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  1. Mar 7, 1973 · The Six Million Dollar Man: Directed by Richard Irving. With Lee Majors, Barbara Anderson, Martin Balsam, Darren McGavin. After an astronaut and test pilot is catastrophically mutilated in a test plane crash, he is rebuilt and equipped with nuclear powered bionic limbs and implants.

    • (5.2K)
    • Adventure, Sci-Fi
    • Richard Irving
    • 1973-03-07
  2. May 22, 2020 · 850 Files. 39 Original. If the late Sir Roger Moore made a name for himself as a real British hero in the pages of history, then the living legend Sir Lee Majors is well known...

  3. Watch The Moon and the Desert - Part 1 (Season 1, Episode 1) of Six Million Dollar Man or get episode details on NBC.com.

  4. Apr 8, 2020 · The Six Million Dollar Man: The Moon and the Desert Telefilm (1973) Review | Lee Majors | Bionic Man. Lainie and Jim do a "second take" on the original TV Movie that started off...

    • 7 min
    • 1855
    • Lainie Loo Entertainment
    • Synopsis
    • Naming Controversy
    • The Original Film vs. The Series
    • The Moon and The Desert
    • Quotes
    • Trivia
    • Comic Book Adaptation
    • Nitpicks

    Steve Austin, a civilian member of NASA's space program and moon-walk veteran, loses control during a test flight of a new aircraft and crashes. Both his legs are crushed, his right arm is sheared off, and his left eye is irreversibly injured when his experimental aircraft crash-lands on the runway. (He sustains other injuries that are not specifie...

    The fact that it was an adaptation of Cyborg created some controversy about the film's proper title over the years. It has often been called, Cyborg: The Six Million Dollar Man, in part due to the connection to the novel, but also because the initial image in the telefilm was of a computer screen, defining the term cyborg. Hence, "cyborg" was the f...

    The film remains notable for a number of unique attributes which made it distinct from the rest of the televised adventures of Steve Austin. Unlike either the novel or all that followed, it didn't feature Oscar Goldman, nor did the word "bionics" appear at all. Rudy Wells, though present, is portrayed as a much closer friend to Steve than he ever w...

    In syndication, the movie was used as the basis for a two-part adventure called The Moon and the Desert. In this later form, about 30 minutes of extra footage — drawn from subsequent episodes of the series proper as well as stock footage — were edited into the production, creating numerous continuity problems. As a mixture of the work of two differ...

    Steve: Yes sir? General: Have you any idea what time it is? Steve: (looks up at the sky)About five to seven? Rudy: Steve, you got a positive genius for antagonizing the wrong people. Steve:I know, it's story of my life. Steve: (to Rudy)Dr. Frankenstein, I presume? Rudy: We've given you an eye for an eye, haven't we? An arm for an arm? Steve:My arm ...

    The mission that Spencer sends Austin on in the pilot, is based on the second mission in Caidin's Cyborgnovel, although in the novel Austin works with a female partner; in the film, he works solo....
    Austin's communications with the ground prior to the crash are more extensive -- and completely different -- than that heard in either the followup Wine, Women and Wartelefilm or the later TV series.
    The flight/crash sequence includes detail not mentioned in the regular series opening credits. The most notable difference between the crash as shown here and that depicted in the series credits is...
    Dr. Wells mentions that the manual to the bionic arm has 840 pages and that Austin is to be furnished with a copy.

    Although the basic plot points of the TV movie (and the original novel) were adapted to some degree by both the Charlton Comics and Peter Pan Records licensees, a scene-for-scene adaptation of the TV movie titled El Hombre Nuclear was published in Spanish, adapted by Linton Howard with art by Pablo Martire Villar (who appears to have based some of ...

    In this film we see Austin running at full speed without the slow-motion effect later associated with the power, and a clip of him doing a test run from the pilot film would be included in the open...
    In the opening sequences, and as established in the TV movie, it is seen that the right shoulder, structures supporting and moving the right shoulder, both hips, and structures supporting and movin...
    Before his flight Austin is seen in his spacesuit, with an aide carrying his oxygen supply. This is standard practice, except is redundant in this case as Austin's helmet is open, eliminating the n...
    It could be considered rather convenient that Steve's crash appears to occur at the same time as the OSO meeting, however given the way the narrative is presented, there's nothing saying the two ev...
  5. The Six Million Dollar Man is an American science fiction and action television series, running from 1973 to 1978, about a former astronaut, USAF Colonel Steve Austin, portrayed by Lee Majors. After a NASA test flight accident, Austin is rebuilt with bionic implants that give him superhuman strength, speed and vision.

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  7. The Six Million Dollar Man - Season 1 Episode 1 - The Moon and the Desert Part 1. Sign up for Peacock to watch this episode. Get Started. The Moon and the Desert Part 1. Season 1 Episode 148m. TVPG. Rudy Wells recalls his first meeting with Steve, and the accident that led to his bionic implants. Home. TV Series. The Six Million Dollar Man.

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