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Don Weis (1922–2000)

Author of M*A*S*H: Season 1

36+ Works 823 Members 9 Reviews

About the Author

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Image credit: Don Weis

Works by Don Weis

M*A*S*H: Season 1 (1972) — Director — 217 copies, 1 review
M*A*S*H: Season 2 (1973) — Director — 142 copies, 1 review
MacGyver: The Complete First Season [1985 TV series] (1985) — Director — 137 copies
The Andy Griffith Show: Season 1 (2007) — Director — 76 copies
Kolchak: The Night Stalker [1974-1975 TV series] (2005) — Director — 72 copies, 1 review
The Twilight Zone: The Complete Fifth Season (2011) — Director — 18 copies
Pajama Party [1964 film] (1964) — Director — 14 copies
Critic's Choice [1963 film] (1963) 13 copies
I Love Melvin [1953 film] (1953) — Director — 11 copies, 1 review
Remington Steele: The Complete Series (1982) — Director — 11 copies, 1 review
It Takes A Thief: The Complete First Season (1968) — Director — 10 copies
The Love Boat: The Complete First Season: Volume 2 (2015) — Director — 6 copies

Associated Works

Tagged

1960s (9) action (8) adventure (12) American International Pictures (6) beach party (6) comedy (55) DC Comics (6) detective (7) Don Weis (9) drama (20) DVD (114) DVDs (9) fantasy (12) fiction (8) film (8) horror (14) Korean War (10) M*A*S*H (8) MASH (7) movie (7) musical (7) mystery (7) romance (7) science fiction (10) series (16) sitcom (9) television (56) TV series (66) war (8) Wayne Rogers (7)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Weis, Don
Birthdate
1922-05-13
Date of death
2000-07-26
Gender
male
Occupations
film director
television director
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
Place of death
Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

10 reviews
This was a truly stylish television show that tapped into the kind of Stanley Donen light mystery/romance that is missing from the movies today. Pierce Brosnan and Stephanie Zimbalist were perfectly cast and the show only got better with each episode. The classy Henry Mancini theme captured the feel of this light and sophisticated show tinged with humor perfectly. It was as evocative and as much a part of the show as his “Peter Gunn” theme had been decades before.

Laura Holt (Zimbalist) show more couldn't get her private detective agency off the ground in spite of her skills, until she invented the phantom male agency head, Remington Steele. Business was booming and everything was going swell until Pierce Brosnan showed up and assumed the roll of the nonexistent Steele, both around town and with clients. An uneasy alliance was formed that to the delight of fans moved more and more towards the romantic as time went by.

Brosnan’s Steele was debonair and stylish, his past a shady mystery. Each season Laura discovered new things about his past in Ireland and his exploits in other countries. Steele was also a film buff, and to the delight of classic film fans he would make constant references to films of the 1930s and 1940s that he felt pertained to the case. It made all us film buffs who knew just what he was talking about feel like we were insiders, and it was one of the many charms of this wonderful show.

Brosnan and Zimbalist were a terrific screen couple in the tradition of all those ones we remember fondly. One could say they were the Nick and Nora Charles of their time. There was fun anticipation for viewers as week after week we watched the two become involved in a mystery while they danced around their growing affection for one another. And it was always fun when little tidbits of Steele’s past were discovered by Laura. In one episode, however, Steele learns things about Laura’s past, to the delight of audiences.

Season one put this on the radar, and cast changes — Murphy got axed, Mildred Krebs became integral — only seemed to make the show even better for the remaining seasons. Bosnian’s opportunity to become James Bond had to wait, and we got a truncated season at the end. What had preceded it was so wonderful, however, that fans have always held a soft spot in their heart, and a place in their film cabinet, for this refreshing show that was at the same time quite nostalgic.

Fun and sophisticated in a way that always left viewers with a good feeling by episode’s end, this kind of entertaining television is sorely missing from today’s dreadful offerings. Remington Steele filled a void left for those seeking the kind of fun escapism which all but disappeared when the Hollywood studio system began to collapse, and has virtually disappeared entirely in our day. Remington Steele was something really special in television. Every lover of classic films was in love with this show. It was — and still is — a refreshing reminder of what television could, and should be.
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This show didn't run for long, which probably makes sense, because they would have run out of monsters. But Darrin McGavin's Karl Kolchak is one of the great characters ever. With his ever-present hat, he overcomes his fear to venture wherever he must to get rid of the monsters that no one else wants to acknowledge. It's also a lot of fun to recognize many of the guest stars here--everyone from Phil Silvers to Tom Skerritt. The supporting cast, especially Simon Oakland as Karl's editor, are show more also very good, but McGavin always steals the show. show less
½
Hijinks in an army hospital.

Works a lot better as a TV show than a movie, even if it does have a laugh track. At times it gets a bit McHale's Navy, what with the zany antics and bumbling higher-ups, which is kind of annoying since for the most part it's an intelligent show. There are no bad episodes, though; at its worst, it's pleasantly amusing.

Concept: B
Story: C
Characters: B
Dialog: A
Pacing: B
Cinematography: C
Special effects/design: B
Acting: C
Music: F

Enjoyment: B

GPA: 2.5/4
½
2022 movie #113. Lawford is a wealthy playboy living beyond his trust fund's means. Leigh is the lawyer hired to rein him in. Romance ensues. Despite what the poster says, not very funny. Just because a movie is old and has a great cast doesn't mean it's any good.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
36
Also by
2
Members
823
Popularity
#30,997
Rating
4.0
Reviews
9
ISBNs
22

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