Old shows that you enjoy?

Don’t know that was ever shown in the UK. I did watch Tailspin though.

It was shown on the BBC on Monday evenings, but the show only lasted one 20-episode season before being cut due to the ratings not justifying the show's budget. Talespin creators Jymn Magon and Mark Zaslove cite Tales as one of the inspirations for their cartoon.
One of the things that Tales did, which was unusual for an adventure-of-the-week show in 1982 (it also included a recurring character in a wheelchair), was to give the characters a bit of actual dramatic depth, and their backstories weren't just a descriptive sentence justifying their character archetype. It would have been a really good show if it had been continued - the box set included character bios from the show's story bible, and they go into greater detail about the past and future of the characters. The drunk mechanic, for example, has a family tragedy to blame for his drinking, and the German spy on the island, a comedy character, is noted as having later died in an infamous battle on the Russian front in WWII.
 

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Deep Space 9, obviously. Though I personally don’t think that should count, because I’m going to count “stuff that was first on TV when I was a child.” So instead, I’ll promote these two, which first aired in the U.K. 1980-2 (I was 5-7 years old) and which I remember watching when they were first broadcast in England.

Star Fleet was the U.K. adaptation of X-Bomber, a Japanese puppet show and my first introduction to the tropes of sci-fi anime. It was awesome. The Brian May theme helped.



Huckleberry Finn and His Friends was a Canadian-German production and mostly filmed in and around Vancouver, where I now live, especially at the Burnaby Village Museum and on the Samson V paddlewheeler (which I can just about see from my window, it’s a museum now).
"Huckleberry Finn and Friends" reminds me of another old Canadian show I used to watch, on CBC. "The Forest Rangers." It was primarily shot in Klienburg, Ontario, which is also the home of The McMichael Canadian Art Collection; the home of many paintings by The Group of Seven (I'm a supporter).

 

Crossbow


This was a 1980s half-hour historical adventure series showing William Tell getting involved with righting various injustices in Switzerland. Season one was good, and season two was still okay (but once he got reunited with his bratty son the irritation factor rose significantly). Avoid season three at all costs, however, because the quality of everything dropped significantly, when they apparently decided what the series needed was a Mad Max style wasteland in the middle of Switzerland where mythical beings ran sway. The production values started looking like a junior high school play, and it sucked so much the lead actor wasn't even in the series finale (not that I can blame him).

Still, it provided one and a half seasons of quality entertainment, with interesting characters (the main villain, Gessler, was excellent) and decent action.

Johnathan
 

Crossbow


This was a 1980s half-hour historical adventure series showing William Tell getting involved with righting various injustices in Switzerland. Season one was good, and season two was still okay (but once he got reunited with his bratty son the irritation factor rose significantly). Avoid season three at all costs, however, because the quality of everything dropped significantly, when they apparently decided what the series needed was a Mad Max style wasteland in the middle of Switzerland where mythical beings ran sway. The production values started looking like a junior high school play, and it sucked so much the lead actor wasn't even in the series finale (not that I can blame him).

Still, it provided one and a half seasons of quality entertainment, with interesting characters (the main villain, Gessler, was excellent) and decent action.

Johnathan
It vaguely rings a bell, but I've never seen it.
 





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