12 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- What a "Guy"...., 4 July 2000
Author:
George Litman from Marietta, OH USA
Ahh, the '80s - what a decade: big hair, faded denim, ankle-high boots...and
that was just Heather Thomas alone!
"The Fall Guy" was a guy's show, plain and simple. Produced by
action-meister Glen Larson (along with TV shows "Battlestar: Galactica",
"Buck Rogers in the 25th Century", "BJ and the Bear" and "The Misadventures
of Sheriff Lobo"), it followed the same tried-and-true formula of lots of
action, explosions, fights, tough guys doing tough things...and, of course,
beautiful women.
They had the tough guys covered with "The Six Million Dollar Man" himself
Lee Majors as Colt Seevers (See? Even a tough name!), a stunt man who
moonlights as a bounty hunter.
His partner is nephew Howie Munson (Doug Barr), a guy who is a semi-genius
(having been in countless colleges) and fancies himself a stunt man also, in
spite of the fact that he ends up getting the worst of the situation
usually.
And then there's Jody Banks (the blossom of womanhood herself - Heather
Thomas), who was as rough and tough as they come, but looked a HECK of a lot
better in swim-wear than her fellow stunt men!
Every week they were bringing felons back to justice, saving towns from
outlaw bikers, fighting against evil UFOs, finding themselves surrounded by
beautiful women and, every once in a while, big name guest stars (Buddy
Hackett, William Conrad, Barry Newman, Richard Burton (!!!), Shecky Greene)
- even Roy Rogers came by for two shows! What talent!
No wonder it stayed on the air as long as it did; it had everything a male
chauvinist pig could want in a TV show. Even, for a few seasons, Markie
Post (and if you've never seen Markie in a bikini, you HAVE to watch this
show!!).
It lives on in syndication and, naturally, finds new generations of fans
every time it's on. So, join the legion of fans who forever cheer, "Viva la
"Fall Guy!" - you won't be alone.
Ten stars and a set of gold-plated elbow pads for "The Fall Guy" - and let's
hear it for that Fall GIRL!
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- This show raised the Bar., 2 June 2003
Author:
mm-39 from Winnipeg
Sure, this show had holes in it, it is cheesy, but I loved it. In Junior
High I grew up on this, and it influenced me greatly. I can not watch
boring sit coms, which maybe have 2 sets, or even cheaper made reality tv
shows. Do I really care who gets voted off the island , or can keep their
hand on a rock for 2 hours. After years of watching Colt drive through a
china shop with his truck, use the trailer part of the truck which is used
to move cars as a ramp, use a a rocket pack and hang onto the side of a
chopper. All in a hour show! This show raised the bar high. My wife hates
Heather Thomas. and says she's there for her anatomy, with her lines "Colt
he's got a gun or "Oh Colt." Howie was funny, and added good comedy. The
Unknown stunt man theme was great. I loved the time some thugs beat up an
identical truck to Colt's and he drives off with the real one and these 2
huge guys leaving the bar say, "hey what did you to my truck." Speaking of
trucks I think that truck must have started the SUV craze, with the imprint
it left on many 30 and 40 year olds minds. I love the Mad comic spoof on
this show. A must watch.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- He's the unknown stuntman, that makes Eastwood look so Fine, 11 June 2007
Author:
scenario from Houston, TX
Lee Majors could have been a burned out 70s star during the 80s much
like Burt Reynolds and John Travolta, but the former Six Million Dollar
Man resurrected his career yet again with "The Fall Guy". Majors played
Colt Seavers, a working class Hollywood stuntman who moonlights as a
bounty hunter. You gotta love a TV show that was brave enough to have
it's star walk around with a name like "Colt". The Fall Guy was full of
manly macho bravado, right from the iconic opening lyrics, where Colt
gets into full country cowboy mode and laments his status as a
Hollywood stuntman. Even though that song is clearly grounded in the
late 1970s, with it's references to women such as Sally Field, Cheryl
Tiegs, Bo and of course Farrah, it continues to play effortlessly well
across the decade. You understand the plight of Colt Seavers. He does
all the dirty work for guys like Clint Eastwood and Robert Redford
(more 70s stars), but he never gets the girl. It always felt right that
Lee Majors would sing about celebrities from the 1970s anyway, even in
an 80s TV show. Nobody questioned it, it was like oh wait it's Lee
Majors singing, well of course he would be singing about Farrah, Bo and
Clint Eastwood in 1984.
