So..., I was at Cracker Barrel a couple of weekends ago, and found the full single year of the TV series Hawkeye starring Lynda Carter [wonder woman] and Lee Horsley [Matt Houston]. It was done in 1995, three years after Last of The Mohicans.
Well they try pretty hard, but I wonder if the folks in Hollywood are so insulated from the rest of the world they simply don't know where to go or where to look for stuff? The executive producer was Stephen J. Cannell who did a bunch of successful series in the '80's and '90's but this was I guess the exception to the rule....
The rifles and muskets are Pedersoli..., OK not bad, but the costuming for the men needs some work, and for Lynda Carter, IT SUCKS. :barf: Not to mention they tried to adapt some existing sets from Westerns for the show.
I don't know why costumers, who are often women too, do such a craptastic job on women's fashions in history when something is produced out of California. You can tell in some of the shots they are using reenactors as extras, as the costuming suddenly jumps up about "ten notches". God Forbid they'd ask the living historians what Carter should wear.....
But you see Lynda Carter without a cap, wearing a shift with short sleeves that end before her elbows, and she often is conducting business in her general store in the middle of the day while wearing a ball gown. :shocked2:
They are at a trading post inside a military fort, and you see the sentries walking the upper walkway on the walls... the tops of said walls only coming up to the sentries' thighs...so what they did was slap a catwalk up on a single story, Western, cavalry stockade. :shake:
Rodney Grant [Dances with Wolves: Wind in His Hair] plays Chingachgook, and does a pretty good job, and the part is written pretty well for his character, so he is actually fun to watch.
Well for $12 it's bad but fun to watch in some parts, and real pity they didn't spend a bit more time and some more cash as it had some potential.
LD
Well they try pretty hard, but I wonder if the folks in Hollywood are so insulated from the rest of the world they simply don't know where to go or where to look for stuff? The executive producer was Stephen J. Cannell who did a bunch of successful series in the '80's and '90's but this was I guess the exception to the rule....
The rifles and muskets are Pedersoli..., OK not bad, but the costuming for the men needs some work, and for Lynda Carter, IT SUCKS. :barf: Not to mention they tried to adapt some existing sets from Westerns for the show.
I don't know why costumers, who are often women too, do such a craptastic job on women's fashions in history when something is produced out of California. You can tell in some of the shots they are using reenactors as extras, as the costuming suddenly jumps up about "ten notches". God Forbid they'd ask the living historians what Carter should wear.....
But you see Lynda Carter without a cap, wearing a shift with short sleeves that end before her elbows, and she often is conducting business in her general store in the middle of the day while wearing a ball gown. :shocked2:
They are at a trading post inside a military fort, and you see the sentries walking the upper walkway on the walls... the tops of said walls only coming up to the sentries' thighs...so what they did was slap a catwalk up on a single story, Western, cavalry stockade. :shake:
Rodney Grant [Dances with Wolves: Wind in His Hair] plays Chingachgook, and does a pretty good job, and the part is written pretty well for his character, so he is actually fun to watch.
Well for $12 it's bad but fun to watch in some parts, and real pity they didn't spend a bit more time and some more cash as it had some potential.
LD