Fri 3 Oct 2014
Mike Nevins on CORONADO 9 and A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES.
Posted by Steve under Columns , Crime Films , Reviews , TV mysteries[30] Comments
by Francis M. Nevins
In the late Fifties and early Sixties private eye series on TV were a dime a dozen. One of the lesser known of these was released on DVD by Timeless Media not long ago and, never having watched it back in 1960 when it was first run, I decided to check it out more than half a century later.
CORONADO 9 was a 30-minute syndicated series, released by Revue Studios, largely shot on location in San Diego and elsewhere, and starring 6’5″ Rod Cameron (1910-1983) as PI Dan Adams, a big beefy guy who conjures up images of a pro football player in middle age.
What makes the series unusual is that its directors and writers went out of their way to avoid the tried-and-true elements we tend to associate with the PI genre except for the chases and fights, which we also associate with Westerns, and of course for the first-person narration, although almost every episode cheats with scenes outside the narrator’s presence. Adams is so untypical an eye that, assuming he has an office, we literally never see him in it.
The main reason the series attracted me is that 16 of its 39 segments were directed by William Witney (1915-2002), the Hitchcock of the action film and my best friend in Hollywood. When it comes to visual excitement, most of Bill’s are not on a par with his great cliffhanger serials (one of which starred a much younger and leaner Rod Cameron) and Western features and episodes of TV series like BONANZA and THE WILD WILD WEST and THE HIGH CHAPARRAL, but the best of them are very good indeed.
Whenever he could take over a locale and shoot his climax there, he did it with glee, commandeering a Coast Guard cutter for “The Day Chivalry Died†and the San Diego Zoo for “Obituary of a Small Ape,†just to give two examples. My favorite among Bill’s dozen-and-a-third is “Hunt Breakfast,†which despite its unintelligible title is a near-perfect film equivalent to those Fawcett Gold Medal paperback original novels that are central to the Fifties experience for many of us. In this episode Adams tries to save a friend and his family whose home has been invaded by three bank-robbing psychos, and the Witney visual fireworks run neck and neck with the violence.
Of the 23 episodes not directed by Witney the most deserving of mention are at least four which were apparently shot on location in New Orleans and helmed by Frank Arrigo (1917-1977), who usually worked in Hollywood as an art director.
The segments which take place overseas seem to have been filmed on the Revue back lot with help from stock footage and process plates. I certainly don’t believe that Arrigo shot “Film Flam†in Algiers, or “Caribbean Chase†in then newly Communist Cuba!
Among the actors who appeared once or more often in the series are John Archer, Richard Arlen, Al Hodge (early live TV’s Captain Video), DeForest Kelley and Doug McClure. The veterans of Witney’s Western features and earlier TV films whom Bill found roles for in CORONADO 9 episodes include Jim Davis, Faith Domergue, Patricia Medina and Slim Pickens.
Featured in two segments not directed by Witney is Lisa Lu, a well-known Asian actress best known over here as Hey Girl in HAVE GUN–WILL TRAVEL. A friend of mine who recently interviewed her tells me that in her eighties she is still acting.
As so often when Timeless Media releases a TV series, there are a few technical problems with the transfer of CORONADO 9 to DVD. But if you can snag it for a decent price—it’s listed on Amazon.com for $17.99, and someone on the Web claims to have found it at Sam’s Club for $12.88 — it’s worth having.
No one would rank Rod Cameron with the great cinematic PIs, like Bogart in THE MALTESE FALCON and THE BIG SLEEP, Ralph Meeker in KISS ME DEADLY and Jack Nicholson in CHINATOWN. But Liam Neeson comes within shouting distance as Lawrence Block’s recovering alcoholic and off-the-books investigator Matt Scudder in A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES, which is based on Block’s 1992 novel of the same name and came to theaters a few weeks ago.
Directed and written by Scott Frank and filmed noirishly in Brooklyn where the novel takes place, the movie has garnered mixed notices to date, with the reviewer for the Los Angeles Times going so far as to call it torture porn. I’ve seen nothing on the Web or in print that attempts to stack it up against the novel (except for one cyber-comment that I stumbled upon as I was finishing this column) so I might as well do the honors.
