I remember Diagnosis Murder doing a vampire episode that starts out where it seems like it's just a nut who thinks she's a vampire, but in the end, they show that there are definitely real vampires.STARSKY & HUTCH and McCLOUD both did "vampire" episodes back in the seventies. Technically, they were about nuts who only thought they were vampires, but I remember the McCLOUD ep added a coda that suggested that maybe, just maybe the vampire was real after all.
F TROOP and GILLIGAN'S ISLAND also did vampire eps, but in those cases the vampire turned out to be a misunderstanding or a dream, respectively.
As far as I'm concerned, CSI has always been science fiction. It's set in an alternate reality where forensic scientists actually do the detective work themselves and this is somehow not seen as an enormous conflict of interest. And where the forensic scientist-detectives are such celebrities that they periodically inspire serial killers to target them with murderous games.
More seriously, it's science fiction in the sense that it's fiction about scientists doing their work, and in which the process of doing science is integral to solving the problems that drive the plots. Which is more than can be said for a lot of the sci-fi on TV and film. Another good example was Eureka. I consider it one of the purest science fiction shows in TV history; while the science may have been fanciful, it was a show that was fundamentally about scientists doing the work of science, with both the crises and the solutions arising from scientific innovation.
Any good medical-mystery show qualifies.
@Christopher I think that even more sci-fi, as in out of the realm of possibility
is the composition of the Priority Homicide/Major Crimes Division from TheCloser/Major Crimes. It's got what, three lieutenants,a sergeant, two detectives and a dedicated civilian media guy, plus a deputy chief all working one case at a time.
I don't know if this counts but since you brought up Starsky & Hutch, there was that 2-parter from season 2 'The Set Up' that was inspired by the Manchurian Candidate about brainwashing people into becoming hitmen/women. You could argue that it was sci-fi given the methods used for the time. It also broke continuity as the iconic Ford Gran Torino was blown up (not very convincingly, they used a completely different make of car), only to return unscathed in the next story. Also the villains behind it were never Identified and got away, the mob, the US Government?STARSKY & HUTCH and McCLOUD both did "vampire" episodes back in the seventies. Technically, they were about nuts who only thought they were vampires, but I remember the McCLOUD ep added a coda that suggested that maybe, just maybe the vampire was real after all.
F TROOP and GILLIGAN'S ISLAND also did vampire eps, but in those cases the vampire turned out to be a misunderstanding or a dream, respectively.
It seems like that was taking a response to an interview question about going to space and the writer diplomatically saying they won't take anything off the table if they can make it work and casting it as "They're going to set it in space!!!!". It's all about the clicks, baby...Wasn't there a rumor going around at one point that the Fast and Furious movies were going to do a movie set in space?
I always joked that the series was going to inevitably wind up with the team breaking up a cartel / spy ring on the Moon with the help of a lunar buggy street racing challenge and the power of familia.Wasn't there a rumor going around at one point that the Fast and Furious movies were going to do a movie set in space?
@Shawnster I really wanted to watch Mercy Point when it was on. They advertised it as "Deep Space 9-1-1". How could you not be interested in that?
Reminds me of a credibility issue I had with Law & Order. What are the odds that every homicide investigated by the same pair of detectives from a single Manhattan precinct would then get prosecuted by the same pair of assistant DAs?
The Black Hole is basically a Gothic horror story complete with Gothic looking space ship. It also has the Captain Ahab element. I think Moby Dick has been retold in various scifi movies.
Alien is a rehash of the typical haunted house/scary monster/slasher flicks.
Any war movie, especially a WWII Nazi movie can easily be remade as a space opera.
Although I wish they wouldn't. Assuming that Earthbound war tactics could work in space makes as much sense as assuming tanks and jeeps could work underwater. The physics and logistics of the environment are completely different.
Dukes of Hazzard.
We seem to be approaching this from different angles.
For example, TOS "Balance of Terror" was basically a science fiction version of two World War II movies; "Run Silent, Run Deep" and "The Enemy Below." While there are complaints, BoT is one of the better Star Trek episodes.
All of Star Wars could easily look like a WWII movie. Just put the Imperials in Nazi uniforms. That's been a pretty successful series of films, as I recall. George Lucas even based the fighter scenes on WWII dogfight films. Yes, the realism leaves a lot to be desired, but that's not hindered that franchise.
Although I wish they wouldn't. Assuming that Earthbound war tactics could work in space makes as much sense as assuming tanks and jeeps could work underwater. The physics and logistics of the environment are completely different. And my problem with a lot of military SF is that it tends to ignore technological advances. IIRC, we're already at the point where the US Air Force has more drone pilots than fighter pilots. I suspect that future wars will be fought mainly by drones and cyberwarfare, that the whole nature of armed conflict will change to the point that trying to transpose historical war stories into a future setting will just be ridiculous. (Deep Space Nine was particularly bad at this. Its Starfleet troops in the Dominion War were running around in cloth uniforms, without any kind of helmets or body armor at all. Not only were they riffing on WWII movies, but they couldn't even bother to use WWII-level technology!)
Star Trek: Insurrection was billed as being a science fiction version of Heart of Darkness /Apocalypse Now.
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