Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA man with no recollection whatsoever of his identity learns that he may be a deep-undercover special agent. He has to piece together his life, find out who's pulling the strings - and work ... Ler tudoA man with no recollection whatsoever of his identity learns that he may be a deep-undercover special agent. He has to piece together his life, find out who's pulling the strings - and work out if he killed someone, and whether he may, in fact, be a hired assassin.A man with no recollection whatsoever of his identity learns that he may be a deep-undercover special agent. He has to piece together his life, find out who's pulling the strings - and work out if he killed someone, and whether he may, in fact, be a hired assassin.
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It's a show, but not like any other show. Initially, the elements capture your attention so smartly: cool spy with amnesia, a hero who chases his own fact and be chased in the same time, a nice sidekick, a gorgeous girl, powerful enemies, and thrilling truths yet to be revealed.
The atmosphere was so sharp and stylistic. It got what you can call rarely new elements, for little instance: the not common but magical zither music that made the ambiguity so appealing, the character of sarcastic "blind" computer expert (!), or the novelty of the title itself; the fifth corner which could refer to a certain way that this spy always finds to escape from a four-corners room. WAW!
(Alex McArthur) was unforgettable as the witty lively lead. (Kim Delaney) was a good reason not to leave the viewing for anything. (James Coburn) is the funniest evil man; one of the major disappointments is not seeing him in such a charming role a lot, bringing back the "Flint" glamour but as a bad guy. And who can forget (J. E. Freeman) as the taxi driver (Boone) who lives in the cab, reading comics, helping out the good guys, giving the show the cartonnish jest it needs.
It surely reminds me of an old show that I read about once named (Coronet Blue - 1967), starring (Frank Converse). Both of them got a character of a mysterious hunted man who got - guess what - amnesia, searching for himself, suspecting that he's a spy, and ironically the 2 shows had the same deplorable luck because they were cancelled too early, and the secrets were kept secret!!
Actually, that gives it a feel of deep frustration more than an attractive side. I sense the rage already when I read that there were remaining filmed episodes from (The Fifth Corner), but they were never shown. Though it came to my knowledge lately that there was a DVD somewhere that had, and get ready to this folks, the pilot (Trio), with 4, and I repeat 4 episodes: (Eva), (Home), (Woman At Her Toilette), and (The Sword of Damocles). To the IMDb's page of the episode's list: Eat This!
This time I really hope for a remake; though it would mess its original cast's flavor, but it's the only way to watch it, and experience its own good formula right. Anyhow, I'll always remember this show, it's maybe the most unfortunate potential one ever.
I've actually seen most of the show twice. I caught the tail end channel-hopping through late night TV, and managed to catch the whole season a year or so later.
The show reminds me a bit of "Nowhere Man" and has the same dreamy sense of wonder. I think what made the show for me was that (despite it's early cancellation) the final episode actually offers some sort of resolution.
Worth a look - I'd certainly watch it again if it was repeated.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesOnly the two episode pilot and the third episode aired. The remaining three episodes never aired.
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