Similar to “You cant keep a helicopter from taking off with super-strength”…if you jumped onto something, could you use your super-strong legs on it right before landing/impact?..like right before hitting it? Know what i mean?
Say Steve jumped onto a moving truck. Right before landing he thrust his legs like a piston to punch a hole in it?
In the book, Steve Austin had a dart gun in his finger. The weird thing is that they never thought to put a computer in his noggin. Marvel Comics introduced Deathlok with his ‘putter around the same time SMDM debuted.
I remember in one episode of The Bionic Woman, Jamie displayed her powers in front of a Russian agent she was working with and he exclaimed “You are a cyborg!”
I remember liking Salvage 1, at the time. If you allow the “magic fuel” that makes it possible to fly a ship made out of a cement mixer into orbit and back on a regular basis. And if you look at the Vulture as akin to the ill-fated Titan submersible; there’s no redundancy and the first failure in space will be the last, but until then…fly away!
Reading the wiki, a lot of the episodes look like rejects from the 6MDM, though. Aliens appear in the 6th episode! Runaway robots! not!King Kong! I guess I was more forgiving at 17.
The Six Billion Dollar Man was officially confirmed back in 2014, and despite the better part of a decade transpiring, the movie has come no closer to getting made. Since 2014, directors like Peter Berg and Damian Szifron have been attached, only for them to eventually hastily exit. In 2017, the Weinstein Company sold the project to Warner Bros. and a release date was even set in 2018. However, The Six Billion Dollar Man was delayed until 2020 before eventually being delayed indefinitely. The movie has languished in development hell ever since, and Wahlberg’s latest update suggests it could still take a while.
Any movie or show is going to suck. Martin Caidin’s estate doesn’t own the rights to 6MDM or Bionic Woman - but they DO have control of portrayals of “Steve Austin” as a cyborg with life-like super-powered artificial limbs, which is why every reboot attempt since has used nanotech and different names.
I liked the books (hard to find good print copies and there are no digital ones), since the character in the books (and the pilot of the show) is basically James Bond with the gadgets built in.
There was a Bionic Boy episode who had guest star Vincent Van Patton as a kid whose legs were crushed in landslide and was given bionic replacements. I think it was a pilot for a possible spinoff.
IIRC, the Bionic Woman had a bionic dog (a German Shepherd) for a few episodes.
[quote=“Broomstick, post:14, topic:996529”]
There’s also a different tone to the whole thing with prosthetics. 6MDM went to big efforts (due to low special effects budget) to emphasize how realistic the guy’s artificial bits looked and how secret everything had to be.
Now? Every day I go to work in summer you see at least a couple customers going through the store in shorts without a care in the world that everyone can see one (or both) of their legs are not original equipment, sometimes in wild colors or 3D printed “fairings”. One guy with a cochlear implant shaves his heard around it and got a mandala tattoo around the hookups, nope, not hiding that real-life bionic ear at all… there isn’t any social pressure to hide these things any more. My theory is that when they didn’t work well there was a focus on the cosmetic to try to make them at least look like the parts they replaced (although too often looking like dead replaced parts…) but now that they are actually functional there’s a a bit of showing off to be done. Also, media like Star Wars where you have people walking around with replacement parts have sort of changed the way these things are regarded, too.[/quote]A few years ago I recall reading an interview with a prosthetics specialist who called it “The Terminator Effect”. He said that he’d noticed a strong age divide between pre- and post Terminator patients, with the latter apparently having imprinted on the idea of “robot limbs are cool” thanks to the “exposed robot hand” scene. Older patients would insist on fake-human looking parts even if it was a bad imitation, while younger ones wanted them as obviously artificial as possible.
The version we got in translation in Canada was titled “six million” (actually written as “L’HOMME DE $6,000,000”) but the translation was done in France, so the dialog always expressed the amount as “trois milliards” (3 billion in U.S. parlance). Because in France in the 1970s, large amounts were still expressed in pre-1960 francs. Pretty confusing for us kids. But we all still wanted red training suits with stripes and we all went boop-boop-boop fighting in slow motion in the schoolyard.
Presumably pull from film, which AIUI has close to infinite resolution.
Back in the day, the first HD program I watched on HDNet was reruns of Hogan’s Heroes. Crazy how good it looked, relative to more modern at the time programs that were presumably video-taped instead.
The number 6 million has certain… associations in Israel, so the show was just called “The Man Worth Millions” ("Ha’ish Hashaveh Millyonim). It was pretty popular at the time.
Or that the guys in fight scenes are obviously the stunt men. (When they redid a lot of exterior FX shots in ST:TOS, they should have spent some of that CGI money on making the stunt doubles less obvious.)