Let's not get carried away, strong baby. My Dad back in that day used the same argument of 'imagination' as why old-time radio was superior to TV. Acting? Nope, it's called suspension of disbelief, and CGI has made that much easier in recent days. I don't disagree with this digital world being a challenge to individual imaginations, but even green screens task the acting skills of modern actors as much as Irwin Allen's silly creatures did...@@strongheart8
@@davidwesley2525Alas, Irwin would have spent a mint on the series if he HAD the money. The Cash was allotted by the Sponsors, the Network, the Investors and the Studio. Irwin himself didn't have the bank account to put this on. He could only "direct".
Appreciate your analysis here. It's been easy for Irwin's critics to dismiss the shows entirely, but fans should Appreciate the technical skill in putting these shows on. The "creatures" are often underappreciated but as I often offer, WHO did this costuming better? I doubt the critics could even now.
@@davidwesley2525 'Cheap'? The pilot for Lost In Space was the most expensive ever made up to that time. Every episode of Land Of The Giants cost a quarter of a million. That's 'cheap'.?
Boy it was the Captain who caught my eye, Lee Crain. I thought he was so handsome. Childhood was a whole lot of fun then. The music to this day have me. Everytime it is played, I remember the first episode. Living was so good back then.
I, too, wondered how these actors could keep a straight face with the silly monsters in later seasons of VTTBOTS! But Richard Basehart was a professional and a superb actor, and all the others were also quite good in their roles. Kind of a life lesson - Do your best regardless of some of the crappy "scripts" life may send your way. Thanks, again as I make my way through watching...This show was my favorite as a kid, and I am enjoying the episodes again. As for some of the criticism, I concur...but honestly it was a pioneer sci-fi show from 60 years ago. Needed more variety that last season, I agree. I guess 60 years from now, there may be laughing about current movies and TV. I put it in perspective. Thanks, Tooleman. Very enjoyable.
You're absolutely right about the walls. I've noticed sometimes when a monster throws a crewman against one of the corridor walls or there's a fight among the crewmen when they also hit a wall, the walls easily move as if the walls are made of plywood or something similar. Since you mentioned the steel hatch doors, I strongly believe they were made out of wood because in one episode I noticed the wood grain on it. It was a hatch door going into the laboratory.
@@hg27 I saw that !!!! We forget its Hollywood...... So we know set designs are flimsy , but let's not crash through walls and see the flapping paper ! Guessing this is part of classic T.V. ........still fun and entertaining . Good day !
We watched as kids loved it,!!& Mom & Granmom too...while eating dinner on TV trays in den!!!!.thanks so much beautiful clear pictures..... can't believe...😮
James Whiton, the writer of this episode stated he tried to sell an episode script that had an espionage theme. He was told by the producers that monster themed storylines were needed. One day while sitting outside, he looked at some rocks on the ground and imagined them if they were alive.
Also check for the old Hollywood Palace excerpt where David Hedison and a Fossil Man are guests with Milton Berle as a daffy Crewman. It's not a color print unfortunately but still fun. Again what's posted is not the whole hour but is just the wonderful Voyage spoof.
@@easternsuneasternsun171 That actually was a completely different creature. Not remotely related to the 'fossil man' thing which was a costume being worn by an actor. The 'Savage Curtin' entity was more of an animated rock structure.
I loved the way near the end when Captain Crane got bashed up by that rock man he was well and truly mashed when he jumps up and says 'I'm fine!' with not even a bruise, that man is made of steel!😳
Superb delivery for Us Fans. Thank you. I know a few others will fuss over Trek comparisons; but later Voyage was a pure action adventure show. There should be room for both concepts in a big field.
Irwin Allen realized in season 2 that having a new monster or strange creature in almost every episode was the key to ratings success the show did every possible monster it was inventive and fun.
Actually it didn't really impact ratings that much since it was always up against Disney on NBC in the exact same time slot. It always came in second or third place. As Terry Becker said years later, it was amazing the show lasted four seasons. In fact there was talk of a fifth season before Irwin went ahead with 'Land Of The Giants'.
I'm still studying this situation, but apparently the first season approach wasn't as buoyant during season 2. According to all the available reports, the audience wanted it all Under Water and with ...something "Fishy" every week, apparently. According to author Marc Cushman, there was HEAVY pressure to save money and bring on the beasts to scare up an audience. Even before the shift to Sunday, ABC is reputed to have requested a more free wheeling format, to keep the show, in their view, "more competitive". I'm torn -- I like both variants...
@@AdmiralNelson1000 Well either way, the show never won the time slot on Sundays at 7 pm. I thought the 2nd Season was the best and liked how they briefly tried to cash in on the 'Man From UNCLE' craze.
