jesus amancio
The Time Tunnel first appeared on TV when I was 11 years old, and it has been four decades since I have seen any of Tony's and Doug's adventures. Thanks to the Starz Action Channel, I've recently had the opportunity to view a few of the episodes once more. Yes, it's a little more goofy than I thought all those years ago, especially when story lines start to turn around the appearance of aliens. But the show is also much better than some of the younger critics seem to be saying.How so? Well, think about the assumptions behind the Time Tunnel. The producers of this program ASSUMED its audience, back in 1966, had at least a passing familiarity not only with the history of the Titanic, the Alamo, the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, and Custer's Last Stand but also ASSUMED its audience was aware of the outlines of the story of the Trojan War, the War of 1812, the Siege of Khartoum, and the Dreyfuss Affair--and remember this was long BEFORE the making of PAPILLON. Imagine an hour long TV series today turning one of its plots around the Dreyfuss Affair! It couldn't happen. Today's audiences haven't heard of Dreyfuss and can't even tell you what CENTURIES Pearl Harbor or the American Civil War took place in.As strange as it may sound to the ears of the contemporary TV viewer, the truth is the Time Tunnel was geared towards a much more sophisticated audience than today's viewers, who are illiterate in their own culture and history. Could a TV series today do a story about the attempt to assassinate Abraham Lincoln--in 1861! The ability of the producers to take this all but forgotten historical incident and turn it into a hour long story could only have worked had the 1966 TV audience been well founded not only in the history of the American Civil War but in Lincoln's assassination in 1865.The fact is the Time Tunnel could not work for today's dubbed down TV viewers. You can't assume they know what they had for lunch yesterday, much less the history of their own nation or Western Civlization. It's so much easier--and necessary--to develop films and TV shows around cartoon heroes with no baggage and no grounding in all that nasty history.
kpapts
The Time Tunnel was a far advanced show for it's time. I read a question that asked why did Tony and Doug travel to the Titanic on the last show. This is completely backwards, this was the FIRST show. What I am curious about is why the Time Tunnel could bring other people from the past back to their time but could not get Doug and Tony back Home? One must remember that the Time Tunnel had partially non fictional stories along with some fiction added. As far as why they always had clean clothes when they transferred in time, it's because what had happened to them where they were had completely vanished when they left that time period as though they were never there, thus the clean and non-torn clothes re-appeared each time they were transferred in time.What I don't understand is why this show is not shown on METV and has never been shown in reruns anywhere since it was made.
wkozak221
I1 watched this series when it first came out. I thought it was great. I always liked Irwin Allen. He took risks. He plowed ahead and did what he wanted to regardless of what other people thought. This series was entertaining all around. It brought lessons about the titanic, Halley's comet, etc., every week. I wish the series ended with them getting back to the control room. I really do not understand why quantum leap was done. I think time tunnel was better all around. Also, ironically the two series ended the same way, Sam, Doug and tony were still in limbo somewhere in time.I guess the network thought at the time the series was too high brow. I enjoyed getting a mini historical lesson every week. I was only 8 in 1966. I wish sam, doug and tony could have made it back. It would have been a nice and fitting ending to both series.
qormi
When I was twelve, I loved this show. Now, it seems pretty bad. Tony and Doug were constantly transported from one historic destination to the next...the walls of Jehricho, the Titanic, the Civil War,...they could have landed near a small cottage in Latvia circa 1870, but no...they always had to appear amidst some profound historical event. That wasn't the least of the implausibilities, however. You see, Tony and Doug never changed their clothes. Doug wore a shirt, sportcoat, and tie; while Tony went through time in a turtleneck sweater. Turtlenecks make you itch and sweat after awhile. At what point, one wonders, did their deodorant fail? They also had no change of underwear. They stank. A lot.They were always randomly rescued right in the middle of a cliffhanger - rescued just in the nick of time. One of the more stupid episodes was when they were transported from the Renaissance to the Americam Civil War. Somehow, Machiavelli came along with them. He proceeded to manipulate the Civil War generals and play them off on each other. How Machiavellian. The one cool moment of the series was when they were in a bind in ancient Rome. The Roman legion was about to execute them when Mission Control succeeded in sending a man in a hardhat with a machine gun back in time to rescue them. He just let out a burst and knocked off about ten Romans.