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Two American scientists are lost in the swirling maze of past and  future ages during the first experiments on America's greatest and most  secret project - the Time Tunnel! Tony Newman and Doug Phillips now  tumble helplessly toward a new fantastic adventure somewhere along the  infinite corridors of time...
- Opening narration
HG Wells was a clever old sod. Not only is he considered the father of  science-fiction,  but he also managed to introduce and use the genre in  ways that have scarcely been bettered since. In the hundred-plus years  since The War of the Worlds was first published, no one has since  produced an alien invasion story more concisely brilliant or as  significant, while his equally influential The Time Machine  managed to pin down the fundamentals of what makes a good story about  travelling through the fourth dimension, namely the fusion of  science-fiction metaphor with the psychology and sociology of history.  At its best sci-fi explores the great truths of what it is to be human;  at its best, history tells us why we are who we are and allows us to  understand, through the actions of those who came before us, both our  current situation and also the consequences of our future actions. They  both hold mirrors up to human nature itself, the only difference being  that whereas science-fiction is speculation, history is illustration,  literally opposite sides of the same coin. What Wells did in The Time Machine  was realise you could fuse the two together; his tale of the Time  Traveller’s encounter with the Eloi and Morlock was telling a futuristic  story from a historical perspective, the novel’s socialist writer  relating a parable about the downfall of capitalism. From that impetus  all subsequent time travel stories have grown: while the superficial  prefer to play with the idea as an end to itself, contending itself with  the sheer coolness factor of seeing hundreds of years before one was  born or millennia into the future, the more intelligent have used it as a  continuing device to putting a modern-day sensibility into a historical  situation (literally, in the form of the time travellers) or reflecting  on the future problems our current culture might be setting up, drawing  parallels between the times to particular ends. Media as varied as the  sublime first Back to the Future, and the wonderful last episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation  have each in their own way shown that, done properly,  time travel is  not so much about the outward adventures of its protagonists as  introspection about themselves.
It’s not something Irwin Allen ever realised though. Actually, that  might not be true, but even if he did appreciate the finer points of the  genre he wouldn’t have given a stuff about them. When ABC approached  the producer in 1964 to make them a series on the subject he didn’t see  the finer philosophical points that could be drawn from such a project  (although, to be fair, given ABC’s choice of producer, they probably  weren’t expecting such an approach either) he just saw an opportunity to  make another of his action-packed series that would appeal to, as he  saw them, the lowest common denominator, with no time for such optional  extravagances as proper characters or interesting plots. This misguided  approach, which is consistent with pretty much all of his output both on  television and in the cinema, is one of the reasons that today The Time Tunnel is perhaps the least remembered of his four major series: whereas something like Lost in Space  could get away with being unremittingly stupid,  a show with the  premise of two scientists visiting famous historical times practically  demands a modicum of intelligence, as well as a respect and appreciation  for the study of history and historical figures. With the Sixties being  a particularly volatile time, here was an excellent opportunity for  some serious reflection about the past and what lessons it could have  for current conduct, whether it be from the metaphorical legends of the  Siege of Troy right through to the tragic stupidity of Custer’s Last  Stand (a moment with particular relevance for a nation busily getting  itself embroiled in the tragedy of Vietnam). Just as Roddenberry was  using futuristic metaphor to preach (Star Trek launched the same season as The Time Tunnel  in 1966) so Allen could have used past examples, and there were plenty  of writers around at the time who would have been more than happy to  contribute to such an exercise.

But no. Instead of taking advantage of essaying such characters as  Lincoln, Marie Antoinette and the men at the Alamo, he instead presents a  series of straight-forward romps with characters straight out of  stereotype and conflict for the two leads no more complex than escaping  from the latest prison they’ve been captured in. Anything approaching  intelligent argument and debate is non-existent with every situation  painted in clear colours black and white. Essentially Allen had a  contempt for his audience, believing them to be fundamentally stupid  consumers who didn’t want to have to engage their brains at all and  would be kept quite content as long as there was an explosion or  fist-fight every five minutes. He made what he liked to call “running  and jumping shows” and had no interest in anything aside from that,  including such trivial things as logical plot development and scientific  – and in this case, historical – accuracy. Anything in the series that  actually corresponds with the true events being depicted is entirely  coincidental, and there are plenty of basic errors, some of which are  gob-smackingly stupid; gems in the first fifteen episodes include the  Captain of the Titanic being given the wrong name while in the episode  based around Pearl Harbour, The Day the Sky Fell In Tony's age is  stated to be seven at the time of the attack - odd, considering in the  Pilot his birthdate was 1938 (three years before the attack).