@@MrPeterbs Greetings and thank you for weighing in on the Seaview s peccadilllos. Indeed Irwin and ABC had initially expected Voyage to be a commanding hit, but it's success is based on simply surviving the seasons (true of most of our fantasy favorites). You likely know all this -- season 1 Monday 730, in command through Jan.65. NBC shifts another freshman, UNCLE Man, to the 8PM slot midseason where it chips away at Voyage's lead. This prompted move for year 2 to Sunday 7pm. According to Voyage fan studies, the move slogged --CBS s Lassie, My Favorite Martian, NBCs Disney had the initial commanding lead. Voyage, according to the lore, rallied only when "surface intrigue stories" were retired (the ones you noted). I really liked those. Obviously UNCLE is credited with inspiring them, but just MO (and I DO love UNCLE warts and all) the Voyage "intrigue tales" were better crafted, tighter stories. What Voyage in many ways was "all about"...superpower rivalry post WW2...Anyway, more underwater Voyage = improved numbers and interestingly My Favorite Martian was dropped by CBS. Season 3 supposedly opened to BIG numbers as the "monster rally" and that hyperactive pace bagged audiences. CBSs replacement for Martian, It's About Time, didn't scare up viewers and its said that the Disney hour was experiencing initial fall doldrums with Walt's absence as host. But it is said too that by early 67 when the next season schedule was being considered, that VBS was "on the bubble". According to a 3 part article in UK's Infinity magazine, VBS Squeaked by with a renewal because sponsors were satisfied and the network was pleased with the "demographics". If you haven't seen them, I'd recommend the books by Marc Cushman covering Voyage, Lost In Space and Star Trek OS. They're pricey so I only have the Voyages. Cushman has come under criticism for coming up with numbers suggesting that ST OS was "really a BIG hit"; vintage press reports say otherwise. Still, his Voyage books tell of the astounding stories of Voyage's Battles of the Budget, and how these affected the course the show took, offer ratings which appear to be accurate, etc. Season 4 reports are a mixed bag, suggesting that the effort was getting waterlogged BUT still had a lot of energy and potential left to it. (Never stated anywhere but Voyage's slow start out the gate in fall 67 was, my "educated guess", due to the considerable popularity of CBS s new Gentle Ben.)
Yes, I nerd out a lot on that, trying to figure out just how "big" it could be in "reality". I'm suspecting that the packagers didn't give this matter much consistent thought, leaving it to the fans. A marine engineer once said that a submarine could be of any size called for, but that construction facilities presently are equipped only to build a 700 foot craft possibly.
Love this episode. My brother and i used a play tent as our reactor room and a play school workbench for our reactor console. Did anyone else notice he pointed the sonic gun in the direction of the torpedos to try it out. lol
I kid you not. My cousin and David Hedison look like, speak like and walk like each other. A doppelganger. Lol 😆. I used to think that my cousin was him. 😆
Richards (Jerry Catron) also had a slightly recurring role on Star Trek The Original Series as Security Officer Montgomery. In the season 2 episode "The Doomsday Machine", he played the guard who fought Commodore Decker on the way to escorting him to his quarters. Decker, as you know, knocked him unconscious and stole a shuttlecraft. He played the same character in the season 2 episode "Journey to Babel".
He also appeared in one of the Joker episodes on Batman in the the second season of the series as one of Joker's goons. And also in one of the Julie Newmar Catwoman episodes as one of her goons as well. I just don't recall the title of the episodes at moment.
In direction, camerawork, editing, stunts and even music that fight scene between Catron and William Windom (Decker) is surpassingly well done. No doubles as far as I can tell, and though the actors doubtless had to pull their punches they looked like they enjoyed hauling off at each other in character.
The Storms and Sparks and Tumult were special order fast food from the Powers that Be. The show was high cost at the outset and for year 3 it was ordained due to budget cuts to be a high action, ear pounding roller coaster ride for the early Sunday night kids' dinner hour audience. Trick was to rouse Junior away from Lassie and Disney. Yes, upon conclusion of the series I'd like to have Seaview hauled into drydock and thoroughly examined.
Irwin Allen TV shows were produced by 20th Century Fox, same studio that released The Day the Earth Stood Still. This same music was used for the Time Tunnel episode about the ghost of Nero.
I bought what was advertised as the complete DVD set of this show several yers ago,, but I'm seeing episodes here that I have not seen before. I loved this show when it was featured on T.V. Saturday afternoons. I had to work hard to get it the picture to come in clear by cranking up the tower which made the show even more exciting. I loved the cast. Richard Basehart had the best voice, he made the show believable. Apparently Erwin Allen insisted on having an authentic looking set which helped to make this show a success. That new diver featured on this episode, Richards, is a hunk. I googled him for more info. His name is Jerry Catron, and along with most of the original cast, is no longer with us.
