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55th Anniversary Viewing
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12 O'Clock High
"The Suspected"
Originally aired December 18, 1964
IMDb said:
While on assignment to the 918th, reporter Clifford Moran is certain that Sgt. Driscoll, an exceptional gunner, is actually an accused murderer who disappeared in the States years before. Desperate for qualified crewmen, General Savage is unconvinced of Moran's allegation and demands concrete proof. In the meantime, Moran continues to hound Driscoll in hopes he'll uncover his charade for a big story and finally goads him into a public confrontation that nearly explodes into violence. Shortly thereafter, Moran mysteriously falls - or is pushed - in front of a subway train, and the circumstances seem to point straight back to Driscoll.
After a mission, Sgt. Jim Driscoll (Michael Callan) invites General Savage to his anniversary dinner, as the general was the one who gave away the bride. As Driscoll is driving off, Moran (Edward Binns), a war correspondent who's been getting under Stovall's feet, declares that the sergeant looks like George Turner, an escaped murderer from St. Louis. Turner, then a teenager, was convicted of murdering his abusive stepfather in 1933.
At the dinner, we learn that Meg Driscoll (Antoinette Bower) is a local girl and very pregnant. Savage fishes for more details about Jim's background, and the sergeant maintains that he's from Los Angeles. Back at the base, Moran has arranged to interview the Driscoll, which he does in Savage's office. Moran tries to shake Driscoll with hints of his true identity, but the sergeant seems unphased.
Fingerprints that Moran covertly obtained during the interview prove inconclusive because Turner is said to have burned his fingers, but Moran remains persistent. At a meeting arranged by Driscoll in a London pub, the sergeant seems more upset at how the reporter has been "bird-dogging" him, which has included questioning Meg. Driscoll is seen following Moran out of the pub onto the foggy street set. Moran proceeds into a subway station, where the reporter is jostled off the platform.
When the news gets out in the morning of Moran's death, which is being considered an accident, Driscoll has gone AWOL. Things looks worse when Savage visits the Driscolls' flat to find that them both gone...until the general learns from the cleaning lady that Meg delivered her baby on the way to the hospital...and the boy has been named Frank! Savage is practically giddy when he visits the couple at the hospital. Outside the room, Savage questions Driscoll about his meeting with Moran and breaks the news of the reporter's death.
Fraser (John Orchard), the Scotland Yard man who'd been checking the fingerprints for Moran, visits Savage with good news and bad. The good is that a pickpocket has confessed to having accidentally pushed Moran off the platform. The bad is that a print has been deemed usable. The weather that's been keeping the 918th grounded lifts, and Savage and Driscoll are together on a bomber that's explicitly identified as not being the Lily. Savage tells Driscoll about the print and how he plans to send it to St. Louis to clear the matter up. Attacked by fighters after the run, the bomber loses a couple of engines, the co-pilot is killed, and Savage is temporarily blinded by a near miss. The general orders the crew to bail, but Driscoll lingers behind in a manner that seems increasingly ominous. Savage addresses Driscoll as Turner, and Driscoll admits it. The sergeant protests that he killed his step-father in self-defense, but he intends to bail, which would be leaving Savage to die. Savage convinces him to stop running and help him land the plane.
Now in custody, Turner visits Savage at the infirmary before being sent back to the States. Savage promises his help in seeing that Turner gets the best legal defense available, and wishes the sergeant luck.
Jason Wingreen makes his second of three appearances as meteorologist Major Rosen, who's being comedically chided by Savage for not providing a good forecast.
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Gilligan's Island
"Birds Gotta Fly, Fish Gotta Talk"
Originally aired December 19, 1964
Wiki said:
It's Christmas on the island and the castaways recall their first days of being shipwrecked whilst waiting for the believed oncoming rescue ship.
It's a good thing that the castaways have endless battery juice to listen to their radio! They're listening to Christmas music while decorating their makeshift tree, and Gilligan has just wished for a rescue, when they hear a news bulletin that a Navy plane has spotted a group of castaways believed to be the passengers and crew of the
Minnow on an island, and that a destroyer is on the way to pick them up.
This serves as a framing story for footage from the unaired pilot mixed with redone scenes featuring the regular series actors. The shot in the opening credits of Gilligan on the deck of the
Minnow carrying equipment on his person is from this sequence. Flashback Gilligan reluctantly climbs the island's tallest coconut tree, sees a ship and people, and thinks they're rescued--of course, it's the
Minnow and her passengers. The Skipper and the Professor are making progress on fixing the transmitter when Gilligan hooks it with his fishing pole and casts it into the lagoon, followed by the radio.
