A subdivision of ACIDEMIC

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

CHARLIE'S ANGELS Season ONE: Acidemic's Episode by Episode Guide (1976-1977)


Charlie's Angels is from a different era, but hey - if you are too, then this is your baby. It comes from a time when detectives would sometimes (not always) stand slack-jawed before the most obvious of clues, forgetting nearly everything they allegedly learned at the Police Academy one moment and then devastating bad guys with some half-baked karate or quick driving-firing combo maneuvers the next, only to drop their guns and run away the next time the same thing happens. But that's like, you know, real life? Maybe?

Maybe we don't always remember everything we know about self-defense when we need it. And anyway, here's more at work in Charlie's Angels than simply one facet of the then erupting 'women's lib' consciousness, or--as critics often snidely dismiss it a priori --mindless T&A. The Angels wanted to do more than just be tough men imitations, or dumb sex objects. They brought feminine care and warmth to their business as well as seduction and ball-breaking. And most unique to the emotionally open time it was made: cop show compassion. Killing has consequences and more often than not, bad guys are just trying to scare people off or whatever, like in Scooby Doo. 

And most importantly, especially for the multi-generational (pre-VCR; pre-cable) viewing audience (starting especially with season one when it was moved from the 10 to 9 PM slot in prime time)-- there's rarely if ever any overt sexual violence. No matter how compromised our heroines become, they're free of all molestation; they may go for some anyway, but it's their choice, and even then, they end the episode free of any lasting attachment, trauma, or injury.

Most of all, they're women as well as detectives. If they talk a bad guy into dropping his gun or coming down from a ledge, for example, they don't run over and pin him to the ground as soon as he's clear, they help him up, give him a nurturing smile, and walk him down the hill, his hands in theirs (with another Angel bringing up the rear, with the gun, just in case, but unobtrusively).

That said, The Charlie's Angels series, which ran for 105 episodes, was wildly uneven, slowly getting worse and worse with each season, sunk more often than not by lazy writing, which sometimes-- as the legends go--merely recycled old scripts from earlier Spelling cop shows (like The Rookies and Honey West), the characters changed around (barely) to fit the Angels, resulting in one or more of them playing the simpering victim intimidated by the simplest of stalker tactics, which makes no sense since they'd be kicking ass before and after that week. The hour became heavy with padding and dawdling, and as the decade ended, and Kate Jackson left, so did the cool 70s fashions, replaced by the height of 80s silken gaudiness, chintz and perms and spandex enough to make us move to a city like Buenos Aires or London, where the 70s never dies.

But, especially in the first two seasons, there's enough good episodes to make it all worthwhile, presuming perhaps you're in need of a mellow, gentle 70s nostalgia kick, or--like me--spent some formative early years of childhood obsessed by the show, hoarding the Topps gum cards, collecting pictures and clippings in a big scrapbook and all the other things a child does before unwelcome puberty turns him from chaste adoration to raw hormonal longing. Thus it's from a gentler time when love was the key, not sex, a time people actually read Playboy in public, for the articles. It was a great time to be a kid anticipating the shag carpet van future in store (the 80s would see it go up in smoke from a pistol in Mark David Chapman's hand). I have my handy episode-by-episode guide to help you find the good and skip the bad (first three seasons only). Just follow my letter grades (given on a curve, naturally) and its impossible you should coast amiss.

March 1976 (Pilot)
A

Pilots are always fascinating glimpses of directions never taken, would-be future cliches that never got off the ground, different stars in different roles, and for Charlie's Angels, a seriously ritzier economic strata, almost like an alternate reality where the fees and payroll is substantially larger. As if to bear that out Charles Winchester III himself, David Ogden Stiers, is another Charlie liason, and Charlie has a much more godly all-knowing deux ex machina power and the girls are all upper crust super-rich. They cater to the top 1%, the Bel Air country club crowd. Sabrina is an old money equestrian; Kelly has her own pool; Farrah has a tennis court (that's her private court she's playing on in the credits). Since it's a TVM two hour time slot the plotting is broadened to allow for extra slyness, character detours, disguises, and inexorable snap-trap momentum; we never know quite what the Angels are up to in their scheme until it gets away from them, and I like it better that way. We follow behind in quiet awe as they weave their undercover Sting-style spell.

Pros: Kelly looks extraordinary in her biker blacks (below) as an out-of-the-blue heiress, and a then-unknown relatively young and gorgeous Tommy Lee Jones rides around in a pick-up with an old hound dawg! Adding to the good old boy charm is Bo Hopkins in the peak of his sinister yet easygoing James Dean-ishness. He makes a good foil for the ladies alongside Diana Muldaur as Mrs. LeMair, the second wife (widow?) of the missing vintner. Kelly poses as the estate's legitimate heiress, a daughter long vanished, Naturally the odious conspirators give her the Hitchcockian warm milk treatment. And it's sweet the way Tommy Lee Jones says "go shake 'em up, Sabrina," before the big climax. Damn if he didn't know how to play a scene, even then.

Best of all: the team's overall level of intelligence is a pretty far-out high watermark of the Angels' combined initiative, guts, intellect, and being able to handle themselves and use their hotness in service of the operation. They're also --and this aspect would soon be jettisoned, alas --more privy to info than we are (ala say Mission Impossible) which works well for the suspense when things actually do eventually get out of their control.

As for clothes and disguises: Sabrina looks great in fur while under a rich girl cover and later in commando black, and Jill rocks a PG version of Claudia Jennings shotgun-toting swamp rat in Gator Bait. I like when we learn how much the Angels are making and we get to see them enjoying the good life, as they should --their beauty and multi-talented wondrous competence seems to fit better that way; and here we learn the agency made a cool $250,000 on the case.  Their office here is in a suitably Olympian looking temple, probably a bank in real life. Damn, fighting crime pays!


Until it doesn't, of course, and the farther the series got from this shining moment, the dumber the Angels got -- going the opposite of learning from their mistakes, and letting the most incompetent of crooks walk all over them for the first 50 minutes, their lovely jaws agape in befuddlement and Bosley mugging while he kvetches about the price of replacing the Angels' bullet-riddled windshields.

Cons  -Jill wears a hideous lavender hat while stalking the swamp. It's so distracting, ugly, and wrong for the scene it stands out as one of the season's most baffling sartorial choices; David Ogden Stiers is quite odious as 'Woodrow,' a smarmy aide to Charlie who wouldn't last past this one episode and with good reason. He's just too innately snobby to work as a good guy; his sharp little laugh at the end comes across as hopelessly defensive and snide. Weirdly, the Angels don't carry guns at all, which is slightly strange, and hopefully not some prejudice the actresses or producers had. Fortunately the guns would be there eventually and Stiers found his own bag over on M*A*S*H, where he fit perfectly as the slightly less neurotic and infinitely more haute bourgeois replacement for Frank Burns the following year.

No
Another thing that didn't work: their logo / commercial break tag (above). Note the weird lower half silhouettes and passive postures. This is the only time we see it. The pro-active sleek 70s fashion silhouette replacement (below)abandons all heavenly associations or demure reverence, in favor professional assertiveness, groovy clothes and hair, and overall high style that says: here's a show Gloria Steinem wouldn't mind showing to her tomboy nephew on babysitting night.

Yes
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Sept. 1976: Ep.1 - Hellride 
A

Pros - Sabrina puts a down home screech in her voice to portray a "local circuit" stock car racer and of course nails it perfectly. Jill repeats her hot young hillbilly look from the pilot (when a sleazy driver asks her what her religious denomination is, she says "35-24-34"), and again Bosley is her cracker daddy, this time a hokey race track preacher in an art school smock and bible. It's nice to see Jill fleece the bad guys at poker, asking all sorts of nosy questions like they're just occurring to her in a ditzy coversational stream of babble.

