Any info on pricing and availability?
It's from Kino Lorber. It's out now on Blu-Ray. Cost $59.97.
Any info on pricing and availability?
I don't recall them going into Cash Conover's background, but he's basically the owner of the casino where Shatner's Jeff Cable has his secret quarters behind the fireplace. Cash owes Jeff for saving his life, y'see, which Jeff constantly reminds him of.Barbary Coast basically was a thinly-disguised retread of TWWW, with Shatner doing the Artemus Gordon often-in-disguise role and Doug McClure as the James West-type leading man (only I think he was a reformed gambler and sometime con artist instead of an ex-Army officer? Something like that.)
It's from Kino Lorber. It's out now on Blu-Ray. Cost $59.97.
I'm only a handful of episodes into Season 6, which generally gets a bad rap, but I think they may have improved upon this situation by having the disguise master (Casey) not necessarily be the person who wears the disguises. Thought it was pretty cool when they brought in a guest agent to impersonate Barney.Well, logically that's how it should work. Instead of having one impersonator who was magically expected to match everyone, the realistic thing to do would be to find someone who already resembles the subject. That was the intent in the original M:I pilot, when Landau was just a special guest star -- that Rollin was brought in specifically because of his resemblance to the dictator they needed to double. By contrast, when he had to wear a full-face mask to briefly impersonate Dan Briggs, it was visibly far less convincing, unlike the fancifully perfect masks they used later in the series.
But once they made Landau a regular, it led to the contrivance of the team repeatedly needing to impersonate people who looked like Landau, either because Landau played them or because they cast an actor who resembled him (Paul Stevens was the main one, playing three different characters that Rollin impersonated in various episodes).
I understand the value of sticking with a regular team, but sometimes I wish M:I had stuck with the original intention that the team composition would vary from week to week, tailored for each mission. Instead of one universal master of disguise, they should've saved the "disguise artist" role for a succession of featured guest stars. If nothing else, they could've avoided the unfortunate times that they put Landau or Nimoy in yellowface makeup to impersonate Asians, instead bringing in someone like James Hong or George Takei (who was an M:I guest team member once, but as a medical expert) to play the role.
I'm only a handful of episodes into Season 6, which generally gets a bad rap, but I think they may have improved upon this situation by having the disguise master (Casey) not necessarily be the person who wears the disguises.
And because she wasn't going to be convincing impersonating the same sorts of characters that Rollin and Paris routinely impersonated.Which, I'm sure, was largely because they didn't want to hide Lynda Day George's stunning face any more than they had to.
Although it was also because they cut the cast size along with the budget and couldn't afford to have both a master of disguise and a glamour gal, so they combined them.
And because she wasn't going to be convincing impersonating the same sorts of characters that Rollin and Paris routinely impersonated.
Jill Ireland in The Valachi Papers, 1972.
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Once they became a couple, pretty much any movie staring Charles Bronson will have Jill Ireland in it.
Trek actors are pretty common on Mission: Impossible, but it always seems more noteworthy when one turns up as a guest agent. In "The Miracle" (Oct. 23, 1971) it's Lawrence Montaigne, who plays an agent who plays a Catholic priest.
Once they became a couple, pretty much any movie staring Charles Bronson will have Jill Ireland in it.
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