Reb Brown played Captain America in two late-1970s TV movies: Ah, no. |
The costumed
romanticism and colorful childish conventions of superhero comics do not blend
well with the mundane, realistic surfaces preferred by television (even though
TV's plots are anything but realistic).
This is one of the reasons why shows
about costumed characters like Spider-Man and Captain America failed so badly
on 1970s TV, while normally dressed bionic super-spies and the Incredible Hulk
succeeded. The Hulk was, after all, just a Universal Pictures monster writ
large, coupled with the familiar TV formula of "The Fugitive." I remember a long sequence on a Spider-Man TV episode that was actually given over to a car chase — the very dullest of television conventions weighing down a character who should have soared.
Even several years
earlier, in 1971, Marvel’s blind superhero Daredevil arguably became, in TV
writer Stirling Silliphant’s hands, a private detective named Longstreet, played by James Franciscus.
Silliphant had consulted with Stan Lee about a Daredevil TV series before he
created Mike Longstreet. The character’s heightened remaining senses could pick
up clues others missed, and he could fight with spectacular martial arts
abilities taught to him by Bruce Lee. Dramatic radio, the
theatre of the mind, was hospitable to immensely popular superheroes like the
Shadow, the Lone Ranger and the Green Hornet even before the comic book variety
arrived, and welcomed Superman almost as soon as he landed. Costumed characters
are no dramatic obstacle when you’re the one imagining how they look. Movies,
with their bigger budgets and audiences seated in the cavernous dark before a
giant glowing screen, also find it easy to trade in the fantastic. But the living-room medium remains uncomfortable
with anything that looks out of place in a living room. Superhero comics prefer
the fantastic to look fantastic, while television prefers the fantastic to look
pedestrian.
"The Bionic Woman:" TV prefers its super people sensibly dressed. |
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