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63 out of 69 people found the following review useful:
Who cares what people think, it was still Entertaining..., 4 March 2004
Author:
deaconjguy from Oklahoma
A lot of people laugh at David Hasselhoff and write Knight Rider off as
a corny piece of 80s television. I still think this is one of the
coolest shows ever, and I freely admit that Knight Rider can be pretty
idiotic at the same time. The series was basically a cartoon and that
can make it hard for some people to revisit when they grow up. I think
that Knight Rider is one of the best unintentionally hilarious shows
ever created. The silly aspects of the series make it just that much
more entertaining in adult life. Knight Rider is an endearing and
nostalgic series that finds a way to entertain you despite how
ridiculous it can all be. "Michael & KITT", how can you not feel the
tug of the old days back in the 80s when you hear that? We all grew up
with this show back in the 1980's as kids, the appeal of a cool looking
black sports car that could TALK was irresistible back then. Today I
guess we look back at Knight Rider and wonder "wtf". It might make us
recoil, and get pretty damn embarrassed with some of the out there
stuff we used to think was so cool.
The immense flaws of logic and continuity that plagued Knight Rider
were easily hidden to a casual child viewing the show back in 1982 (I
was 5 years old), but they really stick out like a sore thumb when
viewed through adult eyes. The same damn stock footage was used ad
nauseum, the frames were sped up to make a car going 20 mph look like
it was zipping along at 400 mph, blue filters were always used to make
it look like it was night time; and as others have mentioned, the fight
scenes were never, ever believable. I don't think they even had any
kind of trained fight specialist on Knight Rider, it always seemed like
the director just told Hasselhoff or the stunt doubles to simply go out
there and just make up some crap that could pass for jujitsu or
tae-kwon-do. But again, this is what makes Knight Rider so fun.
This series is loaded with all kinds of unintentional hilarity. Some of
my favorites are when David Hasselhoff's stunt double wears a mustache
in a take, or the episode when the stunt double's Michael Knight afro
wig accidentally flew off while he was doing one of those patented
"Hasselhoff-Fu" roundhouse karate kicks. It seemed like Michael Knight
could take down any bad guy with one well placed karate kick to the
head. Let's all be honest with ourselves, a big reason this show was
popular was because it featured a really cool looking black car with
that cool looking red scanner mounted in the front. Everyone loved that
car, and there is no doubt that is the reason Knight Rider is a part of
American pop cultural lore. I'm 26 1/2 years old today and I still like
this show because it's my childhood, and because it's from the 80's
that we all love and grew up in. Things would get so stupid, you often
wondered if there would be a button on KITT's dashboard that would say
"Drive Very Fast" instead of "Super Pursuit Mode". The show didn't
magically become any more nerdier in the 2000's then it was in the
1980s. Even back in the early-mid 80s most people over the age of 15
had a tendency to laugh at Knight Rider. It was always cool to children
that didn't pick apart the series, but not so to anyone above the 9th
grade. The prime target audience was boys that were roughly 9 years of
age. So if you were already over the age of 13 back in 1982 when Knight
Rider first aired, then you were likely going to always be too cool for
a show like this that leaned on being a live action cartoon. Yes it is
amazing that this series lasted on NBC's prime time for 4 years. But
aren't we glad it did?
52 out of 59 people found the following review useful:
Knight Rider was among the BEST of the 80s, 27 August 2004
Author:
Quality_Critic from Hollywood, CA
In 1982 an unknown actor named David Hasselhoff burst onto the scene in
a weekly Friday night series aired on NBC. Hasselhoff played Michael
Knight on a brand new 80s vehicle oriented TV show (that frequently
targeted boys) called Knight Rider to rival The Dukes of Hazzard on
CBS.
Hasselhoff was what many in the industry call an "8 x 10", a perfect
hunky man with shoulder length wavy hair and beaming smile. Hasselhoff
was also gifted with a keen sense of humor and wit, which allowed many
of the outrageous stories of Knight Rider to work and not be taken too
seriously. Knight Rider was about an undercover cop named Michael Long
who was betrayed and left for dead in the desert. Long was rescued by
an eccentric billionaire by the name of Wilton Knight, who nursed Long
back to health. Wilton Knight also gave Long a new face and identity as
"Michael Knight". Knight convinced Long to use his police officer
skills to help his private organization (The Foundation for Law and
Government), and equipped him with a super car with artificial
intelligence named KITT (Knight Industries Two-Thousand). The
supporting actors like Edward Mulhare, Patricia McPherson complemented
Hasselhoff wonderfully as Devon Miles and Bonnie Barstow. It is rare
that a cast gels so well like this, and in many ways KR was more about
the characters then the stories or KITT.
Despite some negative and absurdly over the top reviews here, Knight
Rider remains one of the most fondly remembered action adventure TV
shows of the 1980s. Knight Rider was not an L.A. Law or St. Elsewhere
type drama, nor was it Harlan Ellison level science fiction, and it
never tried to be. Knight Rider had some camp, but campy doesn't mean a
dog meat series. Every single one of those action/adventure shows from
the 80s like A-Team, Dukes of Hazzard, Blue Thunder, Airwolf, Hunter
and MacGyver had plenty of instances of overt stupidity. They ALL had
their "what the hell was that about?" moments. Every one of those 80s
shows. So why is Knight Rider singled out and getting ridiculously
picked on like this?