Pros: Jill and Sabrina both have great tans and look born to ride (like the Santa Anna wind / blowin' hot from the north). Looking ravishing in very 70s tight flared jeans, the bits where Kelly comes onto a racer at a bar are pretty risque for a prime time 70s ABC show (though it was at a later time slot); Sabrina does a nice W.C. Fields impression and rocks some toned bare arms, and she stares down the badass butch rival driver with great aplomb: her eyes rock hard, meeting her rival's evil gaze without blinking while her voice stays all calm, threatening without seeming at all agitated, coming off like Wyatt Earp saying hello to the Clampett's as they come out of the rain in Darling Clementine. Like the previous episode, the Angels aren't just about identifying the enemy, but fleecing his wallet and catching him right in the act so they're 100% sure of a conviction as well. Kate fake-drives very well, and the car is even the same color as her "real" one (that red hatchback with the white Nike stripe) so we know where she is on the track.

Cons: It's pretty dumb how Sabrina and the mechanic can't tell a guy's right across the street watching them at the cop impound lot. It's also pretty dumb that Kelly would just jump into a car with a murder suspect after snooping around his apartment, not knowing where he was taking her or leaving a note for her fellow Angels. Sabrina going undercover as the racer instead of Jill seems an odd choice since Jill was supposed to be a racer in "real life" (she Jill would leave the agency after this season to race, and so Farrah could make Saturn 3)

2 - The Mexican Connection
A

This is one of the best examples of the early days of the show wherein the Angels get really sexually aggressive in order to confuse and unnerve their suspects, taking the come-ons of all the Mexican gentlemen and studly pilots with 'put up or shut up' come hither stares that kowtow them into corners. Sublime! Jill gets hit on by Mr. Doyle (no relation to the actor playing Bosley); Kelly gets hit on by Mr. Bartone (Cesar Danova); Sabrina gets all flushed when she makes out with the granite-haired pilot (done to get the rumors flowing as a nosy stewardess passes the cockpit). Hitchcock's Notorious is referenced (again) as heroin "crystals" are smuggled in wine bottles on a charter airline and kept in the cellar and they --oops--drop one right as bad guys start walking down the stairs. Little on the nose but we'll pass it, because I like how it's kind of implied in weird ways Jill sleeps with the giant thug who keeps her prisoner in the wine cellar all night, and doesn't feel too bad about it the next day, not even tired! We see them start making out in the corner and the next morning we see her alone at the pool, which in production code parlance means they totally hooked up. Totally! Or did someone get kowtowed? Was it me?

Pros: Consistently strong acting, some good camera work and nice pacing makes the whole thing flow like the wine in the non-heroin bottles. Kelly calls her corny one-liners "very tacky" but Sabrina's got her thinking cap on and so do the writers. It's a solid example of the Angels in their prime. And there's drugs! "Get some heroin and put it in a bottle for her" is a great line spoken by the super-smoov Danova.

Cons: It's one of those where the client doesn't seem to have the amount of money that would be needed to finance such an elaborate set-up, let alone show it's profited by it. You would think a drug kingpin would be able to afford a decent-sized villa. Also, the dialogue can get a little too self-consciously 'naughty' in these first few episodes. The more they try to talk 'adult,' the more juvenile they seem, ala Spencer Gifts. Once they knew they had a hit (and one all the rage with us perverse little kids) I think they eased back on the bad sexy pun throttle. Of course the kids with parents who didn't make them go to bed at unreasonably early hours could then repeat these awful puns at recess, and drive those of us sent to bed at 9 PM into paroxysms of masochistic envy. Once again, though, the Angels are very anti-gun. Sabrina handles one she picks up like it's a super gross frog and passes it off to the pilot instead of brandishing it like a real detective would -or like she would have no problem doing in later episodes. Get over it, girl. You're on the Police Academy firing range in the goddamned opening credits! It's like, if you don't like cameras, don't be a model.

3. Night of the Strangler
B+

Jaclyn Smith, in a dual role, plays a murdered "high-fashion" model in a terrible wig. In her regular dynamite hair, she signs with the agency to unnerve the killer, Laura-style.  "Put her in the white bikini," says open-shirted decadent Kevin St. Clair (Soap's Richard Mulligan). Damn if he's not right: She's so damned radiant in that white bikini the world shudders to a halt and the 1976 ABC line-up shatters like a glass ball hit with a .44 Magnum. This pisses off St. Clair's sulky wife who, if she knew what was good for her, would be in bed with the pool boy instead of moping around the set, loudly labeling Kelly's similarity to the victim a case of "some freaky reincarnation." This 'ritzy' peek into the world of high fashion culminates at a swanky opening that looks like every other cheap Italian restaurant-held event the Angels attend and even Ironsides would have been able to grab the killer when they find him in their hotel room, but the Angels let him get away, barely trying to stop him, in fact. What bodyguards they'd make! Since it's a horror-ish episode, even St. Clair gets a super creepy look on his face saying "didn't you know? I have affairs with all my models." With his fashions straight off the bargain K-Mart rack and his habit of incessantly pawing his 'girls,' St. Clair is exhibit A in why all successful designers are gay.

Pros: Sordid undercurrents let you know the show was still on at the 10 PM slot: the lead suspect is a German designer who's either gay (a bi-racial model notes, "he digs nobody, just men") or sexually frustrated mama's boy (the killer leaves a rag doll by his victims!) Because of the ritualistic murder scene, the police dismiss it as 'a sex thing.' In other words, the show tries to ape the Italian giallo style of the era, but instead seems like a sixth-grader trying to bluff his way through an adult conversation. Still, it's nice that the girls are finally armed. "There's a killer on the loose, don't you know?" Well duh! "A wonderful film for the sadomasochistic, Charlie." Jaclyn Smith is so stunning in that white bikini she never left my thoughts, all through my childhood. A rival tries to push her into the pool in a case of jealous pique but Kelly twists around and the other model goes falling in herself!

Modeling Hint: If she's going to be catty, a model should know how to fight by the side of a pool without falling in, that's something they need to master before they ever get their first assignment! It takes too long to re-do your hair once it gets all chlorinated. It's a good way to lose bookings. Read a book, ladies!

Cons: Jill's still a bit of an airhead. "Do you know what happened when Trigger died? They stuffed him!"  Kelly makes some terrible boners, like trying to flag down a van hightailing out of the parking garage in the dead of night, a moment or two after interrupting a would-be strangling, never imagining it's the strangler driving, or that even if it was, he wouldn't politely stop to help. I mean, two people are dead who worked in that very same agency that very same week, and girls still think they'll be perfectly safe going down to a creepy parking garage in the middle of the night unarmed and alone. When an Angel suggests they travel in pairs, the models scoff! It's silly to even suggest such things! There's way too many deaths for there not to be at least one real cop around in that parking lot, that there isn't just makes it resonate like a giallo-esque nightmare logic miasma that-- if you're nine--might be terrifying stuff. I couldn't tell you since I was in bed at the time. God damn it.

4. Angels in Chains
A

This is the one where the Angels go down south with the express purpose of being arrested by a fat evil sheriff (the great David Huddleston) who's hauling in sexy women passing through his backwoods county in order to subject them to inhumane treatment at the hands of the great cult icon Mary Woronov as a butch guard ("drop the towels and get to it!"); Woronov and Huddleston soon decide to to let the ladies work out the remainder of theor sentence in the comfort of the local brothel in order to help them get, among other things, incriminating photos of rich politicians. Nice operation!

