Las desventuras de un hombre que revive tras décadas de animación suspendida accidentalmente y que sigue teniendo físicamente la mitad de la edad de su propio hijo e iguala la edad de su nie... Leer todoLas desventuras de un hombre que revive tras décadas de animación suspendida accidentalmente y que sigue teniendo físicamente la mitad de la edad de su propio hijo e iguala la edad de su nieto.Las desventuras de un hombre que revive tras décadas de animación suspendida accidentalmente y que sigue teniendo físicamente la mitad de la edad de su propio hijo e iguala la edad de su nieto.
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe show premiered on ABC on Wednesday night at 8:30 EST. Its main competition was Los Beverly ricos (1962), which at the time was one of the most popular shows on television. When ABC canceled Batman (1966), they moved the show to its time slot on Thursday at 7:30, but it wasn't enough to save the show.
- Citas
Narrator: One upon a time out in California a sixty-seven-year-old man lived with his thirty-three-year-old son. Meanwhile up in Fairbanks Alsaka, there was this big avalanche. Get the connection?
[disappointed]
Narrator: You don't.
Colonel Garroway: Two days ago there was an avalanche in Alaska An frozen object was discovered that been identified as your father.
Edwin Carpenter: After all these years.
Colonel Garroway: Um, Mr. Carpernter there is something I haven't told you.
Edwin Carpenter: I'd like to bring the body back here.
Colonel Garroway: Your father's alive.
Edwin Carpenter: Alive!
Colonel Garroway: Whatever your father may be chronologically, physically and mentally he hasn't aged a day since he fell in that glacier. Your father for all intents and purposes is thirty-three years old.
Luke: Not bad for a hundred and one. Don't look a day over over ninety.
[Chuckles]
Edwin Carpenter: What are you doing on the floor?
Luke: Playing with my grandson.
[laughs]
- ConexionesReferenced in Mystery Science Theater 3000: Master Ninja II (1992)
Some have commented on the poor scripts. I guess being a kid at the time, I wasn't very discerning when it came to script quality (but maybe my parents were, as they didn't particularly care for the show!). I can't really comment on the quality of the writing, but "It's About Time", and "The Second Hundred Years", were two big favourites from my childhood.
Whether it was a couple of astronauts going back to live among cave people, or this show's post-civil-war prairie man suddenly living in "swinging" 1967, I found the "fish out of water" concept very appealing, and I guess, still do. I'm obviously not alone in this, as it continues to be a popular theme.
Arthur O'Connell was great as the poor, exasperated guy who was always the "meat in the sandwich" between his young father and son. And Monte Markham was wonderful in his dual roles. He played "Luke" as a man possessed of folksy charm and naiveté, with a zest for life. Ken, on the other hand, was a stick-in-the-mud conservative, and Markham's contrast between the two characters was impressive.
Like "It's About Time", this show disappeared too soon for my liking. I would love to see it again! Too many modern shows get their laughs by using "put-down" humour. This show didn't need to do that. It put its main character in funny situations, instead. I still remember Luke's incredulous reaction to seeing a woman in a miniskirt - and his elderly son simply said, "That's 1967!". We laughed at that because the way they did it, it was funny. And we weren't jaded, then.
With the exception of seeing Don Rickels' routine on a variety show or fat jokes directed at Ralph Kramden, nasty insult-humour wasn't terribly common on TV back then. And when a put-down was used, it wasn't anywhere near in the same league as that which takes place on something like "The Drew Carey Show". I miss those days, when it didn't require being cruel and vicious to get a laugh.
There may not be enough general interest to release a boxed-set of this show on DVD, but it would be great if someone would release some sort of anthology of past TV shows for each year. I'd like to see a scenario where we could buy DVDs containing at least one episode of shows that were shown in prime time for every year - in this case, "Prime Time 1967", for example.
Then, we'd get to see our favourite long-lost shows again (like Michael Callan's "Occasional Wife"), even if only one episode! These shows have been long-buried, so I can't see license fees for them being horrendous.
ADDENDUM: I finally got to see the pilot for this show again on YouTube! Yay!
A couple of notes on it:
1) Luke just "woke up" after years of suspended animation, so to him, decades-ago is like yesterday... However, he didn't seem to grieve for (or even inquire about) his wife!
2) Luke can't seem to keep even the most menial jobs. He was hired to push a broom in a warehouse which stores bags of quick-setting cement. In an effort to keep the dust down, Luke sprays the bags with a hose - causing all the bags to set like (what else?) concrete. Offensive - for cryin' out loud, the ancient Romans knew that concrete is set with water. I'm sure a man in his 30s, even a travellin' prairie guy, would've known this, as concrete or mortar was used for lots of things, including wells in cities and private land. The writers made him look stupid.
I still think the actors were great, though!
- axellaj
- 5 sep 2008
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución30 minutos
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1