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El hombre de los seis millones de dólares

Título original: The Six Million Dollar Man
  • Serie de TV
  • 1974–1978
  • TV-14
  • 1h
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,1/10
14 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
2117
200
Lee Majors in El hombre de los seis millones de dólares (1973)
The Six Million Dollar Man
Reproducir trailer1:03
1 vídeo
99+ imágenes
Superhéroes¿CrimenAcciónCiencia ficciónDramaMisterio

Después de que un piloto de pruebas gravemente herido sea reconstruido con extremidades e implantes biónicos de propulsión nuclear, sirve como agente de inteligencia.Después de que un piloto de pruebas gravemente herido sea reconstruido con extremidades e implantes biónicos de propulsión nuclear, sirve como agente de inteligencia.Después de que un piloto de pruebas gravemente herido sea reconstruido con extremidades e implantes biónicos de propulsión nuclear, sirve como agente de inteligencia.

  • Reparto principal
    • Lee Majors
    • Richard Anderson
    • Martin E. Brooks
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,1/10
    14 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    2117
    200
    • Reparto principal
      • Lee Majors
      • Richard Anderson
      • Martin E. Brooks
    • 49Reseñas de usuarios
    • 18Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado para 2 premios Primetime Emmy
      • 1 premio y 5 nominaciones en total

    Episodios99

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    The Six Million Dollar Man
    Trailer 1:03
    The Six Million Dollar Man

    Imágenes1688

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    Reparto principal99+

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    Lee Majors
    Lee Majors
    • Col. Steve Austin…
    • 1974–1978
    Richard Anderson
    Richard Anderson
    • Oscar Goldman
    • 1974–1978
    Martin E. Brooks
    Martin E. Brooks
    • Dr. Rudy Wells
    • 1975–1978
    Lindsay Wagner
    Lindsay Wagner
    • Jaime Sommers…
    • 1975–1976
    Alan Oppenheimer
    Alan Oppenheimer
    • Dr. Rudy Wells…
    • 1974–1975
    Quinn K. Redeker
    Quinn K. Redeker
    • Frank…
    • 1974–1977
    Than Wyenn
    • Ambassador Mahmound…
    • 1974–1978
    John de Lancie
    John de Lancie
    • Diver…
    • 1977–1978
    Terry Leonard
    Terry Leonard
    • Thug…
    • 1974–1977
    Farrah Fawcett
    Farrah Fawcett
    • Major Kelly Wood…
    • 1974–1976
    Jack Colvin
    Jack Colvin
    • Dr. Charles Leith…
    • 1975–1977
    Bruce Glover
    Bruce Glover
    • Capt. Voda…
    • 1974–1978
    Lloyd Bochner
    Lloyd Bochner
    • Gordon Shanks…
    • 1974–1977
    Curt Lowens
    Curt Lowens
    • Anton Brandt…
    • 1974–1977
    William Sylvester
    William Sylvester
    • Admiral Prescott…
    • 1975–1977
    Paul Carr
    Paul Carr
    • Timberlake…
    • 1974–1978
    Hank Stohl
    • A.F. Maj. Phillips…
    • 1974–1976
    Hank Brandt
    • Fowler…
    • 1974–1978
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios49

    7,114.1K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    8alexanderdavies-99382

    The first Bionic character on television!

    "The Six Million Dollar Man" had to prove it was worthy of being given its own regular series after the opening feature length pilot episode wasn't enough. A further two pilot episodes were made before the actual series was commissioned. The pilot episodes are 73 minutes each, which is long enough to sustain much interest. The first feature length episode is very well made. Lee Majors immediately made the character of Colonel Steve Austin his own and he is the only constant throughout the entire run of episodes. He is the only actor one can associate with the character. Before Richard Anderson came along as Oscar Goldman, Darren McGavin was cast as the Government character. His was more of an antagonistic character to Austin as the tension in their scenes is clearly in evidence. Martin Balsam played the surgeon who helped change Austin's life in the first pilot episode instead of the actor who was cast in the regular series (his name escapes me). The opening episode focuses more on how Steve Austin adapts with the way fate has entered his life. About three quarters of the running time is taken up with this and it works effectively. I like the way in which Austin is portrayed as a human being with feelings and not just as another one-dimensional action hero. The writing is great as each of the main characters in the pilot are given depth. About the last 15 to 20 minutes is taken up with some action scenes and they are exciting. Seeing a man who possesses the ability to be stronger and faster than the average person was the selling point of "Six Million Dollar Man" and it always worked. With the first season being a ratings winner, the creator of "Six Million Dollar Man" Kenneth Johnson, created the spin-off show, "Bionic Woman." That show is for another review. Overall, the best episodes are from the first season til the end of the third one. The fourth and fifth seasons contain some good episodes but the quality had fallen away slightly. However, that can happen with the best television shows. Richard Anderson was well cast as Government man Oscar Goldman. His character was more of an ally to Steve Austin and that was a wise move. I didn't really take to Lee Majors changing his image by growing his hair longer and having that moustache. Neither suited him. I enjoy episodes where characters like Bigfoot are included and evil Robots that square up to Austin. There are some noteworthy supporting actors involved, like William Shatner, Jane Merrow, John Saxon and others. "Six Million Dollar Man" is the kind of show where you find some stories resembling Science Fiction or Fantasy, thanks to the show's inital premise. There are all kinds of plots, including crossover episodes involving Jamie Sommers as the Bionic Woman. "Six Million Dollar Man" will go down as a classic show and one that remains very enjoyable today.
    krunchy2001

    Ahead of its time...