This isn't the best written TV show, but for a Glen Larson show it sure
is. The concept of Hollywood mixing in with bad guys is a hit out of
the park. The creators can always give the audience that extra double
wink with what they're doing, after all Colt Seavers is a Hollywood
stuntman. It's mind bogglingly enticing to wonder what Stephen J.
Cannell (a far better writer who was an 80s TV tycoon that specialized
in action-humor) could have done with this show. I'll admit nostalgia
plays a huge part in my fondness for The Fall Guy. I can actually
remember when this show first aired back in the early 80s. I was 6
years old, and this series was sure bet for Wednesday nights. It even
had it's own set of Colt Seavers action figures and toy pick truck
modeled after the one Lee Major's used on the show, so you knew this
show marketed itself at children as well as adults.
There's something so magical about '80s TV, that even silly TV shows
like The Fall Guy can
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- One of those few..., 23 June 2002
Author:
Rainer Koschnick (arkay) from Germany
80s shows that you can still enjoy today. This cannot be said about many
of
the other shows out there at that time (Knight Rider, A-Team, all the ones
I
can't even recall anymore). Got to love that title tune sung by Lee
himself
as well :)
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Classic Eighties Primetime TV, 4 March 1999
Author:
James Pimentel-Pinto from London, England
Another classic teatime viewing experience from Glen Larson. Totally
mindless, relaxing formulaic Larson stuff. The success and longevity of his
series prove that old formulas work and this 5 year series was no exception.
Colt , Howie and Jodie (most male viewers reason to watch!) were to the 80's
what Xena is to a new generation.
6 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- One Of The Many Classic 1980's Shows, 27 May 2002
Author:
Big Movie Fan from England
The Fall Guy was just one in a whole list of classic 80's fare such as The
A-Team, Dukes of Hazzard and Knight Rider. It featured Lee Majors as bounty
hunter Colt Seavers and he was joined by his sidekick Howie Munson who was a
bit naive at times. They were also joined by the beautiful Heather Thomas
who played Jody Banks.
Like many 1980's action shows The Fall Guy was not to be taken seriously.
The plots were crazy, the characters were crazier, the stories were rather
mad at times and what can I say about the stunts-they were out of this
world. Week after week Lee Majors topped his stunts and did things such as
jumping from a plane without a parachute and jumping from tall bridges into
water below.
Highly enjoyable series-but when will anyone release it onto
video?
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Comparing to Zena is harsh, 14 August 2001
Author:
davidcarr from Texas
Fall guy was a show with mediocre acting, sometimes cheesy plots, and yes,
much appeal was the scantily dressed women. But I liked it. And I did not
at all like Zena. I think there is a major difference that has not been
addressed. Even though most of these episodes of Fall Guy were kinda
cheesy, they had a morality factor that is lacking in most shows now.
These
guys were usually trying to get the bad guy, help the good guy, and survive
themselves. I would like to think that was a large part of the appeal.
And
the fact that who was good and bad was very obvious was also a big part of
it. It made the destruction, violence, and hot women all the better. Zena
of the 80's?...Thats a little rough. Ok, thats my 2 cents.
DC
#I might roll a brand new car#, 21 November 2007
Author:
jubilee77 from United Kingdom
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I always remember The Fall Guy's invasion on the British TV screens in
the 1980s and the typical things added in with the classic opening of
"The Unknown Stuntman" song. In fact, this goes to Lee Majors from his
earlier stint starring as Steve Austin in Six Million Dollar Man to
another Glen A. Larson creation of "The Fall Guy" about the unknown
stuntman and so-called bounty hunter Colt (Coltrane?)Seavers. The plots
generally worked out fine from starting with Colt's "on screen" stunt
work to usually hunting down and tricking criminals whom evade justice
being centred mostly in and around Los Angeles with sidekick assistant
from a slightly flustered Howie and sparkling Jodie. I like the course
of the action scenes, some stunts with the use of a large wheeled pick
up and Colt armed with a gun that he normally uses on a film set and
fires just blank shots. Some well known guest screen names have
appeared on some episodes and quibbles aside, some of the scenes were
quite funny when Colt goes knocking on somebody's door usually only to
get an edgy and unfriendly welcome along with some of the endings were
when Howie outspokenly blew Colt's chances of meeting a girl together
with an unplugged food vending machine. Some of the lyrics from The
Unknown Stuntman are funny and the most funniest is when it goes; #I
might roll a brand new car#. Ha Ha Ha. I wonder how many have rolled
about in a brand new car.
