Mannix – The First Season (CBS DVD)
Picture: C+ Sound: C+ Extras: B- Episodes: B
In
between the traditional detective series that TV made following the Film Noir
era and the more realistic cycle of such series in the 1970s was one of the greatest
of all detective TV series, Mannix
with Mike Connors. Several things made
the show different than previous series on TV of any kind. For one, it was smarter and had more advanced
screenplay writing than previous detective shows, then it had a more energetic
modern detective in Connor’s dead-on casting, had more realistic action than
had been seen up to that time to the point that the show was criticized for
being “too violent” and Joe Mannix was the first detective to ever use that
new-fangled device known as the computer.
Created
by the legendary team of Richard Levinson & William Link, then further
advanced by the late, great Bruce Geller (Mission:
Impossible, who died far too early in an airplane crash) and produced by
the great Desilu Studios at their height, the series was a huge hit, lasting
eight seasons and finally, Season One
has come to DVD. Well into syndication
into the 1980s, the show was phenomenal and it is amazing it disappeared, but
it eventually did, only surfacing on cable here and there. 41 years after its debut, it holds up
amazingly well, as the show was finding its way in its debut 1967 – 68 Season.
For this
season only, Mannix worked for Lew Wickerman (Joseph Campanella) and Intertech,
his advanced detective outfit using technology the competition has little
access to. However, Mannix is only so
impressed and uses his wits, instincts, logic and is not afraid to get his
hands dirty as he takes on case after case, no matter what the risks. As was always the case with Desilu’s shows,
they had top directors, cinematographers, writers and actors, plus other
surprises as the following list of first season episodes and their guest stars
will attest to:
1)
The Name Is Mannix (guest stars Lloyd Nolan, Kim
Hunter & Barbara Anderson)
2)
Skid Marks On A Dry Run (Vincent Gardenia, Charles Drake
& Vic Perrin)
3)
Nothing Ever Works Twice (Gloria DeHaven, Frank Aletter
& Richard Derr)
4)
The Many Deaths Of Saint
Christopher (John
Marley, Norbert Schiller & Neil Diamond as himself)
5)
Make Like It Never Happened (John Randolph & Logan
Ramsey)
6)
The Cost Of Vacation (Donnelly Rhodes, Henry Beckman
& Marlyn Mason)
7)
Warning: Live Blueberries (Tom Skerritt, Brooke Bundy, Phil
Leeds & The Buffalo Springfield)
8)
Beyond The Shadow Of A Dream (Richard Mulligan, Robert Yuro,
Pat Priest and Ann Prentiss)
9)
Huntdown (Ford Rainey, Ken Renard, Paul
Stevens & Phil Vandervort)
10) Coffin For A Clown (Frank Campanella, Diana Muldaur,
Norman Fell & Christopher Knight)
11) A Catalogue
Of Sins (Percy Rodrigues, Jennifer Billingsley & Kim Hamilton)
12) Turn
Every Stone (Linden Chiles, Nita Talbot, Lloyd Gough, Hampton Fancher, John
Crawford, Noam Pitlik & Madge Blake)
13) Run,
Sheep, Run (Malache Throne, Joyce Van Patten & Ruta Lee)
14) Then The
Drink Takes The Man (Julie Adams, John Anderson & Lynda Day George)
15) The
Falling Star (Jan Sterling, Lee Bergere, Mickey Morton and playing
themselves, Army Archerd and Rona Barrett)
16) License
To Kill – Limit Three People (Karen Black, Peter Haskell, Melinda O. Fee
& Art Lewis)
17) Deadfall
(two parts/Michael Tolan, Beverly Garland, Roscoe Lee Browne & Dana Elcar)
18) You Can
Get Killed Out There (Howard Da Silva & Marianna Hill)
19) Another Final Exit (Larry Storch, Grace Lee Whitney
& Pamela Dunlap)
20) Eight To
Five, It’s A Miracle (Lillian Adams, William Bryant & Jay Novello)
21) Delayed Action (Louise Sorel, Ned Glass, Richard
Bull & Walter Koenig)
22) To Kill
A Writer (Michael Strong, Paul Petersen, Larry D. Mann & Ted Cassidy)
23) The Girl
In The Frame (Leslie Parrish, Paul Mantee & Oscar Beregi, Jr.)
The
biggest surprise is how much more energy, great pacing and impact this show
has, with even the obvious commercial breaks not really hurting the show. With some debit to the Bond films, it is easy
to forget how physical Connors was, not always relying on stuntmen. The show always feels lived in and real, a
world of mature adults dealing wit each other for better or worse. That this was a hit at the peak of the
counterculture and with TV itself at a peak of great series production speaks
well to its quality, but Connors gives it his all in each show and the result
is one of the all-time great TV detectives.
These days, we get CSI series
with ensemble casts, but as good as those shows can be, there’s nothing like
having a real actor with star power carry a great show that manages to have
episodes this consistent. Yes, some
parts the shows have dated, but not to the detriment of the series. Geller had died by the end and though new
talents took over and Geller was a huge loss, the series was far from finished
breaking new ground.
The 1.33
x 1 image is pretty consistent throughout the six DVDs, with only minor color
and picture fading in spots on each show.
This issue is so minor, it can be hopefully, easily fixed before it
becomes available on Blu-ray. The Dolby
Digital 2.0 Mono is good for its age, features the classic theme song by Lalo
Schifrin and is pretty clean considering TV audio of the time. Extras include audio intros by Connors for
all the episodes, a two-part Connors/Campanella interview across the first two
DVDs, the Mannix section of the CBS
fall promo reel for 1967 on DVD 3, exceptional audio commentary by William Link
on the first pilot episode, 1969 Connors Mannix
appearance on The Mike Douglas Show,
TV Land network promos for cable reruns of the show & sales presentation
about the show on DVD 5, stills and clip from the awkward, awful Mannix
appearance by Connors on Hard Boiled
Murder from the Dick Van Dyke hit Diagnosis:
Murder, a show the total opposite of Mannix in too many ways to go into.
Fortunately,
the original show is back and looking better than the many (and I mean many)
times I have seen it before. Recently,
there were suggestions of remaking the show as a silly feature film, which
would (once again) be a big mistake. Mannix is an original and has so much
going for it, why not a straight out action film? Even now, we wonder if audiences would accept
anyone in Mike Connors place. Now you
can see why.
- Nicholas Sheffo