    There is no question that The Six Million Dollar Man was as revolutionary a program in its prime as it is woefully overlooked today. Most of the great science fiction themes had been exhausted during the early Cold War era, when fears of alien invasions and nuclear holocaust were rampant. It was the horror genre, if anything, that enjoyed a resurgence in the 1970's, with such notable offerings as The Exorcist and Jaws, and television programs like Dark Shadows. By contrast, the 70's were lean years for sci-fi - the classic motifs of the 60's were dead, and successful 80's tech-shows like Knight Rider were still on the shelf.

    But Col. Steve Austin virtually redefined the genre with his story of bionic implantation. His character was indisputably TV's first cybernetically enhanced human being of any significance. In fact, rarely did even the silver screen feature a cyborg in a major role before TSMDM debuted. After its long run at the top, Hollywood began churning out its subtle rip-offs, which spawned such diverse characters as "Bishop" in Alien, The Terminator, "Data" and the dreaded Borg from Star Trek TNG, and a host of mediocre Austin clones in Van Damme-style B-movies.

    Further, TSMDM was competent in its own right. The show was a household name during its reign, and gave birth to the kind of merchandising mania - action figures, board games, etc. - more typical of a big-budget motion picture than a television series. There wasn't a young boy anywhere in North America who didn't mimic the Colonel's slow-motion antics in the schoolyard, and even parents inevitably ended up enjoying the program as much as their kids (name another show that can make that claim!).

    The cast was well-chosen and usually convincing, with Majors' understated but charming persona leading the way. The special effects were acceptable for the time, if not particularly ground-breaking. Best of all, the episodes were reliably action-packed, well developed and truly imaginative in their diversity and execution. The program touched on alien visitors, military themes, espionage, romance, and never lost its sense of perspective or sheer fun.

    My only complaint with TSMDM is that no station in my part of the world carries the show any longer. Amazingly, the Space Channel sees fit to broadcast garbage like Beauty and the Beast and Lexx, but turns its back on a genuine pioneer of the genre. It's confounding. Shows like this cannot be allowed to simply rot away in some vault. They must be preserved, just as legends in their time like Star Trek clearly have. I'd love for my children to share in the awe and excitement I felt when TSMDM was new and fresh, and, quite frankly, I wouldn't mind feeling like a kid again myself!
    Shield-3

    You Gotta Love This!

    This is one of the ways you can tell you're getting old: when someone says the name "Steve Austin." Do you think of a bald wrestler rolling around on the mat groping other guys, or Lee Majors moving in slow motion and squinting? I think of the latter.

    "The Six Million Dollar Man" is one of the first shows I remember watching as a child. I watched the shows, I played with the toys, I wanted to BE Steve Austin. Lee Majors (along with Clint Eastwood) proved that some people look so cool when they squint. I look like I need my prescription checked when I do it, but I'm not Lee Majors. Steve Austin could handle anything they threw at him, not just because of his bionics, but because he was smart, he never gave up and always kept his cool. I still want to be like him when I grow up.

    Recently, I've seen some episodes on the Sci-Fi Channel. Sure, the 1970s fashions are a little jarring (polyester rules!), and sometimes the plots are juvenile, but overall the show holds up pretty well. It could be very intelligent when it wanted to be, funny when it was called for, and always exciting and fun. It reminds me of a time when six million dollars was a lot of money, and American technology could produce wonders like a functional cyborg.

    Yeah, I'll take Lee Majors over the bald wrestling guy any day. After all, how many wrestlers could take on spies, terrorists, aliens, Bigfoot, a killer Venus probe and Sonny Bono and live to tell the tale?
    ShaneofPg

    One of my favourite TV Shows of my childhood!

    I loved The Six Million Dollar Man, I watched it every week if possible and actually wanted to be Bionic when I grew up! I even had Steve Austin Action figures including Oscar Goldman with his exploding Briefcase and Maskatron too. I was a big fan and still have a soft spot for the show and would happily watch it if it is being re-run on TV. It has dated badly in some ways, especially the clothes and hairstyles, but most shows from the 70's have anyway.

    It was corny in places too and I wonder why objects such as rocks and steel bars made a whistling noise when Steve threw them! Also the androids were bad especially when their face came off and an actor had a mask with wires and lights on it over his/her face which meant realistically they would have had a side profile like E.T.!

