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"The Equalizer" was a unique and amazing series. I followed each episode
with great interest. The ensemble of talent was remarkable - Edward
Woodward
having started out as a Shakespearean actor.
Hostile comments against this brilliant series derive largely from an
inability to understand what McCall represented and who he was. A veteran
of
the British Army, he served in the Suez conflict and - while in the SAS -
in
operations in Malaya against Maoist gunmen. On leaving the British service
he was recruited by the CIA who had apparently heard of his SAS exploits
and
talent in intelligence gathering. As his mother was an American, he could
qualify as a US citizen - combine that with his last name, and he hardly
qualifies as an Englishman. In the CIA he worked in Vietnam, where he met
many of his later New York allies.
The character of Robert McCall may be in his early-mid fifties, but has a
background of training and experience which would humble any supposedly
tough petty-thug. For better organised enemies, McCall has a loyal
following
of friends to call on, including a selection of law enforcement personnel
and ex-Special Forces men.
Therefore, he is not the tea-sipping greying middle-aged gentleman he may
appear to be at first.
I adored this show. It requires a certain depth of historical knowledge to
fully understand.
"The Equalizer" was an action-adventure TV series unlike any that I had
ever
seen before. It effectively mixed espionage, crime drama, and the private
eye genres into a wonderful film noir package. Robert McCall (played to
perfection by Edward Woodward) was no Mike Hammer, nor was he meant to
be.
He relied more on brains than brawn and his plans worked like a game of
chess. Whether he attended an embassy affair or was running down a lead
on a
guns dealer in the South Bronx, McCall seemed right at home.
Disenchanted with his cloak-and-dagger life in the CIA, and perhaps
seeking
some redemption for some of his darker exploits in the name of God and
Country, he broke away from "the Company," and offered his services to
people in trouble.
McCall's strength was his abilities as a strategist and tactician.
Although
he was quite able in shootouts and fisticuffs, he tended to leave the
rough
stuff to other operatives who sometimes took time off from their day jobs
(usually in the CIA) to work for McCall. One of his most trusted
colleagues
was his comrade-in-arms Mickey Kostmeyer (played by Keith Szarabajka), a
Company man who seemed willing to dive into any dangerous situation for
the
thrill.
Although McCall resigned from the CIA, he continued to maintain contact
with
his friend and former boss, a man known only as Control (played by Robert
Lansing). There is a history of camraderie between Control and McCall,
but
Control's job tends to get in the way of that friendship. When one of
Control's operations involved lying to McCall, and McCall confronted him,
Control's only response was, "It's what I do for a living,
Robert."
All in all, a wonderful show with high production values. I'm only sorry
it
lasted four seasons.
The Equalizer-like so many shows from the 80's-is pure
class.
It had a very dark premise. Robert McCall was a guy who helped people whose
lives were in danger and had no one to turn to. Woodward was very serious
and menacing as Robert McCall. McCall may not have been a young man and may
not have been capable of jumping onto the top of a van or chasing after the
bad guys on foot but he was dangerous. His voice was menacing and he put the
fear into every bad guy he ever met. Once he took on an assignment
(sometimes for no pay)he would not stop until he finished the job. Many of
the bad guys were killed by McCall.
The best thing about this show was the premise. In the 1980's we had a lot
of altruistic heroes (such as The A-Team and Michael Knight)who always
helped the needy and always put the bad guy away-no matter how much above
the law the bad guys thought they were. McCall was always there for people
who needed him. That was the great thing about this show. Nowadays on TV,
characters are out for themselves and will betray people on a whim, even the
good guys. The likes of McCall were not like that-they were caring. No-body
could kill them, scare them off or pay them off. They were true
heroes.
I have seen all the episodes at least 3 times; first on CBS, then USA, and
then on A&E. Now it is on Hallmark.
Like other reviewers, I found the show refreshing and unique.
I thought the choice of Edward Woodward was curious (a Brit for a
Yank?)But
I was willing to let it slide through.
Robert Lansing's portrayal as a District or Station Chief was well
cast.
Like most American TV series, it takes a season or two to become really
good.
The show had good writing, good actors and actresses, and good
cinematography. I think that it was one of the best series
produced.
The Robert McCall character had the potential of becoming a cardboard
character. Woodward's acting skills prevented that, thank
God.
I found the premise of a disillusioned CIA Case Officer to be believable.
The look-and-feel of McCall reminded me of the legendary William King
Harvey
of Indianapolis. It is uncanny.
I found the story line of internal CIA `political' struggles to be
realistic. Remember, this was just after the infamous Senator Frank Church
Commission which effectively gutted the CIA. We built the CIA to prevent
any more Pearl Harbors. Then through internal political dissention (and
ideology sympathy) we made it a Hollow, blind Man. Many veteran Case
Officers were `forced out' at that time.
