Special Agent Eliot Ness and his elite team of incorruptable agents battle organized crime in 1930s Chicago.Special Agent Eliot Ness and his elite team of incorruptable agents battle organized crime in 1930s Chicago.Special Agent Eliot Ness and his elite team of incorruptable agents battle organized crime in 1930s Chicago.
- Won 2 Primetime Emmys
- 4 wins & 7 nominations total
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I had never heard of "The Untouchables" TV show until one morning
my 8th grade English teacher, Mr. Schmidt started ranting about the
graphic violence depicted in movies and on television shows such as
"The Untouchables" and what was he world coming to? From the next
broadcast, I was an avid fan. Much as in the style of the James Cagney
classic of 1933, "Public Enemy," "The Untouchables" wove a web of
mysterious gangland horror by NOT showing the graphic violence but by
instead keeping the killing in the shadows. The creators of the series
never forgot that there is nothing you can show in theater that can
measure up to the imagination of the audience. Another mysterious dimension to the series is, like "The Alfred
Hitchcock Show", "The Untouchables" had an uncanny knack of featuring
actors who would later become stars or at least very well known faces
in movies and on television. After 4 years in the air force including
a year in Vietnam, I watched the series as daily re-runs during the
summer of 1971 just before going to university in Tokyo. One episode
had Telly Savalas as an up and coming bookkeeper with The Mob run by
Frank Nitty while Al Capone was in prison. That evening other business
pulled me away from the television set and I figured I'd see the second
half of the show some other time. Because I have been in Japan ever
since, I never did find out whatever happened to the character played
by Telly Savalas. Less than two years later, however, Telly Savalas
finally made it big in television as Kojak.
my 8th grade English teacher, Mr. Schmidt started ranting about the
graphic violence depicted in movies and on television shows such as
"The Untouchables" and what was he world coming to? From the next
broadcast, I was an avid fan. Much as in the style of the James Cagney
classic of 1933, "Public Enemy," "The Untouchables" wove a web of
mysterious gangland horror by NOT showing the graphic violence but by
instead keeping the killing in the shadows. The creators of the series
never forgot that there is nothing you can show in theater that can
measure up to the imagination of the audience. Another mysterious dimension to the series is, like "The Alfred
Hitchcock Show", "The Untouchables" had an uncanny knack of featuring
actors who would later become stars or at least very well known faces
in movies and on television. After 4 years in the air force including
a year in Vietnam, I watched the series as daily re-runs during the
summer of 1971 just before going to university in Tokyo. One episode
had Telly Savalas as an up and coming bookkeeper with The Mob run by
Frank Nitty while Al Capone was in prison. That evening other business
pulled me away from the television set and I figured I'd see the second
half of the show some other time. Because I have been in Japan ever
since, I never did find out whatever happened to the character played
by Telly Savalas. Less than two years later, however, Telly Savalas
finally made it big in television as Kojak.
Quinn Martin, Desilu and Robert Stack propelled a crime series into the status of TV greatness. This series ran 114 episodes long, but stands shoulder to shoulder with such giants as GUNSMOKE and BONANZA. Set in Chicago, late 20s and 30s during depressed times and prohibition, Special Treasury Agent Elliot Ness(Robert Stack)and his band of crime fighters must deal with bootleggers, gangland murderers, assassins and crime figures like Al Capone(Neville Brand) and Frank Nitti(Bruce Gordon). Expertly narrated by Walter Winchell, this power packed crime drama got the story told without the use of on screen gore, profanity or blatant violence.
Besides the super work by Stack and Gordon others became familiar faces:Nicholas Georgiade, Oscar Beregi Jr., Anthony George, Abel Fernandez, Jerry Paris, Steve London, Grant Richards and Jason Wingreen. This series was so near perfection production wise. Awesome.
Note: TV Land, A & E, Nick at Nite, TNN...somebody put this back on the air for future generations.
