Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea S2E21 "DEAD MEN'S DOUBLOONS" HDTV Full Restored Episode Rated ARRRR!
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- Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
- Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
Season 2, Episode 21
DEAD MEN'S DOUBLOONS
First air date: 13 Feb. 1966
Guest star: Albert Salmi
During a routine undersea missile inspection, the crew of the Seaview encounters a 16th century pirate ship and a plot to destroy the western hemisphere.
TooleMan TV's observations: Richard Basehart seems to have enjoyed working on this episode. We see him laugh and smile, and he grumbles and rants when hampered by obstacles erected by unreasonable bureaucrats. The director, Sutton Roley, composed shots skillfully, taking full advantage of extreme close-ups and fisheye lenses. In addition to Dead Men's Doubloons, Roley directed the two Phantom episodes of season 2.
Footage of the pirate ships came from Anne of the Indies, a 1951 theatrical movie.
This beautiful HDTV broadcast recording of a restored and remastered film surpasses the commercially-released DVD set and any other syndicated or network broadcasts of Voyage.
Additional color and other video adjustments by TooleMan TV 2023.
I was 6 years old and couldn't wait to see this show each week.
@hohnshields6852 "Cave of the Dead" scared the living s**t out of me when I saw it the first time it aired back in the 1967-1968 season. I was very young so this show mostly scared the crap out of me with all the crazy monsters terrorizing the Seaview.
That flying sub is indestructible! 😅
Dig the happy endings for the crew, along with the sentimental music almost puts a tear in you eye, long live the Seaview
takes me back to the '60's
Albert Salmi was an amazing character actor. The guy gave his all to whatever his role was. Very in demand on tv. Pick a show from the mid fifties through the seventies he was on it.
Thanks for episode.
You're welcome!
Love these the definition is so good watching all over again keep them coming
You're welcome. I enjoying them, too!
Rated ARRRRRRR!
Aye, matey. You even made the Admiral chuckle.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Big fan of the show....keep them coming!!👍
I will! Thanks for the comment!
Thanks! 👍
Brilliant series
Thank you for the posting. Please keep posting more ❤
You bet! Glad you're enjoying Voyage.
I love this episode from series 2.
It was an entertaining show and a lot of episodes each season, not like today when all you get are 8 or 10 episodes in a season.
Muchas gracias por compartir tan interesante episodio 😊. No conocía este episodio, con buenos escenarios y buenos actores invitados. Realmente Viaje al fondo del mar es una de las mejores series de todos los tiempos. 😊❤😊
that poor flying sub gets a lot of beatings on this show
He was a pirate on lost in space also!
CPT Brandt is an alien that travels through time with his pirates crew. They have also learnt to handle modern technology. Unbelievable.
Well, if they're aliens who routinely use time travel then using ( supposedly 1970's ) technology should be fairly easy...
@adamcheong4742 You say "unbelievable" when watching a futuristic sci-fi fantasy show featuring time traveling Pirates??? Unbelievable!
Always unwise to disturb things ! Leaving it alone is often a bit wiser!
Funny how this is set in 1978. I was a sophmore in high school in 78
Leave it to director Sutton Roley to shoot an interesting rock n roll.
When Crane hit his head on the rock, you can see it move
You weren't expecting a real stone, I hope!
@@TooleManTV sure I was. A large hunk of granite with knife sharp edges. 🤣🤣🤣
@@TooleManTV lol😂 good retort
@mikegeorge5354 You can see what move, his head or the rock?
I think it was a bit of wood!
Originally telecast on February 13, 1966.
Very,very sad how Albert Salami killed himself and his wife in April of 1990,he appeared in over 150 movies and television shows also Lost in Space 😕
He also played a pirate in two Lost in space episodes.
Great picture quality! 1080?
1:24 Oh.....fascinating trivia there......Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea takes place in fictional 1978. Didn't know that before.
How come the Seaview has so much room? Not even the Typhoon class has this much room!
Because it has as much room as needed by the script.
Because producers wanted it to be.
Because it is a TV show, how come so many people try to use real logic when dissecting a made-up TV show.
It was a "Room with a SeaView"...
Good question, and as a Voyage geek I'm mulling it over all the time.
The initial delivery for the movie simply called on a more decorative variant on the old missile subs that turned up around 1960. About "400 plus feet".
But the movie gave us a bigger sub regardless. Especially interiors. According to various stories, space was required to get cameras, crews and actors through the sets without much stress. And it was said that the producers didn't want to burden the movie audience with "claustrophobia".
These and other factors caused interested parties to speculate about a 520 or a 620 foot length.
Additionally, speculation suggests 3 decks --- but drawings in the past have offered only 2. Thanks to a Renaissance in Voyage interest, there's more material available for study than before. But alas, no consistent guidance has been set before us. The viewer, if friendly to the series, is often left either bewildered or compelled to do his/her own homework.
Marine engineering offices have largely ignored my inquiries about just how long the submarine could be. Good input came from one on line correspondent who said that sub-building isn't necessarily limited to a specific size...but that US "boat yards" are limited to 700 feet. [I haven't obtained further information on this].
Sooner or later one is confronted with TV stories requiring someone or "something " having lots of endless corridors to hide in. Endless corridors aft of course. Whether or not that's actually feasible is left to us apparently.
Biggest challenges come from the "high camp" spook era arriving with year 3. Among the biggest: the "space launch" from the submarine itself, ("Journey With Fear", year 4). Fascinating idea if the Seaview was truly mammoth, which is asking too much at this point. Maybe a special accommodation for a space plane powered by "handwavium", but not a "staged rocket". [There are alternatives possible for that episode s peccadillos, however].
620feet might be a good initial guesstimate. The vintage atomic merchant shop Savannah apparently was built at that length....
Damage control are on the ball.2 seconds after the event they know exactly where the damage is
How can a electric signal travel along a cable so slowly.😂
repeat to yourself, "it's just a show, i should really just relax".
laughed at one where the gorilla ran amok inside sub
@@johnbigglesfriend1289 You laugh but when I saw that very episode titled "Fatal Cargo" back in 1967/1968 when it first aired it scared the Hell out of us kids! I'll never forget it. It's still action packed fun even though the gorilla looks "hokey" but he makes up for it in brute force!
No lifeboats?
Who gets a generational background check?
A General!
How much worse can these episodes get, the stories are so ridiculous.
Suspension of disbelief is good for ya!
@@TooleManTV not when it's this bad, all it's doing is making the show a load of rubbish, I thought the same even when I was a young kid, when it was originally on tv.
@@jameshaywood878 I understand. I was disappointed by a lot of the plots as a kid, too. But lately I am enjoying the shows on a different level. I like this one better than I ever did as a boy.
Sutton Roley always did a lot of interesting directing on Allen's series, even when hemmed in by crap scripts. Nathan Juran too. 😮😮😮
@@jameshaywood878 and you've come no further, otherwise you'd know you're not supposed to take a show like this that seriously.