The beginning, with an innocent girl getting either shot for escaping, or roped into brothel-work, is pretty disturbing --hinting at the way this series might have developed had kids like me not rescued from the Police Woman 'adult' slot it with our passionate interest. Tall scrawny "Foul Owl on the Prowl"-listening dirtbag "Curtis Harrington's Sid Haig" character actor Anthony James (five coins if you get all those references) is a rapist guard; Neva Patterson is the friendly warden with the pitch on the 'House.' The musical score is at its most 70s cop show funk bangin' and the sight of the three Angels chained up in prison blues is one of the most quintessentially iconic of the entire series.

Thanks to New World's hit movie Jackson County Jail (1976), the hick rapist sheriff--grabbing passing hotties on phony charges and vanishing them into the corrupt system--was a popular bogeyman of the moment and to see him on network TV still give me a slight chill. I generally avoid WIP films and sordid rape-revenge sagas, but the Angels all look good in their prison blues, and who shows up as one of the innocent girls forced to work in the brothel but a very young Kim Basinger! Don't worry, y'all. The Angels wreak some very cathartic and fiery vengeance before their honor has a chance to be unduly compromised (a cavity search aside). Kim is saved. Hurrah for Kim!

5. Target Angels
B+

Someone's put a contract on the Angels, or have they? The killer, a hired merc with a limp, watches slides of each Angel before the attempted hit. The Brain from Planet Arous himself, John Agar, is Col. Baylock, Sabrina's dad, an arms expert who notes that Uzi ammo is very hard to get. On what planet? Is he the role model for Bill Paxton's character in Haywire? He's either drunk or had a stroke. He's great. The plot is mainly an excuse for us to see the Angels' home life and the various exes and boyfriends who think what the girls are doing is too dangerous. "You mean a great deal to me," Charlie says, "all three of you." Lay off the embalming fluid, Charlie. "You've grown into a beautiful woman, Kelly," notes the geriatric orphanage nun. Et tu, soror?

Pros: Sabrina is firing on all engines, figuring out the plot just as we do, faking her own death, searching the killer's hotel room and planning ornate snares one minute, reminding her ex-husband his fretful control freak anxiety is why they're "not playing house anymore" the next. Miles Cavendish is the name of an arms dealer; Jill gets up in a ref's face as the coach for a girls' basketball team in her off hours;  Kelly romances a pre-fame Tom Selleck ("you kiss better than you cook"); Kelly reveals she has trust issues--it's weird to see her with a boyfriend, even if the boyfriend is Selleck and supposedly a surgeon. It's all weird, and it ends with a mysterious visit to Charlie's pad, which is really clearly a country club, unless Charlie has phone booths in his lobby and "no parking" zones in his driveway. Will they get to see him at last? No, but there are some good twisty synths on the score and fans will note that the plot is the one they more or less recycled for the Drew-Lucy-Cameron reboot of 2000 which may explain why there are so many damn boyfriends in it.

Cons:  It seems pretty dumb to waste a cab ride rather than just look around the grounds for the guy with the dynamite. He's not exactly a master of camouflage and it's hard to believe he'd get the drop on a professional mercenary and not even look around for the money he went to jail for.
Sabrina's over-protective cop ex-husband moping after her is even more tiresome to us than he is to her and she's pretty tired of him.

Luckily no long-term boyfriends, husbands, or ex-husbands would be seen after this. We wanted our Angels for our own. Lovers were allowed only on the condition they were arrested or killed by the end of the episode. The guys we see here were just basically dumped all at once 'cuz they can't stand the gaffe. Or Spelling and Goldberg understand viewer psychology the way few other producers do, to their enduring credit.

6. The Killing Kind
A-

Dirk Benedict (Starbucks on Battlestar Galactica) directed this punchy little entry. Moxy-encumbered journalist / beach dweller Brooke Anderson vows that if anything happens to her she'll spill all that she knows about Moonshadows, a sleazy mob resort run by Mr. Terra Nova (Robert Loggia). Here's a tip: never threaten a mobster, especially don't threaten him with no witnesses around. He might have frogwomen waiting to pull you under when you swim out to your little raft to get away. Everyone knows that!

Pros: It's always good when the bad guys got some color to them, Loggia's got it, of course-- and there's a dame on his hit squad / Moonshadows staff, a stern Swedish masseuse named Inga! Her massage scenes with the Angels are a big highlight: "Did you two want to be alone!?" asks Jill as she interrupts Inga's probing for Kelly's deep tissue. "Another minute," retorts Kelly, "and I thought she'd be playing 'Strangers in the Night.'" It's great to hear them giggle, and exchange lame quips in low whispers while naked under white towels, even if it's a bit homophobic (did they even have that word in the seventies?)

This is just the kind of thing the Angels do super well and we love them for it - low stress crime solving in relaxing getaways where they can interview character actors while posing as instructors and service people of all walks of life. Here, Jill poses as a tennis instructor, allowing for all sorts of klunky fifth business with smitten bra salesmen, the type who make us wince imagining the smell of cheap aftershave; Kelly poses as a freelance journalist writing about Moonshadows, saying groovy 70s swinger Cali nonsense like "I'm really getting turned on by this California sun." She asks what the hassle is with Mr. Nova not letting her take pictures. "The other resorts couldn't have been more cooperative." They sure couldn't have, sweetheart. It's cool to see instances where an Angel uses sex like a squid uses ink, and cooler when even so it fails to work. Mr. Big isn't buying it, nor any other mobster at Moonshadows. These guys really are pros. "Let me give you a tip," the underling says, "people around here don't like a lot of questions," then he adds that's because dirty old men and prostitutes come here. "You are one of the pros, aren't you?" asks a swaggering Texas underwear big shot of Jill. He means tennis, yes he does.

That was risque stuff in the 1970s, and in its way--with the macho older guys (Charlie and George) out on the boat fishing and the women on the beach facing all the death, it's a kind of children's eye view of Playboy, i.e. feminism means men can finally let women fight their own battles, even if they're against other men.

Pros: This is the episode where Kelly busts some karate and flips her hair perfectly in the red sleeveless turtleneck, as seen in the credits. (Mr. Big snarls: "Bug her room! If she gets out of line... I want her reservation canceled!"). It's also great to see Jill pulling all sorts of tricks with door jams, picking locks, snooping and seducing, and all with a tan and bubbly charm. Sabrina does some good defensive driving but her orange-red suit makes her look too much like a neutered hotelier.

Cons: This one is a few marks shy of a perfect score thanks to Bosley's callous overreaction to the cost of Sabrina's car damage after she bumps the bad guy off a cliff ("do you realize what bullet holes do to the Blue Book?") -- it's not funny or believable. But he reveals he's married (his wife packs brown shoes to go with his black tux - "I thought all cocktail parties were formal") which unfortunately says a lot - but none of his character details survive this one episode, maybe for the best.  Jill asks if they can stop off at the store because she's "out of whipped cream" and it seems dubbed in after the show's massive buzz, to make it more sexy, but it just sounds out of character, like it's trying to be dirty rather than just 'free' like her character. Does Jill even know what whipped cream is?  Sabrina blows another half point by dressing in a hideous granny frock during the big stable-set climax, but Loggia's indomitable presence counterbalances it. The coda has Charlie describing a sunset to the real blind George, sharing a beer ("skoal!") and letting a blind man fry his fish.

However you slice it, this one is Kelly's episode and Smith nails it. Her come-ons suddenly seem very deadly when she keeps after Mr. Big, teasing him for not having a sense of humor when he catches her shooting his documents with a spy camera. Jaclyn Smith's restrained acting style is put to good use in these scenes. She's like a cold-hearted mannequin zombie killer. It's awesome. We see the way her character could have gone in the future, had tired formula not slowly leaked the air out.

