Barnaby Jones – The First Season (1973/CBS DVD)
Picture:
B- Sound: C+ Extras: C Episodes: B
In 1973,
Buddy Ebsen was one of television’s biggest stars. The
Beverly Hillbillies was actually cancelled by new CBS head of programming
Fred Silverman despite still being one of the biggest hits in TV history and
still in the Top Ten, so it continued to be a huge hit in syndication and Ebsen
was showing up on TV episodes and in TV movies all over the place. Pumping him up further were special broadcasts
of The Wizard of Oz (1939) where the
trivia that he almost played The Tin Man became surprise trivia. In all that, it is no shock that someone
wanted to get him into another TV show.
Enter CBS
and Quinn Martin Productions, whose hits includes The Fugitive and then-current
juggernaut Cannon (reviewed
elsewhere on this site), so it was decided to launch a new detective show with
Ebsen and even get William Conrad to show up as Cannon in the first show. A 1973 mid-season replacement, Barnaby Jones first aired in January
and with Lee Meriwether as niece Betty, the show was an instant smash that ran
for eight seasons. The First Season finally comes to DVD after a long wait, but the
wait was well worth it.
Betty’s
father is a detective friend of Cannon’s who is killed. Barnaby arrives, intervenes and gets involved
in finding the killer. By the end of the
show, he decides to juggle his farming business and solving murders. Meriwether was long overdue to be in a
long-running hit after smaller stints on many shows, as Dr. Ann MacGregor in
the underrated The Time Tunnel and
as Tracey in the fourth season of the original Mission: Impossible.
You gotta
love the titles for the initial shows here, including:
1)
Requiem For A Son
2)
To Catch A Dead Man
3)
Sunday: Doomsday
4)
The Murdering Class
5)
Perchance To Kill
6)
The Loose Connection
7)
Murder In A Doll’s House
8)
Sing A Song Of Murder
9)
See Some Evil, Do Some Evil
10) Murder-Go-Round
11) To Denise, With Love &
Murder
12) A Little Glory, A Little Death
13) Twenty Million Alibis
This is
another one of those great, strong TV seasons where you are likely to recognize
more of the actors than you can name.
The guest cast for this season includes William Conrad as Cannon in the
pilot, Bradford Dillman, William Shatner, Charles Cyphers, Janice Rule, Stuart
Nisbet, Gary Lockwood, Corrine Camacho, Jon Cedar, Jeff Donnell, Lynn Hamilton,
Geraldine Brooks, Andrew Parks, Hank Brandt, Booth Colman, James Daughton,
Jerry Houser, Chad States, Eric Braeden, Sharon Acker, Richard Bull, Richard
Hatch, Jamie Smith-Jackson, Mark Roberts, Barbara Stuart, Christine Belford,
Lloyd Bochner, Michael Blodgett, Ted Gehring, Richard X. Slattery, Whit
Bissell, Cathy Lee Crosby, Anne Francis (both with Meriwether in the same
show!), Richard Derr, Jack Cassidy, Estelle Winwood, Andy Kim (the “Rock Me Gently”/“Sugar, Sugar” guy in his only acting role), Jackie Coogan, Paul
Lambert, Judy Strangis, Paul Sorensen, Dan Tobin, Roddy McDowall, Reni Santoni,
Beverly Powers, Patricia Donahue, Claude Akins, Lou Frizzell, Geoffrey Lewis,
Neva Patterson, Bill Bixby, Claudia Jennings, San White, Jill Jaress, Brendan
Dillon, Meg Foster, Barry Sullivan, Mark Thomas, Sandra de Bruin, Bill Erwin,
Byron Morrow, Bert Freed, Chuck Isen, Michael Laurence, Ben Wright. Peter
Haskell and Gary Owens.
The
writing is top notch and holds up very well today. The big joke became Barnaby drinking many
glasses of milk in a time when each detective had some calling card, but Ebsen
leaves Jed Clampett far behind and the chemistry between he and Meriwether is
totally believable. I liked the show
then and was impressed by how well it still played. With technologized versions all over TV
today, some items may seem dated by today’s standards, but the writing is
smarter, richer and stronger than most of the equivalent of what we are getting
now. If you like detective TV, Barnaby Jones - The First Season is
required viewing.
The 1.33
X 1 image could have been rough like what we have been getting from the Cannon
sets, but CBS has gone back to the original film elements and created new
transfers of all the episodes over the four DVDs here. The result is stunning color and decent
detail that is easily the best this show has ever looked. Fleshtones are good, detail can be impressive
(though we get slight softness more than I would have liked) and depth will
surprise viewers. Nice job overall in
what might be High Definition masters. The
Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono is clean and clear for its age, but can be compressed or
flawed at times and limited, but work was done to fix the tracks up to CBS’
credit. The only extras are minute-long
promos for each episode.
- Nicholas Sheffo