The two time travellers Doug and Tony are cut from the same all-American-hero mould as Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea’s Admiral Nelson and Lost in Space’s  John Robinson and Don Smith, all square chin, deep voice and wholesome  image; they want nothing more than to do the right thing and serve their  country. It’s one of the most perennially boring aspects of US  television before the Seventies that most of the heroic characters in  mainstream family shows had only the vague flaw of slight impetuousness  to mar their otherwise apparent saintliness and so it is here; Doug and  Tony are dull leads, not helped by their playing by Robert Colbert and  James Darren. Colbert in particular is blandness personified, seeming to  think his mission is to stand and pull a firm face in every scene he’s  in (it doesn’t help that he sounds exactly like Spottswoode in Team America: World Police)  and while Darren (whose day job was as a heartthrob singer) tries to  put a little emphasis into his delivery he still a rotten actor with  little charisma. (He got better; thirty years later he travelled to  Bajor to play Vic Fontaine on Deep Space Nine, and while it’s  correct to point out he’s virtually playing himself, at least he’s more  convincing; shame the character was an utter waste of space, but that  was hardly his fault). Together, they are absolutely typical Allen  characters, and as actors even seem to have shared his ideals: one  frustrated writer told an anecdote years later about how he tried to put  more emotional speeches into the scripts only to be told by one of the  two leads (he doesn’t specify which) that he only wanted short things to  say which didn’t tax him, with the ideal examples being “Let’s go!” or  “We have to get out of here!” Years later, a show almost identical in  format and yet completely dissimilar in tone would realise that the  heart of any good time travel show is in the characters, exemplified by  its two leading men who brought heart to their adventures, but things  weren’t going to go ga-ga for Sam Beckett for a while yet, and in the  meantime Tony and Doug (even their names have a clichéd feel) make poor  substitutes.

So, if one gets past the fact that the approach to The Time Tunnel  was a missed opportunity and its leading men have all the excitement of  a particularly bland rice cake, how does the series fare based on its  own merits? Admittedly not that badly. At first glance the show appears  to be an impressively expensive venture as each episode features  extensive recreations of whatever historical incident Tony and Doug find  themselves involved in; we see hordes of Greek sacking Troy, scenes of  panic as people flee the oncoming Japanese bombers at Pearl Harbour, the  last moments of the Titanic before it sank, complete with large sets or  location shoots and sometimes hundreds of extras. However, all is not  as it seemed: once again crafty old Allen had hit upon a way of doing  the series on the cheap, namely plundering Fox’s back catalogue of  movies and nicking bits from them. Using a standard cut 'n' paste  method, he inserted scenes from films such as Krakatoa, East of Java, How Green Was My Valley and even  To Catch a Thief  into Tony and Doug’s adventures, often alternating the pilfered scenes  with reaction shots of our two heroes “watching” events unfolding. While  this is just another example of Allen’s general cynicism and  opportunism (one does wonder sometimes why he became involved in the  business at all), and as much as it pains one to allow such tactics any  credit at all, it does work extremely well, especially given the  attempts made by production staff to marry the old clips and newly-shot Time Tunnel  material together. If it wasn’t for the fact one is often familiar with  the clips being used, as well as the difference in quality in film  stock between them and the newly-shot material, it’s quite conceivable  it would be difficult to tell which bits were new and which were not.  This element certainly lends an impressive range to the series, and  immerses the characters far more in each adventure than a regular  television budget would allow. As well as this, the main standing set of  the tunnel itself is very impressive, arguably the most visually  striking of Allen’s shows, with the Tunnel itself a minor icon in the  genre: shame the actual effect of travelling through it is nothing more  exciting than a few weak explosions and a bit of smoke. Visually,  though, there is much to enjoy in the series.
But then, as mentioned, it’s hardly surprising that the show’s strength  is in spectacle rather than drama. The thematic problems have already  been covered in some depth, but on a basic level structurally this is a  show highly repetitive in nature. Each week Tony and Doug seem to find  themselves landing in the middle of a situation about to reach boiling  point (it's very unlucky for the pair that they never arrive just in  time for something like VE day or the day after the Armada was  defeated). They then spend the majority of the time fruitlessly trying  to dissuade whoever is involved to back off from their disastrous  plan-of-action, only to be totally ignored, forcing them to sit back and  watch destiny take its course, before they’re scooped up and dropped in  another time zone. Along the way they are regularly captured and  escape, while back at the Time Tunnel base the other scientists observe  events on a viewscreen, aghast. One feels very sorry for actors John  Zaremba, Lee Meriwether and Whit Bissell who play said team, as most of  the episodes they get little to do other than gasp in horror as they  watch Tony and Doug’s adventures and push the odd button on their  console; perhaps because of this, later on there comes a spate of  episodes in which another character from whichever period the two  travellers are in gets transported through the Tunnel to chat – or, more  usually, attack – the team. Overall though, all the episodes follow a  set formula, the only variation being the location of each adventure.
Despite it all, it is pretty entertaining, as long as you disengage your  brain beforehand and don’t watch more than one episode in a sitting. As  far as Allen was concerned, it’s an entirely successful show in that  it’s never dull with characters are pulled constantly from one crisis to  another (typically each episode ends with a cliffhanging preview of  next week's adventure, another Allen-trademark). There’s a certain joy  in hearing stupid dialogue such as “What do you think are our chances?”  “About a million to one.” “Hmm, we have to go for it,” (an exchange  which occurs regularly), although that joy would be a lot more if one  didn’t appreciate the cynicism behind it. Ultimately that, and the cold  disinterest in trying to make anything more, means that ends up being an  extremely annoying series, one that makes one rather cross at Allen and  his opinions in a way that none of his other shows do (despite  everything said, I'm a relatively big fan of his output, even if it's  often in spite rather than because of his active input into the episodes  themselves). It’s a wasted opportunity certainly, but more than that  it’s the purest example of the producer’s excesses with none of their  compensations. Worth watching a couple of episodes, but it’s an almost  impossible show to like long-term.