Since the book is narrated by Scudder, nothing can happen outside his presence, although Block cheats a bit in the first chapter where lovely Francine Khoury is abducted on a Brooklyn street and, after payment of $400,000 ransom by her narcotics-trafficker husband, is returned cut up into fresh meat.
Unrestricted by first-person narrative, Scott Frank shows us the psycho kidnappers at work here and later in ways Block couldn’t. The novel takes place in 1992, the film in 1999, so that we’re treated to a few allusions to the Y2K panic, which has nothing to do with the plot, and also to the sight of pay phones on the streets of New York City, which do figure in the plot and still existed, I assume, at the end of the 20th century but are rarae aves in today’s cell phone era.
The film’s climax is something like Block’s but also quite different, in ways that I won’t reveal here. Between beginning and end Frank touches base with Block only on rare occasions.
A host of the novel’s characters make no appearance: Scudder’s wealthy call-girl lover, the teen-age computer hackers, the various cops Scudder hits up for information. Although one of the perps’ victims in the novel survives her ordeal and gets to talk with Scudder, in the movie there are no surviving women. Indeed two important male characters make it through the novel alive but wind up dead in the film, and several other men in the movie, like the obese groundskeeper and the DEA agents, have no counterparts in the book.
The bloody incident that made Scudder a boozer is never mentioned in the novel but is dramatized for us in a flashback at the movie’s start, with the difference that Scott Frank morphs it into the catalyst for Scudder’s giving up the sauce and joining AA.
The streetwise black teen who calls himself TJ has a big role in both novel and movie but Frank’s version of the character unlike Block’s is a vegetarian and a victim of sickle cell anemia, although Frank mercifully spares us the rhyming patter and much of the it-be-rainin-out jivetalk of TJ according to Block.
Ironically enough, two of Frank’s alterations in the storyline seem to have been expressly rejected by Block. Late in both versions comes a scene in Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery where a million dollars, much of it counterfeit, is exchanged for the 14-year-old girl who is the psychos’ latest victim.
In the novel the exchange comes off without incident, and Scudder specifically tells the girl’s family (on page 269 of the hardcover edition) that “it’s crazy to get into a firefight in a graveyard at nightâ€. That craziness Scott Frank embraces, letting the bullets fly and the cars screech and crash away as in a thousand other action flicks.
After Block’s badguys have fled the cemetery, TJ tells Scudder (on page 286): “[I]f this here’s a movie, what I do is slip in the back [of the psychos’ vehicle] an’ hunker down ‘tween the front an’ back seats. They be puttin’ the money in the trunk and sittin’ up front, so they ain’t even gone look in the back. Figured they’d go back to their house…an’ when we got there I just slip out an’ call you up an’ tell you where I’m at. But then I thought, TJ, this ain’t no movie, an’ you too young to die.â€
Well, what Scott Frank wrote and directed is a movie and that’s exactly what his TJ does and how Neeson as Scudder finds the perps’ home base.
What Larry Block thinks of the picture I have no idea. It does capture something of the spirit of the Scudder series, and Neeson’s performance is excellent, thanks in part to his wisely not attempting a New York accent.
Most of Frank’s innovations help make the movie cinematic in ways that the dialogue-driven novel wasn’t and couldn’t have been. In the same league with THE MALTESE FALCON and THE BIG SLEEP and CHINATOWN it isn’t, and the moments of extreme violence, especially to women, are integral to the storyline but may turn off potential viewers. (I saw it with a Vietnam veteran who later told me he had to close his eyes during some scenes.)
To anyone wondering whether to see it or not, all I can say is: Hit the Web, do your homework, make (or as the Brits would say, take) a decision.
October 4th, 2014 at 8:47 am
I agree 100% on the merits of CORONADO 9. I have both this box set of DVDs and the one for MIKE HAMMER with Darren McGavin, and while I’ve sampled only six or seven episodes of each, the Rod Cameron series ranks just a notch higher with me.
Even IMDb users agree. CORONADO 9 gets 8 stars out of 10, which is almost unheard of, while HAMMER gets a still very respectable 7.7.
