| Index | 5 reviews in total |
13 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
"Only one man got away....me", 1 August 2003
Author:
skoyles from Calgary AB Canada
A fine if formulaic series. The star's escape as the police closed in was the high point of suspense. He also wore his .38 in a distinctive position - behind his back. If "Tightrope" were to be issued on DVD I would buy it in an instant.
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
"Someone's Gotta Do It, Someone's Got To Walk That Tightrope!", 26 July 2006
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Author:
mike rice (mike235@charter.net) from Sparta, Wisconsin 54656
The show was fine. Mike 'Touch' Connors had been a B movie actor in the
early fifties who couldn't get arrested in a decent film. Then he came
along and did this immaculate TV series. I just went looking for this
series and another with Frank Lovejoy, Meet McGraw, on Netflix, with no
luck.
In the early days of TV, the opening billboard sequences of TV shows
were often better than the shows. But with 'Touch' Connors behind the
voice, the ultimate film noir voice-over had been met and joined with
the premiere of this show.
I would die just to hear Connors do the opening sequence to the show,
let alone get DVD copies.
Connors played an undercover cop who wore his .38 stuffed in a holster
in the small of his back. He wore a black suit in every episode, and
was as cool as a TV detective can get. The series was as noir as TV
could manage. The suit was always dark, so was Touch's hair, the rooms
were dim and dingy, but the night was bright with dark promise.
In that opening Billboard, Touch would recite the litany of the
undercover man walking that tightrope, and my brother and I would be
writhing with excitement from the effect, in our chairs. Then the show
would come on and it would be something of a letdown. But Tightrope was
a good show as fifties detective shows go.
Later, Connors would get a bigger TV show called Mannix, which was not
as good, and become famous for the sense of parody he brought to the
voice-over. I'm not sure he intended that, but years later, after
Mannix was ancient history, the effect was saluted in an episode of
Murder She Wrote. Connors played a disembodied voice, whose recording
was used to illustrate his own murder. A little like William Holden in
Sunset Boulevard, only trashier.
It was great. Elizabeth Ashley played a down-at-the-heel waitress in
the episode, and Connors' voice-overs were wittier than a dead man
should be, and funny.
But its the Tightrope Series that I long for. Could some of the others
among you try to help start a drumbeat for this series to appear on
DVD? Just write to Sony and beg them to produce a DVD series.
TV and movies today are now so boring that the old stuff is bound to
come back on DVD.
Besides, someone has to try and bring this marvelous series back.
Someone has to walk that tightrope and that someone is you!
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
A lost classic of it's time., 30 October 2009
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Author:
Zipper69 from Sunny Sarasota FL
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I was a spotty 17 year old in London when this series first turned up
on British TV. Few of the first generation of American cop shows (like
"Dragnet") got much airing in Britain (I think the powers-that-be
assumed we scruffs would be inspired by the tough, gun toting bad guys
portrayed). so Tightrope had the field pretty much to itself. The
"unique selling point" was the character's wearing his pistol in a
holster in the small of his back - OHMIGOD! Who would ever think of
looking there? (I wonder if this was the inspiration for the
"pat-downs" seen today that run the hands all over the body and down
the legs?). Anyway...the shows were fast paced, Connors was smart and
savvy and believable as a tough, no nonsense undercover cop (even THAT
was a new concept) and the regular fistfights were a cut above the Brit
style "left hook and He's down!" even though muted by the Production
Code.
This was at the time that the James Bond books were THE big seller and
talk was of a film (imagine!) and I remember thinking that Connors,
with his dark, good looks, stylish dress sense and even the errant lock
of hair that fell across his forehead was exactly as described in
Fleming's books. An American as Bond? Well, they've had a Scot, an
Irishman, and an Australian so it's not such a leap - I'll bet Connors
could have done the accent, too!!
3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Mike Connors' best performance in a fine series, 7 July 2007
Author:
Cheyenne-Bodie
"Tightrope" (1959-60) was a terrific series about an undercover cop.
Mike Connors played the role with great style and flash. He was a
magnet for the many luscious women he encountered while pretending to
be a smooth crook looking for action.
Connors narrated each episode, and he was the only regular. He would
worm his way into the confidence of criminals who were planning a big
job. At the end of the episode, almost all the bad guys would be
captured in a surprise police raid but
"in the confusion, one man
escaped-me". However, in one episode a cop who doesn't know Connors is
undercover shoots him as he tries to escape.
Connors carried a gun that was in a holster attached to his belt in the
small of his back. When he was searched, no one thought to pat him down
there. When the bad guys believed they had him covered, Connors would
swivel and come up with the gun seemingly out of nowhere. It was a
great gimmick that I never tired of.
There were fine ending scenes of a lonely Connors walking the city
streets at night narrating his thoughts. This gave the show a nice noir
feel and made you feel close to the romantic existential hero.
'Tightrope" was well paced, and the 30-minute episodes flew by.
Guest stars included Kent Taylor, Richard Jaeckel, Gerald Mohr, Robert
Lowery, Whitney Blake, Connie Hines, Paula Raymond, Jean Byron, Barbara
Bain, Paul Burke, Karen Steele, Ed Nelson, Leslie Parrish, Mike Road,
Ruta Lee and June Vincent.
The producers were Russell Rouse and Clarence Greene, who wrote the
brilliant Edmond O'Brien thriller "DOA" and won an Oscar for "Pillow
Talk". Rouse and Greene also did the fine Glenn Ford western "The
Fastest Gun Alive" and the Stephen Boyd guilty pleasure "The Oscar".
Rouse and Greene were masters of pulp melodrama.
Writer Ben Maddow (the screenplay for "The Asphalt Jungle") was the
creator of "Tightrope". The show was suggested by the experiences of a
real cop, who appeared on "To Tell the Truth" the week before this show
premiered. As I recall, the guy even looked a little like Connors.
This was a great role for Mike Connors, sort of a combination of
Richard Diamond and The Fugitive. He was superb.
Two hour-long pilots were made in the early 60's in an attempt to
revive the series. The first was "The New Tightrope" and the second was
"The Expendables". Both starred Connors. "The Expendables" was aired in
1962, but the semi-documentary approach used took all the juice out of
the concept. I turned it off after a few minutes, even though Dina
Merrill and Zachary Scott were intriguing guest stars, and "Tightrope"
had been my favorite show.
One more ambitious attempt was made to bring back "Tightrope" in a 1972
movie pilot called "Man on a String". Christopher George ("The Rat
Patrol", "The Immortal") played a dirty cop who is thrown into jail. Of
course it is just an act so that George can go undercover. The director
was the great Joseph Sargent ("Tribes", the "Longstreet" movie pilot,
"The Marcus Nelson Murders") and the cast included Keith Carradine,
Joel Grey and Jack Warden. Ben Maddow was the writer. They tried hard
but no cigar.
"Tightrope" was done perfectly the first time, and the new pilots never
recaptured the magic.
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Excellent suspense in short, 21 November 2006
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Author:
logila2001 from Yonkers, NY, USA.
It was one of my favorite as a child. In my native Dominican Republic it was shown in its Spanish-speaking version with excellent voices absolutely right for each character. The suspense was masterful. The episodes being so short honored the adage "What is good, if short, doubly good". And there is a paradox about the title in its dubbed version in Spanish. Tighrope can be translated to Spanish as "La cuerda tensa", but the title in Spanish was "En la cuerda floja" that is exactly the opposite though a better description of the plot. I would love to see it again. Besides I would love to see somebody make an updated version starring Robert De Niro or Johnny Depp. Or would it be a good idea to cast Leonardo DiCaprio? How would you like it on Sunday nights like The Sopranos? Author: Juan Lora.
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