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Mission Impossible TV Series Overview
Mission:
Impossible is an American television series created and
initially produced by Bruce Geller. The Mission Impossible
TV series chronicled the missions of a team of secret
American government agents known as the Impossible Missions
Force (IMF). The leader of the Impossible Missions Force
team was Jim Phelps, played by Peter Graves.
A hallmark of the Mission Impossible television series shows
Phelps receiving his instructions on a tape that then self
destructs, accompanied by the Mission Impossible music
composed by Lalo Schifrin, which is widely considered to be
one of the most iconic television music themes.
The Mission Impossible tv series aired on the CBS network
from September 1966 to March 1973. It returned to
television, as a revival, for two seasons on ABC, from 1988
to 1990 and later inspired a popular trio of theatrical
motion pictures starring Tom Cruise in the 1990s and 2000s,
with the role of Phelps played by Jon Voight.
Mission Impossible Season Episodes on DVD
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Mission Impossible - The
Complete First TV Season on DVD (1966)
Amazon.com
DVD Review - With its combination of Cold War
villains and James Bond-like techno-gadgets,
Mission: Impossible was an instant hit when it
premiered on September 17, 1966. Airing Saturday
nights at 9:00 on CBS, the series was the brainchild
of creator/producer Bruce Geller, whose formula for
seven successful seasons included a well-chosen
ensemble cast, noteworthy guest stars, and a
flexible premise that inspired clever plots twists
and a constant variety of "international" locations
(mostly filmed on a studio backlot). This seven-disc
set includes all 28 episodes of season 1, the only
season to feature Steven Hill as Dan Briggs, leader
of the top-secret counterintelligence team known as
Impossible Missions Force (IMF). As the no-nonsense
Briggs, Hill (better known for his later role on Law
& Order from 1990 to 2000) began each episode by
sneakily retrieving the dossier and recorded
instructions (voiced throughout the entire series by
uncredited actor Bob Johnson) for the IMF's latest
assignment. "Your mission, should you decide to
accept it" and "this recording will self-destruct in
five seconds" quickly became pop-cultural
catch-phrases, as Briggs routinely selected his
preferred teammates based on their mastery of
practical skills. With "special appearance" billing
for M:I's first three seasons, Martin Landau played
master-of-disguise Rollin Hand; his off-screen wife,
Barbara Bain, played top-model and undercover
seductress Cinnamon Carter; Greg Morris brought hip
coolness (and racial diversity) to his role as
electronics expert Barney Collier; and Peter Lupus
played handsome hunk Willy Armitage, adding IMF
muscle to Briggs' brainy strategies.
As a Desilu production based at Paramount Studios,
Mission: Impossible shared guest stars, production
personnel, locations, and even occasional sets with
the original Star Trek. Fans of both shows will
enjoy spotting these crossover details (including
George Takei's appearance in "The Carriers," a
first-season highlight), and this season's other
stand-out episodes include the "Pilot" (featuring
Wally Cox as an ace safe-cracker), "Operation Rogosh,"
"A Spool There Was," "Action!," "The Train," and
"The Traitor." Whether they were toppling dictators,
rescuing doomed prisoners, foiling despots, or
framing Mafia kingpins, the IMF agents were
consistently blessed with taut, well-written plots,
many unfolding with minimal dialogue and highly
visual schemes that demanded (and rewarded) the
viewer's close attention. Although Steven Hill
eventually left the series (as an Orthodox Jew, he
preferred not to work on the Jewish Sabbath, as M:I
required), his single season set the stage for M:I's
long-term popularity, with Peter Graves (replacing
Hill as "Jim Phelps") leading the IMF from 1967 to
1973. And while Paramount has again neglected to
offer DVD extras with this set, the episodes look
and sound just about perfect, with a parade of guest
stars including Carol O'Connor, Simon Oakland, Fritz
Weaver, Nehemiah Persoff, Barbara Luna, Vic Tayback,
and a host of other '60s TV regulars. Your
mission--and you shouldn't hesitate to accept it--is
to enjoy this classic series all over again! --Jeff
Shannon |
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Mission
Impossible - The Second TV Season on DVD (1966)
Amazon.com