I’ve been meaning to watch more of C9 and report on what I see here, but thanks to this month’s installment of Mike’s column, I won’t have to.
I haven’t seen TOMBSTONES, and I probably won’t, as much as I like the books. I also think Liam Neeson fits the character of Matt Scudder very well, but at this stage of my life, from all reports, the movie’s far too dark for me.
I’d love to be convinced otherwise.
October 4th, 2014 at 2:32 pm
I have seen the DeForest Kelly episode of CORONADO 9. Like many TV shows of that era the series star was not the focus. Instead Kelly’s chewed the scenery and took center stage. The wife character was just a plot device and Cameron was almost a deus ex machina. I found the plot and drama weak but do remember some nice outdoor shooting. Nice typical PI series but its lack of wit or humor left me with little interest to see more.
MIKE HAMMER had the humor and style that appealed to me but wore out its welcome quickly with its repetitive stories and style.
October 4th, 2014 at 3:08 pm
I think one problem with both series is that the episodes were only 30 minutes long. There’s barely enough time to tell a decent story or develop a clever plot in that little short amount of time. As much as I fondly remember Peter Gunn, I’ve found the same to be true of that show too. I think an hour is about the right length of time to tell a detective story and have enough else going on to keep it interesting. More than that doesn’t usually work either. The Rockford Files stories that were shown as two-parters seem awfully padded — endless scenes of cars driving here and there and airplanes landing or taking off. Boring!
October 4th, 2014 at 4:34 pm
Steve, the best 30 minute dramas nearly always are remembered more for their style rather than substance. It was believed in the 50s and much of the 60s that the audience would not be able to sit for an entire hour of dramatic crime and mysteries.
The 70s had the hour long dramatic crime and mysteries shows and found audiences enjoyed the two hour format. The two hour format was as too long as the 30 minute was too short (compare the ninety minute COLUMBO with the two hour episodes).
Pace was different in the past. Both of us grew up hearing the concerns for the MTV generation and the speed young people were able to understand visual information. Today there are fewer establishing shots, faster editing, and more movement just to keep the audience’s attention. Two hour shows are rare as the networks believe its hard to compete versus all the different choices the audience has to keep the audience on one story for two hours.
As for endless car chases, have you been to the movies lately?
October 4th, 2014 at 5:15 pm
I semi recall CORONADO 9 (his telephone exchange wasn’t it), and it was Cameron’s second outing as a private eye having played in in RUNAROUND a B film with Broderick Crawford.
Did Witney direct any of Cameron’s serials? Witney was at Republic then and I thought in that period Cameron was at Columbia after he graduated from Buck Jones stand in and stunt double. Not that they still couldn’t have known each other and worked together. Had Witney directed any episodes of STATE TROOPER?
I recall CORONADO 9 but only in a vague way. I might invest in it though.
Steve
A half hour is too short, an hour usually way too long. Most hour long programs include a good ten minutes of padding.
So long as WALK is better than EIGHT MILLION EYES and Neeson beats Jeff Bridger’s Scudder I’ll be partially happy.
There is no mention, but do they do all the AA business from the Scudder novels and or Block’s sometimes infamous word play?
As for the films violence it is often a problem in the genre because reading and seeing are two different experiences; describing and showing different levels of discomfort.
October 4th, 2014 at 6:21 pm
David
I though EIGHT MILLION EYES was abysmal and gave up on it in less than 15 minutes. I always meant to try again sometime but that “sometime” has never come.
October 4th, 2014 at 6:29 pm
David
You say:
“As for the films violence it is often a problem in the genre because reading and seeing are two different experiences; describing and showing different levels of discomfort.”
and I agree totally.
I can’t make comparisons in this particular case, though, not having seen the movie, nor have I gotten as far as this one into the series of Matt Scudder books. This one’s number ten in the series, and so far I’ve finished off the first five or six, enjoying them all.