In the Army I made the acquaintance of some Mickey Kostmayer types. I
liked
the acting of Keith Szarabajka. His naturalness made the character
believable according to the real people that I met.
After Woodward's heart attack, I thought that the inclusion of Richard
Jordan was well cast. I was sorry to see his character fade out. He was
just
starting to come into his own.
The technical aspects were, at the time, quite startling. The `Trade
Craft'
was superb. I never did learn if the writers had access to old Case
Officers
or not. There is one scene where McCall tracks down someone using recorded
voices from the telephone system. The NSA must have had fits over that
one.
I have several favorite episodes, but one of two that stands out in my
mind
is where McCall is trying to teach street punks about what death is all
about. He takes them to a morgue to see a stiff. While there, he
introduces
them to an old colleague who tells them about Hell. It was quite chilling,
but very accurate.
The other episode is where he is trapped in a wedding reception as a
hostage. The techniques and tactics that McCall used were very real. It
should be required viewing for future operatives.
Like other reviewers, I was sorry to see it cancelled. I felt that it had
a
few more seasons left.
One of the other reviewers mentions that the Equalizer replacement was
Wiseguy. Interesting that, like the Equalizer, Wiseguy was modeled after a
real person (Donnie Brasko) and a real situation. Yes, very
interesting.
A very strong series during its initial run and in the occasional burst of
reruns that can be found occasionally.
Edward Woodward is a superb actor, and was a sharp contrast to most other
private detectives of the day (and indeed, even today). The 80's might as
well have been called the "Era of the P.I." with so many series centered
around them (Magnum P.I., Simon and Simon, Riptide, even Miami Vice and the
other police shows). But Robert McCall was an entirely different kind of
detective. He was a seemingly mild mannered Englishman, who dressed sharply
and drove a cool Jaguar. He rarely engaged in any kind of physical
struggles, yet was probably the most menacing of any television P.I. While
the others were jumping onto the hoods of cars and duking it out with the
bad guys, McCall's quiet presence and absolute lack of any fear whatsoever
was thrilling. The fact that a middle aged man who looks more like a
University professor than a detective could look so menacing and literally
HARDCORE speaks volumes about Woodward's acting capability.
Probably the best theme music ever written, as well.
Amid designer-superficiality like "Miami Vice" and myriad juvenile Glen
Larson productions, "The Equalizer" came as a breath of fresh air when
first broadcast in 1985. After many years in the wilderness, American
studios recognised the intelligence of their audience and produced a
well-scripted, well-acted action drama with character, depth and real
bite.
The central premise was of a British military officer named Robert
McCall who had served the latter half of his career with an American
intelligence agency nickednamed "The Company" (although it approximated
the real-life CIA) but had grown disillusioned with its methods. The
series starts with McCall having resigned and decided to use his
espionage, intelligence-gathering and combat skills on a lone crusade
to champion the victims of crime, apparently as some form of atonement
for his shady past.
But McCall could never fully escape The Company. Occasionally he needed
some of its resources to help him tackle the job at hand. While his
ex-superior, known only as "Control" (played by Robert Lansing), was
sympathetic to McCall's reasons for quitting, he was never fully
prepared to let him go, both because of his skills and the sensitive
secrets he carried with him. Indeed many episodes saw McCall being
drawn back into Company operations. The two men remained friends but
their relationship was on a constant knife-edge (and often led to some
of the series' best "stand off" dialogue moments).
The first two seasons wrought a tremendous variety in interesting story
lines, had good dialogue and the performances of Edward Woodward, his
regular co-stars and the often-abrasive interplay between their
characters lifted the show further.
Location shooting in New York was used highly effectively and Stewart
Copeland's startling, unique musical style lent the show a sparky,
effervescent, slightly off-beat air.
The staging of action scenes was reasonable, though would never match
the sensational jousts witnessed in Brit series such as The Sweeney and
The Professionals. In fairness, though, The Equalizer trod a more
realistic path in this respect.
The series' sole fault, during the first three seasons, was that the
scripts became rather formulaic. With a few notable exceptions, the
plots tended to revolve around a well-established, predictable pattern:
McCall would receive a call from some distressed individual being
terrorised; they would meet to discuss the problem at hand; McCall
would then use his dubious contacts to dig up some dirt on the
aggressor, who McCall would then threaten and, ultimately, end up
having to kill - though all imbued with a liberal dose of pathos, of
course!
The production schedule on the series was frenetic and with most scenes
requiring the involvement of Woodward, it maybe shouldn't have been a
surprise that he, a heavy smoker, suffered a heart attack during
filming on the third season in 1987. Actor Richard Jordan was brought
in to lighten McCall's load for several episodes. While a perfectly
understandable move, in many viewers' minds it appeared that Jordan was
taking over.
