It seems odd that NBC would have no issue with a dark-skin man/light-skin woman romance (Space Seed) but would have an issue with a light-skin man/dark-skin woman romance (The Alternative Factor).
One of the interesting elements of Mission: Impossible was the believability of the gadgets used. There were also speciel effects, but they were obviously much more lowkey than Star Trek's.I've never really seen much of the original Mission: Impossible. What was it that made the show so dang expensive? Was it the cast salaries, or all the location work they were doing or something?
I can't imagine it was the effects.
Definitely!I always loved their dead silent power tools.
It seems odd that NBC would have no issue with a dark-skin man/light-skin woman romance (Space Seed) but would have an issue with a light-skin man/dark-skin woman romance (The Alternative Factor).
Hm. I hadn't thought of this before, but network aside, it's not a surprise that a studio run by Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz would not having a problem with a Mexican man romancing a white redhead.
EDIT: And I see somebody beat me to that thought.
But Khan/Montalban still wasn't black even with that. In other words, to use the phrase of the time, he wasn't a Negro. That was the issue. He wasn't Bill Cosby or Ivan Dixon. The trouble was more about race than skin tone.
The disguises were also a riot. A mask/disguise might work well enough for stage or screen, but I question whether you could pull it off in close quarters.
Definitely!I always loved their dead silent power tools.
The disguises were also a riot. A mask/disguise might work well enough for stage or screen, but I question whether you could pull it off in close quarters.
The disguises were also a riot. A mask/disguise might work well enough for stage or screen, but I question whether you could pull it off in close quarters.
Ha yeah, even as a kid I had a hard time believing that trick could really be pulled off. What with people's very different bone structures and all the incredibly subtle details that make up the human face.
Even artists who spend weeks sculpting wax figures from exact measurements have a hard time making it look completely real.
Mythbusters did an episode about this. If I recall correctly, they made the two hosts up with Hollywood-style prosthetics to look like each other and had unsuspecting test subjects who were familiar with the show interact with them (at a distance) to see if they noticed anything amiss.
The results were mixed.
Hey, they don't call it the Impossible Mission Force for nothin'...
M.
Yes, very true.It may be ridiculous as hell, but the mask thing on M:I is definitely a fun trick to watch them pull off, I can't deny that.
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