October 4th, 2014 at 5:32 pm
Coronado 9 was Rod Cameron’s third starring series for Universal/Revue, the other two, more successful shows were City Detective and State Trooper. I think the 30-minute format can work perfectly well and it certainly did on radio. The key is atmosphere and character. Do we want to know these people — and I mean the continuing week-to-week regulars. Only my guess, but a shrewd one, Cameron’s career arc had plummeted and they all had a pretty fair idea that this wasn’t going to happen but, produced inexpensively and trading on the good will remaining the star, this went ahead. An even casual look at his post Coronado 9 career should confirm this thinking. Yes…?
October 4th, 2014 at 6:03 pm
5. David, yes, it was his phone exchange.
6. Barry, the 30 minute drama vs 60 minutes was a major issue in the TV world in the 60s (the audience may not have heard all the arguments but it was discussed in the trades and within the profession). The talent side especially the writers wanted sixty minutes, the advertisers lead the group wanting it to stay at 30. The change came as the networks took over programming from the advertisers. The networks found it easier to win one hour of programming with one good show versus developing two good thirty minute ones. It also made it easier to keep people on one channel for the night.
I am a fan of old radio but can’t think of one successful hour long radio series. I think the difference between radio and TV is you have to pay attention listening to radio where TV does most of the work for you so the audience could last an hour.
As for a successful thirty minute drama, ZORRO and HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL worked as a half-hour series, but shows such as PETER GUNN, DANTE, T.H.E. CAT, and so many others could have been much better at sixty minutes.
Speaking of ZORRO (as I take this thread to historically way off topic), I just added some interesting links to the recent ZORRO review below if anyone is interested.
October 4th, 2014 at 6:18 pm
A quick response in regard to 60 minute radio shows, the most famous one is probably LUX RADIO THEATER. There are a few others that come to mind, but most of them were short-run trials that failed, such a sequence of 60 minutes episodes of SUSPENSE, before returning to 30 minute programming. It takes a lot of commitment for a listener to keep focused for an hour of radio. It does me. I can’t even begin to follow Books on Tape.
PS. Thanks for the ZORRO links!
October 4th, 2014 at 6:32 pm
Some YouTube clips of interest.
Clip from DeForest Kelley in CORONADO 9 –
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iipA1_T4R0s
Trailer for movie A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES –
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O6Ttj9tXzCA
October 4th, 2014 at 6:33 pm
David and Michael
According to Wikipedia, and agreeing with what I remember of the opening sequence:
“Coronado 9 is Adams’s address; the numeral 9 on a rock shown near his front door in the opening credits denotes the house number.”
October 4th, 2014 at 6:48 pm
Steve, TVGuide.com claims it was his phone exchange. But apparently it may have never been explained in the series.
Another link to a detailed look at CORONADO 9
http://tvnewfrontier.blogspot.com/2013/03/coronado-9-1960.html
October 4th, 2014 at 8:26 pm
Thanks for the link. I don’t think I’ve come across this site before, even though I have some of the same images. Maybe I did without realizing it.
There is a good argument for CORONADO 9 being a phone exchange — it certainly sounds more like one than an address — but why the opening shot of the rock outside a house or building with the 9 on it?
And the article is correct about the pilot episode — the story just starts without much in the way of explanation — takes a sudden extremely surprising twist — and never does explain anything about Dan Adams, Rod Cameron’s character.
There is a lot of mystery still unexplained about the whole series.
October 5th, 2014 at 12:46 am
One major argument here, PETER GUNN would not have been Peter Gunn in an hour long format. It was very much a mood piece and an hour long format would have destroyed the atmosphere, required much more depth to the characters, and played havoc with the somewhat ephemeral setting. The film and the two hour second pilot with Peter Strauss both showed these flaws. Frankly most episode of Rockford and Mannix would have been better off at thirty minutes without those endless car chases. The hour long format ruined the TWILIGHT ZONE, and THE HITCHCOCK HOUR never had the impact of PRESENTS. The multiple star format like 77 Sunset Strip, Bonanza, and many of the hour long series was developed because an hour was generally too much of a single protagonist without a broad support group.
An hour long Peter Gunn would have inevitably had to go into Mother’s background, intro’d Jacobi’s wife and children, and overused Edie, none of which would still have been Peter Gunn.
About half if todays series would benefit from a ten minute trim. They almost all run about one commercial too long for my taste, at least the network series.
