CBS/Paramount brings us another edition of their very modestly priced TV Sets collection. TV Sets: Action Packed contains the pilot episodes from four of the most popular action/adventure shows from the vaults of the CBS/Paramount library: Walker, Texas Ranger, NCIS, MacGyver, and Mission: Impossible. I suppose that one could view this as a “sampler” of sorts, by which people are introduced to potentially new favorites on DVD.
Personally, TV Sets: Action Packed is something of a mixed-bag. The set begins with the extra-long premiere episode of Chuck Norris’ Walker, Texas Ranger. Quite possibly one of the dumbest series ever, Walker, Texas Ranger nevertheless proved to be a hit with television audiences and lasted for nine seasons (proving once and for all that there is just no accounting for tastes). In the pilot episode, “One Riot, One Ranger” (aired April 21, 1993) our titular hero (played by Chuck Norris) goes after the group of bank robbers who killed his partner.
Things go from bad to worse for the average viewer with even a degree of intelligence as the next episode on TV Sets: Action Packed is “Yankee White,” the pilot for that unbelievably bad NCIS show starring the unbelievably bad Mark Harmon. Watching an episode wherein President George W. Bush is the target in an elaborate setup by Al-Qaeda terrorists might have seemed semi-believable back when it aired on September 23, 2003, but it just comes off as laughable today. The only thing that really ever made this show worth watching for me was the casting of David McCallum as Ducky, the show’s resident forensic genius.
Ah, the tension mounts with the first-ever episode from MacGyver (9/29/1985), a show that a friend’s father always referred to as “James Bond… on a budget,” while another friend of mine always summed MacGyver up by saying “Don’t throw away that Styrofoam cup! I can make an airplane out of that!” It’s hard to believe that MacGyver also caught on with TV audiences. Granted, it premiered in the mid-80s when television was a lot cheaper than it was when Walker, Texas Ranger and NCIS aired, so I guess MacGyver wasn’t that bad. But the man who helmed this pilot sure must have thought it was bad: the as-yet-unknown director is credited as “Alan Smithee.” Of course, looking back at MacGyver, it’s not that bad. Sure, it’s cheesy, but Richard Dean Anderson’s knack for serving cheese makes it much more bearable.







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