The show was a fun yet not too serious one hour adventure series. Many
people here seem to be overly concerned with "looking cool" as adults
and join in on the over the top teasing of a series that you know
everyone loved back in the 80s. Stop trying to be so cool just because
you're now an adult in the 2000s versus being the young kid that
watched this show every week back in 80s. I highly recommend Knight
Rider, (it will blow you away!) and check out the newly released DVD if
you can. The Season 1 DVD has rich vibrant colors and sound, complete
with an assortment of extra features that will keep you busy for days.
My Rating:
9/10
49 out of 58 people found the following review useful:
Nowhere near as bad as it's made out to be, 14 March 2006
Author:
Ty Benson from Scottsdale, AR
The basic premise of Knight Rider has already been covered here
numerous times, so I'm not going to delve into that. Everyone knows
that Knight Rider is about an ex-cop with a new identity, working for a
private foundation that provides him with an indestructible super car.
But if you read some of the reviews here, you might think that Knight
Rider is the worst TV show that was ever made. Knight Rider could get
corny at times but it was nowhere near as terrible as some people say
it is. There's nothing at all wrong with a show being campy.
Knight Rider wasn't "all about a cool car" either. If that was true
then why didn't the two attempts to revive the show in the 90s work?
Knight Rider 2000 in the early 90s and Team Knight Rider in the late
90s both failed to recapture the 80s glory of the original. Team Knight
Rider even had 5 talking super vehicles. That proves that there was
something to David Hasselhoff (Michael Knight), William Daniels (voice
of KITT) and Edward Mulhare (Devon). They had a special chemistry that
made the series work. David Hasselhoff for all his William Shatner
overacting antics, made the show work too. Another man might have tried
to play the material seriously, but the Hoff knew better. Knight Rider
wasn't a show that was trying to change the world, it was merely a one
hour action/adventure block of entertainment. The people slamming
Knight Rider were probably too old to appreciate the show as children
in the 80s, or they are too young to have been around in the 80s. I bet
a lot of these mean spirited comments are from some dopey Generation Y
kids born in 1989 or something like that. I think the shows success
speaks for itself.
43 out of 55 people found the following review useful:
it was SUPPOSED to be campy., 4 June 2003
Author:
baconbit from Binghamton
People are picking on this show for ridiculous reasons. IT was not SUPPOSED
to be this great acted, perfectly mistake free show. It was an homage to
the classic cliff hangers of the 50s. The flashing lights on the gas pedal
were there for effect. It was never supposed to be a guide to those
driving. A simple formula, really. Flashing lights = cool! By the way, to
complain about show for mistakes and actually make a mistake in your
complaint is kind of funny. We DID see the truck driver. In fact, in later
years, he became a regular cast member. (And quite frankly, it made the
show worse.)
The show was fine. Seriously, if you are watching the show expecting
Shakespeare, then the mistake is YOURS not the shows.
24 out of 26 people found the following review useful:
Come on its not that bad, 4 July 2002
Author:
(anjana_blue@hotmail.com) from Auckland, New Zealand
I was a kid when Knight Rider was in its prime time and yes I watch it no matter what. Currently have the reruns of Knight Rider on and I must say there are somethings that bug me. Like every kid in the 80s I loved K.I.T.T. Now for all you people that say David Hasselhoff can't act come on, o.k he's not the best actor in the world but he wasn't that bad, I think he was great for the role, but the things that bug me were like how everytime Michael say something like "K.I.T.T get Devon on the line for me" and Michael would go and press 20 other buttons and the reuse of footage. I must admint David Hasselhoff was good looking at the time, just about in every episode Michael would do his good dee and get the girl at the end, well they did drop to his feet, just about all apart from Bonnie, thats the only time we see Michael try so hard and get turn down, but you can see they are more then just friends. Michael and Devon I can say are bit like Maxwell Smart and the Chief off Get Smart but the only thing was Michael was a lot smarter but it still irritated Devon like Max did the Chief. Some episodes did a get a bit boring and could have been better, but over all Knight Rider is still a good TV series.
18 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
K.I.T.T. Super Pursuit Mode.......!, 29 August 2001
Author:
Joseph Legg from Fort Walton Beach, Florida
Oh man when I was a little kid I used to watch this show religiously. I
loved this show and when the reruns are on T.V. I watch them too. I used
to
watch them on U.S.A. when I was in High school and loved the episodes
again.
It reminded me when I was a little kid. K.I.T.T. inspired my love
Pontiac
cars and one day I will own a 1982 Pontiac Trans-Am with T-tops. If you
have never seen this show and happen upon it one day I recommed watching
it,
this is a classic like the A-team.
