I have this series on the Shout Factor blu rays of TSMDM, but did a full rewatch when I had the Time Life DVD set.
This is a series that works best when you wear your heave prescription Nostalgia Glasses on. If you look at it with today's eyes, it's a hard journey. Even with forgiving eyes, it can be tough.
The original pilot movie (the network version not the godawful syndicated edit) is excellent, if uneven.
TSMDM's pilot movie was the concept at its best, and frankly, should have ended there, with Steve placed in a coma until he would be needed again, for missions that would not be produced.
Just a quick correction, they didn't put Steve out at the end to keep him on ice between missions. That was Oliver's suggestion, but Rudy said "over my dead body." He was just in a coma while he was being repaired.
The two Glen Larson follow ups were just terrible (although The Solid Gold Kidnapping was less so). Once Harve Bennet took over, the show returned to the feel of the movie a bit more, with Steve back to being the country boy type.
The first two seasons were excellent, really, with some solid scripts by Elroy Schwartz, of all people (brother of Sherwood and equally bad at the comedies). D.C. Fontana also contributed some nice stories. Steve was rather reserved when talking about his bionics, as if still carrying self-consciousness about it. The show was a lot more adult and had some really good stories. I feel The Seven Million Dollar Man was a great look at how Steve could have turned out and it remains my favorite episode.
The second season was really solid and the introduction of Jaime was a great benefit. But this is also where the series started down its more cheesy path. First, someone let Lee Majors believe he could sing. It really does bring the episode down somewhat, which is a shame because Ken Johnson's script is excellent (so good he retooled it for a two part Hulk episode "Married"). Bringing Jaime back was, if not a great idea in the context of the original episode, understandable. But the whole "Jaime's doctor falls in love with her" is so unethical it left a bad taste. Luckily, he doesn't become a regular in her series.
When we got The Bionic Woman series, we got the other side of the coin. The "girl's show" and even as a kid, I wasn't crazy about it. It was fine to have Jaime doing jobs Steve never could (beauty pageants and lady wrestling), but at this point, the bionic shows were more gimmicky. And TBW was geared more towards Lindsay Wagner's interests, like saving tigers and environmental issues (nothing could be more boring to a 10 year old boy who wanted people being tossed around). Still, she had some solid episodes (Kill Oscar, the Lisa Galloway episodes, Doomsday is Tomorrow and more fembots) and, I agree, Lindsay was a much more accomplished performer in these shows than Lee, who used his eyebrow more and more to do the heavy lifting.
The mustache season was the end of Steve having a personal life of any kind. He was all about the job. He wasn't even a personality at this point, just a glorified stuntman. And even in season 3, the weirdo celebrity guests were laughable: Rodney Allen Rippy, Sonny Bono, Flip Wilson....really just terrible.
Like Airwolf a few years later, TSMDM was dumbed down to appeal to kids.
Then TBW went to NBC and suddenly Jaime was having a bevy of romances. Chris Williams and some Indian boy for an episode. Ken Johnson left the series and it seemed to go in a more SF/action direction. Some good, some not.
TSMDM's 5th season was a series out of gas, with Allan Balter and Fred Freiberger co-producing. They tried goosing it up with a series of two-part episodes and a lot of cool location shooting. Some episodes were great. Dark Side of the Moon and Deadly Countdown (with amazing NASA location shooting) were really well done. Just a Matter of Time was also really good. But then we got The Lost Island and Date With Danger (a 30 minute story stretched to a torturous two parts). Not to mention The Return of Death Probe, a dull threat brought back with a LOT of padding. However, I did enjoy Bigfoot V mostly because it was just a single part episode and moved really fast.
Lee was bored and he showed it. Lindsay still gave it her all and at least she had a good final episode. TSMDM just ended.
The first reunion was quite good and it's a rare example of an otherwise never involved producer doing his homework. While "Lyle Stenning" and "FORTRESS" were out of the blue even though the characters stressed they were major adversaries in the past, the explanation for Steve having an unknown son made sense. Chris Williams being killed on a mission held some satisfaction for me and all of the Steve and Jaime relationship repair was very well done. The music was terrible, a far cry from Oliver Nelson's masterworks and even the composers who took over after his death would have been better choices. But Tom Shanley was great at Michael Austin (but Lee Majors II was awfully annoying).
Bionic Showdown was a good story, but Steve and Jaime were sidelined in favor of Sandra Bullock and V's Jeff Yagher. Richard Anderson, conversely, turns in his best performance as Oscar. Bill Conti's theme is great but the score itself is meh. At least Steve and Jaime get re-engaged.
Bionic Ever After (done as a favor to Richard Anderson apparently) was not very good. Three years too late with the cast far too old and with the worst synth music every to disgrace the series. The villain was annoying but the Wendy's guy in a cameo was hysterical.