Gemini Man | |
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Genre | |
Based on | The Invisible Man by H. G. Wells |
Written by |
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Directed by |
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Starring | |
Opening theme | Lee Holdridge |
Composers |
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Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 11 (+two-hour pilot) |
Production | |
Executive producer | Harve Bennett |
Producer | Frank Telford |
Cinematography |
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Editors |
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Running time | Approx. 50 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | NBC |
Release | September 23 – October 28, 1976 |
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Gemini Man is an American action-adventure drama series that aired on NBC in 1976. The third television series based on H. G. Wells' 1897 science-fiction novel The Invisible Man , Gemini Man was created to replace the previous season's The Invisible Man using simpler and less expensive special effects.
The series starred Ben Murphy as laid-back, denim-clad, motorcycle-riding secret agent Sam Casey, who while diving to retrieve a fallen Soviet spy satellite, was exposed to radiation in an underwater explosion, which rendered him invisible. The agency for which he worked, a high-tech government think tank called Intersect (International Security Techniques), found a way to return him to visibility and control his new power by the use of a special wristwatch referred to as a "DNA stabilizer", which was invented by scientist Abby Lawrence (Katherine Crawford). Pressing a button on the digital watch would make him vanish, clothes and all, which was a helpful tool in his line of work, but he could only do this for 15 minutes per day or else he would die. [1] [2]
A pilot episode aired on May 10, 1976, and the series began airing on September 23 of that year. Casey's boss, Leonard Driscoll, was played by Richard Dysart in the pilot, and by William Sylvester during the series.
The show was cancelled after five episodes due to low ratings and relatively high production costs. Although 11 episodes were produced, the remaining six were not aired in the United States, although the entire series was seen in Britain with somewhat greater success that led to a record album and hardcover annual based on the show. The eleven episodes were also shown, dubbed into Afrikaans, in South Africa.
The pilot episode of Gemini Man was titled "Code Name: Minus One". The plot involves Sam Casey, a government agent for INTERSECT, who is caught in the explosion of a government underwater salvage operation. He finds himself capable of turning himself invisible. Genetic changes sustained in a radiation mishap Casey to turn invisible, but only for 15 minutes a day, but any longer and he'd be dead. He then sets out to use his new powers to prove that the explosion was sabotage. The pilot episode was directed by Alan J. Levi . [3] [4]
This section needs a plot summary.(April 2015) |
Two episodes, "Smithereens" and "Buffalo Bill Rides Again", were re-edited into one 90-minute television film titled Riding with Death, released in 1981.
The film used scenes from Colossus: The Forbin Project as establishing shots for sweeping computer-room scenes. The "Guardian" logo ("Guardian" was the Russian version of "Colossus") appears in at least one segment. Though not immediately verifiable, at least one segment uses the "Colossus" speaker/microphone.
Production had to deal with Crawford departing the series by the latter episode, the length of time between filming (Sylvester had grown a thick, bushy mustache in the interim), and the appearance of an arch-villain in the second "half" who did not exist in the opening (covered by an overdub referring to the villain's elusiveness in the final minutes of the first segment). Both parts feature singer Jim Stafford as a trucker named Buffalo Bill, who befriends and helps Sam.
In 1997, Riding with Death was featured in an eighth-season episode of movie-mocking television show Mystery Science Theater 3000 . Mike Nelson and his robot friends highlighted the thin connection between the two halves, and the general incoherence of the plot.
The complete television series was released as a region 2 DVD in the French territory in November 2013 by Elephant Films with two language tracks, French and English. [5] The episodes are uncut.
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. is an American spy fiction television series produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Television and first broadcast on NBC. The series follows secret agents Napoleon Solo, played by Robert Vaughn, and Illya Kuryakin, played by David McCallum, who work for a secret international counterespionage and law-enforcement agency called U.N.C.L.E.. The series premiered on September 22, 1964, and completed its run on January 15, 1968. The program was part of the spy-fiction craze on television, and by 1966 there were nearly a dozen imitators. Several episodes were successfully released to theaters as B movies or double features. There was also a spin-off series, The Girl from U.N.C.L.E., a series of novels and comic books, and merchandising.
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The Invisible Man is a British black-and-white science fiction television series that aired on ITV. It aired from September 1958 to July 1959, on CBS in the USA, two seasons. Of which these shows amounted to twenty-six one-half-hour episodes. This series was loosely inspired by the 1897 novel which was authored by the famous H. G. Wells. This television program was one of at least four 'Invisible Men' television series. This interation deviates from the novel making the character's name Dr. Peter Brady. The character remains sane, opposed to a lunatic as in the book or the 1933 film adaptation. No characters from the novel appear in the series.
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The Invisible Man, the second television series with this title, debuted in the US in 1975 on NBC and starred David McCallum as the scientist Daniel Westin and Melinda Fee as his wife, Dr. Kate Westin. The series was created by Harve Bennett. A pilot TV movie initially aired in May 1975 and was followed by a 12-episode series later that year. A TV tie-in novel based on the script of the pilot episode was written by Michael Jahn and published by Fawcett Gold Medal in 1975.
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Works of popular culture influenced by H. G. Wells' 1897 novel The Invisible Man include: