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50th Anniversary Viewing
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Mission: Impossible
"Illusion"
Originally aired April 13, 1969
Wiki said:
The IMF must eliminate two of the three contenders for chief of secret police in an eastern European nation.
Another TV Fu chop right in the opening credits--this time by Jim.
The reel-to-reel tape in some reused footage of a vague location that might be a rooftop or parking garage said:
This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim.
In this scheme, Cinnamon plays a nightclub singer meant to remind one of the contenders, Skarbeck (Fritz Weaver), of Carlotta Kleve, a singer he was infatuated with and whom he's known to have killed. Rollin plays the
Cabaret-style emcee of her show, wearing an eye mask and blue makeup. Cin "confesses" to Skarbeck that she's been hired by his rival, Lom, to seduce him. Meanwhile, Jim, having drawn attention to himself at the club, works on Lom (Kevin Hagen), claiming to be an accomplice of Cin's and offering psychological information about Skarbeck that Lom could take advantage of by working with Cin, with the goal of causing Skarbeck to suffer a breakdown. The contender the IMF is trying to help is Trock (Martin E. Brooks), who's supposed to be friendly to the West, but I suspect they're really interested in his expertise in the breaking field of bionics. He seems to be completely in on the plan...I'm surprised they didn't do a portfolio just to put him in it.
Skarbeck takes a pill that Barney planted in his medicine cabinet (a job offering a little more elbow room than usual), which knocks him out and then puts him in a hypnotic state for questioning by Jim and Barney. Cin is brought in by Lom for questioning, and makes it look like she's spying for Skarbeck. Lom wants to provoke Skarbeck into killing her like he did Kleve. In private, Cin provokes Skarbeck into attacking her and knocks him out with a drugged needle hidden in a ring. Willy's first exciting role in the scheme is to lug him into the next room! Jim TV Fu's Lom's henchman before he can shoot Cin outside. Rollin impersonates Lom to confront Skarbeck at the club with Jim, accusing him of killing Cin. The lights briefly go out, the real Lom comes in, and Skarbeck shoots him. Filling in for Rollin onstage during this sequence has been Barney--aided by the eye mask and makeup worn in the act, and a recording played by Willy.
This one was...OK. It didn't really grab me.
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The Avengers
"Take-Over"
Originally aired April 14, 1969 (US); April 23, 1969 (UK)
Wiki said:
Steed is spending the weekend with two of his oldest friends, Bill and Laura Bassett, who, unknown to him, are being held prisoner in their own home by the other house guests. If they reveal this to Steed, or the reason why, he will be murdered: but he nevertheless begins to suspect something is amiss. Then an unsuspecting Tara blunders in.
Actually, it's the Bassetts who are in danger, from miniature "phosphor bombs" implanted in their throats that will kill them if triggered remotely by a device concealed in a cigarette lighter. And the bad guys weren't expecting Steed. He's visiting the Bassetts in February to celebrate Christmas, a tradition that goes back to when he and Bill were going by an erroneous self-made calendar in a cell in Nanking.
Steed eventually becomes suspicious and the bad guys try to kill him while hunting, but he manages to make them think he's drowned in a marsh after he's been wounded. They're planning to use an "ultra long-range weapon" on a house seven miles away where some foreign ministers are meeting. They use the Bassetts to evade a Special Branch door-to-door security check, which is why they needed the couple alive, and Tara shows up immediately after that. They take her prisoner, but she ultimately helps the Bassetts to overcome Grenville, the leader of the quartet, and Steed turns the tables in their favor when he sneaks back in and attaches one of the bombs to him. Steed uses the bad guys' gimmick against them: check. I suppose the two times that we see the phosphor bombs used to kill people (an unidentified captive in the teaser and the Bassetts' servant) count as the "multiple incidents" angle, though those usually come in numbers of three or more.
The coda gag involves Steed playing "invisible golf" in Tara's apartment, and Tara somehow managing to break a window while trying herself.
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33 1/3 Revolutions per Monkee
Originally aired April 14, 1969
Wiki said:
33 1/3 Revolutions per Monkee is a television special starring the Monkees that aired on NBC on April 14, 1969. Produced by Jack Good (creator of the television series Shindig!), the musical guests on the show included Jerry Lee Lewis, Fats Domino, Little Richard, the Clara Ward Singers, the Buddy Miles Express, Paul Arnold and the Moon Express, and We Three in musical performances.
Although they were billed as musical guests, Julie Driscoll and Brian Auger (alongside their then-backing band The Trinity) found themselves playing a prominent role; in fact, it can be argued that the special focused more on the guest stars (specifically, Auger and Driscoll) than the Monkees themselves. This special is notable as the Monkees' final performance as a quartet until 1986, as Peter Tork left the group at the end of the special's production.
Now if somebody wanted to give the Monkees credit for starting a subgenre of painful-to-watch one-shot variety specials--one that would include among its spawn the
Star Wars Holiday Special--I wouldn't put up much of an argument. This one was instantly annoying from its intro...I can easily picture millions of Americans getting up to change the channel. Brian Auger, who was apparently the leader of a music group called the Trinity that I wasn't familiar with, plays a grating mad scientist type in an extremely thin storyline that attempts to weave the special's series of musical performances into a narrative about the Monkees being processed and packaged for consumption as part of some sort of vague evil plan. I got a giggle out of his Flower Power Forklift, at least--that might have given some needed pizzazz to the M:I episode with Rollin stealing the nitro.