You'll likely find Jerry Catron doing "extra" work on Star Trek Original. He's also the "Buccaneer" in another year 3 Voyage, "Night of Terror". If recall serves, he may also have a brief role as a Crewman guarding a radioactive cargo from a "possessed" Admiral Nelson in year 4s "Terror".
It’s interesting that the music score when the Admiral and the chief see the rock creatures for the first time is the same as the score for the robot Gort in The Day The Eath Sttod Still.
It is also interesting, the music score before they see the rock creature, it's from the 1959 movie journey to the center of the earth, with James Mason and Pat Boone. Both music scores are from the late great Bernard Herman, I am not sure if I spelled his last name right, but I think you know who I am talking about, good old Bernard he scored a lot of movies and TV shows.
This episode also uses cues from another Fox film 'The Enemy Below'. Herrmann's movie cues were heard in all of Irwin's shows with the one exception of Land Of The Giants.
@@MrPeterbs excuse me, I wasn't flagging you or anyone else, I was just making a comment just like you and everybody else, if other people read my comments about Mr David hedison or anybody else, maybe they learned something that they did not know before. 🤔 Please don't take it personal.
Seaview logic: hear knocking on the crash shutters “Open the shutters, let’s take a look” -monster- Rational action- “close the shutters! Prepare for boarding! Break out the laser guns!” Seaview action- “send out a dive party” Yet I love it still! I think I would hate a modern remake (did Seaquest DSV count? 😁)
SeaQuest often seen by many as a Voyage "return," whereas some SeaQuest packagers claimed at first that they were "improving" on yesterday's SF. Ratings issues and expenses humbled the SeaQuest staff as they found out the hard way that exotic adventures may be enjoyed by just a core audience of adventure fans. Considering TV economics, it's a wonder that we get shows like these at all.
I have watched just about every episode of this show....i don't think there is one....where the sub does not get thrown about....and the crew are all flung from side to side.
You'd think he' d be able to just activate the collision screen turning on a switch rate where's he's standing ,you know , instead of calling over the telecon system , I mean he is rate there in the observation compartment in front of the window he wants to protect .
Irwin Allen recycled all the monsters on his shows. If you saw a monster on this show, it was or will be on Lost in Space, Land of the Giants or The Time Tunnel. Richard Basehart was trying not to laugh 😂 looking at the rock man.
A long held observation. The one most likely to venture a snicker is Richard Basehart, if you look closely. David Hedison was known for a snappy sense of humor, but on camera he really covered it up.
The Arsonists were the show's bean counters. Note minimal sparking in the first two seasons. Season 3 is out to bag the kids in earnest. Thus the Pounding and the Sparking and the Flames.
The show, undergoing hefty financial and ratings strain, was being actively aimed at the kids in the Sunday early PM dinner hour where the tots had long been courted there by Lassie and Disney. What you're watching is ABCs "counterprogramming" with Voyage.
Didn't have much budget but they did the best they could with what they had. Besides your talking six decades ago where everything was new and different for series TV. 😊😊😊😊 5:23
Just use the laser beam against any thing out in front of the Seaview. Once there was a giant seaweed monster and they blasted the thing with the laser and sent it to Davey Jone's Locker!!
There was talk about the use of Voyage and Lost In Space in providing foundational material for two 90s shows, SeaQuest and Earth Two. Some of the production staff on both shows acknowledged this, while others were disdainful of 60s shows and claimed that the 9os projects were improvements. What humbled the Universal/Amblin crews was the same problem afflicting 60s SF shows -- tight money, audience ratings, and not fully understanding what the MASS Audience wants to support...
Questions: Why did Richards turn so quickly? He didn't even get the lava pit treatment! Why did the admiral and Chief use torches to fight the fossil man? Didn't they just see one of them come out of the lava pit? Anyway, I remember being impressed by this episode when I was 8. The plots were invariably silly, but it was fun to watch.
This RESTORED version is Great! Loved this show back in the day!
I've always admired how the cast were able to keep such straight faces no matter how ridiculous the various monsters of the week looked.
Irwin Allen had talking carrots on Lost In Space.
Whatever happens, "I'll be right down".
Indeed-I am sure there were many outtakes of such...
It’s called “acting” and it used to be more important that the special effects because audiences used to have something called “imagination.”