The advertisers wanted half hour programs because they were cheaper to produce and a single product could sponsor them as they had done in radio. As said above when the studios stepped in with the networks to kill the half hour drama format it was done so they could sell to multiple sponsors in an hour program.
Not a concern for dramatic impact or storytelling but good old greed.
As for radio, no few shows only ran 15 minutes like I LOVE A MYATERY, PERRY MASON, DICK TRACY, and others, though in early television the 15 minute format was only ever used sparsely for variety.
But an hour long PETER GUNN, it would never have worked though it might have been better for the HONEY WEST series.
October 5th, 2014 at 1:38 am
David, you are right if you think PETER GUNN was a great TV series. I think the series is one of the most overrated TV series of all time, and Gunn one of TV’s most unbelievable PIs. I like the series look and style as well as the quirky characters, but Edwards had done that with Dante in FOUR STAR PLAYHOUSE. What makes PETER GUNN remembered fondly is the theme song by Henry Mancini. Today people who have never seen the series smile when hearing that theme music.
Adding more time would have let the writers develop the story more and add more mystery to the drama. The half hour format lack the time for enough suspects to make any mystery interesting.
But I do agree the hour PETER GUNN would not be like the half hour version. It would not have been able to exist on style without substance. It would have had to be more than a soundtrack with cool visuals and weird characters for the sake of weirdness.
Oh, as for the fifteen minute PERRY MASON on radio, don’t forget it was a daily soap opera and reportedly became EDGE OF NIGHT. Those stories lasted weeks not just fifteen minutes.
The fifteen minute format never caught on for some reason with TV but I think there were syndication attempts, even some five minute mysteries (to fill time between films).
October 5th, 2014 at 4:50 pm
Michael
In popular terms PETER GUNN is culturally important not only because of Mancini’s theme, but because Gunn is the transition figure for American audiences between Mike Hammer and Spillane and Ian Fleming and James Bond.
The Gunn series began just as Bond was beginning to get real notice with American readers (it happened with the publication of DOCTOR NO, not the famous Kennedy list a year or so later — NO was already a bestseller by then, but the Kennedy list certainly was important and the first film huge). Gunn introduced viewers to a detective who was suave, witty, dressed well, but when needed as violent or sexual as Hammer. Quite a few critics and genre historian credit Gunn for changing the view of the American audience to a more sophisticated hero.
Richard Diamond was another Edwards creation who predated Gunn and existed a good deal on style, but it was Gunn that caught the public imagination. Frankly I wanted Gunn the way it was, I didn’t need or want another generic Hammer, Spade, or Marlowe ripoff.
As for unbelievable pi.’s I was an investigator with Pinkerton’s and even the Op is pretty much pulp exaggeration. The only realistic eyes I have encountered were those in ex eye Joe Gores books and Stanley Ellin’s THE EIGHTH CIRCLE. There has never been a realistic eye on television and there will never be one because the kind of work done by private investigators is rarely the stuff of drama.
Even when I worked undercover it was as a draftsman, engineer, or BP executive. The one murder I worked on was unsatisfactory despite the fact we solved it, and generally the greatest danger you were in was dying of heat prostration or freezing to death on extended surveillance. I did manage to get shot at once, but you could hardly call it a shootout.
I’m just saying I have never seen realistic gore in a horror film, never seen a realistic pi on television, never saw realistic blood, so believable is well nigh impossible for me short of SAVING PRIVATE RYAN or SCHINDLER’S LIST.
October 5th, 2014 at 7:03 pm
I’ve seen all the Coronado 9 episodes, courtesy of the Timeless Media set, and enjoyed them quite a bit. Not an all-time great series, but it has some very good episodes, and even the weaker ones are interesting due to the extensive location shooting.
“Run Shep Run” and “Obituary of a Small Ape” (the latter mentioned by Mike above) are two of my favorites, both directed by Witney; the latter has one of my favorite “sounds-bizarre-but-makes-sense-in-context” lines in any TV show: “Mr. Adams killed him and threw him in the bear pit.”