7. To Kill an Angel
D

Kelly's on a special day-off carnival boardwalk stroll "date" with an autistic orphan in cowboy duds and an Oliver-style haircut. Of course he witnesses a murder, picks up the dropped gun, shoots Kelly (accidentally) and runs away. Now she's got a head wound, amnesia, and mobsters are after both her and the kid, thinking they witnessed the murder. Cop show cliche compendium a-go-going on here, in short, lots of relying on old character actors doing lame bits as an assortment Southern California boardwalk stock types-the goombah pizza guy, the old timer peanut vendor, the sleazy printer--each examining Kelly's picture and then pointing Bosley and the other two Angels in the direction she last staggered.

Cons: As in the later "Angel Trap," it's clear Lasko got the memo that audiences like to see kittens, or he considers them a substitute for an actual plot, for there's no other reason our wandering loner child bonds with one. No offense to the kitten but no one came to this show to that, or have their whole hour wasted watching Kelly fret dourly over the fate of a towhead moppet. Plus the killer's rationale for needing to eliminate her and the kid because they may have seen something makes no sense. The murder of some sleazy underworld tough will barely get a stir from the LAPD, but it's mob law 101 that you don't shoot kids, priests, or Jaclyn Smith, who once again displays a lack of the instinct essential to law enforcement, rivaling even Sheriff Dewey from the SCREAM series as far as public endangerment through consistent incompetence. She's good at using her beauty as a weapon in some episodes and can occasionally bust a martial arts move (like in "The Killing Kind") but she's terrible at thinking on her feet. She even drops her bag--and presumably, gun--when going into action against two professional thugs, just so she can depend on last minute rescues like a junky depends on his dope.

8. Lady Killer
B+

Another thing in vogue throughout the self-aware but still sexist 70s was Playboy! People read the articles. Hefner was a major taste arbiter. Here he's fictionalized as the vaguely Paul Thomas-esque Tony Mann, editor in chief of Feline. Charlie refuses to pick which one of the angels will go undercover as a centerfold, letting them duke it out. Rest assured it won't be Sabrina -- Kate Jackson had an iron clad contract! She poses as Mann's new squeeze, instead, which doesn't go over well with his latest... um, 'Feline of the Month' (she won't go down to Acapulco because it "ages the skin," citing Sabrina as an example): "why don't you call me when you've gotten off this geriatric kick" she says.

Wait a minute... wry double entendres, adult themes cleverly disguised, bad jokes, trenchant observations (Sabrina suggests after it's all over that Tony should try dating another girl over twenty), and Jill cleverly giving the one guy's room key to the other guy? Whoa! So feminists could still have a sense of humor about sex in the 70s? I'd totally forgotten. It's lovely to see the Angels on top of things, so to speak, and a good time is had by all... for a few more years anyway. Sex was still no-harm / no-foul, but AIDS and slasher movies were coming like a virgin blood tide.

Pros: Attack by explosive tennis ball in a tennis ball machine. Very Sherlock Jr. Attack by electrified water bed? Genius! The good guys are swingers with chest hair blazing, and bad guys are uptight and moralistic in itchy suits and sweaty repressed brows. Kelly Garrett lip syncs "Embrace Me" but is supposed to be singing (yet Bosley is behind the stage with a tape player). The red herring virgin side bet jumps early so there can be a big surprise shocker anticlimax finale straight out of Maniac, Shivers, or Blue Sunshine! Nice touches include the killer keeping chloroform in the kitchen cabinet next to the tomato soup, and a wry reference to Gloria Steinem.

9. Bullseye
C

When discussing actors who play crazy snipers in TV shows there is James B. Sikking, and then everybody else. He is a titan amongst dissociative marksmen character actors. He's not in this, alas, but someone at this army training facility is, and he's trying keep women out of the military. Or is it all just a plot to see how Kelly and Jill look in combat fatigues? Adorable, that's how. But too thin. Is Farrah anorexic? She's into weird stuff here, like meditation--then a very new California "craze"--and you had to have your feet a certain way. Jaclyn seems pretty healthy, Sabrina gets to wear a nurse's uniform and have a nice scene trying to get a scared girl to talk about what's going on. The dead cadet is Mary Jo Walker, the victim of some kind of sexist 'women can't handle the truth" kind of psycho. Maybe. Meanwhile, there's crusty Sgt. Billings (L.Q Jones) is clearly suspicious, though, but so are we of the whole army thing.

Though there's a big plane-into-shed fireball crash at the end, "Bullseye" misses by a half mile at any target except the macho resistance to the incursion of women into a male domain (army, football, etc.) may be guilty of the same thing in reverse. Lots of dead end scenes, and a general idea that when it comes to defense and armed combat, the military can only stare at its shoes and give the terrorists what they want (in this case during the hostage negotiation once the killer is outed), so that Kelly has to ride in with an M-16 and restore order to the land.

10. Consenting Adults
A

Part of the genius of the first season was sex, not just in the 10 PM slot maturity way- that's just a side benefit --but in a power over men kind of way. The Angels make people nervous because they're attractive and smart and assertive; their womanly curiosity leads them towards clues and into locked rooms to snoop without a care for the fears that inhibit normal people, or the outdated chivalry of men who worry too much they'll get hurt (like the collectively dumped boyfriends in "Target: Angels"). In this episode, another girl--less angelic--is using that same skill in conjunction with a computerized dating service to get gullible male pigeons for easy grifts. First she gets a mama's boy mark to pay for her "school tuition" and then has his antique store robbed whilst he's away on a date with her. A colorful David Johansen-esque lowlife doing the robbing quotes Andy's Gang: "Pluck your magic twanger, froggy!" as he steals a McGuffin ceramic frog from the shop. "That's not my kind of nostalgia," says the other robber.

One of the better mid-season Episodes, this has all sorts of priceless 70s time capsule moments and clothes: Trendsetter athlete Jill, her Diana Von Furstenberg-style dress open to the navel, wants to ride the "paved wave" on her new skateboard; she earns the trust of of a prostitute by telling her the john she's with is LAPD Vice, though he's probably not. Audrey Christie plays Maggie Cunningham, the mother of the missing dating service patsy, she rattles on about her days as a compatriot of Harry S. Truman. Moral of the story: stay away from computerized dating services! Too late! But old Maggie's actually cool with the fact her son was dating glorified prostitutes. Meanwhile, turns out Bosley plays the horses, and a steed called Khaki is visited (Kelly rocks a nice pair of black boots with a slick black dress and pretends a donkey behind a fence is a race horse). Name-checked is Nadia Comăneci, the mind-blower of that year's Olympiad.

Sabrina rocks some really bad hair and outfits, like she's a nine year-old boy, but gets to shout "Move and you're part of the wall" with a shotgun trained on the door--maybe that's why I felt so comfortable swooning over her at the time--she was so much like me! These days I'm more about Jill going down the hill in the big awesome skateboard chase climax, though in some shots she looks suspiciously like one of the Dogtown Z-Boys crew in a drag queen blonde wig (which s/he is). So I guess I'm back at square one...

11. The Seance
C-

Farrah's film career was taking off; Kate had a lower profile gig doing movies on the side already; so Jaclyn had to carry a lot of 'filler' episodes like this one (and episode #7). This time she gets to do some acting and backstory as we learn her 'impoverished orphan backstory' while she's hypnotized into channeling some past trauma involving some cruel caregiver named "Beamish." These hypnosis scenes really drag even though Smith's high-pitched child voice ("Beamish! No! Put it down, Beamish!") is creepy in all the wrong ways.