Let's not get carried away, strong baby. My Dad back in that day used the same argument of 'imagination' as why old-time radio was superior to TV. Acting? Nope, it's called suspension of disbelief, and CGI has made that much easier in recent days. I don't disagree with this digital world being a challenge to individual imaginations, but even green screens task the acting skills of modern actors as much as Irwin Allen's silly creatures did...@@strongheart8
Star Trek under the sea. Still better than 90% of the junk made today.
Good comparison.
😂 Kowalsky is really an allround crew, torpedoes, radar, sonar, diving, flying, you name it 😅
Crane sent Kowalski back to work because Kowalski runs the entire ship.
@@goldabernstein1215
Kowalsky Should be promoted Captain.
😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
He can even be knocked out and lose consciousness once or twice a day, and he just keeps right on going!
he also drives a 440 white challenger!
He was a messenger/courier on a motorcycle in "Hail to the Chief".
Gotta say the COSTUMES for these shows were well made, as well as imaginative!
If V.T.T.B.O.T.S Wasn't on a Tight Budget & If Irwin Allen wasn't So Cheap the costumes could almost Look real.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@davidwesley2525Alas, Irwin would have spent a mint on the series if he HAD the money. The Cash was allotted by the Sponsors, the Network, the Investors and the Studio. Irwin himself didn't have the bank account to put this on. He could only "direct".
Appreciate your analysis here. It's been easy for Irwin's critics to dismiss the shows entirely, but fans should Appreciate the technical skill in putting these shows on. The "creatures" are often underappreciated but as I often offer, WHO did this costuming better? I doubt the critics could even now.
@@davidwesley2525 'Cheap'? The pilot for Lost In Space was the most expensive ever made up to that time. Every episode of Land Of The Giants cost a quarter of a million. That's 'cheap'.?
WOW ! 😅😅😅 I Didn't Know Irwin Allen was so Generous. 😅😅😅@@MrPeterbs
Boy it was the Captain who caught my eye, Lee Crain. I thought he was so handsome. Childhood was a whole lot of fun then. The music to this day have me. Everytime it is played, I remember the first episode. Living was so good back then.
This show was so entertaining and still is!
The resolution is ABSOLUTELY amazing ! Incredible for the late 60's 😊😊😊😊
Love this show. ..use to watch with my Grandma on Saturdays afternoons....Wow...
The best of the Irwin Allen Sci fi creations. Watched it as a kid, great stuff. Thanks for uploading it.
I, too, wondered how these actors could keep a straight face with the silly monsters in later seasons of VTTBOTS! But Richard Basehart was a professional and a superb actor, and all the others were also quite good in their roles. Kind of a life lesson - Do your best regardless of some of the crappy "scripts" life may send your way. Thanks, again as I make my way through watching...This show was my favorite as a kid, and I am enjoying the episodes again. As for some of the criticism, I concur...but honestly it was a pioneer sci-fi show from 60 years ago. Needed more variety that last season, I agree. I guess 60 years from now, there may be laughing about current movies and TV. I put it in perspective. Thanks, Tooleman. Very enjoyable.
Thank you Tooleman for posting these great shows
"The Fossil Men". This episode should have been set in Washington D. C.
Touche .....
I remember as a kid watching this show Satureday mornings with a beer and bong in hand.
You mean teenager! I seriously hope!
Too high and drunk to learn how to spell?
Great episode..... Side note....love the strong steel hatch doors , yet the walls are paper thin. Funny
Fascinating. And true.
You're absolutely right about the walls. I've noticed sometimes when a monster throws a crewman against one of the corridor walls or there's a fight among the crewmen when they also hit a wall, the walls easily move as if the walls are made of plywood or something similar. Since you mentioned the steel hatch doors, I strongly believe they were made out of wood because in one episode I noticed the wood grain on it. It was a hatch door going into the laboratory.
True!😮
@@hg27 I saw that !!!! We forget its Hollywood...... So we know set designs are flimsy , but let's not crash through walls and see the flapping paper ! Guessing this is part of classic T.V. ........still fun and entertaining . Good day !
@@hotknight1335 yes, still fun and entertaining! Have a good day as well. 👍😁
We watched as kids loved it,!!& Mom & Granmom too...while eating dinner on TV trays in den!!!!.thanks so much beautiful clear pictures..... can't believe...😮
James Whiton, the writer of this episode stated he tried to sell an episode script that had an espionage theme. He was told by the producers that monster themed storylines were needed. One day while sitting outside, he looked at some rocks on the ground and imagined them if they were alive.
Brilliant! Thanks so much for sharing this “slice of my youth” as a very young TV viewer back in Indiana! Xoxo
O boy am I enjoying these episodes , have chronic arthritis don't get out much these days , cheers for uploads so happy 😊
Glad you're aboard!
