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IMDbPro

L'homme de l'Atlantide

Original title: Man from Atlantis
  • TV Series
  • 1977–1978
  • TV-PG
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
L'homme de l'Atlantide (1977)
Man From Atlantis: Season 1
Play clip1:49
Watch Man From Atlantis: Season 1
2 Videos
99+ Photos
AdventureFantasySci-Fi

The adventures of an amphibious man, the last survivor of the legendary sunken city.The adventures of an amphibious man, the last survivor of the legendary sunken city.The adventures of an amphibious man, the last survivor of the legendary sunken city.

  • Creators
    • Mayo Simon
    • Herbert F. Solow
  • Stars
    • Patrick Duffy
    • Alan Fudge
    • Belinda Montgomery
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    2.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Creators
      • Mayo Simon
      • Herbert F. Solow
    • Stars
      • Patrick Duffy
      • Alan Fudge
      • Belinda Montgomery
    • 22User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes17

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season1979

    Videos2

    Man From Atlantis: Season 1
    Clip 1:49
    Man From Atlantis: Season 1
    Man From Atlantis: Escape
    Clip 1:55
    Man From Atlantis: Escape
    Man From Atlantis: Escape
    Clip 1:55
    Man From Atlantis: Escape

    Photos238

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    Top cast99+

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    Patrick Duffy
    Patrick Duffy
    • Mark Harris…
    • 1977–1978
    Alan Fudge
    Alan Fudge
    • C.W. Crawford
    • 1977–1978
    Belinda Montgomery
    Belinda Montgomery
    • Dr. Elizabeth Merrill
    • 1977–1978
    Richard Laurance Williams
    • Cetacean crew
    • 1977–1978
    J. Víctor López
    • Cetacean crew
    • 1977–1978
    Jean Marie Hon
    Jean Marie Hon
    • Cetacean crew
    • 1977–1978
    Victor Buono
    Victor Buono
    • Mr. Schubert
    • 1977
    Anson Downes
    • Cetacean crew
    • 1977–1978
    Robert Lussier
    • Brent
    • 1977
    Michael J. London
    • Cetacean crew…
    • 1977
    Kenneth Tigar
    Kenneth Tigar
    • Dr. Miller Simon
    • 1977
    Ted Neeley
    Ted Neeley
    • Jack Muldoon
    • 1977–1978
    Pamela Peters Solow
    • Jane…
    • 1977
    Fred Beir
    Fred Beir
    • Captain Bracy
    • 1977
    Brandyn Barbara Artis
    • Cetacean crew
    • 1977
    Neville Brand
    Neville Brand
    • Stringer
    • 1977
    Dean Santoro
    Dean Santoro
    • Ernie Smith
    • 1977
    Sharon Farrell
    Sharon Farrell
    • Charlene Baker
    • 1978
    • Creators
      • Mayo Simon
      • Herbert F. Solow
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    6.52.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7thediehard

    Movies vs TV Show

    The first movie was wonderful, the three following movies were pretty good. (The fourth movie, which was only a 90-minute instead of the usual 2-hour, was the highest-rated movie of the year.) The four movies were published as books. The series, unfortunately, was utterly destroyed by Herb Solow, who made it into a "kiddie show, like a comic book" -- and Solow didn't even know comic books. A giant two-headed sea horse? A giant squid made from a plastic purple shower curtain? It was embarrassing. The blessedly short-lived comics series itself was even worse -- the stories were passable, but the art was about the worst that comics have ever dared to try to sell.

    There were also four paperback books made out of the movies. They were pretty much exactly the same as the scripts.

    Duffy did most of his own stunts, being better at holding his breath than the stunt man. (Boy, did he have a six-pack! Yummm....) But he really wasn't that good a swimmer -- he actually lost to the guy from Grizzly Adams in the swimming competition on "Battle of the Network Stars." Ouch.

    Victor Bueno, the recurring head bad guy ("Mr. Schubert") said it was his favorite role of all time, since he could camp it up to his heart's content -- and this from a man who had done everything from Shakespeare on stage to villains on Wild Wild West and Batman. The other recurring bad guy, Ted Neeley, is probably better known for his role on a fairly famous musical -- as Jesus Christ, Superstar.

    Man from Atlantis also served as the inspiration for main characters in Vonda McIntyre's "Superluminal" and her four-part Starfarers series. McIntyre is considered one of the top ten living science fiction authors.