Pros: Sabrina sports a very becoming, very 'occult bookstore chic' necklace / sweater / vest combination while hanging out in LA's hippest hypnotist circles.

Cons: Also, it's pretty dumb for a supposedly capable detective to go into a murder suspect hypnotist's office, alone, and let him hypnotize you, thinking it's a good way to grill him for information. (you never to go in any hypnotist's office and do that; always have a buddy with you and make sure they're not wanted for murder). After that, if you don't think the hypnosis worked, but can't explain the missing time, then you're just a moron. That said, it's a pretty familiar angle from 50s movies and 30s old radio shows and there was even an LAPD police unit created just to deal with these kinds of predatory operators, the Bunco Squad! Was Kelly just so pretty she graduated the Police Academy even though she's so gullible she'd buy the Brooklyn Bridge from the grifters she's supposed to arrest?

Even if the big climactic trick-out was already overused when Charlie Chan, Sherlock Holmes and Philo Vance all did it back in the 30s-40s, well it's still a classic. I'm not one, but there are fans of the infamous "Beamish" episode, including "the Arizonian" who notes, "Truly, Kelly Garret is one of the most enduring characters in TV history." I don't like "Beamish" but I do agree,

12. Angels on Wheels 
B

Another solid 70s 'craze'-capsule, this time it's the fast-paced world of women's roller derbyThe Angels investigate the recently killed "roller game" champ Karen. Her shady new boyfriend Joe Esposito has simultaneously disappeared. A suitcase factors into the plot. Sister Barbara hires them and thinks it's all about the suitcase. Is she wrong?

A real unfunny aspect here is Bosley being so cheap at every step. Remember how ritzy the pilot was way back in 1976, when the Angels had two mediators between them and Charlie and were brought in from their swanky private lives to go fleece the bad guys and earn themselves a 250,000. fee? I guess that was so they could go pro bono on cracker cases like these the rest of their lives and endure Bosley's nickel-and-diming them on expenses like medical bills from attempted assassinations.

Jill poses as Karen's sister, "you're like any other jock on this team!" Jerry gets told to "use the napalm!" The usually clueless Kelly makes some good moves here and looks great in, once again, all black - this time a slick pantsuit that shows off her great, um, ass, though I hate to say it as I'm trying to be classy, but sometimes she and the others can look so undernourished they seem compressed in an improper aspect ratio. Even so, it hurts seeing her fall for the same trick twice, and drive sabotaged cars... also twice! Charlie plays deux ex machina by calling her out of the blue to tell her there's a bomb in her car, even somehow knowing she left the briefcase behind. Maybe Bosley does have a point about her wasting cars.  Jill does some real skating (I think); the plot is complex without being obtuse and the suspects and bad guys are entertaining rather than rote thugs: a Cruella Deville-style blonde named Jessica Farmer (Andra Akers); a "roller game" dykeaholic named Bad Betty King (Kres Mersky); Hugh Morris (Dick Sargent), the sole beneficiary of the roller girls' life insurance and victim of his own half-baked "Texas" accent. Meanwhile Charlie bribes phone operators (with sexual favors) to back up the Angels' resumes as working for the state board of insurance. Yes, they cover their bases this time - a reflection of some good writing to compensate for Bosley's cheapness (besides the client always assumes the price of 'expenses'). Best is how the bad guy's Alpha thug is stuck on crossword puzzle and gets uppity when Kelly suggests he could be a male centerfold in her made-up magazine. "You Gloria Steinem types turn me off," he says.

Poor Steve Sandor, outwitted at every turn, both here and in the Tiffany Bolling classic BONNIE'S KIDS!

13. Angel Trap
D

A slightly elderly but oh-so charming Italian or French hitman known as Jericho (Fernando Lamas) is offing Townsend's old war buddies. He's nice to a kitten he finds, though, and also to Jill, who honey traps him at a piano bar. It's a slow and kind of dumb filler episode, so you know it's written by Ed Lakso, a decent 'story editor' (when he's not overstretched) but the bane of later seasons when he goes it alone. Old Ed's in no hurry to make sense or get to the point --in tone it's a bit like Vertigo with Fernando Lamas as Kim Novak. He romances Jill in the park where the hit's supposed to go down. Kelly poses as a suspiciously beautiful hotdog vendor; Sabrina poses as the next target's much younger girlfriend. Unless you're hypnotized by watching Lamas sit in a car and pet a kitten, then you may weep as the second most achingly dull episode in the series thus far comes to pass, i.e. unlucky 13. The motives for all concerned are pretty lame, though it's interesting to think there spies in WW2 who were still able to get decent (pre-Viagra) erections and run detective agencies even in the 70s.

My dad's Time subscription was always ground zero for my nine year-old hormone carbonizing
I wasn't sure what it was about this particular cover that made my 10 year-old self feel so....
pleasantly tortured?
14. "The Big Tap-Out"
C+

A Tony Curtis-esque gambing addict part-time thief has the ingenious idea of breaking into a big office building stealing a bunch of cash and then dropping the stolen loot into an envelope pre-addressed to himself and dumping it down the company's own mail chute before the cops get him, trusting the people in the mailroom won't think twice about it. The chief of police, who catches him on the way out the door, can't figure it out, so he throttles the gambler, gets in trouble for it, then asks Charlie to help convict the guy and together they arrange an elaborate con that lets you know the movie The Sting was breaking big at the time.

Pros: the casino is hidden inside an LA movie theater showing Altman's California Split, but the actual inside of the room is the same old old wood panelling and red curtain set, with around 20 people 'gambling.' To help with the con, Charlie recruits a presumedly real dealer who does some slow but interesting card tricks to amuse the angels. It's that sort of digression and ambling quality that gets me relaxed while, say, sick with a cold and home from work

Cons: It's hard to believe the Angels would bother with a con that clearly stretches over a course of weeks or days to lure a small time thief into doing one more big job, just to absolve an abusive cop, pro bono no less! It requires an extra dose of mindlessness to not wake up to these little things, but don't forget, you had to appease the kids, the old folks, and the parents in between, all at once on ABC in those days. You learned to just tolerate the stupidity, and after all--it was hard to remember the plot after the commercial breaks anyway, because you were still talking to each other and doing things in the 70s. We were still alive.

15. Angels on a String
C

The Angels get a three-day vacation 'with pay' - oh wow so generous. Bosley all but pisses himself. They've fallen far since their quarter million take home pay days in the pilot. Bosley is expected to stay home and man the books, thank god. Where is he from, the moon? Paid vacation is pretty common, you moron!! Right there I'm subtracting ten points for Lakso-hackso-itis.

Outside of the show, on the news, this must have been when everyone was talking about Lech Walesa. He's here in effigy as Peter Wycnski (Theodore Bickel in a terrible gray Beatle wig). Sabrina gushes all over him as he tells her what slivovitz is. "Such a pretty head," he tells her, "and full of much information." Whoa, Peter! That's, like, poetry. Kelly is playfully horrified that Sabrina has a crush on a "sixty year-old man!" It won't be the first time Kelly comes off as something of a prude--or is she jealous? Does the friendship of Kelly and Sabrina have an undercurrent of lesbian pair bonding? Walesa wouldn't be on the cover Time until the early 80s but this was the era when terrorists were white as often as not, and we did negotiate with them, and they started hijacking so many planes they were using them like cabs, so we had to get tough and let them know we would not negotiate with them anymore.

What does that have to do with anything? I forget.