Another monster of the week episode but still enjoyable,thanks for posting.
Fantastic, one of the best episodes ever, I think the Fossil men were built for this story then one made a guest appearance in Lost in Space.
A couple did yes
And the stone guy on star trek when they met Abe Lincoln fighting the Klingons
Also check for the old Hollywood Palace excerpt where David Hedison and a Fossil Man are guests with Milton Berle as a daffy Crewman. It's not a color print unfortunately but still fun. Again what's posted is not the whole hour but is just the wonderful Voyage spoof.
@@easternsuneasternsun171 That actually was a completely different creature. Not remotely related to the 'fossil man' thing which was a costume being worn by an actor. The 'Savage Curtin' entity was more of an animated rock structure.
I loved this show 60 years ago, and I still love it today 🙂
Laughable now, 60 years ago I loved it.❤
I loved the way near the end when Captain Crane got bashed up by that rock man he was well and truly mashed when he jumps up and says 'I'm fine!' with not even a bruise, that man is made of steel!😳
Well, that was Sci-Fi for you back in the 60s and 70s 🤗
This show had an awesome cast.
Superb delivery for Us Fans. Thank you. I know a few others will fuss over Trek comparisons; but later Voyage was a pure action adventure show. There should be room for both concepts in a big field.
18:29 - How does a CPO not know to ship oars when leaving the boat?!? ;-)
This show is so ridiculous, but I sure loved it as a kid!
Awesome Tooleman, another favorite monster episode of mine. 👍😁
I remember as a kid. We would act like we were being thrown back and forth. Then say, "guess where we are" in Voyage to the bottom of the sea...lol
Irwin Allen realized in season 2 that having a new monster or strange creature in almost every episode was the key to ratings success the show did every possible monster it was inventive and fun.
They had to exchange "Tom Clancy" for that incredible Zoo they came up with. Great menagerie of creatures.
Actually it didn't really impact ratings that much since it was always up against Disney on NBC in the exact same time slot. It always came in second or third place. As Terry Becker said years later, it was amazing the show lasted four seasons. In fact there was talk of a fifth season before Irwin went ahead with 'Land Of The Giants'.
I'm still studying this situation, but apparently the first season approach wasn't as buoyant during season 2. According to all the available reports, the audience wanted it all Under Water and with ...something "Fishy" every week, apparently.
According to author Marc Cushman, there was HEAVY pressure to save money and bring on the beasts to scare up an audience. Even before the shift to Sunday, ABC is reputed to have requested a more free wheeling format, to keep the show, in their view, "more competitive". I'm torn -- I like both variants...
@@AdmiralNelson1000 Well either way, the show never won the time slot on Sundays at 7 pm. I thought the 2nd Season was the best and liked how they briefly tried to cash in on the 'Man From UNCLE' craze.
@@MrPeterbs Greetings and thank you for weighing in on the Seaview s peccadilllos. Indeed Irwin and ABC had initially expected Voyage to be a commanding hit, but it's success is based on simply surviving the seasons (true of most of our fantasy favorites). You likely know all this -- season 1 Monday 730, in command through Jan.65. NBC shifts another freshman, UNCLE Man, to the 8PM slot midseason where it chips away at Voyage's lead.
This prompted move for year 2 to Sunday 7pm. According to Voyage fan studies, the move slogged --CBS s Lassie, My Favorite Martian, NBCs Disney had the initial commanding lead. Voyage, according to the lore, rallied only when "surface intrigue stories" were retired (the ones you noted).
I really liked those. Obviously UNCLE is credited with inspiring them, but just MO (and I DO love UNCLE warts and all) the Voyage "intrigue tales" were better crafted, tighter stories. What Voyage in many ways was "all about"...superpower rivalry post WW2...Anyway, more underwater Voyage = improved numbers and interestingly My Favorite Martian was dropped by CBS.
Season 3 supposedly opened to BIG numbers as the "monster rally" and that hyperactive pace bagged audiences. CBSs replacement for Martian, It's About Time, didn't scare up viewers and its said that the Disney hour was experiencing initial fall doldrums with Walt's absence as host.
But it is said too that by early 67 when the next season schedule was being considered, that VBS was "on the bubble". According to a 3 part article in UK's Infinity magazine, VBS
Squeaked by with a renewal because sponsors were satisfied and the network was pleased with the "demographics".
If you haven't seen them, I'd recommend the books by Marc Cushman covering Voyage, Lost In Space and Star Trek OS. They're pricey so I only have the Voyages. Cushman has come under criticism for coming up with numbers suggesting that ST OS was "really a BIG hit"; vintage press reports say otherwise. Still, his Voyage books tell of the astounding stories of Voyage's Battles of the Budget, and how these affected the course the show took, offer ratings which appear to be accurate, etc.
