View Full Version : Was The "New" Get Smart The Most Pointless TV Remake Ever?!?


Brian Damage
04-23-2011, 10:57 PM
http://i.huffpost.com/gadgets/slideshows/11570/slide_11570_153312_large.jpg?1303613675768

Before making headlines for being, um, not so smart, Andy Dick was cast as the heir apparent to Don Adams for a reboot of "Get Smart" in 1995. Fresh off the great "Ben Stiller Show," Dick was cast as the son of Maxwell Smart and Agent 99 in the new series. Unfortunately, "Get Smart" fever was only about 30 years past its expiration date, and this one fizzled out almost as unceremoniously as it started.

catlover79
04-23-2011, 11:14 PM
The show that introduced Andy Dick to the world? In a word, YES!!!

Marvo301
04-23-2011, 11:51 PM
They should have cast Ben Stiller instead of Andy Dick!!! Then maybe it wouldn't have been so pointless!

catlover79
04-23-2011, 11:57 PM
Barbara Feldon never appeared on this show, right? Or did she? I think I blocked the whole thing out. :eek: :crazy: :lol:

Adamantium
04-24-2011, 12:10 AM
Barbara Feldon never appeared on this show, right? Or did she? I think I blocked the whole thing out. :eek: :crazy: :lol:

She did appear in the show but not as a cast member. Just special guest if memory serves me right.

And I hardly think this is the show that introduced Andy Dick to the world. He did The Ben Stiller Show before this and after this became somewhat famous for the critically acclaimed (but mostly low-rated) sitcom NewsRadio. From there he did some MTV stuff and another sitcom, Less Than Perfect.

This show was a bad idea (the reboot, that is). It's not Andy Dick's fault the show failed. Besides, he was quite happy that it failed so he was able to do NewsRadio, which he found to be the better project.

Marvo301
04-24-2011, 12:11 AM
Barbara Feldon never appeared on this show, right? Or did she? I think I blocked the whole thing out. :eek: :crazy: :lol:
Or maybe you just blinked!! The show only lasted 7 episodes. Don Adams and Barbara Feldon both reprised their roles from the original series. Only now Max was the Chief and son Zach (played by Andy Dick) was a field agent working with his partner agent 66. (a beautiful female agent of course! - like father like son!)

catlover79
04-24-2011, 12:56 AM
Thanks, everyone. I should clarify and say this was the show that introduced ME to Andy Dick. He's always just creeped me out. I'm not saying that to be mean - I'm just stating it as a fact. If Barbara Feldon had only appeared in a limited capacity, it's no wonder I don't remember her from that show. :eek: :lol:

Marvo301
04-24-2011, 01:09 AM
Thanks, everyone. I should clarify and say this was the show that introduced ME to Andy Dick. He's always just creeped me out. I'm not saying that to be mean - I'm just stating it as a fact. If Barbara Feldon had only appeared in a limited capacity, it's no wonder I don't remember her from that show. :eek: :lol:
According to IMDB.com Barbara Feldon appeared in 5 of the 7 episodes of this show. I believe they were basically just cameo appearances. Agent 99 stopping by the office to visit her husband and son. Stuff like that since she was no longer an active agent.

Zoneboy
04-24-2011, 01:27 AM
http://i384.photobucket.com/albums/oo283/tzgames/GetSmart1995.jpg

catlover79
04-24-2011, 01:57 AM
^ :rofl: :brent

Jude The Obscure
04-24-2011, 04:52 PM
The "reboot" also forgot that 99 had twins in season 5 of the original show!

catlover79
04-24-2011, 05:48 PM
No, I seem to remember that the girl twin had gone into deep undercover work or went into witness protection. Don't ask me how/why I know that. :eek: :crazy: :lol:

treky
04-25-2011, 01:52 AM
The "reboot" also forgot that 99 had twins in season 5 of the original show!
yea, but on the original show they were quickley written out.

TV_on_the_Porch
04-25-2011, 07:43 PM
The twins weren't written out, the show was cancelled before they made it out of the cradle. In the 1988 reunion it was mentioned that they were in college.

TMC
08-02-2013, 02:45 AM
http://splitsider.com/2013/07/andy-dick-in-a-get-smart-remake-what-could-go-wrong/

When Get Smart premiered in 1965, its blend of Inspector Clouseau and James Bond redefined TV comedy. And rightfully so. Show creator Mel Brooks designed Get Smart to be different. "I was sick of looking at all those nice sensible situation comedies. They were such distortions of life…I wanted to do a crazy, unreal comic-strip kind of thing about something besides a family,” said Brooks. “No one had ever done a show about an idiot before. I decided to be the first." He succeeded.

Get Smart ran for five years and, later, spawned two movies, the Raspberry-nominated The Nude Bomb and 1989’s made-for-TV Get Smart, Again! While neither rekindled any interest in shoe phones, in 1995 the idea to revive the show bubbled, once again, to the surface. This time with Andy Dick.