By the time of the fourth season Woodward had returned full-time and
Jordan was phased out. But a necessary reduction in the strenuous
exercise regime Woodward had previously followed meant he was far from
the dynamic powerhouse he had once been. The show took on a new
direction and embraced socially-sensitive themes. (In one episode a
small boy is dying of AIDS and being harassed by frightened, ignorant
neighbours.) Although audience rating were not as strong as before,
they remained high...
Unfortunately CBS was apparently suffering from internal power
struggles and some of its senior staff wanted to launch new series at
the expense of existing ones. "The Equalizer" was axed after completing
its usual 22-episode production. Neither Woodward nor a huge campaign
of public support could convince CBS to change its mind.
The situation for the UK was actually worse. For reasons that have
never been clear, proper peak-time screenings (on the ITV network) of
the final season stalled after a few episodes. Naturally many Brits
assumed the show had been cancelled mid-season. The remaining
eventually aired via regional syndication in late-night "graveyard"
slots with no publicity. In fact some ITV regions opted out completely,
the affected editions being buried amongst repeat runs in the 1990s. It
was an astonishing attitide to adopt as the show had actually been even
more successful in the UK than its home country! Once can only suppose
that denial of a complete network run was due to CBS.
The series had to wait for many years until it was made available on
videocassette and even then only nine episodes from the first season
were issued. Yet - probably to CBS' embarrassment - repeat runs
continued to demonstrate the show's enduring appeal. In early 2008 the
first season was issued on DVD in the US and UK. But even then problems
continued. The American set has a welcome addition of an audio
commentary by the series' creator Michael Sloan but the episodes suffer
from several mysterious substitutions of incidental music. The picture
quality on the UK set is notably "scratchy" and has been overly
compressed for digitisation.
However with efforts under way to launch a movie version in 2009, there
is clearly still an audience for this show... and deservedly so.
I absolutely loved this series,and this,I suppose,comes from the fact that I have a passion for seeing the bad people of this world get what they deserve.Deep down,I think everyone would love to have someone like Robert McCall around to even up the odds in a bad situation.McCall was brilliantly played by Edward Woodward,whom I would love to see more of these days.Although the series had a high level of violence,it was thoroughly entertaining,and it was a ten o'clock series if I recall correctly,properly placed beyond the family hour.This was indeed one of the better shows on network television in the mid to late eighties.Great stuff.
I like this show. Robert McCall was a company man with a guilty conscious who tried to find redemption through doing good works. Robert must have broken many cold war eggs to make many omletes. McCall's skills were now used to help the defenseless. This show like many other great 80 shows had a similar story lines. Where the Equalizer differed is with his method of intelligence. Like an intelligence officer Robert plotted, probed, planned, and visualized. Luck and the ability to out wit the opponent made for an interesting television show. Nice seeing this over the self centered tripe of todays TV. I never seen another show like this on TV. They should make this into a movie. I bet the old BBC show the Naturalizer was an influence for the shows producers. 8 out of 10 baby
I agree with most of the comments about The Equalizer as far as its good qualities are concerned. I thought Edward Woodward did a fine job of acting and his costars were very helpful also to each plot. I had taped a number of the episodes and am enjoying them even now. I, as I noted some persons have said, wish the series could be made into DVD's and thus kept on our television screens. I especially enjoyed the episode with Edward's wife, Michele, who is a well-known actress on her own. I hope Mr. Woodward has been able to see how much his many viewers enjoyed his performances. I am wondering too if he will ever return to the United States to perform for us on the stage? I wondered too why he did not sing in more shows? He did sing a bit of As Time Goes By in one episode where he was outside dancing with a costar on a snowy night.
I doubt that I could call this an objectively excellent show, but I loved
it. We all have worries and concerns in this world, and when The Equalizer
would come on, it was as if someone showed up to take care of it
all.
The violence was gratuitous, the hero flawed, the premises and execution
over the top. Yet the team, headed by an effective if somewhat hammy Edward
Woodward who is in turn flanked by Mickey Kostmayer, and Jimmy and Sterno,
and the regulars - Control, Pete O'Phelan, Lt. Smalls, Scott, etc. - grew on
us. So many budding actors, now famous, guested on this
show.
In a key conversation, McCall tells Control how he wished the rain pouring
outside could clear away all the human scum and filth that terrorizes
society. McCall took it upon himself to do so.
I often wished that longer-term plot elements would take hold. At one point,
McCall says to Saul Rubinek's character, "Jason, you set me up. I don't know
why, but believe me, I will find out" - but nothing came of this. Some of
today's shows, Alias for example, show the potential for twists and turns in
long-term plot elements. So, while there were serial elements (ex. McCall's
family tribulations), the episodes were largely stand-alone. The Equalizer
had huge potential for groundbreaking storylines, but failed to realize it.
Still, it provided me with my weekly dose of valued escapism.
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