Season 4 reports are a mixed bag, suggesting that the effort was getting waterlogged BUT still had a lot of energy and potential left to it.
(Never stated anywhere but Voyage's slow start out the gate in fall 67 was, my "educated guess", due to the considerable popularity of CBS s new Gentle Ben.)
What a treat! I'm amazed by quality of the image. Much better than on DVD. Thanks a lot. By the way, I am 58. Greetings from BCN.
Greetings to you! Where is BCN? I apologize for asking...
@@TooleManTV BCN is the acronym for Barcelona. Spain😉👌
@@juancarlosgiraltnavarro1406 Thanks for that info!
The inside of their submarine is bigger than the outside. I never considered this when I was a kid. Still a cool show.
Yes, I nerd out a lot on that, trying to figure out just how "big" it could be in "reality". I'm suspecting that the packagers didn't give this matter much consistent thought, leaving it to the fans. A marine engineer once said that a submarine could be of any size called for, but that construction facilities presently are equipped only to build a 700 foot craft possibly.
Watch Doctor Who. 😂😂😂😂
Will Robinson asked that same question in "Invaders From the Fifth Dimension".
Love this episode. My brother and i used a play tent as our reactor room and a play school workbench for our reactor console. Did anyone else notice he pointed the sonic gun in the direction of the torpedos to try it out. lol
i never missed an episode back in the 70,s...brings back memories ,thanks
🥰🤩
Thanks so much for posting The Fossil Men. One of our favorites. Can't wait for the next one. Will watch this one several times. 😊😊❤❤ 46:04
I like the the high powered soldering iron 😳
Radio shack had those....😽
Lots of high ique stoners.
Superb remastering and restoring job!
I kid you not. My cousin and David Hedison look like, speak like and walk like each other. A doppelganger. Lol 😆. I used to think that my cousin was him. 😆
If the fossil thing doesn't work out for their leader then he could always have a great career in radio with that voice.
😄 Yes, he was a "rock star."
@@TooleManTV🤦♀️
@@TooleManTV could have had a career in wrestling…The Rock.
@@SherwoodyFinishing Move the Rock Pile Driver 😅😅😅
@@davidwesley2525 that’s one thing that we can take for granite.
Hola. Siempre interesantes y dignos de volverse a ver los episodios! Por favor 🙇🏽🙇🏻♂️🙇🏼♂️🙇🏽♀️ activa los subtítulos en español. Gracias.
It's so nostalgic. 😭👍💯Thank you.🙏😍
Richards (Jerry Catron) also had a slightly recurring role on Star Trek The Original Series as Security Officer Montgomery. In the season 2 episode "The Doomsday Machine", he played the guard who fought Commodore Decker on the way to escorting him to his quarters. Decker, as you know, knocked him unconscious and stole a shuttlecraft. He played the same character in the season 2 episode "Journey to Babel".
He also appeared in one of the Joker episodes on Batman in the the second season of the series as one of Joker's goons. And also in one of the Julie Newmar Catwoman episodes as one of her goons as well. I just don't recall the title of the episodes at moment.
In direction, camerawork, editing, stunts and even music that fight scene between Catron and William Windom (Decker) is surpassingly well done. No doubles as far as I can tell, and though the actors doubtless had to pull their punches they looked like they enjoyed hauling off at each other in character.
David Hedison is so handsome. ❤
❤
🤗ホンマに、Handsome😉👍✨ From🇯🇵🖐️😅
I was 7 back then, top 3 shows I liked, batman, the Munsters and this.
When I was a Kid I thought the Fossil Men were Lava Creatures. Or maybe I had a Mandela experience.
😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
I thought this show was so cool when it was originally on.
Their amazing, futuristic, advanced ship is remarkably fragile.
The Storms and Sparks and Tumult were special order fast food from the Powers that Be. The show was high cost at the outset and for year 3 it was ordained due to budget cuts to be a high action, ear pounding roller coaster ride for the early Sunday night kids' dinner hour audience. Trick was to rouse Junior away from Lassie and Disney.
Yes, upon conclusion of the series I'd like to have Seaview hauled into drydock and thoroughly examined.
I like how they used the same music for the emergence of the fossil man, that was used when Gort appeared in The Day The Earth Stood Still.
Irwin Allen TV shows were produced by 20th Century Fox, same studio that released The Day the Earth Stood Still. This same music was used for the Time Tunnel episode about the ghost of Nero.
I was obsessed with the flying sub as a kid
Definitely!