Besides the super work by Stack and Gordon others became familiar faces:Nicholas Georgiade, Oscar Beregi Jr., Anthony George, Abel Fernandez, Jerry Paris, Steve London, Grant Richards and Jason Wingreen. This series was so near perfection production wise. Awesome.
Note: TV Land, A & E, Nick at Nite, TNN...somebody put this back on the air for future generations.
i became aware of the untouchables in the mid-late 1970's. when it was on, i stopped everything to watch it sometimes twice a day. didn't matter that i saw each episode a million times! the stories, the acting, the theme song was the best there is. Robert stack,Paul Picerni, Bruce Gordon, Neville Brand and especially Nick Georgiade (who is my very most favorite) all did great jobs. the show still holds up today. in fact, its better than most of whats on today! it would be great if a channel would pick it up and we could watch it again. just knowing these untouchable websites exist makes me feel really warm and good. thanks for being here for us. I've been trying to locate nick georgiade to write a fan/thank-you letter but have been unsuccessful. well, i can look at him here. i miss this show.
I use to watch the Untouchables every thursday nite, never missed a series ever. I still remember the comericals CHILDS double edge razor blades, Chesterfield cigarettes.
Every time I watch it from one of my VHS tapes I long for the series to come back on TV.
Bet you didn't know that a lot of the guest appeared on THE Adventures of SUPERMAN, also on LASSIE, and a few on GUN SMOKE. Which was no surprise sense THE UNTOUCHABLES was a Desilu Production.
To sum it up if you haven't seen THE UNTOUCHABLES the TV series of the 50's, You haven't lived until you do.I hope someday to have all of the series to watch.
Sencer Thanks James
Every time I watch it from one of my VHS tapes I long for the series to come back on TV.
Bet you didn't know that a lot of the guest appeared on THE Adventures of SUPERMAN, also on LASSIE, and a few on GUN SMOKE. Which was no surprise sense THE UNTOUCHABLES was a Desilu Production.
To sum it up if you haven't seen THE UNTOUCHABLES the TV series of the 50's, You haven't lived until you do.I hope someday to have all of the series to watch.
Sencer Thanks James
I bought the first series of DVDs yesterday and until then, I never knew there was a two-hour pilot movie about it. I always thought Robert Stack was a better Eliot Ness than Kevin Costner. Stack's Ness was more like a tough, no-nonsense federal agent while Kevin Costner played him more like a nerdy accountant. This used to be my dad's favorite show and, on nights when I didn't have school the next day, he would let me stay up and watch it with him. When I was in college, I caught it when it was in syndication. I hope they continue to put out these DVDs until they have the whole series out. I'm really looking forward to it.
Life sure was simple back when this series first aired. You rooted for the good guys and hissed at the bad guys and you were glad, in the end, to see Capone and his cohorts get what was coming to them. It also shows that we have to be ever vigilant with our government officials so that this kind of evil cannot permeate our society. Great action-packed series and now lives forever in the DVD format. Now, if only THE FUGITIVE would come out on DVD.
Life sure was simple back when this series first aired. You rooted for the good guys and hissed at the bad guys and you were glad, in the end, to see Capone and his cohorts get what was coming to them. It also shows that we have to be ever vigilant with our government officials so that this kind of evil cannot permeate our society. Great action-packed series and now lives forever in the DVD format. Now, if only THE FUGITIVE would come out on DVD.
Did you know
- TriviaWalter Winchell received a reported $25,000 per episode for his narration on this series. With his signature machine gun dialogue delivery, he could apparently rack up almost 200 words per minute.
- GoofsThe opening credits for the fourth season show a book open to a page that reads "The Untouchables, 1929--1933". This contradicts the chronology of several episodes set in 1934 or 1935.
- Quotes
Police Officer: There is nothing in that area... except an old abandoned warehouse.
- ConnectionsEdited into Le tueur de Chicago (1959)
- How many seasons does The Untouchables have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 50m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 4:3
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