Vote for why you think it jumped
Never Jumped
The third season
The middle of the second season
Color
The 'My Friend The Gorilla' Affair
Shark Bytes
I think the show jumped sometime in the middle to latter part of the second season. The Third season was bloody awful, campy, an unfunny version of Get Smart. Sadly, the 4th season was looking very good but they had lost their audience by then, A perfect example of how to ruin a good show.
However, I also think they made a mistake frm the very beginning by deciding that EVERY episode was to have an "innocent" character who was accidently drawn into the plot. Usually this character was a young woman, occasionally it was bumbling male character, and once in a while it was a married couple. It would have been fine to do this once in a while, but it became more and more difficult for the writers to find plausible reasons for an innocent character to become involved, and this contributed, I think, to the nuttiness in the 3rd season.
From the beginning they should have decided to only involve an inncoent character in some of the episodes, allowing NS & IK to do their spy thing on their own in others.
The decision was made because the producers thought that it would be easier for the viewing audience to "identify" with an innocent character caught up in the UNCLE-THRUSH war. Hogwash! Nobody who watches a movie or tv show identifies with the supporting players, the audience always sees itself as one of the heroes or heriones (or as one of the villains). Later spy shows like I Spy and Secret Agent and Mission:Impossible proved that the audience did not need an innocent character to identify with.
MFU should have avoided this mistake from the start, and it might have saved them the disaster they experienced in season 3
However, I also think they made a mistake frm the very beginning by deciding that EVERY episode was to have an "innocent" character who was accidently drawn into the plot. Usually this character was a young woman, occasionally it was bumbling male character, and once in a while it was a married couple. It would have been fine to do this once in a while, but it became more and more difficult for the writers to find plausible reasons for an innocent character to become involved, and this contributed, I think, to the nuttiness in the 3rd season.
From the beginning they should have decided to only involve an inncoent character in some of the episodes, allowing NS & IK to do their spy thing on their own in others.
The decision was made because the producers thought that it would be easier for the viewing audience to "identify" with an innocent character caught up in the UNCLE-THRUSH war. Hogwash! Nobody who watches a movie or tv show identifies with the supporting players, the audience always sees itself as one of the heroes or heriones (or as one of the villains). Later spy shows like I Spy and Secret Agent and Mission:Impossible proved that the audience did not need an innocent character to identify with.
MFU should have avoided this mistake from the start, and it might have saved them the disaster they experienced in season 3
I was a toddler when it first came on, so I couldn't remember it way back when. I stumbled across a marathon of episodes on some cable channel three years back. In one of those episodes, a then nouveau-riche Japanese industrialist had received news that his precious teenaged daughter was a kidnap threat. So, in one scene when Kuryakin was at home effectively babysitting/protecting the daughter the girl turned petulant and wanted to go out, meet her friends and party and such. Kuryakin ends up throwing the minidressed little cutie over his knee and giving her a good spanking! I wondered how this borderline pedophilial yet kinky scene ever slipped past the notoriously tightassed censors of the time.
Its another one of those things - as a kid watching these, I never felt it jumped the shark for me. If I sat down and watched all the episodes now I'd probably feel differently. I remember being really annoyed that is was being replaced by some show with the ludicrous title of Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In. To be honest, it opened out of the gate fast, but couldn't maintain its momentum. However, the charisma of Vaugn and McCallum kept the show alive probably longer than it deserved.
UNCLE took its humorous turn- so-called "camp"- in Sept '65, four months before Batman hit the air. Its Sept.'65 season premiere further pre-figured Batman by having a cliff-hanger ending.
An addeum to "Guests" comment about David McCallum appearing on "NCIS" as the "annoying" medical examiner.
An episode had the crew talking with their boss about "Ducky" (McCallum's character) because he and the boss had been friends "back in the day." When the crew asked what Ducky was like back then, the boss thinks for a second and says; "Illya Kuriaken!"
An episode had the crew talking with their boss about "Ducky" (McCallum's character) because he and the boss had been friends "back in the day." When the crew asked what Ducky was like back then, the boss thinks for a second and says; "Illya Kuriaken!"
Will I could watch during Writers' Strike of 2007. This was real writing. Not script recycling from no-talent, unionized greedy slugs.
The show started off with a bang and tapered off in the second season. The third season was probably an attempt to widen the audience to include more young viewers, the fourth season was better than the third but had outlived the "spy-show" fad. Don't forget when it aired in the 60's it was only on once a week and as a 16 year old at that time it was a must-see for everyone I knew.
Definitely the third season. I've been watching them all on cable and reading a book someone has written about the show. You can definitely see the producers trying to keep up with BATMAN...even hiring the BATMAN composer to write music for some episodes (you can't miss it). Napoleon dancing with a gorilla made my 17-year-old refuse to watch any more reruns with me. That season also had the worst theme version: POW...POW POW...POW POW POW...POW POW POW POW with screeching brass. Fourth season has some good episodes in the spirit of the earlier shows, but they couldn't save UNCLE.
Here in the UK we got the movie 'To Trap a Spy' before the series started on TV, At the time the film was excellent with a really striking intro theme, a good plot and Robert Vaughn made a really good suave sophisticated spy, the classic scene of WASP attacking the New York HQ and the one that gets to Alisons office is quickly despatched by Solo who was behind bullet proof glass, this became the opening title of the TV series, but for me I really enjoyed the original opening you know with Del Floria's in the East 40's. In my view a real shame that the show became tongue in cheek and really rather silly by season 2, I did stick with it but really the first film and season one were the best, this was an important part of my teenage years.
Jumped the shark at the beginning of the second season.I was 15 at the end of the first season which ended with the Odd Man Affair, a very good spy story episode, even today.When I tuned in for the start of the second season I was crushed.They had begun a complete makeover of a thrilling TV show.Gone was the great glass shattering intro and driving theme and episode music, which always got my pulse racing, to music that could have been from the Adams Family and the Batman TV series.The plots went from drama with understated humor and wit to the dreaded camp.And that did start in the second season not the third.Solo went from a sophisticated man to an adolescent in search of girls. Sam Rolfe, the original producer, left the show at the end of the first season and the show was never the same again.The first season was Rolfe's vision of the show, not executive producer Norman Felton.As a grown man I still cannot believe they took a hit show and completely changed what had made it a hit.Watch the first season on tape or in2tv and it still holds up well.
I always loved the show. I didn't see it until it was in its second season.
I had just turned 12. The charisma of the leading actors was amazing. The first season they did not realize the impact that David McCallum was having on the show. He is not featured as much until season 2.Then with the two of them the show really took off. Very few people had color TV's so I don't think it impacted the show one way or the other.
I had just turned 12. The charisma of the leading actors was amazing. The first season they did not realize the impact that David McCallum was having on the show. He is not featured as much until season 2.Then with the two of them the show really took off. Very few people had color TV's so I don't think it impacted the show one way or the other.
Like "The Wild Wild West", MFU jumped the shark when it switched to color. While both shows were still entertaining, they had writers who felt they didn't need to be as creative now they had color to entrance to viewers. (Who had see color in the cinema for a while.) The improbalitity for much of the plots is beyond belief, but that doesn't change the fact both shows are still entertaining.
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