We see the gun again in the flashbacks as the men are salvaging equipment from the boat. Gilligan catches several large fish (the first one looks like a small shark) and discovers that one of them swallowed the radio. The castaways search among the other fish for one who swallowed the transmitter, talking into each fish's mouth. Miraculously, they actually find it (the transmitter being much larger than the fish), but once it's out, Gilligan drops an armload of logs on it.
The in-present castaways learn that it was another group of castaways who were spotted and have been rescued. They'd been on their island for eleven years.
In the coda, the castaways get a visit from a Santa who looks and sounds a lot like Alan Hale, and who reminds them of everything they have to be grateful for in their situation. They assume, as does the audience, that he's the Skipper in a Santa suit...until the Skipper walks into the scene just as Santa's leaving.
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A little something from 55 Years Ago This Holiday Season:
"A Holly Jolly Christmas," Burl Ives
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50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)
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"She Never Had the Vegas Notion" (Part 2)
Originally aired December 18, 1969
Wiki said:
While in Las Vegas, Donald is tricked into thinking that he married an actress. Guest star Jack Cassidy.
OK, the chronology of Donald's alleged marriage is all screwed up. In the previous episode, they leave that club in broad daylight, with Marty Haynes commenting that they've been out all night. Donald and Joanne get into a cab together and Marty stays behind. The next scene, Ann is having breakfast with Marty outside the hotel, talking about how she hasn't heard from Donald since he got back to the hotel last night, and when she finds Joanne in Donald's room, Joanne says that they got married last night. In Part 2's continuation of Part 1's last scene (which doesn't include the "To Be Continued" That Girl gag), Marty says that he was Donald's best man at the chapel. Huh? Marty's whereabouts during the incident get cleared up, but I suspect that the shot of the group leaving the club in broad daylight was a patch that didn't match the intended continuity of the story.
Mr. Marie
is in this one. A telephone operator refers to Donald having married a woman now being referred to as Mrs. Hollinger last night, and you know what Lew assumes...which causes him to head straight to Vegas to--you guessed it--kill Donald!
Meanwhile, Joanne has confessed that the marriage was a practical joke of Marty's. She explains how Marty arrived at the hotel just behind them, helped Donald into his room, and went out and got a phony marriage license. Ann is furious and wants to get back at Marty. With Joanne's help, they make Marty think that Donald's gone to Hoover Dam to kill himself, which causes Marty to admit to the joke. They keep the ruse going and head to the dam, where they make it look like Donald has already jumped and Ann threatens to.
Some more confusion at the front desk of the hotel causes Lew to think that Donald has since divorced Ann and run off with another woman. Lew heads for the dam, finds Donald hiding nearby, and disrupts the counter-joke.
"Oh, Donald" count:
1
"Oh, darling" count:
1
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Get Smart
"Ice Station Siegfried"
Originally aired December 19, 1969
Wiki said:
It's August but Max and the Chief are snowed in at Miami. In fact, the weather is unusually erratic all over. The Chief assigns 99 while the CIA assigns Agent Quigley (Bill Dana) -- who is so goofy and naive that he makes Max seem sophisticated in comparison -- to investigate who may be manipulating the weather this way. A lead sends the duo to fictional frozen Wolf Jaw, Canada, where they make contact with two "mounties": Siegfried and Shtarker. A spoof of Ice Station Zebra. Note: Don Adams only appears in the cold open of this episode and it is the last episode in which Siegfried appears.
It's odd to do an episode about winter weather at such a seasonally appropriate time but set it in the summer. The guest agent actually seems like a rewrite of Max, but Dana's delivery is flatter and more subdued.
Al Molinaro reappears as Agent 44...this time hiding in a stove. He directs them to Siegfried and Starker, who claim to have left KAOS but try to kill 99 and Quigley by leaving them deserted in the frozen wilderness. The duo nevertheless find the igloo entrance to the underground lab of the scientist behind the weather, whom S&S have killed in order to claim his weapon for KAOS. S&S leave the 99 and Quigley trapped there, but the agents get out and stop the not-so-giant fan responsible.
There's a lot of talk about S&S having sled dogs, but we never see them.
Overall, a pretty bleh episode.
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The Brady Bunch
"The Voice of Christmas"
Originally aired December 19, 1969
Wiki said:
In the show's only Christmas episode, Carol comes down with laryngitis and may not be able to sing at the holiday service. Cindy asks a department-store Santa Claus (Hal Smith) for a miracle. The older children are also depressed by Carol's illness, prompting Alice to remind them of the true meaning of the holiday.
Featured Song: O Come All Ye Faithful sung by Florence Henderson. It was later featured in 1988 TV movie A Very Brady Christmas, sung by the whole family.