On an interview, now on RUclips, David Hedison said that this show was essentially Voyage to the Bottom of his career. 😁
The great music was a big part of drawing you to this 👊
The theme music for voyage to the bottom of the Sea was one of the best theme musics of any TV show .
@@albertrandall2271 it certainly was well thought out ,and absolutely nailed by the magicians.
Yes, theme and other scoring musically were big draws to vintage series.
@@AdmiralNelson1000 well said 👍
I bought what was advertised as the complete DVD set of this show several yers ago,, but I'm seeing episodes here that I have not seen before. I loved this show when it was featured on T.V. Saturday afternoons. I had to work hard to get it the picture to come in clear by cranking up the tower which made the show even more exciting. I loved the cast. Richard Basehart had the best voice, he made the show believable. Apparently Erwin Allen insisted on having an authentic looking set which helped to make this show a success. That new diver featured on this episode, Richards, is a hunk. I googled him for more info. His name is Jerry Catron, and along with most of the original cast, is no longer with us.
You'll likely find Jerry Catron doing "extra" work on Star Trek Original. He's also the "Buccaneer" in another year 3 Voyage, "Night of Terror". If recall serves, he may also have a brief role as a Crewman guarding a radioactive cargo from a "possessed" Admiral Nelson in year 4s "Terror".
It’s interesting that the music score when the Admiral and the chief see the rock creatures for the first time is the same as the score for the robot Gort in The Day The Eath Sttod Still.
It is also interesting, the music score before they see the rock creature, it's from the 1959 movie journey to the center of the earth, with James Mason and Pat Boone. Both music scores are from the late great Bernard Herman, I am not sure if I spelled his last name right, but I think you know who I am talking about, good old Bernard he scored a lot of movies and TV shows.
A 300 hundred year old flintlock that still fired.....got to love this show
Thank heavens it didn't explode in his hand. Loved your comment!
Irwin Allen's pitch to ABC for the show stressed one word - "Action!". This episode showed that he was true to his word.
This episode lifts Bernard Herrmann's score for "The Day the Earth Stood Still." Which was also heard in "Lost in Space."
This episode also uses cues from another Fox film 'The Enemy Below'. Herrmann's movie cues were heard in all of Irwin's shows with the one exception of Land Of The Giants.
came to the comment section to mention that myself. Good catch!
29:14 Captain crane David hedison was in the movie The enemy belowHe was also in the 1960 movie The lost world. .@@MrPeterbs
@@MrPeterbs excuse me, I wasn't flagging you or anyone else, I was just making a comment just like you and everybody else, if other people read my comments about Mr David hedison or anybody else, maybe they learned something that they did not know before. 🤔 Please don't take it personal.
Okay. However you did seem to call me out by with that '@' flag followed by my name. Just saying.
Love this show even though it was before my time
The monsters are so realistic I can not watch I get to scared.
You are either a small child, or you're just being funny. 😮
@@albertrandall2271Or being VERY appreciative!😅
HAHAHA Love it! This made my day! And @ 34:30, the Captain holding that very phallic weapon LOL
"If we can find the right frequency on the penis gun, we stand a chance!!"
You got a point there 😅
@@jackpayne5101Now I Can't Unsee That anymore. 😅😅😅
I noticed that too.
Thanks for the upload.
Admiral Nelson: "Let's take 'em, chief".
Watched this nonstop back in its day!
Wow
Normal protocol calls for donning your smoke mask before attempting to put the fire down.
The Navy may have been desperate enough to put me in uniform but not foolish enough to let me sail away by myself...
13:50 "Do you hear anything?"
Nope, I can only hear the background music!
Seaview logic: hear knocking on the crash shutters “Open the shutters, let’s take a look”
-monster-
Rational action- “close the shutters! Prepare for boarding! Break out the laser guns!”
Seaview action- “send out a dive party”
Yet I love it still! I think I would hate a modern remake (did Seaquest DSV count? 😁)
SeaQuest often seen by many as a Voyage "return," whereas some SeaQuest packagers claimed at first that they were "improving" on yesterday's SF. Ratings issues and expenses humbled the SeaQuest staff as they found out the hard way that exotic adventures may be enjoyed by just a core audience of adventure fans. Considering TV economics, it's a wonder that we get shows like these at all.
30 fathoms, is 180 feet, not 200 feet. Watch out for that rocky bottom, boys.
Thank you for these videos, I used to watch these in my younger days,
the show ruled.
All that ..and dinner, movie and hole in the 'pop corn bucket'😊🎉
The backing music is the same is when "Gort" had appeared in "The Day The Earth Stood Still".