24 out of 34 people found the following review useful:
An awesome series, 24 April 2003
Author:
linkin_park_pod from Ohio
I just saw what another guy had written about this series and I must say he is so far wrong on this subject and is probably not even from the era of the Knight Rider, A-Team, Airwolf, Magnum PI, Simon and Simon, MacGyver, and Harcastle and McCormick. All of the shows listed above are some of the best shows ever in the history of TV and how anyone has the audacity to sit here and type in a bunch of drivvle and say that Knight Rider had bad actors, bad stunts, and bad filming shows to me they know nothing about the show. The only problem Knight Rider had was, it was way ahead of its time. Knight Rider was a lot like KITT it was the show of the future. Now I will go on and defend Kinght Rider like any true fan would. David Hasselhoff may not have been one of the best actors, but none-the-less he is a fairly decent actor. In turn, the KITT car was a real Pontiac and at times it was a dumb car, most people know this stuff, however this is a TV show not real life, so if it may have seemed fake in manner, then maybe you should sell your TV and sit in your house like a bored bump on a log. My rating for Knight Rider is 4 1/2 out of 5 stars.
13 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
It's make just make believe, 10 November 2005
Author:
hubbaork from United States
I was 3 years old when Knight Rider was released in 1982, I remember vaguely seeing some of the episodes when they were new. I find it puzzling that people will "nit-pic" a TV show that lasted a decent 4 years on the air, yes maybe corny to todays standards, but the show was harmless entertainment. Unlike TV programming today, at least it had it's own originality. Kids could watch it without a lot of heavy violence or nudity, (which was like none in Knight Rider. to name only a few.) on the contrary, it was very much sci-fi, as well as drama, and action. Bottom line, it's a TV show, get real folks, does anyone have imagination anymore?
15 out of 22 people found the following review useful:
It sure seemed futuristic back then...now it just creeps me out, 27 September 2004
Author:
billys from Columbus, OH
Knight Rider was one of the staples of my TV diet as a preteen back in
the wonderful (?) '80s. The main attraction to this young car fanatic
was that...CAR. I swear, back then, that jet black Trans Am was
awe-inspiring. It wasn't an '80s car in the sense that we know now, but
an *'80s car*...new, ultra-high-tech, computerized! All those flashing
buttons and lights and monitors were, like, so sophisticated. It even
had a steering wheel that was a cross between an airplane's and a
dragster's. Never mind that this Knight Industries 2000 talked with a
voice like a somewhat more streetwise version of HAL 9000. Wow!
It still has an air of futurism in my memories--it seems like it should
still seem fresh now in the year 2004--but then of course I haven't
seen it since its original run ended. Maybe better that I shouldn't, or
risk ruining my memories.
What I do remember, outside of having a minor crush on Bonnie and the
chemistry between all the leads, is that as much as I enjoyed this show
it had a distinct thread of creepiness running through the whole show.
Technology had part of it--remember KARR, KITT's evil doppelganger? Or
the episode where someone's voice had been cut apart and "reassembled"
to say something different? But what I remember the most was the
explosions. Funny how many shows I liked back then had lots of things
blowing up (like The A-Team, another Universal TV favorite).
Knight Rider's creeped me out for some reason...the one non-KITT image
I remember over any other from this show, for some reason, is a large
stack of fuel drums set ablaze by bad guys in a factory or airplane
hangar, and a long, long scene of these drums exploding and shooting
into the air like rockets, accompanied by a repetitive stock explosion
sound effect right into the commercial break. I dunno, I still get the
willies thinking about that one. Then again, there's that Lear Jet
getting blown up in the opening credits...that one WAS kinda cool.
Very strange what twenty years can do to one's memories of a
show...some things are cystal clear, others (like the stories) I'm not
sure I ever really paid attention to. Such is TV. KR was one of my
faves once upon a time.
15 out of 25 people found the following review useful:
The opening credits of Knight Rider are so misleading, 16 February 2003
Author:
Manth_Sigdaw from Washington D.C.
Like a lot of you here, I grew up in the 1980's (born in 1978) and I have been catching the reruns of Knight Rider on the Sci-Fi channel. I'm also pretty shocked at how goofy the show is compared to how I remembered it as a kid. Not much in this series makes sense, and hardly any of the story lines will captivate you. I can barely sit through an episode and it's only loyalty to my childhood that even has me watching the show in reruns. One thing that bothers me is that opening credit intro sequence. It's very MISLEADING to the tone and content of the series. The opening credits with KITT racing across a purple tinted desert is VERY COOL, and it implies a dark and menacing series that exists in a sinister hi-tech world. The universe of Michael Knight, "a man that does not exist" seems to be like that of Tim Burton's Batman or the recently released Daredevil, where anything can lunge out at you from dark and shadowy corners. But when you watch an episode of Knight Rider, you realize that it's NOTHING like the opening credits. Not even close. The show is more like an episode of Superfriends or Gilligan's Island. You might as well have the Skipper be the one driving KITT and calling him his "little buddy". The show fails to deliver on the evil world that is promised in the opening credits, and that is something that has always annoyed the hell out of me about Knight Rider.
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