Re: "The Fugitive" (1963): Season 1; Volume 1 Rumored To Be In The Works!
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Originally Posted by 70sTVlover
Is the show in black and white or color?
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As with The Wild Wild West, GUNSMOKE, The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and other series that began in black & white and later switched to color film, The Fugitive looked a lot better in color. It wasn't too "pretty". It still had the edge and danger of a man on the run for a murder he didn't commit. Suspense remained an important element. The premise of the show wasn't different, and the wardrobe changed as clothing was changing during that period (1966 to 1967). If anything real-life fashion was more bold. You never got to see women in miniskirts in The Fugitive (although both U.N.C.L.E. series had their fair share). It was more realistic because real life isn't in black & white (unless you're in the minority that is color blind).

But that isn't to put down B & W film. There are a lot of wonderful monochrome series, and The Fugitive is no exception. Of course...it was all budgetary and not for artistic reasons.
All remaining American prime-time network TV series not already in color...went color that year.

Another criticism of the final season is one that has some merit: Original producer Alan Armer left the show (to produce Quinn Martin's THE INVADERS, and he was also the original producer of CANNON in 1971-72), and was replaced by Wilton Schiller for The Fugitive's last year. Also, one of the original writers temporarily left and for several episodes until he returned, the stories became much more action-oriented than dramatically structured. I have no problem with that in some of those episodes though, because by allowing one-armed actor Bill Raisch to show up more often as Fred Johnson (who murdered Helen Kimble years earlier), we also learned more about him as Raisch was given more lines than in previous seasons. The only drawback is that Raisch is the only person on The Fugitive who had no formal acting training, and it shows in the lackluster way he delivered his limited lines. Still, the one-armed man was appropriately creepy and that never changed!
He had the least to do that year in "Second Sight", in which Kimble chases Johnson through a chemical storage warehouse...only for an explosion to cause the good doc to be temporarily blinded! Ted Knight had a small role as the hospital physician who treated our hero.
It was in shows like that in which Kimble became the hunter rather than the hunted.
There were other action-packed episodes without Fred Johnson that worked well too. "Ten Thousand Pieces of Silver" (a $10,000 reward is put on Kimble's head) and "The Devil's Disciples" was about a motorcycle gang led by Bruce Dern (in his fifth and last guest appearance...and what a performance)! I think that was the only episode to mention the war, in which Hutch said "You can go to Vietnam....or you can go to jail."
The 2-part finale was entertaining too, although The Fugitive wasn't the first TV series to go that route.
That honor goes to THE PRISONER earlier that year.