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Mission Impossible '88 and SMDM S1 out today

23skidoo

Admiral
Admiral
Had a pleasant surprise at the local Best Buy today - the 1988 season of Mission Impossible and the first season (plus pilot films) of The Six Million Dollar Man are out on DVD today. SMDM has of course actually been out for a year - I ordered the Time-Life box set last November - but it's nice to see the individual seasons starting to show up at the retail level for those who didn't want to invest in the box.

As for Mission Impossible 88 I've already watched a couple of the episodes and it's actually better than I remembered. It doesn't hurt that the first episode features not only John De Lancie as the coolest assassin I've seen on TV in a while, but Virginia Hey from Farscape also puts in an appearance in the Australian-filmed revival. Jane Badler of V joins the series later in the season, though I'd forgotten how hot Terry Markwell, who played the Cinnamon Carter analogue in the new series, was (Badler replaced her midway through the season, which I remembered being annoyed with back in the day). BTW I'm talking about this show SF/F because this was the series that in one episode had the IMF team cobble together a dream recorder in order to trap a guy, among other sci-fi trappings.

Only major complaint I have is that the picture quality royally sucks on the DVD. I mean, some of the VHS tapes I took of the show off air probably look the same, and I have a plasma that's usually quite forgiving with 1980s-era picture quality. And it's not as if I haven't seen DVDs made of shows from the same time period - TNG, Max Headroom, Remington Steele and Sledge Hammer, to name a few, look fine on DVD. Even 1988 Doctor Who (not HD quality, of course). It's a shame, but if I basically think of it as watching one of those old videotapes, but knowing the machine isn't going to eat the tape and the picture and sound won't degrade with each play, then that's better than nothin'.

Anyway, I guess we have the new M:I movie to thank for the revival being released (there's still a second season left to be released, which I imagine will follow eventually). I recall it was the release of either MI2 or MI3 that sparked the original series' release to DVD, so I guess the Tom Cruise movies were worthwhile for something! ;)

Back to the SMDM S1 release, I have it a quick look and it appears to have the same extra features, etc as the version in the box set. From what I understand is the plan is to release the regular seasons at retail, but the bonus set that included the revival movies, syndicated edits of the TV movies, and interview with Lee Majors is supposed to, in theory, remain exclusive to the Time-Life box set (sort of like how only the Get Smart box set included the major bonus features). But if you're just interested in the regular series - especially the Bond-inspired first movies and season - it's a good deal (sorry - no Bigfoot, but you do get to see Farrah Fawcett playing against type as Astronaut Kelly Woods). And the end of a long wait for a lot of people.

Alex
 
Thanks for the heads up about SMDM, Alex. I have seasons one and two on PAL, but I am waiting patiently for the remaining seasons, and for season 2 of BW. This gives me hope! :techman:
 
Damn that's cool. I love the original MI, should be interesting to see the revival.
 
I'm so glad the Six-Million Dollar Man is finally coming out in season sets. The early seasons are best and now you can collect only what you wish and more affordably too.
 
I'd actually forgotten about the 80s M:I revival until I saw this set advertised. Can't wait.
 
Forbin, I know you're a big fan of the original MI. Be advised that some of the plots for the '88 remake series were recycled from the original due to a writers strike.
 
I've been anticipating the release of the '88 Mission: Impossible DVDs for some time, since as it happens I'm just wrapping up a watch-through and blog review series of the original show, and I welcome the chance to continue on to the revival. (Particularly since four of the early revival episodes are remakes of original series episodes -- a legacy of the project's origin as a way of dealing with the 1988 writers' strike. I'm interested to watch and compare the original and remade versions.) Unfortunately, Netflix still lists the '88 season's availability as "unknown."


...I'd forgotten how hot Terry Markwell, who played the Cinnamon Carter analogue in the new series, was (Badler replaced her midway through the season, which I remembered being annoyed with back in the day).

I have never forgotten how hot Terry Markwell was. But I'm looking forward to the reminder.

The weird thing is that Markwell's character was called Casey Randall, whereas Lynda Day George's character (the female lead in the final two seasons of the original) was also named Casey (no other name given). So when they brought Lynda Day George back as a guest star in the revival, they retconned her name to Lisa Casey. Which means her friends were addressing her exclusively by her last name for two years, which is odd. I wonder why they didn't just give Markwell's character a different name in the first place.

One cool thing about the '88 revival is that some of its episodes were scored by Ron Jones, who was doing Star Trek: TNG and DuckTales at the same time. I still remember the music he wrote for
Terry Markwell's death scene
even though I haven't actually heard it in over two decades.


BTW I'm talking about this show SF/F because this was the series that in one episode had the IMF team cobble together a dream recorder in order to trap a guy, among other sci-fi trappings.

The IMF often used fictitious cutting-edge tech in the original series, such as lifelike robots, computers that could infallibly win at chess (anticipating reality), electronic devices that would completely vaporize when needed, pharmaceuticals that could be tailored to deliver incredibly precise effects (such as making someone groggy for exactly two minutes before losing consciousness, or simulating the exact symptoms of a fatal disease followed by the temporary appearance of death), and of course the impossibly perfect latex masks that you could eat through, sweat through, sleep in, fight in, make out in, or even receive electroconvulsive therapy through without suffering the slightest damage. And they frequently did stories that involved faking supernatural or sci-fi scenarios -- convincing people they were seeing ghosts or precognitive visions, convincing people they'd been frozen/comatose and awakened years in the future (including one with a remarkably prophetic prediction of huge flatscreen TVs and home video viewing), making people think they'd been visited by aliens or discovered immortality, etc. There was even an episode where they convinced an aging gangster played by William Shatner that he was 30 years younger and reliving a day from his past, though that didn't make a lot of sense.

Those weren't my favorites, though, because they often entailed trying to sell supernatural/sci-fi scenarios to people who were highly skeptical. That seems a strange way of designing a scam. Wouldn't it make more sense to save those schemes for people who were gullible and already predisposed to believe?


Only major complaint I have is that the picture quality royally sucks on the DVD.

Oh, that's a shame.


Anyway, I guess we have the new M:I movie to thank for the revival being released (there's still a second season left to be released, which I imagine will follow eventually).

I hope so.


I recall it was the release of either MI2 or MI3 that sparked the original series' release to DVD, so I guess the Tom Cruise movies were worthwhile for something! ;)

I thought the third movie was worthwhile, and I'm really looking forward to seeing what Brad Bird does with the new one.


I'll certainly want to rent the SMDM DVDs as well, but I've got so very much in my Netflix queue already.
 
Nice to see the 80's M:I stuff being released - That was my first introduction to Mission: Impossible, and I loved it. It would be fun to see again and see if it holds up.

I'll wait until it shows up on Netflix instant, though.
 
I was a huge fan of the SMDM movies when I was a kid. Somehow the sight of these older versions of the characters running around and still able to kick everyone's ass with their bionics actually seemed cooler and more compelling to me than the original series concept. Just because it was such an unexpected thing to see, and because it made them appear a bit more real and human.

Shame those movies aren't coming out with the new sets.
 
Nice to see the 80's M:I stuff being released - That was my first introduction to Mission: Impossible, and I loved it.

I have vague memories of it being on TV when I was a small child, but it was the '88 series that gave me my first clear awareness of it and made me want to see the original. So I would definitely like to see it again.
 
This is great stuff but STILL no Spenser: For Hire or the other 3 years of The Equalizer *sigh*
 
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