It was Saturday August 28, 1993 and my grandparents had driven down for their weekly visit. They probably wanted to hear about what I’d done over the last week or maybe share some life wisdom with me. But the night before my mind had been blown by what I’d seen on TV and I could not stop talking about it.
30 years later, I guess I’m still talking about it.
The show was, of course, The Adventures of Brisco County Jr.
This was before the internet really told us much, and we didn’t subscribe to TV Guide, so at that time the only way to find new shows was to turn on the TV and hope for the best. That fateful Friday night my dad did just that and stopped on the new FOX network. We didn’t know who Bruce Campbell was, despite his being from Michigan and a big name in horror. It didn’t matter. What mattered was that the show was fun.
The pilot was also a two hour movie with commercials, so it probably kept me up past my bedtime.
Even better.
If you’ve never seen Brisco (and if you’re reading this, you probably have), it was a comedy, sci-fi, western that was canceled after one season. On FOX. Sound familiar? Anyway. Rather than summarize a 30 year old, 93 minute made-for-TV movie, I’ll just try to recreate the feeling of watching it and make some observations. In the early 90s genre was having a moment. Westerns like Dr. Quack: Modern Woman (ahem) and movies like Maverick were in production. Science fiction was also moving into the mainstream.
Immediately after Brisco a little show called The X-Files had its premiere.
What makes Brisco unique is that it manages to blend all its various elements in a 1930’s pulp serial format. The episodes are broken up into chapters with goofy titles and cliffhangers before every commercial break. There’s a mysterious object, the Orb, at the center of the mystery. In a clever twist I’ve never seen before or since, it’s not a relic from the past, but the future. The Orb is also a moral meter like the Holy Grail. Anyone who is unworthy of its power suffers for his corruption and vice versa.
More than mysticism, science-fiction, and western tropes, Brisco also finds room for comedy.
The first episode opens with a gag straight of Loony Toons, before smoothly transitioning to into a dramatic murder. Brisco is forever looking for “the coming thing,” and brushing up against modern inventions. The show’s writers are self-aware enough to let us laugh with them, without ever making us laugh at the characters. Brisco finds wry amusement in every situation, as do we.
Never laugh at your heroes or villains.
There’s sex. There’s violence. There are tropes, in-jokes, and thrills. It was everything ten year old me could possibly want, even if I didn’t understand it all. Mom didn’t really like Dixie Cousins, with her sultry voice and skimpy outfits, but I liked that Brisco liked her, and that was enough. I liked that Brisco could hold his own against martial artists and gunfighters, making cool quips along the way.
They don’t make’em like this anymore.
Is it any wonder that I’m still talking about it?