As a big fan of Witney’s serials, I enjoyed seeing him do the same thing with the California locales of the late 1950s that he had done with California streets, parks, lakes, dams, etc. twenty years earlier in his late-1930s serials (particularly his three Dick Tracy serials and Daredevils of the Red Circle)–to wit, use them as inventive backdrops to action scenes.
To answer David’s question at post #5, above–Witney directed the first of Cameron’s two starring serials, G-Men vs. the Black Dragon; it was the last serial Witney made before entering the Marines.
Cameron actually did no work of importance at Columbia; he was a stunt double for stars at several studios, and a stand-in for Fred MacMurray at Paramount; most of his early acting roles were in Paramount’s B-films and a few of their A-films. G-Men vs. the Black Dragon gave him his first starring role; after a second Republic serial (Secret Service in Darkest Africa), he moved over to Universal and became a B-western star there, replacing John Mack Brown (who had left for Monogram). Universal promoted him to bigger-budgeted features (like the Yvonne DeCarlo vehicle Salmome Where She Danced) in the mid-1940s, but in the late 1940s he moved back to Republic, starring or co-starring in a bunch of their A-westerns, at least one of which was directed by Witney. During the earlier 1950s he starred chiefly in pictures for Allied Artists (in between his three one-season TV shows); he spent the later 1950s and a good part of the 1960s making guest appearances on various hour-long Western shows (Laramie in particular). Coronado 9 gave him one of his last starring parts.
October 5th, 2014 at 7:05 pm
David, there is not a lot I would disagree with in comment 17 (hey, we both worked for Pinkerton). As I said before if you think PETER GUNN was great then you would not want it to change. And I never said TV PIs were realistic. But being rich and perfectly dressed was too much for me to believe (where did he get his money). It was not an usual trait for characters of that era ABC’s PHILIP MARLOWE had the same problem.
To me a half hour episode is like a short story with the hour a novel. Bond handled 90 minutes quite well, there is no evidence that more time for a decent plot and story would have not helped make PETER GUNN better nor would it have reduce the influence the character’s style and soundtrack played on TV. And there is no evidence you are not right and it would have ruined the series. We will never know.
TV in 1959-60 was at an important moment in its history. Television dramas were evolving beyond radio. Writers and producers were learning how to adapt stories to the unique medium of television. TV was learning how to be visual while learning the limitations of a small screen and an audience sitting comfortably at home.
The change from hardboiled to sophisticated PI was hardly due to just GUNN, it had existed even before Hammett’s Nick Charles took on Sam Spade.
GUNN’s visual style was important but a reflection of the time it existed not the reason such style existed.
October 5th, 2014 at 7:12 pm
18 Daniel, thanks for the information. One question for someone who has watched all the episodes, was the meaning of “Coronado 9” ever explained in the series?
October 5th, 2014 at 8:51 pm
Adams lived in Coronado, and the address-number outside his house (washed over by the tide at the beginning of each episode) was 9; that was all the explanation given in the show. I strongly suspect the name was chosen for the show because of its echoes of 77 Sunset Strip–but at least that was a full street address, not just “Los Angeles 77.”
October 5th, 2014 at 9:40 pm
Thanks, Daniel.
October 5th, 2014 at 10:53 pm
Only Coronado 9 of Cameron’s three series ran for just a single season. City Detective ran for two with a total of 61 episodes and State Trooper ran for three and totaled 104 filmed shows. Cameron did indeed play the starring part in several Republic A weste4rns, completed his contract with AA and in working for ever diminishing budgets, continued at Republic until not quite the end of that studio. Guest star parts on television should be seen as the place once more successful people managed to continue their careers while treading water. Three or four days work a couple times a year cannot in any way be considered a serious schedule.
October 6th, 2014 at 4:36 pm
Somehow I completely forgot the Republic Cameron serials even though they are favorites, DARKEST AFRICA one of the best.
I never meant to suggest there had been no sophisticated hardboiled detectives before GUNN, Stu Bailey of 77 SUNSET STRIP was sophisticated and ex OSS in several spy episodes. Richard Diamond was fairly sophisticated.