Cons: Sabrina's gushing expository dialogue about the "war of words" seems a little off, as does her tacky maid disguise with glasses that all but make her blind. The dialogue is like Hemingway crossed with a sixteen year old trying to fake his parents' handwriting. I'm being mean, but sometimes Lakso just gets my goat, as do painted-gray Beatles wigs meant to seem 'Polish.' And the idea that a big political meet with heavy security looks like the same wood paneled restaurant set we see over and over, for nearly any occasion. Or am I jealous, too?

16. Dirty Business
B

Some goons torch the storage vault of a film developing lab. Naturally the Angels are called in to investigate. You'll figure out right away the goons were probably getting rid of some evidence of their car at the scene of a crime that was caught in the background of someone's XXX establishing shot. Too easy! But there is a vague post-modern vibe that lifts it out of the gutter, with a wardrobe stalking and little Bo Peep meets a shepherd on the back soundstage. The girls end up trolling through lots of dirty movie footage, making wry comments about how tacky it all is, and reminding the chump owner of the soundstage that it's illegal. Was XXX illegal in 1976? Even if it was for.... educational and scientific purposes only?

Pros: A red herring Che Guevara type named Tolchak gives Sabrina a deranged but accurate harangue about the evils of white bread, "the rape of the innocent strong wheat!" Alan Feinstein plays a smoov D.A. with a great Jewfro who comes onto Jill at the cop station; they exhibit some real chemistry together and he's very good at radiating a strong slithery charm that's suspicious but not obvious. There's a good chase up a hill with Kelly and Sabrina, their guns out, after knocking over the bad guys. And I always like when the motives of the bad guys were at least at one point well-intended; and when violence isn't going to lead anywhere, most would rather go to jail quietly than die in a blaze of glory. They are after all, white collar. Best of all, Sabrina and Kelly rock more of that slightly lesbian vibe here. Sexual or not, they love each other and Jill's kind of their de facto little sister. Whatever they've got going on, it's making Kelly especially luminous, with a perfect hair wave. She looks great in red and rocks a great naive hick twang coming onto the adult film director.

17. The Vegas Connection
A

The girls go to a Vegas of L.A. studio interiors cut with stock Vegas B-roll. Much sleuthing and sneaking ensues. A typically good first season episode; as usual the tone is more adult and the Angels more on top of their game than in subsequent seasons.

Pros - Can that possibly be John Agar in a black toupee and leisure suit as Cass Harper, sleazy entertainment coordinator / pimp to a Vegas casino called the Versailles? No, it's a guy named Michael Callan. Kelly gets to kick the ass of a rude Gina Gershon in Showgirls 'pro.' It's pretty nasty since all the girl does is push her once in a girly way and Kelly uses all her karate moves, tosses her into the scenery and bruises her face in order to get her out of the picture so she can take her place as Bosley's prostitute! All to no real result! Jill gets to outfox a dour tall tough guy who suspects her when he spots her in two disparate places; the action moves from poker games in a county where it's legal to going from LA to Vegas via a blackmail cartel; Blackie Dammett (great name!) is Freddy, "Anything you want, Freddy will get it for ya." And Sabrina kicks ass posing as a gambling commission accountant who points out to mob casino owner Scharf he's being bilked by Cass.

A good example of a single potent scene comes with an expertly delivered monologue Brooke Bundy as 'Elspeth' (a girl getting strung along by Cass Harper who becomes their informant) to "good listeners" Sabrina and Kelly in her one room apartment. She talks about coming to Vegas for a showgirl gig proffered by Cass and her refusal to return to prostitution when that doesn't pan out. Her eyes moisten as she fights back tears in classic method display. Our Angels are glad they were never so broke and lonesome they had to consider walking the streets to pay the bills. There's a nice parallel between Bosley cracking the Angels up by acting macho to impress Elspeth ("check out the electronic equipment!" he says on the way out, and they crack up), her getting a goodnight kiss from him, and Cass's overall slithery pimp trip. They apologize to Bosley for presuming the mastermind is a man, out to get prostitutes to a certain room for shakedown pics with blackmail-able high rollers. It's cool that the casino is all mobbed up, yet that's not the subject - they're Italian but decent guys who don't like their casino floor used for blackmail operations. Bad for business.

Cons - Bosley gets unbearably tacky posing as a guffawing, Texas high-rolling stereotype ("Bless you for an honest man!") Yeeesh, go easy Bos. The vibe is nice and mellow but once again there's the odd juxtapositions of cheapness with extravagance, Bos mentions billing clients for long distance phone calls like it's a ton of money, but no mention made of the rented Rolls they leave in the desert.

18. Terror on Ward One
B

One of my favorite psych moments in the series comes in this hospital set episode, wherein Farrah drops by the little in-hospital crash pad room of creepy "kissing intern" Quincy. With his wine and microwave pasta card table seduction, he's trying to be the Italian lover, but nothing can prepare him for Jill, who comes onto him full bore. Leaning back on his sad little twin bed, Jill's like OK Quincy, you're all talk or are you ready to throw down? He freezes and stalls. Yeah! Don't rush me!! Hahah I Love that shizz as you well know from my incessant going on about The Seduction , touting of Lacanian models of desire, and my own personal experiences at my ex-roommate's cocaine and models parties. Besides, any giallo fan will guess the real assailant a mile off. If not, well, maybe it's Dr. Danworth and maybe it's a patient named Halverston. Possibly it's the black-haired nurse who used to be blonde and "didn't have much luck." The old ugly nurse gives Bosley a thermometer up the ass ("Madame, you are a sadist") when he goes undercover as a patient ("a bone spur" in his toe). Once Bosley mentions his sharp eye and clever tongue, you know he'll end up zonked on pain killers."Halverston, you are a blunt instrument" says Bos to his hospital roommate. "Rape is a very frightening word," Charlie intones, but it's Bosley who's most terrified of being penetrated.

All in all, a solid episode that's relatively blandly filmed but screamed with great gusto. The word 'rape' is seldom mentioned in the show, but here it's more like a lame fumbling followed by being easily pushed into a table and then running away from or by a surgical masked assailant.

Pros: Smith's hair is really looking good this episode, bouncy and curling in all the right ways. Farrah's seems like she needs a good six inch trim. Both look great in hospital white. I also like Sabrina's pastel shirt and gray blazer (she's posing as an undercover journalist). The use of an experimental amphetamine and the fact so many doctors take it, comes into the foreground in a way we seldom see in shows about the crazy world of hospitals (if your ER intern has been up for 24 hours you better hope he's on speed, otherwise he'll fall asleep halfway through your stitches). For fans of the 'don't ask / don't show/ just read the clues' lesbian coupling of Sabrina and Kelly, they share lots of great casual improv affection during the exposition scenes.

Cons: Sabrina's the most incompetent of them all this time, letting a suspect get her alone in the basement, unarmedBosley's too busy brushing his teeth to hear a special delivery arriving for him three feet away - allowing his roommate to get the confidential papers. The banter between Bos, the old nurse and the crotchety roommate is nowhere near as endearing as they all seem to think, though Bos does a good pill recovery voice (Sabrina notes "I'm glab do see you doo Bosley") He later tells the orderlies "didden I dell you I'm on the pill?" - You're a little old to be a mother, the orderly notes). Pills are so easily switched, it is in fact a bit like the 1972 movie The Hospital as far as criminal mismanagement. The idea of Bos getting someone else's pills and surgery is pretty hamfisted and wrong--he's blamed. Hawr Hawr. He was pretty competen in most of the old episodes up to now, he seems to have descended a few rungs of competence to become like a children's clown. That's what you get for being a pinch-penny, Bosley!

