The Immortal (1970 TV series)
The Immortal | |
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Christopher George, Ross Martin and Mitch Vogel, 1970.
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Genre | Science fiction Drama |
Created by | Robert Specht |
Based on | "The Immortals" book by James Gunn |
Starring | <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/> |
Music by | Dominic Frontiere |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 15 + pilot |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Anthony Wilson |
Producer(s) | Howie Horwitz |
Running time | 60 minutes (including commercials) |
Production company(s) | Paramount Television |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | September 24, 1970 January 14, 1971 |
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External links | |
[{{#property:P856}} Website] |
The Immortal is an American television series, starring Christopher George as a man whose blood chemistry and resistance to almost all diseases (including old age) makes him both almost immortal and a target of several wealthy men who would basically use him as a personal blood bank, aired on ABC from September 24, 1970 to January 14, 1971. The series is based on a pilot film of the same name, which aired on September 30, 1969 as an ABC Movie of the Week. The pilot is based on the 1964 science fiction novel The Immortals, by James Gunn.
The series music was composed by Dominic Frontiere, who is primarily known for scoring the sci-fi anthology series The Outer Limits. Although The Immortal was canceled at midseason, episodes were rerun by ABC in the summer of 1971. It was later rerun on the American Forces Network in Europe in the 1980s and on the Sci Fi Channel in the 1990s.
Series overview
Ben Richards is a test car driver for a large corporation owned by billionaire Jordan Braddock. He is 43 years old, but looks young enough to pass for 30—and he has never been sick a day in his life. Ben's life changes when he donates a pint of blood. When Braddock, who is dying, is given a blood transfusion of his donated blood, and is brought back from the brink of death, Ben's physician, Dr. Matthew Pearce, determines that his O-negative blood contains all known antibodies and immunities. This gives Ben immunity to every known disease and an estimated lifespan five to ten times that of other humans, making him, in the doctor's words, "virtually immortal". The billionaire decides that he has to control Richards' life so he can access his life-saving blood.
When Richards rejects all of Braddock's offers to remain with him, the billionaire has him imprisoned, but he ultimately escapes. Richards tells his fiancée Sylvia Cartwright that they can never marry because she would also be imprisoned by Braddock (in the episode "Sylvia" Richards puts himself in danger to visit Cartwright at her wedding to another man). Richards is now on the run because when Braddock dies (shown in the flashback episode "To The Gods Alone" which resolved plot points between the pilot and the series), one of his former employees, Fletcher (who did not appear in the pilot), is hired by another billionaire, Arthur Maitland, who also wants access to Richards' blood.
The series' dramatic tension is based on the idea that Richards would probably never lose his life if he were to live quietly, since he would never succumb to any known diseases. But his flight from Fletcher puts his life at great risk, constantly engaging in dangerous efforts to avoid capture, and his "immortal" blood did not make him immune to losing his life from injury.
The series primarily focuses on Richards' journeys and the people he meets while trying to avoid Fletcher. A secondary plot involved Richards' search for a brother he has never known, with the implication that that brother may share his gift and thus be at risk from unscrupulous billionaires as well. Ben Richards is imprisoned by a young billionaire, Simon Brent, in an episode titled "The Queen's Gambit." In the episode "Man On A Punched Card" Maitland hires computer programmer Terry Kerwin to track and predict Richards' movements using a mainframe computer. Kerwin was played by Christopher George's real-life wife Lynda Day George, who would co-star on another Paramount TV series Mission: Impossible from 1971 to 1973.
The plotline of The Immortal is quite different from that of the book on which it is based (the protagonist of the book was a vagrant, not a test driver, who discovers his immortality when he sells his blood). Instead, The Immortal bears more than a superficial resemblance to the then-recent, very popular TV series, The Fugitive, which still aired in syndicated reruns. That series had ended its four-season run three years before The Immortal began. It is also the mirror of the series Run for Your Life about a man suffering from a terminal disease who wants to experience everything because he is going to die soon, while Richards has to run because he will live virtually forever. The Immortal was cancelled before a proper finale episode could be filmed.
Cast
- Christopher George as Ben Richards
- Don Knight as Fletcher
- David Brian as Arthur Maitland
- Carol Lynley as Sylvia Cartwright
- Barry Sullivan as Jordan Braddock
- Jessica Walter as Janet Braddock
- Ralph Bellamy as Dr. Matthew Pearce
- Nico Minardos as Simon Brent
- Paul Frees Narrator
Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
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Film | "The Immortal" | Joseph Sargent | Robert Specht | September 30, 1969 |
A 90-minute backdoor pilot television film. | ||||
1 | "Sylvia" | Don McDougall | Robert Malcolm Young | September 24, 1970 |
2 | "White Elephants Don't Grow on Trees" | Michael Caffey | Shimon Wincelberg | October 1, 1970 |
3 | "Reflections on a Lost Tomorrow" | Leslie H. Martinson | Robert Hamner | October 8, 1970 |
4 | "The Legacy" | Robert Douglas | Bob & Wanda Duncan | October 15, 1970 |
5 | "The Rainbow Butcher" | Nicholas Webster | Jack Turley | October 22, 1970 |
6 | "Man on a Punched Card" | Don Weis | Shimon Wincelberg | October 29, 1970 |
7 | "White Horse, Steel Horse" | Leslie H. Martinson | Story by: Gene L. Coon Teleplay by: Gene L. Coon and Stephen Kandel |
November 5, 1970 |
8 | "The Queen's Gambit" | Robert Douglas | Stephen Kandel | November 12, 1970 |
9 | "By Gift of Chance" | Irving J. Moore | Ken Trevey | November 19, 1970 |
10 | "Dead Man, Dead Man" | Allen Baron | William Wood | December 3, 1970 |
11 | "Paradise Bay" | Don Weis | Story by: Ben Masselink and Dan Ullman Teleplay by: Ben Masselink and Stephen Kandel |
December 10, 1970 |
12 | "The Return" | Michael Caffey | Robert Specht | December 17, 1970 |
13 | "To the Gods Alone" | Leslie H. Martinson | Ken Trevey | December 31, 1970 |
14 | "Sanctuary" | Michael Caffey | William Eastlake | January 7, 1971 |
15 | "My Brother's Keeper" | Charles Rondeau | Story by: Bob & Wanda Duncan Teleplay by: Stephen Kandel and Bob & Wanda Duncan |
January 14, 1971 |
DVD release
On October 16, 2017, it was announced that Visual Entertainment Inc. had acquired the rights to the series. They subsequently released The Immortal - 'The Complete Collection' on DVD in Region 1 on November 9, 2017.[1]
See also
References
External links
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- Articles with short description
- American Broadcasting Company original programming
- 1970s American drama television series
- Television series by CBS Studios
- 1970 American television series debuts
- 1971 American television series endings
- 1970s American science fiction television series
- Television shows based on American novels
- English-language television shows
- Fiction about immortality
- Television shows set in Kentucky