"Great to grow up w/", 31 January 2006
Author:
treyevan from United States
Simply put, this is one of the best series a boy could grow up
watching. Good ol, rowdy fighting, truck driving, red-neck woman
watching entertainment. Though it lacked any true story line, the show
made up for it in every other aspect. Unlike all of these reality shows
that I can't seem to get off my TV. We need a new show that focuses on
a regular blue collared no B.S. kind of MAN with morals, big truck, and
beautiful blonde assistant.
I would love to see the show available on DVDs. I do however have mixed
feelings about a remake of the show. Some things shouldn't be altered.
However, if there is one made, I need to get on the ball and buy a
truck like the one Colt had,(love to have one anyway) but now the price
value more than triples after a movie is made w/ a great vehicle.
4 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- best of the magnum clones, 20 July 2006
Author:
shipes_j from vernon florida
in a time that was mostly spent remembering pop culture of the sixties
and seventies....the eighties have sneaked in now as a nostalgic frame
capturing its own spot of fame and remembrance...largely due perhaps to
all the sick programming that we have to endure nowadays on the
tube..,,,so in turn....the shoot em up action shows prominent in the
eighties have taken on a fresh and longing escape from "reality TV"
starting with magnum and the dukes of hazzard...the stage was set for
the copycats to go to work....and in the same egg on your face kind of
humor...the fall guy compliments sellecks mannerisms well....it makes
you respect colt all the more that he is victimized and has to play it
by ear...all the while making a serious set of circumstances seem
somehow comical...
its an all too familiar trend in TV...one hit produces an onslaught of
dups....but in the case of the fall guy...it was done with clever taste
and style even though the general theme was on action and
adventure...like so many of the eighty TV shows...ending with the most
outlandish....the A team.......which basically saturated the genre and
closed the door on it..
the bottom line is that I like the series much more now than I did when
it was on network TV.....I don't know why someone hasn't decided to do
a movie of it like they have with so many other TV series.....
Free on IMDb

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12 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-
What a "Guy"...., 4 July 2000
Author: George Litman from Marietta, OH USA
Ahh, the '80s - what a decade: big hair, faded denim, ankle-high boots...and that was just Heather Thomas alone!
"The Fall Guy" was a guy's show, plain and simple. Produced by action-meister Glen Larson (along with TV shows "Battlestar: Galactica", "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century", "BJ and the Bear" and "The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo"), it followed the same tried-and-true formula of lots of action, explosions, fights, tough guys doing tough things...and, of course, beautiful women.
They had the tough guys covered with "The Six Million Dollar Man" himself Lee Majors as Colt Seevers (See? Even a tough name!), a stunt man who moonlights as a bounty hunter.
His partner is nephew Howie Munson (Doug Barr), a guy who is a semi-genius (having been in countless colleges) and fancies himself a stunt man also, in spite of the fact that he ends up getting the worst of the situation usually.
And then there's Jody Banks (the blossom of womanhood herself - Heather Thomas), who was as rough and tough as they come, but looked a HECK of a lot better in swim-wear than her fellow stunt men!
Every week they were bringing felons back to justice, saving towns from outlaw bikers, fighting against evil UFOs, finding themselves surrounded by beautiful women and, every once in a while, big name guest stars (Buddy Hackett, William Conrad, Barry Newman, Richard Burton (!!!), Shecky Greene) - even Roy Rogers came by for two shows! What talent!
No wonder it stayed on the air as long as it did; it had everything a male chauvinist pig could want in a TV show. Even, for a few seasons, Markie Post (and if you've never seen Markie in a bikini, you HAVE to watch this show!!).
It lives on in syndication and, naturally, finds new generations of fans every time it's on. So, join the legion of fans who forever cheer, "Viva la "Fall Guy!" - you won't be alone.
Ten stars and a set of gold-plated elbow pads for "The Fall Guy" - and let's hear it for that Fall GIRL!
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
This show raised the Bar., 2 June 2003
Author: mm-39 from Winnipeg
Sure, this show had holes in it, it is cheesy, but I loved it. In Junior High I grew up on this, and it influenced me greatly. I can not watch boring sit coms, which maybe have 2 sets, or even cheaper made reality tv shows. Do I really care who gets voted off the island , or can keep their hand on a rock for 2 hours. After years of watching Colt drive through a china shop with his truck, use the trailer part of the truck which is used to move cars as a ramp, use a a rocket pack and hang onto the side of a chopper. All in a hour show! This show raised the bar high. My wife hates Heather Thomas. and says she's there for her anatomy, with her lines "Colt he's got a gun or "Oh Colt." Howie was funny, and added good comedy. The Unknown stunt man theme was great. I loved the time some thugs beat up an identical truck to Colt's and he drives off with the real one and these 2 huge guys leaving the bar say, "hey what did you to my truck." Speaking of trucks I think that truck must have started the SUV craze, with the imprint it left on many 30 and 40 year olds minds. I love the Mad comic spoof on this show. A must watch.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-
He's the unknown stuntman, that makes Eastwood look so Fine, 11 June 2007
Author: scenario from Houston, TX
Lee Majors could have been a burned out 70s star during the 80s much like Burt Reynolds and John Travolta, but the former Six Million Dollar Man resurrected his career yet again with "The Fall Guy". Majors played Colt Seavers, a working class Hollywood stuntman who moonlights as a bounty hunter. You gotta love a TV show that was brave enough to have it's star walk around with a name like "Colt". The Fall Guy was full of manly macho bravado, right from the iconic opening lyrics, where Colt gets into full country cowboy mode and laments his status as a Hollywood stuntman. Even though that song is clearly grounded in the late 1970s, with it's references to women such as Sally Field, Cheryl Tiegs, Bo and of course Farrah, it continues to play effortlessly well across the decade. You understand the plight of Colt Seavers. He does all the dirty work for guys like Clint Eastwood and Robert Redford (more 70s stars), but he never gets the girl. It always felt right that Lee Majors would sing about celebrities from the 1970s anyway, even in an 80s TV show. Nobody questioned it, it was like oh wait it's Lee Majors singing, well of course he would be singing about Farrah, Bo and Clint Eastwood in 1984.
This isn't the best written TV show, but for a Glen Larson show it sure is. The concept of Hollywood mixing in with bad guys is a hit out of the park. The creators can always give the audience that extra double wink with what they're doing, after all Colt Seavers is a Hollywood stuntman. It's mind bogglingly enticing to wonder what Stephen J. Cannell (a far better writer who was an 80s TV tycoon that specialized in action-humor) could have done with this show. I'll admit nostalgia plays a huge part in my fondness for The Fall Guy. I can actually remember when this show first aired back in the early 80s. I was 6 years old, and this series was sure bet for Wednesday nights. It even had it's own set of Colt Seavers action figures and toy pick truck modeled after the one Lee Major's used on the show, so you knew this show marketed itself at children as well as adults.
There's something so magical about '80s TV, that even silly TV shows like The Fall Guy can
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
One of those few..., 23 June 2002
Author: Rainer Koschnick (arkay) from Germany
80s shows that you can still enjoy today. This cannot be said about many of the other shows out there at that time (Knight Rider, A-Team, all the ones I can't even recall anymore). Got to love that title tune sung by Lee himself as well :)
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-
Classic Eighties Primetime TV, 4 March 1999
Author: James Pimentel-Pinto from London, England
Another classic teatime viewing experience from Glen Larson. Totally mindless, relaxing formulaic Larson stuff. The success and longevity of his series prove that old formulas work and this 5 year series was no exception. Colt , Howie and Jodie (most male viewers reason to watch!) were to the 80's what Xena is to a new generation.
6 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
One Of The Many Classic 1980's Shows, 27 May 2002
Author: Big Movie Fan from England
The Fall Guy was just one in a whole list of classic 80's fare such as The A-Team, Dukes of Hazzard and Knight Rider. It featured Lee Majors as bounty hunter Colt Seavers and he was joined by his sidekick Howie Munson who was a bit naive at times. They were also joined by the beautiful Heather Thomas who played Jody Banks.
