Dick Lowry
Autor de Smokey and the Bandit: Pursuit Pack: The Franchise Collection
Sobre El Autor
Series
Obras de Dick Lowry
Tom Selleck Western Collection (Monte Walsh / Last Stand at Saber River / Crossfire Trail) — Director; Director — 25 copias
10.5 Apocalypse [and] Category 7: The End of the World [Double Feature movie] (2008) — Director — 11 copias
The Legend of the Gambler: The Gambler, The Adventure Continues, The Legend Continues (Triple Feature Movie) (2013) — Director — 9 copias
Jesse Stone Collection Volume 2: Jesse Stone: Benefit of the Doubt / Jesse Stone: Innocents Lost / Jesse Stone: Night… (2015) — Director — 8 copias
Miss Marple: A Caribbean Mystery / Murder Is Easy / Murder with Mirrors — Director — 7 copias
4 Films Family Collector's Set V.3: The Derby Stallion / Bailey's Billions / A Horse for Danny / Secret Agent Club (2008) — Director — 3 copias
Category 6 : Day of Destruction 3 copias
Agatha Christie Classic Mystery Collection (Murder Is Easy/Caribbean Mystery/Murder with Mirrors/Thirteen for… (2013) — Director — 3 copias
The Gambler V: Playing for Keeps [and] The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Draw (Double Feature Movie) — Director — 1 copia
Two came back 1 copia
Hallmark Hall of Fame Double Feature: November Christmas & Silver Bells — Director — 1 copia
The Diamond of Jeru 1 copia
The Gambler Collection 1 copia
Obras relacionadas
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Género
- male
Miembros
Reseñas
También Puede Gustarte
Autores relacionados
Estadísticas
- Obras
- 42
- También por
- 2
- Miembros
- 497
- Popularidad
- #49,748
- Valoración
- 3.6
- Reseñas
- 3
- ISBNs
- 19
Enter Glen A. Larson, hot on the heels of his highly profiled Battlestar Galactica series (which ultimately ran aground) with 'Buck Rogers in the 25th Century' - a re-hash of the defining 1930s serial. This would be financially more successful because it was going to cost even less to produce - and the studio executives (who were still confused over the success of Star Wars) liked that idea a lot.
Glen A. Larson could recycle stuff left over from his other shows (namely Battlestar) and 'recycle' would be the key to this new venture; recycled stories, recycled props and recycled stock footage from its own show. Much like Weissmuller's Tarzan infamously swung through the jungle on the same vine in practically every shot, Buck would fly the same ship formation on almost every take-off and landing (weather he happened to be flying the same model of ship or not); and as for the ship explosions, don't even get me stared! But, in the early 1980s we were starved for science fiction and happy to consume mass amounts of poor quality nourishment as a result.
After its theatrical release, what seemed like, a month or so earlier, the television series, complete with re-edited pilot directly from the movie (which let's face it was made for TV quality at best) arrived on our sets, and it was (or at least felt) amazing!
Is it still as good as we approach the 40th anniversary of the series? Well, what do you think?
Oozing with nostalgia, ridiculous hero costumes, villains with a penchant for bad S&M garb, celebrity cameos that made some episodes feel like you were watching the Muppet Show (without Jim Hendson's awesome puppets), and did I mention those terrible ship explosions already? Oh! I did?
If you recall watching this series the first time around - you'll probably love it. But, just as with 'Galactica 80', you may wish to dispense with viewing the later 'Searcher' episodes. This is when the producers switched between wanting to please the Star Wars fans, and tried to cater for the Star 'Trek' audience. They even gave 'Buck' his very own 'Mr. Spok' with 'Hawk Man' - no pointy ears, but he did have a lovely feathered swiming cap.… (más)