When a classic TV series is recast and modernized for the big screen, fan expectations are high. We want and expect everything we love about the show to be dialed up to eleven with the bigger budget. But there’s also a sense of dread, because we know everything will be different. When the director nails the tone, we’re happy. When the script satirizes the source, we’re rarely amused.
There’s also the people who use these remakes to point out Hollywood is bereft of ideas.
When the trailer for The Fall Guy dropped last week I didn’t connect it with the 80s TV show of the same name. Mostly because I’d forgotten all about the show until the connection was pointed out on a podcast. Sometime last year I think I watched the first two or three episodes of the show Lee Majors did after The Six Million Dollar Man, and then I didn’t give it another thought.
And as something of a classic TV nerd, that’s odd.
The premise for the show, which ran for five seasons, is simple. Majors plays Colt Seavers, a Hollywood stuntman who bounty hunts in his spare time. His sidekick is his cousin, Howie “Kid” Munson (Douglas Barr), a stuntman-in-training and the comedy relief. Together they use their fighting and driving skills to solve mysteries and catch bad guys. Even at 42, when the show started, Majors had a gravily gravitas we normally associate with guys in their 60s.
Ryan Gosling’s Colt Seavers probably won’t have that.
The other day I picked a season one episode, “The Human Torch,” at random just to refresh my memory. It was a good pick, as it had some nice nods to Psycho for me so soon after Halloween. The thing that first stood out to me was that Peter Breck guest-stars. Majors and Breck were long time co-stars on The Big Valley two decades earlier, and it seems they maintained a good working relationship. Richard Moll (who recently passed away) also appears in an early, non-speaking roll.
Obviously, the plot wasn’t much different from anything else on TV in 1981.
What I appreciated most goes back to Majors’ character. He’s such a capable everyman, like the dad you wish you had. It’s the sort of grounded character we don’t see anymore. He’s not closed-off, wounded, and dangerous like Leroy Jethro Gibbs or House, nor is he a clown. In this episode, when his iconic GMC truck loses its brakes, Seavers calmly explains how he’s going to use the manual transmission and a hill to come to a stop.
Like a real man.
At the same time, Seavers doesn’t take himself too seriously. He sleeps in a Mickey Mouse T-shirt. You’d never catch Gibbs in one of those. There’s a balance to The Fall Guy, tempering the silly premise with characters who are as consistently inconsistent as any of us and anyone we know. Or wish we knew. It’s such a simple, almost quaint, thing that modern TV writers have forgotten.
Probably because they don’t know any real people.
From the movie trailer, we can see that it will be a totally different animal. And honestly, I don’t mind. It looks like a fun action movie, and the idea of a stuntman using his skills in the real world is a great one. And let’s give credit where it’s due: we don’t see many action movies where the beautiful love interest gazes in awe while her man does something heroic. Not these days.
So yeah, I’ll ignore the connection to the TV show and enjoy the movie as its own thing at my earliest opportunity. In the meantime, I can watch the TV show.