The Disks
The first half of The Time Tunnel’s single season is released on this current volume, totalling fifteen episodes, from the pilot Rendezvous With Yesterday through to Invasion.  The four double-sided dual-layered disks are held in two slim-line  jewel cases, two disks per case, which have identical covers and episode  synopses on their back. These two cases are held in turn in a holding  box with, again, the same artwork on the front.
The menus are uninspiring but perfectly functional. After getting past  the regular FBI warnings and Fox logos one is presented with the Main  Menu, which features a static silent image of the Time Tunnel workers  watching as Doug and Tony’s silhouettes are pulled in. Scattered around  are the names of the episodes on that particular disk and also any  extras. Each episode has its own submenu made up of a different picture  of the Time Tunnel workers, apparently watching a static image of that  particular episode; the options here are Play Episode, Scene Selection,  Language Selection and Home, which leads back to the Main Menu. One’s  place on all the menus is marked with the Time Tunnel’s logo of an  hourglass which is a vaguely nice touch.
All the episodes are subtitled but none of the extras are bar the extended version of the Pilot.
Video
Very nice. The prints have evidently been cleaned up and come across as  clear and fresh, with a nice clarity that, while below today’s  standards, is better than many other television releases dating from a  similar period (including Lost in Space, the release of which in  terms of video quality doesn’t compare to the transfers here). The only  problems comes from the footage from other movies, which are almost  always far grainier than the new material, but other than that there’s  little signs of digital artefacting, although there might be the tiniest  hint of edge enhancement at times. Colours are bright and vivid,  however, and all in all this is a very pleasing transfer.
Audio
Unremarkable but effective. The mono tracks sound fine and clean and,  while not as sharp as they could be, are entirely acceptable.
Extras
Unaired Pilot
A slightly longer version of the Pilot, with an alternative ending, which is vaguely interesting. A nice inclusion.
Irwin Allen’s Home Movies (67:49)
Extensive behind-the-scenes footage of the Pilot being shot that goes on  significantly longer than the episode itself. As there’s no audio  track, the lengthy scenes of Irwin Allen directing operations and actors  pulling faces at the camera eventually grows tedious, but it is  fascinating to watch. That said, there’s a certain amount of frustration  to be had as the camera focuses on obviously significant people but  with no clue as to who they are. Of casual interest to see the activity  on the studio floor, but it is a hell of a long slog to watch all in one  go, so it's just as well the extra has a submenu dividing the film up  into more manageable chunks.
Promotional TV and Radio Spots
A collection of different styles of ads used to advertise the series.  Three network trailers make up the bulk, with each one combining clips  from several episodes (“The exciting past! The breathtaking future! The  Time Tunnel – next week on this channel!”) all of which not  unsurprisingly emphasise the action element of the series. Another TV  Spot, for ABC, is more general with just a random medley of clips, but  of more interest is the original trailer for the very first episode,  which is surprisingly muted in tone, even down to the rather sombre  announcer. The three brief radio spots, meanwhile, are composed of a  very bored-sounding James Darren reading some rather dull, uninspiring,  copy about the show. Completing this small collection is a version of  the opening sequence identical to that on the episodes themselves aside  from one difference: at the end, when the announcer proclaims: “The Time  Tunnel!” in this version he goes on to say “Brought to you by…”  although we don't get to hear an example of who it actually is brought  to us by. Which is disappointing.
Visual Effects Camera Test (1:49)
Not the most thrilling extra you’ll ever see, this is a silent test of  the Tunnel’s lighting, and consists of the camera pointing down the  impressive set while lights flicker on and off. About as good as it  sounds.
Stills Galleries
A large collection of media from the series, with the images divided  down into the following categories: Concept Art, Production Stills  (including some of Allen directing operations), Merchandise, Storyboards  and Comic Book. This latter appears to be a complete edition of a Time  Tunnel comic, the only problem being the pages are too small and cannot  be read properly, which rather defeats the purpose. That aside this  seems to be an excellent and comprehensive series of images.
Overall
This is not a good series and, unlike Allen’s other shows, there’s  precious little to enjoy even if one does embrace and enjoy its many  absurdities, leading to an ultimately empty experience - it's Quantum Leap with everything that makes Quantum Leap  great taken out. A shame, too, as this disk set is first-rate, with  nicely cleaned-up transfers and a goodly selection of extras - a real  effort has evidently been made to bring together a disparate collection  of materials from the time. A shame there aren’t any retrospectives –  plenty of the actors are still alive to share their memories – but  perhaps we’ll get that on the second half of the season, which various  sources have being released either in the middle of this year or very  early next. If you're already a fan of the show it's a superb release,  if you're not it's worth giving a miss.


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