    But on the whole I loved it and have fond memories of watching it! It is a classic 70's show!
    urick

    Steve Austin: Cyborg for the C.I.A.

    To understand the genesis of the show, watch first Harve Bennett's "The Astronaut" (1972) ---with the music of Gil Mellé-- and "Texas, We've Got a Problem" (1974). With a good, solid, realistic in treatment (psychologically and artistically), 1973 pilot produced and directed by David Irving and starring Martin Balsam as Dr. Rudy Wells (see H. G. Wells?) and Darren McGavin as the crippled cynical and manipulator Intelligent head Oliver Spencer who is also known as newspaper "Kolchak, The Night Stalker"; the show starts very well with Gil Mellé's electronic and jazzy score a la Miles Davis' "Bitches Brew", then comes a terrible second pilot "Wine, Woman and War", produced by Michael Gleason and written by Glen A. Larson with a dreadful main title and a horrible song by Dusty Springfield in which Steve Austin is a kind of reluctant second-rate James Bond whose mission ends with an atomic explosion. The series really finds its format with the third pilot: "The Solid Gold Kidnapping" with Jack Cole's famous techno medical main title (made with footages from the two pilots, video effects and body animations). During the middle of season 1, the music department decided to add sound effects from Universal's stock music library to highlight the bionic motions (some were already used in a previous series like the 1972 E.S.P. series "The Sixth Sense"---oddly enough, you can hear a noise from a missile when Austin launches an object into the air). The series had three Dr. Rudy Wells: one played by Martin Balsam (first pilot), by Alan Oppenheimer (pilot 2 & 3 and season 1 & 2) and by Martin E. Brooks (season 3, 4 & 5). The first two seasons ---produced by Sam Strangis/Donald R. Boyle and Lionel E. Siegel/Joe L. Cramer--- were in the line of the pilots and then occurs the transitory season 3 ---in 1975, the main composer Oliver Nelson and the music supervisor Hal Mooney left---, a season 4 with some drastic changes (bad writers and producers, the lead wears a ridiculous thin moustache, Goldman has a new office's decoration and the music is composed and renewed by J. J. Johnson) and therefore an un-inspired season 5 ---without Harve Bennett--- in which the protagonist wears a pre-"Fall Guy" haircut. TSMDM is basically an espionage series with a shallow sci-fi canvas (everybody remember the zoom shot bionic left eye with the frames or the infrared vision); notice the various martial music themes to grasp the concept of this pro-gov/militaryNASA/technology drama. The first pilot shows an offhand and rebel Steve Austin who refuses his injured disabled condition (even try to commit suicide) and his involvement in the scientifical department of the C.I.A. (here, O.S.O.: Office of Strategic Operation, and, later O.S.I.: Office of Scientifical Intelligence): official Oliver Spencer (later Richard Anderson as Oscar Goldman) even receivs a cold slap. From season 2, we are introduced to another bionic man: paranoid auto racing Barney Miller (with a season 3 sequel) in "The Seven Million Dollar Man", and a woman: tennis champ Jaimie Sommers, in a two-parter (with a season 3 sequel too) in "The Bionic Woman". From that point, the show slips into cheap bionic new products (Bigfoot, boy, dog) with a comic book leaning. The best episodes are those which deal with the space program/Austin's background ("The Rescue of Athena One", "Burning Bright", "The Pioneers", "The Deadly Replay": where we learn about Austin's near fatal plane accident) and the dangers of technology in the hands of America's inner enemies ("Population Zero", "Day of the Robot", "Run, Steve, Run").

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    Argumento

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    • Curiosidades
      The characters of Oscar Goldman (Richard Anderson) and Rudy Wells (Martin E. Brooks) appeared on this series and its spin-off, La mujer biónica (1976). When the spin-off moved to another network, this practice continued. This was the first time the same continuing characters appeared on two different television series broadcast on two different networks at the same time.
    • Pifias
      At the end of the title sequence, Steve Austin is running towards the camera while passing a line of trees. However the trees are also "moving" forwards with him. The audience should see the trees moving backwards relative to him.
    • Citas

      [Opening narration, version 1]

      Harve Bennett: Steve Austin, astronaut. A man barely alive.

      Oscar Goldman: We can rebuild him. We have the technology. We can make him better than he was. Better, stronger, faster.

    • Versiones alternativas
      Several early episodes, now syndicated as two-part stories, were original broadcast as 90-minute TV movies. Most retain their original titles, except for the first two episodes of the series, "The Moon and the Desert," which were originally part of the original Six Million Dollar Man TV-movie. Several later two-hour episodes of the series have also been reedited into two-parters, such as "Lost Island."
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Secret of Bigfoot (1979)

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    Preguntas frecuentes19

    • How many seasons does The Six Million Dollar Man have?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 18 de enero de 1974 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Cyborg
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Backlot, Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, Estados Unidos
    • Empresas productoras
      • Harve Bennett Productions
      • Silverton Productions
      • Universal Television
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Duración
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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