DVD Review - The classic Impossible Missions Force
lineup made its debut in Mission: Impossible's
sophomore season (1967-1968), which is preserved in
this essential set for classic TV fans. Gone was
Steven Hill as Dan Briggs, and in his place the
supremely confident and smooth Peter Graves as new
team leader Jim Phelps, whom most viewers identify
with the series. Carrying out the missions assigned
from a pre-recorded voice on the self-destroying
tape recorder was magician and master of disguise
Rollin Hand (Martin Landau, who moved up from guest
star to regular cast member with this season), top
model Cinnamon Carter (Landau's real-life spouse
Barbara Bain, who won three Emmys for her work on
the show), electronics genius Barney Collier (Greg
Morris), and all-purpose strong man Willie Armitage
(body builder-turned-actor Peter Lupus). Among the
25 adventures carried out in this seven-disc set:
"The Seal," in which the IMF uses a trained cat to
assist in the recovery from an important statue from
thief Darren McGavin; "The Town," with Phelps
discovering that Communists have overrun an entire
hamlet; and "The Slave," in which the team tangle
with a Middle Eastern slavery ring. Guest stars
include Anthony Zerbe, Paul Winfield, Fritz Weaver,
and Sid Haig, but it's the team itself that shines
the brightest, especially Landau and Bain, who exude
the breezy charm of the series itself (though both
would depart the show by the following season).
Sadly, the second season set includes no extras. --
Paul Gaita |
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Mission Impossible - The Third
TV Season on DVD (1966)
Amazon.com
- Season 3, should you decide to accept it (and you
definitely should), was Mission's most accomplished.
It garnered six Emmy nominations, and an Emmy for
Barbara Bain, her third consecutive win, probably
for "The Exchange," one of her finest hours, in
which, breaking series format, her character is
captured and psychologically tortured to discover
for whom she works. As always, the first five
minutes of any Mission: Impossible episode are the
coolest: the lit fuse signaling Lalo Schifrin's
indelible theme song, the opening-credits montage
teasing the action in the upcoming episode, and Jim
Phelps (Peter Graves), in some nondescript location,
receiving his covert mission (usually to some
nonexistent, but real-sounding country as Povia or
Costa Mateo), on that self-destructing tape. It
always seemed a waste of time for Phelps to go
through the dossiers of possible Impossible Missions
Force agents for each mission (and he does that less
this season) as he invariably chose the same ones:
model beauty Cinnamon (Bain), master of disguise
Rollin Hand (Martin Landau), electricians expert
Barney Collier (Greg Morris), and strongman Willie
Armitage (Peter Lupus).
Mission: Impossible didn't delve into the team
members' private lives: it was all about the
mission, and together, the IMF foils any number of
domestic and international villains. Some missions
(foil a coup, rescue a dissident) have more at stake
than others (restore boxing's good name), but
there's that great moment in almost every episode
when the team's target discovers that he or she has
been royally IMF'd. "Don't you see?" the warden of a
so-called escape-proof automated prison protests in
"The Glass Cage," "they thought of everything!" He's
not kidding. Not even "Q" on his best day would have
come up with that faux briefcase that secretly
dispenses exact replicas of the prison's towels.
Mission: Impossible today does seem a little
low-tech, especially when compared to the special
effects-laden feature films. And for anyone who has
seen Airplane, it may be difficult initially to keep
a straight face whenever Peter "Do you like
gladiator movies?" Graves is onscreen. But with its
clever and complex stories, impeccable ensemble, and
fun-to-spot guest stars (that's John "Dean Wormer"
Vernon torturing Cinnamon in "The Exchange"),
Mission is impossible to resist. --Donald Liebenson
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Mission Impossible - The Fourth
TV Season on DVD
Amazon.com DVD Review - Foil the invasion of a
democratic country? No problem. Rescue members of a
royal family from their would-be usurper? Piece of
cake. Replace the irreplaceable Martin Landau and
thrice-Emmy-winner Barbara Bain, who departed
Mission after its third season? Now that’s
impossible! But in this classic series’ fourth
season, the veteran and rookie members of the
Impossible Mission Force still put on a good show.
