With the start of the fall television season (at least the
start for shows on the broadcast networks), I thought it might be a good time
to look at the shows the television industry has presented over the years that
have been remakes of previously successful series. I guess it's the concept of if it worked once it obviously will work
again.
As is blatantly obvious, television quite often looks to the
past when searching for new series ideas. This situation occurs for two primary
reasons.
1) The network has a
current hit and wants to capitalize on that popularity by creating a spinoff.
Spinoffs have long been a popular and successful (for the
most part) tactic for the networks. Some
shows have been so finely crafted that they were the genesis of several
spinoffs. For example, ALL IN THE FAMILY gave us THE JEFFERSONS, MAUDE, and
GOOD TIMES. THE MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW gave us LOU GRANT, RHODA, and PHYLLIS.
And we can't overlook the entire LAW AND ORDER franchise, L&O SPECIAL
VICTIMS UNIT and L&O CRIMINAL INTENT.
Then there's the highly successful CSI franchise that included CSI MIAMI
and CSI NEW YORK. And, of course, JAG
begat NCIS which begat NCIS LA and this season the new NCIS NEW ORLEANS. And, of course, we can't overlook the highly
successful STAR TREK franchise…the original TV series (three seasons 1966-1969)
was very low in the ratings so that only a concerted viewer write-in campaign
got it renewed beyond the first season.
That three season, low-rated series gave us a string of very successful theatrical
movies and more television series such as STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION, etc.
2) The network is
looking for a ratings boost so it turns to hit series from the past and hopes
that reviving them will be a ratings winner.
And in that department they have come up with some
significant blunders when trying to capture that elusive lightning in the
bottle for the second time. Far more remakes have been total disasters than
once again successful series. Some of the remakes that have worked are HAWAII
5-0 which kept the original iconic and immediately recognizable theme music and
also the style of the opening main titles. Some other successful remakes include
BATTLESTAR GALACTICA, DALLAS, and V.
But it's more fun to take a look at some remakes that just
didn't work at all, some of the blunders.
DRAGNET (2003): LAW AND ORDER kingpin, Dick Wolf, tried to
bring back Jack Webb's classic cop drama. It wasn't a bad idea. The original
Jack Webb series had a very specific style that was totally Jack Webb's vision
right down to the almost wooden dialogue as personified by that iconic
phrase—"Just the facts, Ma'am." It was an individualistic style everyone
knew. The remake, however, fell victim to the decision by committee mentality of constant tinkering by TV
executives which resulted in a jumbled mess.
THE TWILIGHT ZONE
(2002): An attempt by UPN to remake
one of the most creative and interesting series on television was a colossal
failure. Without the guiding hand and creative genius of Rod Serling, including
his physical presence as the host introducing each episode, it was a dismal
failure. They even went so far as to replace those great musical notes that made
up the theme song. All you need to do is
come out with the first eight notes and the theme song is not only recognized
but its message is clear.
GET SMART (1995): Fox brought back the classic spy spoof comedy
originally created by the comedic genius of Mel Brooks and Buck Henry. And they
brought it back with original cast members and it still failed. This remake
picked up where the original left off with Maxwell Smart having bumbled his way
to the top of Control as the chief. But instead of letting Don Adams continue
with the role that made him famous (apparently the powers that be must have
decided Don was too old to reprise the role), the secret agent work was handled
by his nerdy son played by Andy Dick which made the whole series feel like a
lukewarm second rate attempt. The remake lasted only 7 episodes.
THE PRISONER (2009): The original classic British series starred
Patrick McGoohan as Number six in The Village…a place that seemed to shift and
change before our eyes and before the eyes of the main character so that not
believing what you're seeing was the only rule that seemed to be true. The
original had a subtext that said it never really took itself seriously. The
remake had a bigger budget, larger cast, and better production values but somewhere
in there it lost the feeling of the original.
THE FUGITIVE (2000): CBS thought they could not only cash in on
the highly successful original series, but also the hit movie starring Harrison
Ford. But with the original television series and also a successful movie,
everything about THE FUGITIVE was already known—who the characters were, their
motives, and even the outcome for Dr. Kimball and the one-armed man. They
didn't try to reinvent the wheel, they pretty much exactly copied it. In spite
of the popular Tim Daly from WINGS in the starring role, there were no
surprises, no edge-of-the-seat action, nothing to hold the audience's interest.
With successful American translations of British sitcoms (All In The Family from the British Till Death Do Us Part, Sanford And Son from the British Steptoe And Son, and Three's Company from the British Man About The House), we obviously
thought we could strike gold again. The first attempt starred Harvey Korman and
Betty White. Despite proven and popular talent in the leads, it never got
beyond the pilot stage. The second one tried a switch by putting Bea Author in
a female Basil Fawlty role and it was cancelled after one season. The third
attempt starred John Larroquette, fresh from his successful and popular role in
NIGHT COURT, in a remake attempt that copied the original plots but not the
characters. Another failure. The original FAWLTY TOWERS was done in the late
1970s and is as funny today as it was then. I have the twelve episodes on DVD
and each time I see them I literally laugh out loud even though I know what's
coming.
Some other major blunders in the remake department are: the
2011 CHARLIE'S ANGELS which lasted 4 episodes, the 2008 KNIGHT RIDER, the 2007
BIONIC WOMAN, WONDER WOMAN which never made it past the pilot, ROCKFORD FILES
which never made it past the pilot, and the 2013 attempt at a remake of
IRONSIDE which lasted only 3 episodes. My personal opinion on the IRONSIDE
remake—colossal blunder moving the setting from San Francisco to "the
gritty streets of New York" (as the publicity release referred to the
location).
2 comments:
Family Affair was pretty bad. I like Tim Curry (Rocky Horror Picture Show) but he couldn't help with this one. Also Love Boat: The Next Wave was really one of the worst.
oreluknp0: There are tons of shows that the networks tried to remake that really fell flat. I had forgotten about Family Affair and Love Boat. Now that you've mentioned it, I do recall the Love Boat one. You're right, it was really bad.
Thanks for your comment.
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