First we get individual numbers by each of the Monkees. The first of these has Micky Dolenz teaming with Trinity singer Julie Driscoll on a rearranged version of "I'm a Believer" that sounds a little more psychedelic rock. Then Peter sings an Eastern-flavored number "I Prithee (Do Not Ask for Love)," which is one of the more interesting songs in the special, though very derivative of the Beates' pioneering forays into this sound via George. Next up is dueling Michaels on a tempo-switching country pop song called "Naked Persimmon". This segment concludes with "Goldilocks Sometime," a dance number with Davy and various girls dressed as dolls. This might have appealed to the kiddies if any were still watching at this point.
After a break, the brainwashed Monkees join forces for "Wind Up Man". Imitating robots seems to be a variety show staple. I can't believe they got Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, and Fats Domino to appear in this thing. There's a song apparently called "Darwin", which is punctuated by an actor playing Darwin. Paul Arnold & The Moon Express play "Only the Fittest Shall Survive," a more experimental number with dancers superimposed over a backdrop of surreal images. Then the Monkees return, sporting vaguely simian costumes, to perform "I Go Ape". So far even the music has largely been varying degrees of annoying. Brian Auger & The Trinity, with Julie Driscoll on vocals, perform "Come on Up"--the music's pretty decent psychedelic rock fare, but Driscoll's singing helps me to appreciate what John must have heard in Yoko.
The next segment might have been the most interesting in the special, but fails to live up to its potential. Purportedly taking place at a theater in 1956, it features a medley of numbers from that golden period of rock & roll, consisting of: The Monkees, "At the Hop"; Fats Domino, "I'm Ready"; Jerry Lee Lewis, "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On"; Little Richard, "Tutti Frutti"; We Three and The Monkees, "Shake a Tail Feather"; Fats Domino, "Blue Monday"; The Monkees, "Little Darlin'"; Little Richard, "Long Tall Sally"; Jerry Lee Lewis, "Down the Line"; and The Clara Ward Singers, "Dem Bones"--which has an uptempo and gospelish arrangement, but it's still too soon after the finale of
The Prisoner for me. This segment fails for me in that it feels very rushed...it runs through brief snippets of too many songs by too many artists too quickly. They could have dwelt on this segment a bit longer and given it some breathing room. And the Monkees doing what amounts to a parody of a '50s vocal group don't hold a candle to the pioneering artists featured in the medley.
After this, at about the 3/4 mark, Auger and Driscoll break character and abruptly drop the annoying storyline they've maintained up to this point, declaring that they want to give the Monkees "complete freedom". Too bad they didn't think to do this, I dunno, before the teaser? The final segment features a couple more solo numbers by the Monkees: Davy Jones, "String for My Kite," and Peter Tork, "Solfeggietto" by C.P.E. Bach (I believe
TREK_GOD posted a video of this upthread). Then the Monkees perform their upcoming single "Listen to the Band," in which they're joined by various cast members. I'll hold off on judging it until I've heard the single version in better quality; the Trinity take over this version of the number and it becomes an experimental jam.
The last thing we see before the credits is somebody closing a book titled
The Beginning of the End...appropriate enough, but I'd say that
Head was the beginning, and this was just
The End.
The closing credits feature one last piece of musical annoyance--Peter singing a rendition of "California, Here I Come".
Overall, this gave me a hankering to watch the Elvis Comeback Special again for mind soap. It makes
Magical Mystery Tour look like a brilliant art film by comparison.
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The Mod Squad
"A Seat by the Window"
Originally aired April 15, 1969
Wiki said:
The Squad is split up and assigned to separate charter vacation buses in an attempt to catch a bus station killer.
The individual Squad members are helicoptered to locations where they can get on the buses. From the description of an eyewitness who couldn't see much, they're looking for a man and a woman, one of them blond, who may be on separate buses.
Julie hits it up with a lecherous guy named Bill (John Beck), on a bus that's going into the California desert and stops at an Old West tourist town. She finds herself sitting next to a "hillbilly" musician named Tom (Bo Hopkins) after he helps get Bill's ginormous chin out of her face.
Linc is on a bus heading to Tijuana, where he gets on the wrong side of a gang of drunk toughs who are harassing a very pretty girl named Connie (Tiffany Bolling). Alas, she disappears from the story after that. At the last stop before the border, Linc hears a fight in a darkened building, jumps in, gets beat up by three guys (likely the same toughs, though neither Linc nor we get a good looks at them), and misses the bus. Greer comes to get him, and he's suffering from a slight concussion. One of his assailants got his wallet, but he had his police ID in his sock.
Pete's destination is the Green Hills Music Festival; there's a band in this segment that that end credits identify as "The Musical Group 'THE MOD SQUAD'". They sound kind of like the Brooklyn Bridge. Pete stays behind there with a girl named Willa from Arkansas (Julie Gregg), whom he and Greer have determined to be the killer's sister. When Pete comes clean with her, she confesses that she and her brother had held up a gas station (possibly with the murder victim, who'd taken them in). She describes her brother as being like a dependent child, and tells how he killed the other man for buying her a gift.
Pete learns that her brother is on Julie's bus, after which we see the brother going through Julie's bag and finding her ID. It's the musician, who takes Julie at knife-point to an unconvincing park set. (One can easily picture the Rat Patrol taking some shade right off camera.) The Male Mods and Willa helicopter onto the scene in time to save her. He tries to run but winds up having a breakdown when cornered.
The Mods end their freshman season walking into Greer's car at Western Village. This has generally proven to be a pretty engaging show that I wish I had more episodes of--I only have nine from next season.
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The Saint
"Legacy for the Saint"
Originally aired October 13, 1968 (UK); April 18, 1969 (US)
Xfinity said:
A gangster's posthumous revenge pits Templar against four gold-hungry criminals holding the dead man's daughter (Stephanie Beacham).
Some historical context that should be of general interest in these parts: the final American season of
The Saint is coming to us as a "Summer replacement" series in
Trek's Season 3 Friday night time slot. NBC is still showing
Trek reruns, but in a 7:30 time slot on Tuesdays. (If they'd given it that slot in the first place, maybe more people might have watched it.) It's in this Tuesday slot that the final new episode, "Turnabout Intruder," will air in June. It was originally scheduled to air in the old Friday slot on March 28, but was preempted for coverage of Eisenhower's death.
This American season consisted partly of episodes from earlier UK seasons that I've already watched and possibly reviewed. I'll just be covering the ones that I haven't watched yet, which are all from the final British season. I also have several episodes that apparently didn't air first-run in the US, so I'll be covering those later during the hiatus season, by their UK airdates in sync with other shows from the '68-'69 season that I'll be catching up on.
It seems that they switched up the opening theme this season, including the cue that plays when Simon's halo appears.
(Not
Ironside's) Ed Brown (Reginald Marsh) is a retired gangster now running a casino and an old acquaintance of Templar's, who's apparently killed by a car bomb that the audience saw planted by his right-hand man, Charlie (Alan MacNaughton). Charlie sends Templar to Switzerland to convey the news to Brown's daughter, Penny (Beacham). She apparently doesn't know about her father's old line of work, but begins to get an inkling when his old mob rivals show up at the funeral to pay their respects. The gangsters are also invited to the reading of the will, which is done via a film. After stirring things up with his rivals from beyond the grave, Brown offers one million pounds to whichever of them can match that amount in 30 days. To that end, they find Brown's plans for a million-pound heist of a bullion shipment.
Simon helps the crooks to realize that they need to work together to pull off the heist, but is pulled into actively participating in the caper to ensure Penny's safety. Inspector Teal and his men are hovering around, looking to take advantage of a golden opportunity to nab the mob bosses and Templar, but Templar helps put the bag on Teal by infiltrating Scotland Yard in uniform and using knockout drugs to take over their wee little dispatch room. But he leaves clues along the way for Teal to keep up with what's going on, including a message via the radio when nobody else is in earshot on Teal's end.
I saw most of the twist coming a mile away. We didn't see the explosion of Brown's car, just the burning wreckage, and Charlie hadn't been acting like he had much of an agenda afterward. It turns out that Brown wasn't in the vehicle, and the scheme was to get his rivals to pull of his heist for him and then double-cross them and get away with the loot. The part that I didn't see coming was that his daughter was only feigning not being close to him and her ignorance of his old profession, and was actually a participant in his scheme. Nevertheless, Simon proves to be ever the gentleman even to scheming young women, and tells Teal that she'd been his ally all along.
I totally didn't buy that Brown would believe that Simon would shoot Penny in the climax. Surely the reputation that makes him such a recognizable figure includes that he's not a cold-blooded killer. And indeed, it turned out that the gun he was holding to her head was a lighter that we'd seen used earlier in the episode.
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I like this one, and it's oddly familiar. I definitely don't remember it from the 60s, but I have an idea that I heard it on the Lost 45s radio program a few years ago.
Tommy's stuff is hit or miss for me. This one falls in the latter category.
I absolutely love this. One of my favorite Peter, Paul, and Mary songs that I used to listen to endlessly in the early 70s.
I had no prior familiarity with this one going in. It sounds nice at first glance, but hasn't had a chance to make much of an impression on me. Now their
next single...big-time impression, going back to early childhood.
RJDiogenes said:
That didn't do much for me and it was very long.
I'm not a religious person and gospel isn't my thing, but I find myself on the fence about getting this one...it has a nice sound.
He has stronger songs, but this one's an oldies radio classic with a good hook.
This didn't do much for me either, although it was good enough that I wanted to like it more.
Now this one sounds vaguely familiar to me. Not sure if it reminds me of another song. It was written by Randy Newman and originally recorded by Jerry Butler in '64, but his single barely broke the Hot 100, so I don't think that I would have had occasion to hear it.