Continuity point: Mike's getting Greg a tape recorder! In the early scenes, Mike's wearing a yellow shirt with a red sweater...looking kinda like Billy Batson.
At first Carol's stressed out because there's so much do in preparation for Christmas and the doctor has ordered her to rest. She can't help silently weighing in about where to put the tree. Alice demonstrates her own expertise in certain areas of lore, having an old family remedy that involves wearing a scarf that smells like garlic...is she trying to protect Carol from vampires? (Young Skipper...Young Alice...vampires...this is starting to write itself, isn't it?)
Cindy says that she's six--Susan Olsen was actually eight at the time. Cindy asking Santa for her Mommy's voice back is one of those moments that hits the right note for the season. After Mike learns that Santa couldn't help but agree to do so, he tries to lower Cindy's expectations.
There are some brief shenanigans of the various family members trying to hide presents and stumbling over each others' hiding places.
There's a nice, initially moody scene in which the older and middle kids gather at the tree on Christmas Eve and talk about postponing Christmas, but Alice flips on the lights and talks them out of it.
On Christmas morning Mike wakes up to the sound of Carol humming in her sleep. When she wakes up and realizes that her voice is back, she starts singing "O Come All Ye Faithful," which transitions to the church performance. And goddamn, I don't know what it is, but something about Cindy sitting in the pews beaming because Santa brought Mommy's voice back just hit me in exactly the right spot.
In the coda, Cindy's writing a thank you letter to Santa, and Mike acknowledges that Christmas is the season for miracles.
In addition to playing Otis on
Andy Griffith, it looks like Hal Smith did a crapload of voice work in cartoons over the decades.
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Hogan's Heroes
"Is There a Traitor in the House?"
Originally aired December 19, 1969
Wiki said:
Newkirk turns traitor on international radio after the team’s wireless breaks before they can send London bombing coordinates.
The prisoners have information that Mama Bear needs about a nearby German ball bearing plant, but ironically their radio is put out of commission by an Allied bombing raid. When Klink assembles the prisoners for a broadcast by propagandist Berlin Betty (Antoinette Bower) made specifically for them, inviting one of the prisoners to come on the show and express their support for the Reich in exchange for enjoying her company, they see an opportunity to get the information out. Thus Newkirk pretends to fall for the lure, and the prisoners pretend to be shocked and upset over it.
Klink gives Newkirk favorable treatment and Betty comes to the Stalag to make her broadcast...making the other prisoners jealous that they couldn't be the traitor. But once Newkirk spends some alone time with Betty and she paints a picture of only serving the Nazis reluctantly because they're holding her family, he falls for her and doesn't want to go through with the plan for fear that it might implicate her. He does nevertheless, and learns immediately afterward that Betty had just been testing him.
In the coda the daylight bombing strike on the plant is a success, and the plant is so close that the stalag is littered with bearings. Geez, Allied bombers, you could kinda kill some POWs that way...!
DISSS-MISSED!
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Adam-12
"Log 142: As High as You Are"
Originally aired December 20, 1969
Wiki said:
Reed and Malloy investigate a factory break-in & find a suspect in a wheelchair. As they try and leave, a group of neighborhood thugs decide to interfere, making their job that much harder.
The episode opens with Reed reading up about getting a dog for his son. On patrol, the officers stop a man for his taillight being out. There's no want on the vehicle, but the driver is acting suspicious, so they have him exit the car and find that it's hotwired.
Next they respond to a 459 silent, which is actually at a hospital supplies warehouse. Inside they find a man in a wheelchair wheeling back and forth and singing and mumbling to himself, high from having shot himself up. It turns out that Herbert (Jerry Ayres) has a broken leg from falling through skylight. His intent was to steal and deal, but he took the drugs for the pain.
The officers are blocked and confronted outside by a small group of toughs led by Will Davis (Art Metrano), who has a grudge to settle with the local cops over his brother having been shot during an incident in which he knifed an officer and took his gun. When the warehouse owner, Ben Owen (Frank Campanella), shows up, his belligerence worsens an already tense situation. Davis backs off and leaves the scene after Malloy stands up to Owen on Herbert's behalf.
Next is a 415 in an apartment building. The superintendent's wife, Mrs. Killian (Fran Ryan), gives an unlikely story about a lion who frightened her dog and a baby being in a neighbor's apartment. The officers open the door to find that there really is a lion, which Reed approaches successfully, having noticed that the lion was declawed. Mrs. Langborne (Barbara Davis) comes home and explains that Sandy was a gift pet, and she was out getting milk for the baby. Nobody brings up leaving the child alone in the apartment, tame lion or no.