    Mark Harris is a classic "Stranger in a Strange Land" type character. Unlike Aquaman and Submariner, he is apparently the last, or only, one of his kind, a distinction he shares with another not-quite-human guy named Kal-El.
    paulorcbarros

    A cult undersea TV series

    "The Man From Atlantis" (1977 - 17 episodes of 60 minutes), is a cult TV series created by Herbert F. Solow and Mayo Simon for NBC. The pilot episode begins when a man (the actor Patrick Duffy) is found unconscious on a beach after a storm. Taken to a hospital, the doctors discover that this man is not a simple victim of drowning. The Doctor and sea biologist Elizabeth Merril (the actress Belinda Montgomery) is called to investigate the case and find evidences that the mysterious man has characteristics of amphibians. Impressed by her discovery and with the desire of helping her new friend, she decides to take him to the scientific foundation of aquatic research for which she works and she decides to call him Mark Harris. The sea abilities of Mark attract the attention of everybody, including the Navy, and Doctor Merril thinks that he is probably one of the last survivors of the legendary Atlantis. From there, the man of Atlantis lives many adventures with Doctor Merril in a submarine, that travels into the great depths, always investigating the mysteries and the dangers related to the oceans. Mark had membranes in his hand fingers and his eyes was extremely sensitive to the light. The series made success in Brazil and Patrick Duffy became famous, years later, in "Dallas". As the series had more success in the foreign countries than in the U.S.A., "The Man From Atlantis" was canceled after only one year of exhibition.
    elshikh4

    Let's Reminisce !

    I won't go critic on this, because the last time I have watched it was the very first time I've had, and that belongs to another time, older time, so.. let's reminisce.

    It was the first half of the 1980s. I was pretty young, maybe 7 or 8 year old. And I remember well that I was amazed and amused.

    The submarine was a hero apart. I was waiting it with passion, seeing it as sophisticated vehicle to discover the unknown. Though, the vehicle that owned my imagination at the time, forcing me to build a copy of it, randomly of course, was the plane of Tales of the Gold Monkey!

    Mark was interesting character for me back then. I even used to call the show "Mark's show", or "Mark: man came from Atlantis". His hands in specific had my head spinning. Now, know this: I went to fill our bathtub with water, nearly daily, then put my hands in it for a long long time, just for the sake of having hands like mark's. Somehow I believed that being in water for some time gives you those correlated, frog's kind of, fingers!

    Else matters fascinated me about Mark, like the way how he didn't produce bubbles underwater from his nose and mouth. Plus, his eyes. They never blinked underwater. Apparently, a lot of efforts were spent to perfect tricks like these.

    As for Mark's girl, something like "they wouldn't get married" used to come across my mind. I don't remember why, but maybe because he's a guy who loves to be in the water longer than anybody?, maybe because he looks too different, coming from - literally this time - another world!

    Everything was tame, I don't remember something spooky or violent. It managed to be surprising and dreamy in every episode. And it made me love scientists as guys who live pretty cool life, have adventures for all the time, and meet new worlds every day.

    One episode I won't forget, it was about that magical man who causes everybody he shakes hands with a hysteria of laughing; it was original, funny, and surprising too; because I wouldn't imagine that such a nice guy might be evil as it turned out to be. I doubt that that character was played by Pat Morita, best known later as Mr. Miyagi (I'll look this up now).

    It was, as I love to call it, the childhood of the American TV. Those ideas were pure and simple. Now, I don't find that a lot, or at all. The TV, along with the world maybe, becomes darker as time goes by I think!
    Kirpianuscus

    legends

    a legendary series. itself a mix of legends. because it propose the story of a special man , a lot of adventures, seascapes and few scientific references, a sort of love story and references to the myth of Atlantida. and, more import today, a Patrick Duffy before Bobby Exing. so, a series who , for its public, remains a nice memory. sure, in contemporary perspective, it seems be naive and almost childish. but it is not real the right verdict. because it has the gift to remind the flavor and the colors and emotions of the air from the Jules Verne books or from The Amphibian Man. and the ball of legends is , always, a good gift. so, Man from Atlantis.
    gharbeia

    The dolphin man!

    When I saw these TV series again on PinkTV a couple of weeks ago it only took me a fraction of a second to identify it and it revived very old memories in me. I was barely six when I first saw it in the very early eighties but I never forgot Mark, with his yellow swim suit, and distinctive swim, which I always tried to imitate in the pool and sea. Although I couldn't understand a word of what was said at that time, I nevertheless still remember many of the episodes, characters, and just complete scenes. I still didn't understand what was said in the run in PinkTV as it was dubbed in French, but I enjoyed it no less, and it was nice to find out that my friends have the same fund childhood memories. I'm glad I know the series name at last :-)

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Patrick Duffy would inhale water into his nose and mouth while underwater to prevent air bubbles from escaping while he swam or "talked."
    • Goofs
      Mark Harris has gills but they can't be seen anywhere on his body when he is wearing his swim trunks. This was addressed in The New Breed (1995).
    • Connections
      Featured in Panorama: The Chinese News Machine (1980)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 29, 1979 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • L'homme qui venait de l'Atlantide
    • Filming locations
      • San Pedro, Los Angeles, California, USA(The Foundation for Oceanic Research headquarters building)
    • Production company
      • Solow Production Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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