd randomly gotten his clothes ripped off as part of a botched publicity stunt earlier in the episode.

    We get an extra song this episode, as two of them are played on a jukebox during the "kidnapping party" scene...

    "Let's Dance On"

    (played in the background during the actual scene; somebody redid the audio for the clip above)

    "(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone"

    (B-side of "I'm a Believer"; charted separately Dec. 17, 1966; #20 US; the above clip is not from this episode)

    The only actual video sequence is a new episode-specific one for "Last Train to Clarksville," which has some particularly A Hard Day's Night-esque bits of business in it. It's odd that they didn't use the contest setting for a song sequence.

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    Mission: Impossible
    "Elena"
    Originally aired December 10, 1966
    Guest-starring Barbara Luna as the titular character; and Barry (Surak) Atwater as our guest operative, a psychiatrist.

    Dan gets his mission in a trailer in a parking lot (I think I see a studio building in the background), on another variety of reel-to-reel tape player, one with a casing that looks a lot like a cassette recorder from the '70s.
    Ah, that's disappointing. And this time "the usual means" is dropping it into a sink that's evidently already filled with acid! I gotta hand it to Briggs that he could even keep up with all of these "usual means/methods".

    Yep, the portfolio is back to only showing guest stars and the unchosen. This is the first episode in which the mission team consists only of guest stars (which is how Landau is being billed this season). Once again Briggs can't come along on the excuse that he already knows the subject.

    This is another small-team episode that doesn't have an elaborate scheme and therefore doesn't feel IMF-y...the operatives go somewhere undercover to gather intel, and again they have a contact in the field. And for his role in the mission, Rollin could have been any hero spy here, as he's not using his signature talent, but is engaging in an unusual amount of fisticuffs and even some light romance with Elena.

    Considering that it's more generic spy fi business, the story has a good angle in that the operatives have a to decide on a tight deadline whether Elena lives or dies...and of course, this includes having to stop their contact from killing her once the deadline is up.

    I'm not normally one to pick out TV music cues like Christopher does, but I have been noticing the striking similarities of some music cues on this show to ones that are burned in my brain from Star Trek.

    There's a shot continuity issue in one conversation scene between Elena and Rollin, when Elena is pointing with her index finger in the frontal shots, and with her middle finger in the over-the-shoulder shots.

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    Kung Fu
    "The Vanishing Image"
    PC 166256
    Originally aired December 20, 1974
    Caine badass moment: He flips the charging Indian three times, each time taking his knife and throwing it back to him for the next charge.

    Yep, the Order of the Avenging Dragon is back, including silly hooded narration guy. And yeah, you definitely wanna put some space between appearances of the pimpin' gold fighting togs. Random Caine business: Meditating naked in the waterfall before the fight.

    Caine seems familiar with mercury poisoning. Was this known about in 1874?

    There's potential mysticism in the image of a woman appearing in the waterfall...and certainly in the wind dramatically blowing in opposite directions when the assassin was near, and Caine knowing to stay and confront him--though that's penny-ante stuff compared to the stunts that Clyde Kusatsu was pulling in the other episode.

    It's a pity that Caine's photograph didn't last long.

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    Last edited: Aug 21, 2017