Aldous writes:But it is on DVD, Nightwing. I have rented the whole first season on DVD from my local store. The set included "The Six Million Dollar Man" ("The Moon and the Desert" pilot film), both subsequent TV movies (which I don't like), and all of the first season episodes from "Population: Zero" onwards.
Alas, it's not available here in Region 1. I know it's been out in the UK for some time (and, I gather from your post, available to Aussies and Kiwis as well), but here in the States it's still a no-show. Universal won't give any answer as to why, although speculation has ranged from legal issues (like the also AWOL "Batman") to waiting for a movie tie-in (though the Jim Carrey movie now seems, mercifully, dead). Two years ago they circulated a brochure that suggested Steve and Jamie would both show up on disc, but there's been no news since then.
I'm half tempted to buy one of those multi-region players just so I can buy a Region 2 or 4 copy of SMDM off eBay.
And what do you mean you didn't like the second two TV movies? What's not to love about wannabe James Bond movies made on a $20 budget? And that groovy Dusty Springfield version of the theme song..."The Six Million Dollar MAAAAAAAAAAAAAN!"
Oh well, lots of weird stuff going on in the DVD market. I understand fans in England can't get the Avengers!!
dto writes:Pity we never had a "Wonder Woman" and "The Bionic Woman" crossover -- one wonders if there was any interdepartmental rivalry between IADC and OSI. Or perhaps due to a bureaucratic snafu, BOTH agencies send their top female agents undercover to the SAME case -- without knowing of the other's involvement! Hmm... Jaime Sommers was a professional tennis player, and her skydiving accident probably made the newspapers. It probably wouldn't take Diana long to figure out that Jaime was fitted with bionics. But would the Bionic Woman discover Diana Prince's secret?
It wouldn't take a bionically-enhanced ear to hear that explosion every time Diana twirled around in a locked office!
I remember being a bit disappointed that they saddled Diana with a "secret agent" gig in the later seasons. That made it seem like just another SMDM wannabe, like "Gemini Man," "The Invisible Man," "Man From Atlantis" and all those other "James Bond with superpowers" shows from the 70s.
Plus, you've gotta wonder how Diana Prince would ever get top-level security clearance when, by all rights, there should be no record of her birth, education, previous employment or even American citizenship.
Or maybe that would make you the ideal spy. Hmm....