I remember hating Buck Rogers when it first came on. I had given it a chance by watching the first few episodes, but found it lacking and stopping watching altogether. Never saw the rest of the first season, nor the second.
If this other, less campy version had aired instead, I might have enjoyed it much more.
Didn't know Buck is presently on Netflix. I might give it another shot, now.
Sean
Do it. There's nothing wrong with campy fun (although I would argue that "camp" doesn't apply here). Plus, as bad as season two was, it was still better than anything you'd find on TV now.
^The LA movie version of Flash wasn't my cup of tea for some reason. I prefered the Filmation version.
70s BR was a lot of fun in a straightforward, doesn't quite take itself too seriously way.
That said, Buck's monologue at Hawk's trial in the S2 opener is one of the finest speeches in sci-fi.
^The LA movie version of Flash wasn't my cup of tea for some reason. I prefered the Filmation version.
70s BR was a lot of fun in a straightforward, doesn't quite take itself too seriously way.
That said, Buck's monologue at Hawk's trial in the S2 opener is one of the finest speeches in sci-fi.
Yes it was. How anybody could call that series "campy" is beyond me.
And besides, it's not like he was talking about gazelles.
Could the Glen A Larson series or this one here be Successfully Rebooted like Battlestar Galactica was?
Can't be completely lost, TCM showed 2 or 3 episodes a week for at least two weekends, if not more, of a Black and White Buck Rogers (That is if the Glen Larson Series was only the second), or was what I saw episodes from Saturday matinees like the buster Crabbe Flash Gordon? And come to think of it, it may have been Buster Crabbe as Buck?Could the Glen A Larson series or this one here be Successfully Rebooted like Battlestar Galactica was?
Well, that question doesn't really make sense, since Buck Rogers is a concept that predates either of those adaptations. Any new BR series would presumably be a new adaptation of the original book/comic strip character, not based specifically on a pre-existing TV incarnation.
The Larson series was actually the second Buck Rogers TV series that made it on the air. The first was a live show airing in 1950-51 and is completely lost now, with no recordings known to exist. Wikipedia says it went through multiple cast changes, but for part of the series, Buck was played by future Thundercats voice actor Earl Hammond and Wilma was played by Eva Marie Saint before she became famous in films like On the Waterfront and North by Northwest. IMDb doesn't confirm this, however.
Ah, OK, yea, I thought I remembered it being Buster Crabbe, thanks for the clarification.What you saw must've been the 1939 Buck Rogers theatrical serial starring Buster Crabbe.
Could the Glen A Larson series or this one here be Successfully Rebooted like Battlestar Galactica was?
Well, that question doesn't really make sense, since Buck Rogers is a concept that predates either of those adaptations. Any new BR series would presumably be a new adaptation of the original book/comic strip character, not based specifically on a pre-existing TV incarnation.
Ah, OK, yea, I thought I remembered it being Buster Crabbe, thanks for the clarification.What you saw must've been the 1939 Buck Rogers theatrical serial starring Buster Crabbe.
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