The most prominent new addition to the IMF dossier
is Leonard Nimoy as Paris, magician and master of
disguise. Lee "Catwoman" Meriwether appears in
several episodes as Tracey. Other guest stars make
less of an impression; Alexandra Hay makes her only
appearance on the show in the season opener as Lynn,
who, in the course of an elaborate plot to shatter
an alliance between two would-be dictators is
caught, strip-searched, and thrown into prison (she
disappears mid-episode and is never seen again;
viewers never do get to see her sprung). An
unintentionally hilarious moment that would have
made Mad magazine proud comes in the three-parter,
"The Falcon," in which IMF leader Jim Phelps’ (Peter
Graves) dossier of agents at his disposal includes
the eponymous trained animal! Lending Mission:
Impossible its international intrigue are the
villains from such exotic sounding countries as
Nueva Tierra. Great character actors, including John
"Dean Wormer" Vernon, Harold Gould and Pernell
Roberts portray accented bad guys to the hilt. Each
bafflingly complex mission unfolds precisely to
plan. Everything must go like clockwork, and usually
does, even a lame bit in "The Falcon" in which
strongman Willy (Peter Lupus) disguised as a
peasant, delays a priest from a coronation by
transporting him via horse-driven cart in a
roundabout route. Like the previous season’s "The
Exchange," one mission hits closer to home. In
"Death Squad" electronics expert Barney (Greg
Morris) is arrested by a brutal and corrupt police
chief who also happens to be the brother of the man
who was killed while attacking Barney’s girlfriend
(Cicely Tyson, by the way). Mission: Impossible has
yet to self-destruct, but this season doesn’t
exactly deliver on Paris’s promise to his audience
to deliver "excitement you haven’t seen before." We
have seen this before, but watching the IMF in
episode after episode pull off the impossible is
still smart and suspenseful fun. --Donald Liebenson
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Mission Impossible - The Fifth
TV Season on DVD
The hit
series Mission: Impossible™ returns to DVD,
featuring all 23 Season Five episodes! By the fifth
season, the show's changing times meant changing
crimes, as the emerging drug culture forced the IMF
to spend more time in America, battling organized
crime and drug czars. But the winning formula stayed
the same: Jim Phelps (Peter Graves) gets his
assignment, Barney Collier (Greg Morris) makes the
required special effects, and Willy Armitage (Peter
Lupus) supplies the muscle. And while Paris (Leonard
Nimoy) has the makeup skills to become any character
required, it's the team's newest member — the
gorgeous Dana Lambert (Lesley Ann Warren) — who
gives this season an added boost, and makes this set
of Mission: Impossible™ the most thrilling DVD
experience yet! |
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Mission
Impossible: The Sixth TV Season on DVD
The
classic espionage series Mission: Impossible
returns for Season Six, digitally remastered onto
six discs, on DVD for the very first time! With
every episode an ingenious puzzle, the suspense
begins when team leader Jim Phelps (Peter Graves)
receives a pre-recorded message. Then, electronics
wizard Barney Collier (Greg Morris), muscle man
Willie Armitage (Peter Lupus), and the team’s newest
member, beautiful makeup artist Casey (Lynda Day
George), all spring into action! This season, Jim
and his team focus mainly on targets outside the
reach of conventional law enforcement agencies, as
they successfully bring master criminals, corrupt
politicians, and syndicate bosses to justice. Your
mission, should you choose to accept it is to thrill
to all 22 episodes of Mission Impossible - The Sixth
TV Season! |
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Mission:
Impossible - The Final TV Season on DVD
The
classic spy series Mission: Impossible™ returns for
Season Seven, the most exciting one yet! The action
drama about the activities of the IMF (Impossible
Missions Force) was a sensation from the beginning.
The inspired cast, fast-moving plots, neat gadgets,
pre-recorded tapes that self-destruct – all these
elements mad this brilliant show one of television’s
crowning achievements. For the final season, Jim
Phelps (Peter Graves) continues to focus on targets
outside the reach of conventional law enforcement,
as he and special effects whiz Barney (Greg Morris),
muscle man Willy (Peter Lupus), and the gorgeous
Casey (Lynda Day George) help smash organized crime
rings. |
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