'
The Saint and Mr Teal'
I remember that one. Short story collection, right?
rarely watched the TV show for exactly that reasonThe weird thing is, I never watched the show until the 80s. My first exposure to the character was
THE SAINT STRIKES BACK with George Sanders, which I currently rank as the single WORST Saint film ever made. It blows my mind that the very next one,
THE SAINT IN LONDON, I currenlty rank as the single BEST Saint film ever made. And with the same lead actor. HOW did that happen?? (Yeah, maybe we shouldn't blame Roger Moore... heeheehee.)
But I also got hooked on
RETURN OF THE SAINT with Ian Ogilvy. This became my favorite show on TV for a little while. Overe the years, Ian Ogilvy became my FAVORITE living actor. (Ever since Peter Cushing passed away.) He still is.
When
The CBS Late Movie began doing reruns of Roger Moore, I liked it, but felt his acting wasn't anywhere as good as Ogilvy's. I STILL feel that way! I also came to feel tat Ogilvy's character was NOT the same one Moore played. Either a different continuity (as with every time they recast Tarzan), or something else. When I saw
THE SAINT IN NEW YORK, Louis Hayward blew my mind. WOW. I suddenly "got" why Simon Templar was so popular. I also thought he & Ogilvy has a physical resemblence... so I started to feel that ogilvy was the SON of the original.
Many years later, I read that producer Robert S. Baker wanted to call the series
SON OF THE SAINT, but Leslie Charteris nixed the idea. Whatta ya know?
I wound up casting Ogilvy in one of my own stories, as the SON of an infamous adventurer often accused (but never convicted) of various crimes. Heh heh heh...
I love Roger Moore and I don't put the blame on him, an actor goes with the script and the direction the producers want.DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER really, really sucked. And that had Connery in it.
The first half of
THE SPY WHO LOVED ME, Moore actually played Bond pretty serious. UNTIL... the fight in the temple, when it turned into a slapstick comedy all of a sudden. FUNNY AS HELL!!! "
Women drivers..."
And Moore did damned good in
FOR YOUR EYES ONLY. I really hoped
OCTOPUSSY and
VIEW had been that good. Oh well. They filmed some REALLY stupid scenes for
THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS... then had the sense to CUT them before release.
I have to wonder how much they were influenced by the 3 dreadful Matt Helm movies with Dean Martin?There's a scene with an electromagnet in
MURDERERS' ROW that turned up in
THE SPY WHO LOVED ME. Remember when Bond was the trailblazer others copied-- instead of Bond copying everyone else? WHY was there an electromagnet in the shark tank room? Because the writer was a fan of Dean Martin.............. (that's just not right)
I am currently reading my way through a number of Donald Hamilton's Matt Helm books. A very different writer than Fleming and not as good , but the character is every bit as tough as Bond and if anything colder and more ruthless.
I don't suppose we';ll ever see "authentic"
Matt Helm movies. I've seen the pilot of the 70s TV series with Tony Francisosa, and while it's TOTALLY different from the Dean Martin films, I get the feeling it's not any more authentic than they were.
And yet the producers couldn't take the character seriously and went for corn and farce. Even the Man from Uncle telemovies are better.
The TV episodes those filmes were assembled from are BETTER. Watching the complete series on DVD now... most of which, I somehow NEVER saw before! Have I mentioned TODAY how much I love DVDs?
By the way Moore played Beauregarde Maverick in 16 episodes of that show. I've seen a cpouple of those! (That's all the cable channel was running, about 15 years back. Weird.
I also like the Persuaders with Moore and Tony Curtis.I've seen 2 of those, spliced together (NOT intercut) as a "movie". "Okay", but didn't grab me much. And I like BOTH actors!!
I'm plowing thru
THE PROTECTORS with Robert Vaughn right now, and for the most part enjoying it, so, who knows, maybe someday I might get
THE PERSUADERS. But only after I upgrade my whole
SAINT collection. (I need to CLEAN OUT my house and get rid of MOST of my collections... to make room for NEW stuff. Never thought I'd feel that way, but, there you go.)
Also, believe it or not, he played Clouseau in Curse of the Pink Panther for Blake Edwards.SHHH! You're not supposed to tell that to anyone who hasn't seen that film yet. (heh)
Except for the 10 minutes with Harvey Korman (which I would like to cut out and BURN),
CURSE is one of my favorite "Pink Panther" films. It rearlly brings to a close the whole series. I loved the car chase with the upside-down cab (one of the funniset scenes I've ever seen in any movie), I loved what they did with Robert Wagner, I loved that David Niven FINALLY got his hands on the jewel after 20 years... and I loved them ginving "Chang" a 2nd shot after he went ot the window in "
REVENGE".
And in 1978 played Sherlock Holmes in Sherlock Holmes in New York (TV Movie) Roger Moore & Patrick Macnee (Templar & Steed!), plus Charlotte Rampling and John Huston. Not great, but NOT BAD. The mystery plot repeated one from a
BANACEK movie. No kidding. Moore & Macnee were reunited in
VIEW... (but not in a nice way). Macnee later teamed with Christopher Lee in a pair of 4-hour TV movies in the early 90s.
A jobbing actor and always enjoyable to watch.YEP!
Also enjoyed him in
THE CANNONBALL RUN. He played a guy who pretended to be Roger Moore.