But popular as those were they did very little to change the popular view of the private eye of that era as Mike Hammer. I’m not talking about fans or mystery readers so much as the wider audience who may never have read Spillane or the others, but had an image of Hammer as the eye of that era. As it had been Spade in the thirties, and Marlowe in the forties, it was Hammer in the fifties.
Gunn was not unique, but the impact of the series was and it doesn’t always matter if something is first if it doesn’t come along at just the right time. Gunn is a sophisticated, well dressed, cool version of Hammer, and as was accurately pointed out Bond was Hammer from the waist down.
Glad to see another Pink.
I took ‘believable’ to suggest a certain level of realism and honestly cannot see where Gunn is any less believable than any other television eye of the period. Anyway I don’t think Edwards ever expected us to see Gunn as anything but cool and stylish. He was strictly going for atmosphere and style.
I’m not arguing anyone should like it, only that if it was different it would just have been one more pi series. Gunn just hit at the right time with the right theme song, but while I agree it is remembered today mostly for Mancini’s theme, I don’t think you can suggest the theme alone created the cult any more than the Bond theme did Bondm and there to is another tie between the characters.
In my case the only reason I took the job when Pinkerton’s recruited me was because of that Peter Gunn image in my head.
Gunn wasn’t all that popular in terms of ratings, and struggled to stay on as long as it did, even switching networks, but he is a bridge between Hammer and Bond; not the only bridge, but a significant one.
But re realism, it is a pet peeve, so I hope you will forgive me. I can’t say I’ve ever seen a realistic television series or movie. I’ve seen true stories and characters but real is another matter. I don’t think I would want to see one. I don’t watch escapism to relive the world I have to deal with day to day.
I agree about 1959-60 though. You could almost call it the point when television grew up or at least started to. In many ways it became television as we know it in those years. As you say there was an epiphany among writers, directors, and producers that they were working in a medium that had its own storytelling needs and techniques.
For so much of the early era they tried to make television into a facsimile of radio and theater with a few visual nods to film, but they didn’t seem to grasp its unique qualities.
Barry,
What was the old saying then; television was where Hollywood careers went to die?
October 6th, 2014 at 4:59 pm
David,
I don’t remember the saying but it was the perceived wisdom. More than once I heard someone say — My mistake was getting into television. In the fifties, of course, really only a pair of people, Lucille Ball and Dick Powell made it really work, and that was because of their entrepreneurial skills. Today that is not strictly as — but as Bing Crosby said when asked when he would get start doing television — “As soon as I lose my job in the movies.”
October 6th, 2014 at 10:28 pm
David and Barry in the past Hollywood had a class system and movies were always where the A-List worked with radio then television being second class but more popular with the masses. It took Disney success in early TV (and Walt’s use of TV to sell his movies and theme parks) to draw major studios such as Warners into television. Others such as Columbia film studio adopted the name of Screen Gems for its television work.
Recently this has changed. Major A-List talent is choosing television over movies. This has come from movie studios turning to high budget special effect films instead of quality drama and comedy. This has reduced the jobs for the “serious” talent while TV with its 200 plus networks is offering that “serious” talent a place to work and on quality product.
In the past the work load for a TV talent was so long it prevented the TV talent from other work such as stage and films. Today’s limited series can be done in short enough time for the talent to work elsewhere too, for example, TRUE DETECTIVE stars.
October 6th, 2014 at 10:44 pm
David, here is an interesting review of PETER GUNN.
http://cult-tv-lounge.blogspot.com/2014/09/peter-gunn-season-two-1959-60.html
October 7th, 2014 at 10:57 am
Thanks for the correction on Cameron’s two earlier TV shows, Barry; I’m not nearly as familiar with them as with Coronado 9, and hadn’t realized they both outlasted the later series.
October 7th, 2014 at 9:21 pm
Michael
Thanks, and yes the class system made television a ghetto even below poverty row to some extent, though it was never a bad place to start a career, and the money that could be made accounted for crossovers as much as aging careers.
It was never as bad in England, and today our system is slowly becoming more like theirs in terms of limited series and big names.
October 7th, 2014 at 10:09 pm
Daniel,
You wrote an interesting and informed comment — I just lived through this era. But I would bet Coronado 9 has never been the center of so much attention.