I have watched just about every episode of this show....i don't think there is one....where the sub does not get thrown about....and the crew are all flung from side to side.
I think there was one episode where they had to abandon Seaview. I believe this was in Season 1
There was even an offical tv industry term for the shaking at the time. It was called the "Seaview Rock and Roll"!
Which is fairly close to the "Star Trek" pitch and toss-ship takes a hit and the crew falls out of their chairs and roll around the deck.
poor kowalski, he took a lot of hits in this series
Yes. And when the blows fell elsewhere, Patterson got those. Season 4 could be rough on the Chief (note "Time Lock").
A submarine with windows 😂
Why not?
It wouldn't be called the Seaview if it have didn't windows.
Fossil men, or at least one, appeared on that wacky Hollywood Palace spoof featuring David Hedison.
That's right! And the clip is on RUclips.
@@TooleManTVI saw that clip. It was hilarious!
You'd think he' d be able to just activate the collision screen turning on a switch rate where's he's standing ,you know , instead of calling over the telecon system , I mean he is rate there in the observation compartment in front of the window he wants to protect .
I remember as a boy thinking, I had no idea that there were so many monsters in the ocean 😂
A busy place, fun if the creatures are chasing someone else😂.
I wonder if this episode inspired the crew of the Flying Dutchman from the Pirates of Caribbean franchise.
Now that's an episode I never watched.
And there's a reason you never watched it. 😂😂😂
That'sbecause Perry Mason was one of the few shows on TV. Everyone was on it.😊 4:22
Irwin Allen recycled all the monsters on his shows. If you saw a monster on this show, it was or will be on Lost in Space, Land of the Giants or The Time Tunnel. Richard Basehart was trying not to laugh 😂 looking at the rock man.
True. Richard Basehart is often the cast member most likely to stifle a grin.
The strange music was from The Rolling Stones
It had to be hard to keep a straight face for these actors as goofy as this show was.
A long held observation. The one most likely to venture a snicker is Richard Basehart, if you look closely. David Hedison was known for a snappy sense of humor, but on camera he really covered it up.
Leather jackets are obligatory when travelling on the flying sub.
They also doubled as life preservers in the event the Flying Sub sustained damage from a water crash.
Great show
16:35 Flying Sub Rock and Roll!
Would love to wach the episodes with all the cutouts added. Willkeep a look if any are available to let you know. 😊😊 36:13
Riveting stuff !
Note to shipyard less flammable material in construction
The Arsonists were the show's bean counters. Note minimal sparking in the first two seasons. Season 3 is out to bag the kids in earnest. Thus the Pounding and the Sparking and the Flames.
one of my favourite tv shows as kid.but the monsters got more and more silly
The show, undergoing hefty financial and ratings strain, was being actively aimed at the kids in the Sunday early PM dinner hour where the tots had long been courted there by Lassie and Disney. What you're watching is ABCs "counterprogramming" with Voyage.
When you beat up the doctor...its a bad day.😏
This season the Doc gets his share of walloping.
Didn't have much budget but they did the best they could with what they had. Besides your talking six decades ago where everything was new and different for series TV. 😊😊😊😊 5:23
8:15 Seaview Rock and Roll!
Raise shields, raise shields
The admiral is Knigh Rider's father ?
Yep.
@@TooleManTVAnd after Voyage was canceled Captain Crane changed his name to Felix Leiter and went to work for the CIA.
Just use the laser beam against any thing out in front of the Seaview. Once there was a giant seaweed monster and they blasted the thing with the laser and sent it to Davey Jone's Locker!!
this episode freaked me out back in the day
I hope you got through it okay this time.
This one terrified me as a little kid. My bed was of course right beside a window also an old house with creaking and tapping.
I don't remember seeing one!
I still think this show had a lot to do with the making of Sea Quest DSV
There was talk about the use of Voyage and Lost In Space in providing foundational material for two 90s shows, SeaQuest and Earth Two. Some of the production staff on both shows acknowledged this, while others were disdainful of 60s shows and claimed that the 9os projects were improvements. What humbled the Universal/Amblin crews was the same problem afflicting 60s SF shows -- tight money, audience ratings, and not fully understanding what the MASS Audience wants to support...
Where do you think Roddenberry got some of his ideas. ? 😮😮😮
What's the point of a sealed watertight door, if there are meter wide air ducts running through the walls and ceiling?
Questions: Why did Richards turn so quickly? He didn't even get the lava pit treatment!
Why did the admiral and Chief use torches to fight the fossil man? Didn't they just see one of them come out of the lava pit?
Anyway, I remember being impressed by this episode when I was 8. The plots were invariably silly, but it was fun to watch.