Michael Alden is an amnesiac, who must discover his real identity before the operatives of a mysterious group locate him and kill him. The key to his past might be "Coronet Blue", a meaningl... Read allMichael Alden is an amnesiac, who must discover his real identity before the operatives of a mysterious group locate him and kill him. The key to his past might be "Coronet Blue", a meaningless phrase he for some reason remembers.Michael Alden is an amnesiac, who must discover his real identity before the operatives of a mysterious group locate him and kill him. The key to his past might be "Coronet Blue", a meaningless phrase he for some reason remembers.
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I see this on SuperChannel, which is a Japanese cable channel that's basically a graveyard for short-lived American TV shows. (Shaft, Serpico, Funny Face,...etc.) I got into it quickly.
This is obviously the inspiration for Matt Damon's 'Bourne' films.
The amnesia angle was played very well. Watching Frank Converse do what he felt he needed to do without knowing WHY was eerie.
You really felt for the guy. I'm surprised this show wasn't a hit and Converse wasn't a bigger star.
It was apparent that the cold war was the 'hidden' secret. But since the show never made it...we never really found out until Larry Cohen told us himself.
This is obviously the inspiration for Matt Damon's 'Bourne' films.
The amnesia angle was played very well. Watching Frank Converse do what he felt he needed to do without knowing WHY was eerie.
You really felt for the guy. I'm surprised this show wasn't a hit and Converse wasn't a bigger star.
It was apparent that the cold war was the 'hidden' secret. But since the show never made it...we never really found out until Larry Cohen told us himself.
This was a short lived amnesia spy show that I only occasionally seen..comparisons with the 2011 Liam Neeson flick "Unknown", and as the first reviewer also noted, "Bourne Identity'(forgot that series..). This becomes a real popular theme...but it doesn't get used more often.
This show was so odd that it wasn't rerun..or even given closure (no big surprise for many shows..)..or a video release.
8 out of 10 at least for something unique. Even if it seemed a bit weird. But now with the Matt Damon "Bourne series", and thanks to the first reviewer for refreshing the old cranium here, and Liam Neeson "Unknoqn", this gimmick in a popular state has gotten a favorable status with producers and, as box office shows, fans.
This show was so odd that it wasn't rerun..or even given closure (no big surprise for many shows..)..or a video release.
8 out of 10 at least for something unique. Even if it seemed a bit weird. But now with the Matt Damon "Bourne series", and thanks to the first reviewer for refreshing the old cranium here, and Liam Neeson "Unknoqn", this gimmick in a popular state has gotten a favorable status with producers and, as box office shows, fans.
I sat immersed in each and every episode.
I felt personally cheated when the all to short series ended without clearing up what Coronet Blue was .
As enigmatic and mysterious as the phrase was, having it sung as the title song by Frankie Lane ...was absolute theatrical super glue !
I can recognize Frank Converse's voice almost instantly.
I think a whole new series with B&W flashes of the original series would be as good as any JJ Abrams or Joss Weedon production.
If Frank was teamed with Nathan Fillion in some form of X Files/detective'esk treatment I think the brilliance of the original would still hold up.
I felt personally cheated when the all to short series ended without clearing up what Coronet Blue was .
As enigmatic and mysterious as the phrase was, having it sung as the title song by Frankie Lane ...was absolute theatrical super glue !
I can recognize Frank Converse's voice almost instantly.
I think a whole new series with B&W flashes of the original series would be as good as any JJ Abrams or Joss Weedon production.
If Frank was teamed with Nathan Fillion in some form of X Files/detective'esk treatment I think the brilliance of the original would still hold up.
Only about a dozen episodes of Coronet Blue were made and it wasn't chosen for broadcast during the regular season. Someone had the idea to show it during the summer - and it was a ratings sensation. Everyone wondered what the mysterious words "coronet blue" really meant, and hope that the show would go into production again so we'd find out. But no more episodes were ever made, and no writer stepped forward to give viewers the answer to the mystery!
Haven't thought of this fine series in ages. Then, suddenly that phrase that so haunted Frank Converse jumped into my head and I did a search. What do I get? The answer to the mystery. Thanks IMDb and like-minded fans. "Coronet Blue" was shot several years earlier than it's summer '67 airing. I remember this from a TV Guide article and I think we knew we'd never know the outcome. Is that possible? Was there a hope it's summer airing with less than a season of episodes might lead to its revival? I prayed so and caught every episode. Strong premise, Converse's intensity plus humanity, was convincing. And I have always recalled the camaraderie of Converse's running man and two other characters. I think one ran a coffee shop or bar and the third might have been black. Sadly, I've never heard of it resurfacing, which means it's probably rotting in some leaky vault. Please, how about a DVD set with at least an interview with Larry Cohen. "Coronet Blue" and my romance with Debbie Fink were the highlights of the summer of 1967.
Did you know
- TriviaOriginally produced in 1965, CBS aired eleven of the thirteen episodes in the summer of 1967.
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Last Drive-In with Joe Bob Briggs: The Stuff (2019)
- How many seasons does Coronet Blue have?Powered by Alexa
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