Like many 1980's action shows The Fall Guy was not to be taken seriously. The plots were crazy, the characters were crazier, the stories were rather mad at times and what can I say about the stunts-they were out of this world. Week after week Lee Majors topped his stunts and did things such as jumping from a plane without a parachute and jumping from tall bridges into water below.
Highly enjoyable series-but when will anyone release it onto video?
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
Comparing to Zena is harsh, 14 August 2001
Author: davidcarr from Texas
Fall guy was a show with mediocre acting, sometimes cheesy plots, and yes, much appeal was the scantily dressed women. But I liked it. And I did not at all like Zena. I think there is a major difference that has not been addressed. Even though most of these episodes of Fall Guy were kinda cheesy, they had a morality factor that is lacking in most shows now. These guys were usually trying to get the bad guy, help the good guy, and survive themselves. I would like to think that was a large part of the appeal. And the fact that who was good and bad was very obvious was also a big part of it. It made the destruction, violence, and hot women all the better. Zena of the 80's?...Thats a little rough. Ok, thats my 2 cents.
DC
#I might roll a brand new car#, 21 November 2007

Author: jubilee77 from United Kingdom
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I always remember The Fall Guy's invasion on the British TV screens in the 1980s and the typical things added in with the classic opening of "The Unknown Stuntman" song. In fact, this goes to Lee Majors from his earlier stint starring as Steve Austin in Six Million Dollar Man to another Glen A. Larson creation of "The Fall Guy" about the unknown stuntman and so-called bounty hunter Colt (Coltrane?)Seavers. The plots generally worked out fine from starting with Colt's "on screen" stunt work to usually hunting down and tricking criminals whom evade justice being centred mostly in and around Los Angeles with sidekick assistant from a slightly flustered Howie and sparkling Jodie. I like the course of the action scenes, some stunts with the use of a large wheeled pick up and Colt armed with a gun that he normally uses on a film set and fires just blank shots. Some well known guest screen names have appeared on some episodes and quibbles aside, some of the scenes were quite funny when Colt goes knocking on somebody's door usually only to get an edgy and unfriendly welcome along with some of the endings were when Howie outspokenly blew Colt's chances of meeting a girl together with an unplugged food vending machine. Some of the lyrics from The Unknown Stuntman are funny and the most funniest is when it goes; #I might roll a brand new car#. Ha Ha Ha. I wonder how many have rolled about in a brand new car.
"Great to grow up w/", 31 January 2006
Author: treyevan from United States
Simply put, this is one of the best series a boy could grow up watching. Good ol, rowdy fighting, truck driving, red-neck woman watching entertainment. Though it lacked any true story line, the show made up for it in every other aspect. Unlike all of these reality shows that I can't seem to get off my TV. We need a new show that focuses on a regular blue collared no B.S. kind of MAN with morals, big truck, and beautiful blonde assistant.
I would love to see the show available on DVDs. I do however have mixed feelings about a remake of the show. Some things shouldn't be altered. However, if there is one made, I need to get on the ball and buy a truck like the one Colt had,(love to have one anyway) but now the price value more than triples after a movie is made w/ a great vehicle.
4 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
best of the magnum clones, 20 July 2006
Author: shipes_j from vernon florida
in a time that was mostly spent remembering pop culture of the sixties and seventies....the eighties have sneaked in now as a nostalgic frame capturing its own spot of fame and remembrance...largely due perhaps to all the sick programming that we have to endure nowadays on the tube..,,,so in turn....the shoot em up action shows prominent in the eighties have taken on a fresh and longing escape from "reality TV"
starting with magnum and the dukes of hazzard...the stage was set for the copycats to go to work....and in the same egg on your face kind of humor...the fall guy compliments sellecks mannerisms well....it makes you respect colt all the more that he is victimized and has to play it by ear...all the while making a serious set of circumstances seem somehow comical...
its an all too familiar trend in TV...one hit produces an onslaught of dups....but in the case of the fall guy...it was done with clever taste and style even though the general theme was on action and adventure...like so many of the eighty TV shows...ending with the most outlandish....the A team.......which basically saturated the genre and closed the door on it..
the bottom line is that I like the series much more now than I did when it was on network TV.....I don't know why someone hasn't decided to do a movie of it like they have with so many other TV series.....
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