El detective August trabaja contra el crimen en su ciudad natal, Santa Luisa, California, trabajando con (y contra) las personas con las que creció.El detective August trabaja contra el crimen en su ciudad natal, Santa Luisa, California, trabajando con (y contra) las personas con las que creció.El detective August trabaja contra el crimen en su ciudad natal, Santa Luisa, California, trabajando con (y contra) las personas con las que creció.
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I always enjoyed Burt Reynolds film and TV career but after purchasing this DVD TV series and watching it again some fifty (50) years later I would have to say that the story lines were almost all similar and for todays standards, pretty stale. Most of the episodes focused on a murder of a rich affluent person(s) in the tony neighborhoods of Santa Luisa, California, and Lt. Dan August (Burt Reynolds) and his dower looking sidekick Sgt. Charles Wilentz (Norman Fell) who continually chases after Dan August like a lap dog, whilst Dan is running down his suspects and usually gang tackling them in mid air.
To the series credit, it does attempt to bring to the forefront some racial injustices, homosexuality and social injustices, but good old Dan always figures out by the end of each episode whose the bad guy(s) and who the victims are that deserve our sympathy and/or respect.
There were some cameo appearances by some very young and upcoming superstars such as Harrison Ford, Billy Dee Williams, Jan-Michael Vincent, Joan Van-Ark, Martin Sheen, Donna Mills, David Soul and Larry Hagman, and with a bevy of veteran actors far too many to name.
The TV series theme music is a period piece that brings us back down memory lane for the 1970's Quinn Martin productions, nothing more, nothing less.
I am glad that I watched this memorable TV series once again some five (5) decades later just to watch Burt Reynolds in his TV prime before he went on to film stardom, but sadly it is not something I would watch a third time. Anyone interested in purchasing a slightly used DVD copy of the 1970 Dan August TV series?
I give the series a so so grade of 6 out of 10 IMDb rating.
To the series credit, it does attempt to bring to the forefront some racial injustices, homosexuality and social injustices, but good old Dan always figures out by the end of each episode whose the bad guy(s) and who the victims are that deserve our sympathy and/or respect.
There were some cameo appearances by some very young and upcoming superstars such as Harrison Ford, Billy Dee Williams, Jan-Michael Vincent, Joan Van-Ark, Martin Sheen, Donna Mills, David Soul and Larry Hagman, and with a bevy of veteran actors far too many to name.
The TV series theme music is a period piece that brings us back down memory lane for the 1970's Quinn Martin productions, nothing more, nothing less.
I am glad that I watched this memorable TV series once again some five (5) decades later just to watch Burt Reynolds in his TV prime before he went on to film stardom, but sadly it is not something I would watch a third time. Anyone interested in purchasing a slightly used DVD copy of the 1970 Dan August TV series?
I give the series a so so grade of 6 out of 10 IMDb rating.
Quinn Martin made hour-long dramas, from crime to science-fiction, most notably THE INVADERS, that had the colors and sets, and sometimes acting, of situation comedies, and DAN AUGUST, starring a young Burt Reynolds before his signature mustache, is no different...
Taking place in a small California town based on Santa Barbara, the plot-device is that Reynolds' title character, once a football hero of the local college, knows everybody he investigates: so everyone accused of murder are either a friend or friend-of-a-friend, family-of-a-friend, friend-of-the-family, or merely an acquaintance, but he does what he can...
Not with the kind of likeable persona that would make Burt a huge star not long after, beginning with DELIVERANCE and really igniting with SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT, the Reynolds here his robotic and unfeeling, morose, monotone and pretty cold, actually, but it seems deliberate...
Not a bad series; a kind of mystery more based on modernized film noir than progressive modern cop, but it's that too, taking on subjects from race to Vietnam to drugs... it's just too bad Burt didn't let himself out a little more here... the whole thing, no matter the serious issues, needed more joy within the investigative process.
Taking place in a small California town based on Santa Barbara, the plot-device is that Reynolds' title character, once a football hero of the local college, knows everybody he investigates: so everyone accused of murder are either a friend or friend-of-a-friend, family-of-a-friend, friend-of-the-family, or merely an acquaintance, but he does what he can...
Not with the kind of likeable persona that would make Burt a huge star not long after, beginning with DELIVERANCE and really igniting with SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT, the Reynolds here his robotic and unfeeling, morose, monotone and pretty cold, actually, but it seems deliberate...
Not a bad series; a kind of mystery more based on modernized film noir than progressive modern cop, but it's that too, taking on subjects from race to Vietnam to drugs... it's just too bad Burt didn't let himself out a little more here... the whole thing, no matter the serious issues, needed more joy within the investigative process.
I seem to recall that "Dan August" had a really good theme song ... most of the Quinn Martin shows did, but I remember this one being really up tempo and it fit the character Reynolds played ... the show was all right, but it's hard to imagine Norman Fell playing a cop ... lol
Pretty cool old show. Neat vintage footage. Reynolds is a little stiff but he had yet to grow into his thing. Even Norman Fell is different to see in this role, my biggest memory of him was threes company where he was a laugh. Good story lines, typical drama from the 1970s. No humor at all in it. Neat to see a lot of the bit characters that kept popping up into the late 1970s and 1980s. It seek to get better as it goes along. Unusual format with the different 'acts'. I'm a old car lover so it's cool to see all of the old rides. It's too bad they reformat the screen to wide-screen on these old shows, would be better in the original format.
Great short-lived series. Reynolds in another cop show after Hawk, but this time in color, with more cast members and under a Quinn Martin format (Prologue, Acts 1 to 4, Epilogue). Social topics of the day (student unrest, race relations, changing morals) were woven into the episodes and Burt with his stunts; what more can you ask for?
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaABC canceled the series after one season due to mediocre ratings. When Burt Reynolds became a popular success in the early 1970s, which included the Oscar-nominated film "Amarga pesadilla (1972)" and his appearance on a highly-publicized 1972 Cosmopolitan centerfold, CBS reran the series in 1973 and 1975 with great success.
- ConexionesReferenced in What's My Line?: Burt Reynolds (1971)
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- How many seasons does Dan August have?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1
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