19. Dancing in the Dark
B

A dance studio gives lessons to dotty rich old ladies as a front for a blackmail operation with towheaded Tony (future Jaclyn Smith husband Dennis Cole) as the honey trap. The Angels are hired by the widow of a Hall-of-Famer major league baseball player who had to pay ten grand to not have her honor (and therefore his) impugned. "Sabrina's a little spaced," says Kelly, posing as the sleazy blackmail detective's replacement photographer (basically the same role she played in the pilot). Once again, Smith shows she can be truly foxy when playing someone mercenary and confident, this time in an all-black fashion update on the trench coat and fedora.

Jill joins the dance studio staff and convinces the owner to add disco to the curriculum, which she
hears' is all the rage. "The Hustle" is the newest dance to be taught (huge at the time - we even learned it in grade school gym class!). Sabrina once again wears nerdy glasses to disguise herself as a gullible rich widow. There's a lot of wooden panelling and shag rug for the fans of 70s decor. When Sabrina pretends to pass out, Kelly comes in all in cat burglar black to take pics and Peter ties up her arm with a rubber tube and leaves a needle by the bed so it makes her look like a junkie! I wonder how much of this kind of racket has dwindled in the age of Photoshop. Now no one necessarily believes any photo!

Pros: Sleazy detective Schaefer is played by Logan Ramsey, who was the cop in Head (1968). He's got his eye on your punks. A deserted bowling alley gets a lot of mileage as a meeting place for blackmail payoffs and what in the end will inevitably a showdown involving lanes and pin tosses. There's all sorts of trying to pick each other up, with Jaclyn Smith saying "I do love pie" to the owner of the corrupt studio; Bosley massaging Brie's feet after she and the gigolo dance all night. There's also plenty of space for the Angels and Bos to spread out into the nicks and crannies of the scenes.

Cons: A hammy senior character actor (Benny Baker) swamps an apparently superfluous dance class scene and Sabrina's nasal-whine heiress schtick is so half-assed it's plain beneath her. The cost of their elaborate sting --lots of business and mansion rentals and posing and unposing all for a client to recover ten grand "and a nice retainer for the office" is ridiculous. They'd be out of business in no time flat with that economic logic.

20. "I will Be Remembered"
A-

Ida Lupino plays a rich old movie star who's being gaslit. "Laura...Laura.." calls a ghostly voice (but her name is Gloria) at night when she's alone in her mansion. A crack of lightning illuminates a figure hanging from the tree outside her window.  "If she isn't crazy," notes Kelly, "it looks like someone is trying to drive her there." Wakka-wakka goes the guitar. Car doors slam and chimes toll. The reflexiveness of a film studio setting is nicely used, with tropes harkening back to swell old films like The Death Kiss (1933). And it's nice that all these grand old 30s-40s divas found work as gaslit versions of themselves being attacked on set in TV detective series like this, the use of suddenly illuminated horror tableaux within an otherwise easy plot allows for all sorts of great little haunted house ride moments we kids loved. Everyone wins, especially the producer since the set is already there; the props are to hand: a stage light falling down and almost hitting Jill as she snoops on set; a dead animal in her dressing room, etc. As far as they go, this one is pretty good. Well-written and Sabrina is on the ball. The girls work as a fluid team, their flawless hair and keen-eyes ensuring they don't lag behind on solving the mystery.  Lupino is--as always--a small but powerful queen doing great bits of 'getting old' business like needing to squint with thick reading glasses to try and see the faded faces of suspects in her clippings book. Waka-wakka-wakka Ba-ba-baroooum. 

Pros: One of the great things about the 'battleaxe' era is that these broads have no problem struggling with old age, madness, and irrelevance on the small screen. Thanks to the phenomenal success of Whatever Happened to Baby Jane a decade or so earlier, they were indulged and able 'let it all hang out' or as Lupino does, underplay instead, enunciating every word like she's determined not to seem unbalanced (or drunk), and that's one reason she's endured as such a class act. "You don't climb your way to the top, you claw your way there," she notes, "and there are those you hurt along the way." We can feel in those words the endurance required to work as one of the only female directors in the business and be respected as well as being an accomplished actress, able to modulate quiet and reserved to viciously insane with seamless gradient pacing. Once Sabrina gets the scent of a clue here eyes widen slightly and she gets very cool. Jackson's skin is luminous here, as much as the always flawless Smith.

And here, once the Angels are on the set (within the set), a horde of older character actors get to shine too, like Richard Libertini and Aharon Ipalé as two talent agents Kelly sees to get a SAG card (they also do extra work in between booking other acts, so show up at the office dressed like "injuns"). Sabrina says of Gloria's lesser part in the production: "I remember the role of the mother, that's a good part," and we can't help but recall a certain Lee Tracy praising the 'Beachcomber' role to a drunk John Barrymore in Dinner at Eight. The bit with the fresco is actually pretty fascinating - and--take it as one who knows first-hand how chicanerous the art world is--plausible.

Cons: We learn "Laura" liked liverwurst with horseradish sandwiches from 'Lunchie', played by Louis Guss (the old man excited about Cosmo's moon in Moonstruck) which is kind of gross, but surely rich in valuable iron. It's funny in a meta kind of way that, though Charlie's Angels itself is filmed at a studio, the studio they're filming in for Laura's big comeback looks doubly cheap. For the second episode in a row Kelly winds up being shot at by the bad guys while climbing around behind partitions and the Angels race to the rescue. None of them have to fire a shot though the perp is armed, but that's show biz. Lunchie can tell ya 'bout show-biz, especially back when it looked after its own as far as giving a day's pay to old Hollywood bit players like himself, who are--even today-- always willing to throw themselves into a throwaway scene with every tied old local color tic in the repertoire.

21. Angels at Sea
B-

Bosley drinks a neat whiskey. Someone is sabotaging a client's cruise line, so the Angels head aboard for "first-class accommodations." Since they won't be able to exit the ship once at sea, Charlie says they should vote on whether to go or not, which I think is cool, as his is the exact reason why I don't like long trips on boats. Riddling impressionist Frank Gorshin turns out to be the saboteur but when the Angels grill him on where he planted all the bombs he delivers a long monologue of impressions instead. His Bing Crosby, Bogart, Ed Sullivan, Richard Burton, and Jack Nicholson are all good; the W.C. Fields is meh; the Bela Lugosi is awful; the John Wayne is fair; Cary Grant is okay; Sidney Greenstreet in The Maltese Falcon is nicely done, sir, nicely done, and meanwhile the bomb is ticking so it's like man hurry up, do your Jimmy Stewart and let's move on. None of the Angels around him are smiling at his endless repertoire, thinking: fucking shut up! Brilliant. He goes on anyway, he won't tell them a thing but he will do Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas, then Boris Karloff, Lee J. Cobb, George C. Scott as Patton, Bogie (again), and, Bing- "Bum-Boom Boom Boom" re: the bombs and babbling and laughing as maniacally. We don't know whether to applaud or throw wrenches. Can he read minds? Did he learn to tell the future after an auto accident? I believe it, but nonetheless, this compendium of impression-monologue wankery and half-assed nods to ESP falls rather short. Too uncomfortable to be funny, it does remind us that once all of America knew the same old celebrities, because they only had a three channels, and syndicated old movies, so even kids knew who George C. Scott and Sidney Greenstreet were. Those days are done.

Pros: It looks at the end like the girls are going to triple-team some handsome young stud serving them drinks. "We'll be gentle," Kelly says. Gorshin aside, the Angels seem unusually giddy and free-wheeling this go-round, hazing Bos for getting his clothes stolen and conked over the head. They hit on a good trick to get the saboteur to out himself, even if it's so old it has whiskers, and Kelly gets to spring down from a vent all sleek in a catsuit. Badass, but then she's overpowered in a second, and the Angels ambush is escaped easily, so why bother? The whole advantage to holding a gun on someone is to be out of range of them taking it from you, because you don't need to be right up against someone with a gun, presuming you can hit the broadside of a barn at two paces, just keep them away from the light switch and any doors or windows. I'm just telling you, dear reader, in case it comes up!

