a5c7b9f00b After a crippled test pilot is rebuilt with nuclear powered limbs and implants, he servesa unique intelligence agent. Air Force Colonel Steve Austin, an astronaut who had walked on the moon, is almost killed in a plane crash. Many of his damaged parts are replaced by experimental bionic limbs, including his right arm, his left eye, and both legs. These bionics give him superpowers suchincreased speed and strength and the ability to see long distances. To pay the U.S. Government back the six million dollars it cost to rebuild him, Austin goes to work for the Office of Scientific Investigationan Agent, investigating foreign spies, mad scientists, bombers, space aliens, and Bigfoot. I&#39;m not sure what $6 million dollars is now adjusted for inflation, or whether a reboot would by The Six-Million-Dollar Mana nod to The 40-Year-Old Virgin but this series was absolutely impressive, and demonstrated the might of the USA. It&#39;s probably no coincidence the show declined in the ratings with the election of Carter in 1976, so perhaps a reboot is in order.<br/><br/>Anyway, the opening scene is haunting, especiallyit&#39;s real footage of the craft crashing in the desert - check out Youtube. This show was great fun. It had a good premise, and Lee Majors was perfectly cast has Steve Austin, An astronaut who is injured while testing a jet. He loses both legs, one arm, one eye. But a secret government, decides to put robotic limbs on him. The Legs: He could run at 6o miles per hour. The Eye: He could see a little bit farther then normal. The Arm: It makes him has strong has 20 men. The government makes a secret agent. This show introduced the boring spin off The Bionic Woman. My favorite one was The Bigfoot episode, with Andre the Giant. A 6&#39;2 guy going at it with a 7&#39;5 guy, that was something to see. It had great special effects, but these it could not compete with the Matrix special effects.
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347 weeks ago