Right before joining NewsRadio, Dick starred in Get Smart ‘95. Appearing alongside OG cast members Don Adams and Barbara Feldon as Maxwell and Agent 99, respectively, Dick became a symbol for everything wrong with the new series. Get Smart ’95 mixes the old and the new, hoping Andy Dick will be the adhesive to keep them all together. However, with his jokes and movements screaming over the rest of the cast, the show never matches the tone of the original nor sets a consistent one for itself.

Of adaptation and remakes, many directors talk about maintaining the spirit of the original version, honoring its traditions, but putting their own spin on it. This was not the case with Get Smart. Set thirty years after the original, Andy Dick plays the son of Max and 99, Zach Smart, an R&D wiz who somehow made it to the top of the Control, the CIA-like syndicate they work for. To help him, Maxwell, 99 (now a senator or something), and Agent 66, a younger, blonder version of 99, come to his aid, creating a nice spy family and the exact show Brooks avoided.

Get Smart fails to recognize its audience, mismatching classic Get Smart style with modern comedy. Max and 99 perform for the multi-camera playground of the 1960s, but don’t to realize how close this new camera is to their faces. Feldon, in particular, emotes as if we won’t be able to see her. The show’s laugh track, similarly, appears out of place; an audience guffaws, but this show was not filmed before a live studio audience. The mix of broad wordplay and sight gags that headbang at the original series, coupled with the loud gestures of Andy Dick, muddle the show’s tone, failing to decide who it wants to impress: series diehards or fresh consumers.

In the mid-90s, no one’s stock climbed higher than nostalgia. Between Pulp Fiction and Forrest Gump, not to mention a popular string of very Brady movies and an Oscar-winning adaptation of The Fugitive, the baby boomers had taken over the box office and brought all their favorite babysitters with them. A string of revivals soon followed and included remakes of: Sgt. Bilko, McHale’s Navy, The Avengers, Leave it to Beaver, Dennis the Menace, The Addams Family, The Beverly Hillbillies, Car 54, Where Are You?, The Flintstones, and, Space Jam, if that counts. Nostalgia ran so rampant throughout TV land that even Ben Stiller thought it necessary to dynamite the whole enterprise with the darker than dark comedy The Cable Guy, which also featured Dick.

Get Smart ’65 used its limitations and ran with them, relying on the straight-laced buffoonery of Maxwell and some innovative sight gags to revolutionize TV comedy. Thirty years later, pretty much everything that worked had been discarded. Combining cheapo gags with the look of a movie, and broad gags that sound like lines picked from Mel Brooks’ waste basket, Get Smart ’95 had its cards stacked against it. Maxwell’s superficial control had been replaced by Andy Dick’s complete lack thereof, and the whole story was beefed up by family, the one thing the original tried to avoid.

A remake has to recognize cultural changes to appeal to new audiences, or even the changing ideals of their previous one. And just to prove how wrong they got it in 1995, about ten years later, another remake to Get Smart was made, this time engaging today’s audiences and starting fresh. The movie grossed over $200,000,000 without a special appearance by Robert Goulet. Was it revolutionary? No, but at least it was consistent.

king of comedy
08-02-2013, 06:25 AM
http://splitsider.com/2013/07/andy-dick-in-a-get-smart-remake-what-could-go-wrong/
I'll stick with the Steve Carell version and tried to get the Andy Dick one out of my mind.

LaurenBethel
08-06-2013, 03:38 AM
Oh really?? I totally missed that :confused:

TMC
08-02-2021, 04:03 AM
If they were going to bring (https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:aV6PDpLbjdgJ:https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/tv/1995/01/08/get-smart-kicks-off-fox-lineup/c41a5c29-e17a-4d7b-8e11-52d5aeefa0b4/+&cd=8&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us) Get Smart (https://onemanandhisbanjo.wordpress.com/2016/02/17/how-to-fail-a-relaunch-get-smart-1995-tv-showcase-16/) back (https://thelandofwhatever.blogspot.com/2018/06/a-classic-reborn-get-smart-1995.html), then why didn't they do it (https://www.vulture.com/2013/07/andy-dick-in-a-get-smart-remake-what-could-go-wrong.html) much sooner after the 1989 reunion movie (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Get_Smart,_Again!) came out (https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:IJPdagn6NBMJ:https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2001-jul-30-ca-28148-story.html+&cd=58&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us)? I mean, as the old saying goes, why not strike while the iron is hot.

The Rowdy Reviewer argued (https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x20n1ng) that 1995, when this incarnation of Get Smart came out, just wasn't the right time to do a spy show. Plots to take over the corporate world just don't resonate as well as plots to literally take over the whole world like in the original show from the '60s.