Cons: The whole shortwave radio bomb squad defuser thing drags on longer than Gorshin's monologue.When Bosley's hit in the stomach he goes down flailing and rolling his eyes like a real spazz. Oh Bosley! The old fire in the engine room trick's so old it has whiskers on the whiskers the other thing had, but who watches this show for innovation? It's the link between the flare-pants and denim jacket 70s and classic black and white Hollywood that we all want and even need, at least if we're old enough to remember a time before VHS, when old movie showings were precious enough to skip softball practice for.

22. The Blue Angels
B-

There's murders in the massage parlor ("all vehicles: respond to a purported disturbance at Paradise Massage" - I'll bet). Crooked cops are involved! Sabrina starts working the vice desk as a 'consultant' with an impressive record in undercover vice from Arizona, but is stunned when her partner suggests she put on fringe hip-huggers. Jill and Kelly head to work at the Paradise, there to wait for the corrupt cops to make their shakedown. This leads to some pretty weird interactions when the customers realize these new girls aren't down with happy endings. I mean, actually, it doesn't: We never see any of Jill's alleged massages or find out why she's the only one working there. In fact I don't think we even see anyone massaged at all. Not that I'd want to, considering the clientele.

Pros: Brezhnik--the Paradise's landlord--wants everyone to wear leaves ("actually, first: tiger skins. But where are the tigers today? Nowhere!") and bemoans the body temple has been "violated - filled with cloth worshippers!" The always great Timothy Carey is the massage parlor's actual owner. He's shot way too early, but at least he gets a few lines of dialogue, demanding protection from a crooked vice cop, eyes getting all wide and voice rising up in great waves of coiled beatnik madness in that wondrous Carey way, reminding us the real reason Kazan should have been booed at the Oscars was for dubbing Carey's voice in East of Eden.

Marilyn Joi and Vidonne are memorable as former Paradise masseuses. Vidonne (left) gets off a great stoner laugh and her lamé dress, replete with huge black choker-scarf combo (left) is ubiquitously 70s in a way that all us boys from the era remember as being slightly dangerous, slightly New York City in ways we knew we weren't yet ready for. The quality of set decoration seems more upscale than usual during the scene where Dirk Benedict takes Kelly to a fancy restaurant.

Cons: Jill seems contemptuous of the idea anyone would get a massage without expecting sex. What about the guys (as I have been) who just wanted a massage due to intense shoulder pain and were 'pressured' into sex (quite literally)? It's pretty stupid that though the Angels are hired by the DA to investigate crooked cop involvement in the massage business, they presume they must have got the license plate wrong when the car that chases them turns out to belong to a police academy cadet. The main bad vice cop wants to kill his new female partner (Sabrina) within days for no real reason except she might get too close to his setup--which makes no earthly sense. Not to mention why Sabrina lets herself get chased around an alley by a sedan driven by Dirk Benedict, choosing to drop her bag (with her gun in it!) at the first sign of trouble, even though she's 'undercover' as a cop going undercover as a hooker, and all three levels should have at least some rudimentary skill with self-defense. Even a blind hooker knows how to defend themselves better than Sabrina does, and shooting a driver through a windshield from ten feet away is a piece of cake for anyone not cross-eyed and suffering the St. Vitus Dance or both. Could be she's scared and not thinking straight or that the writer is our old friend Ed Lakso, whose life experience seems limited to his own old scripts. Cue music!

Couldn't find a shot for some of these eps, but I did find this, one of the pics I cut out from wherever 
it was (TV Guide?) and fell in love with Kate Jackson in particular. 
On long drives I would tape it to the back
of the driver seat so I could gaze at it and pretend it was a TV. 
No one back then ever dreamed back then that a TV right there would one day come 
to be a standard safety feature. 
--

So that's the season. As we've seen, the Angels were very versatile, adaptable, and smart, able to use their charms to bewilder male suspects and make dangerous situations easier to diffuse. Depending on the writer or the mood the vibe could change from as adult as Police Woman to as juvenile as Nancy Drew. Their intelligence and confidence in their self-defense skills and ability with a gun could also fluctuate. Reall, their only real enemy was lame scripts. Especially in the back half of the season, the scripts were often hack jobs written by people who seemed to have absolutely no experience researching police or detective methods.

Mainly, though, the show has value as time capsules, for it never failed to incorporate passing fads and politics, skateboards, UFOs, singles bars, and great clothes; Farrah's hairstyle on the other hand, made a lasting impression all its own, singlehandedly and most unfortunately starting the trend that would eventually result in the dreaded 80s pouff.

Farrah would leave after this season, a big star whose promising career was promptly derailed by the maligned and endlessly-delayed Saturn 3. But I always kind of liked her replacement, Cheryl Ladd, just a tad better. Though she was supposed to be Jill's younger sister, she always seemed somehow more mature and womanly, less liable to let her guard down, better able to read a situation, especially where men were involved. Not only that, her Kris-who would see the show to the end, as would Kelly (Jackson). Once Kate left after season three, the bulk of heavy lifting fell to Kelly and Kris, who seemed tired and resentful of the awful mauve pullovers they--by then--had to wear, slaves to fashion as they were they had to follow fashion down the tubes. Tanya Roberts swooped in for season five but by then it was almost too late.. the 80s were upon us all.

The show gets maligned as "T&A" but really there's very little of that, unless for you that includes watching pretty, smart girls do jobs normally reserved for men, and do them better than the men, most often. That would mean, to you, the entire woman workforce during WW2 was "T&A" too, as was Billi Jean King's victory over Bobby Riggs, and that you're either ignorant (never saw the show and are just parroting) or otherwise misled.

We must remember that feminism was still new in the 70s and was then called women's lib and though the Angels are remembered as airheads, that judgment reflects more on the shoddy backwards patriarchal trends that began to re-emerge in the 80s where women were either sexy and fun or good at their job, never both. To have some girl whose young, hot, smart be better at a middle-aged idiot man's job than he is, that must really make that guy feel threatened. Well, the Angels would even let you talk about it. If you didn't just lash out with dismissive name calling or violence, they might even help you get over it and grow as a person.

So, hey, watch the episodes before you label them sexist jiggle tripe. There's almost no jiggle at all - seldom a bathing suit, never underwear, always class and style, sisterhood, warmth and courageous forward motion, striding bravely into one male-dominated domain after another. These girls weren't just 'imitation men' action heroes, or mindless babes with guns, they were female investigators, and they always got their man, usually without killing him, and through using a woman's strengths vs. a man's weaknesses. Confidence, intelligence and hotness all in one packet? Forgive Spelling his shallow trespasses. Like Hefner, or Roger Corman, beneath the surface tawdriness and exploitation camp value is a genuine love of strong women that's so much better than the reverse, isn't it? Good lord. It better be.

Onward to
SEASON TWO
SEASON THREE

1 comment:

  1. These reviews would be improved if they, y'know, reviewed the actual episodes. Kelly does not get amnesia in "To Kill an Angel," nor do the other Angels show her picture around looking for her; she goes straight from the shooting scene to the hospital, memories intact. And whatever narrative is being related for "Bullseye" shares almost nothing with the "Charlie's Angels" episode of the same title.

    On the other hand, your description of Kelly in "The Killing Kind" ("like a cold-hearted mannequin zombie killer") is pretty awesome, so there's that.

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