Back on patrol, Malloy reminds Reed that the lion still had teeth.
This is one of those episodes that was plagued by really horrible syndication edits as aired on Cozi, especially cutting to commercial in mid-conversation. Hopefully Me does a better job in this department.
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And a little something from 50 Years Ago This Holiday Season:
"Christmas Ain't Christmas New Years Ain't New Years without the One You Love," The O'Jays
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Understandable. I was never familiar with the books when growing up with Bond-- and still am not, for the most part-- but I'm a firm believer in being faithful to the source material. The James Bond of the movies was a completely different character and so should have had his own name and mythology.
I wouldn't go that far. The movies started out trying to be straight-up adaptations of the source material, but they became their own bigger, more successful, iconic animal. To proactively cover some territory addressing quotes further below, I initially got into Bond more through the books than the films, and at that time Moore was still in the role and the films were as far from the source material as they'd ever been. I enjoyed the films for what they were, and generally was more entertained by Moore's films than Connery's. Connery was flat-out miscast as Fleming's character. Moore was a more frustrating situation, because he wasn't miscast IMO, and could have potentially been a great Flemingesque Bond if he'd taken the role seriously. But he didn't, and was open in saying that he didn't find anything in the books worth emulating in his performance. I enjoyed Moore's lemonade, but the part of me that enjoyed the books wished for something closer to them, and at that point wasn't expecting it to ever come.
Sometimes a creation takes on a life of its own that little resembles its origins. Try reading some early Golden Age Superman, for example. One could say that in the larger development of the Bond character, the original Fleming Bond was just the first of several varied interpretations of the character. Connery's Bond was different from Fleming's, and Moore's was different still.
Where I've always been a heretic is in the area of people who are primarily familiar with Bond via the films who hold up Connery as the gold standard of the character's portrayal. Over the years I came to appreciate what he brought to the role and Connery's charisma in general, but Connery was not love at first sight for me as a Bond fan, and I still roll my eyes a little when he gets praised for being the one, true Bond.
Everything must be larger than life (that wasn't intended to be a Bondian one-liner, but I'll leave it there

).
Moore
might have been able to make that one work with some heavy-duty suggestive eyebrow lifting.
and when it comes to Craig I can't get into a Bond that reminds me of Vladimir Putin.

Well, he sold movie audiences.
I take it that you're generally not a fan of Moore's Bond.
That's not the case at all, and I hope that I've better explained myself above. What I was attempting to do regarding Moore in my OHMSS review was to defend and champion his legacy in the Bond tapestry. Among Bond fans, he and his films often get dismissed out of hand for being too comical and comic-booky. I say, whatever one thinks of Moore's films, things could easily have been a
lot worse without him. There was a time when the producers flirted with the idea of casting Burt Reynolds as Bond, for example....
Now there's some odd characterization-- I'm not surprised that the movie Bond didn't follow that. But I get the impression, partly from what I hear and partly from having read the first novel, that Fleming was a bit non-traditional in his plot structures and characterizations.
Fleming's Bond was both generally more naturalistic--not a superheroic archetype--and an exaggerated reflection of his creator...he was outspokenly opinionated in dialogue and narrative POV regarding his very particular tastes and predilections. In this case, Bond felt that he was being forced to pursue a wild goose when there were real threats out there he could have been taking care of. At that point in the books, Blofeld was more of a bogeyman...he was the guy behind the guy who'd masterminded SPECTRE's one big scheme to date, in the
Thunderball novel. Bond had no personal stake in finding this Blofeld character and I think assumed that he'd just gone to ground and wasn't necessarily an ongoing threat.
The simple techniques are often the most effective.
There's definitely more of that sort of thing going on in Fleming's books than the OTT gadgetry of the films.
Agreed. But that being said, and not to detract from the performances, but I really hate the gimmick of having the protagonist find true love only to have said object of their affections killed. Either don't do it, do it for real, or find some novel way to treat the subject.
Regarding the part I emphasized in the quote, I have to ask for an example of "doing it for real" in this case.
What Fleming did at the end of OHMSS was a very striking and unusual turn for his books. He didn't hit the reset button and restore Bond to standard operating procedure in the next book. Rather, he spent the next novel dealing with the impact of Tracy's death on Bond.
One might liken the role of Tracy's death in the Bond mythos to that of Gwen Stacy's death in Spidey's...a tragic moment that informs the character going forward. Subsequent novel authors and even the films in their briefer way have gotten a lot of mileage out of referencing it. The first time it was directly referenced in the films again stands out as one of Moore's better little serious moments as Bond (1:11+):