Okay, I'm glad somebody thought that was funny...
Let me explain. My introduction to
SHAFT was actually the promotional trailer for
SHAFT'S BIG SCORE, run at the end of
THE CBS FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE to fill out time (remember those days?). It may seem nuts, but until that moment, I had no idea "Shaft" was the name of a private eye. A year later, "Are You Man Enough" by the Four Tops turned up on the radio, and became a fave of mine (side-by-side with "Live And Let Die" by Wings). I thought it was funny that James Bond went to Harlem the same time
SHAFT IN AFRICA came out. A couple months later, a TV magazine article was titled, "
You can't put THAT John Shaft on TV!", about the TV-movie series. The write-up was so bad, I never watched (then again, CBS was dumb enough to schedule their rotating series opposite NBC's rotating series-- isn't that like putting
BUCK ROGERS on in the same time slot as
DOCTOR WHO ?).
I finally saw
SHAFT on CBS, when they ran it in a 90-min. slot. Think about that. The movie's 2 hours. HOW MUCH did they cut? Amazing it still made sense-- and became a fave of mine overnight. Only several years late. (I even wrote a comic-book story during my senior year in high school that was a tribute to it. I had Robert Stack team up with Richard Roundtree.) The sequels never turned up on the networks.
SHAFT'S BIG SCORE turned up on Philly's Channel 6 on the midnight show. I immediately got to like that BETTER than the 1st one!
SHAFT IN AFRICA turned up a few years later on some cable channel, around 2 AM. The TV movies, years later still, at 4 AM. (Somebody really did not like these movies.)
In 1983, Stacy Keach debuted as
MIKE HAMMER. I'd heard about the guy for some time, but made sure I watched when Mickey Spillane did a radio interview to promote it, talking about the earlier Kevin Dobson film, and totally disavowing the Armand Assante film in between (which he had nothing to do with). To this day, Tanya Roberts is my favorite Velda, even though she only did that one movie. (She would have come back, but they dragged their feet, and by the time they did the sequel, she was off filming
SHEENA.) I always remember, about 15 minutes in, suddenly realizing that in the 70's,
SHAFT had been a "black" variation on
HAMMER. Both ex-cops with friends on the police force who break every rule in sight and sleep with every woman who crossed their paths. (Actually, I'm not sure Richard Roundtree's character was an ex-cop... but later, his NEPHEW was!)
And here's the punch line. BOTH Mickey Spillane (who created
HAMMER) and Ernest Tidyman (who created
SHAFT) at one time, used to work for MARTIN GOODMAN! (So,
LUKE CAGE was continuing a tradition...)
"That man's trouble, he's been to my house!"