Tuesday, April 4, 2023

Captain Video And His Video Rangers!


It's somewhat difficult to imagine the massive influence this show had on its audience, a crew new to television and hungry for adventure of a scientific kind. The long defunct Dumont Television Network was the home to Captain Video and his Video Rangers, a live weekday show targeted to kids. There are only a handful of episodes extanct these days and frankly watching them now it's clear that seeing a huge number would grow tiresome. They were like candy, wonderful in the moment, sweet and satisfying, but taken in too large an amount dreadful and likely cause trouble.

Al Hodge takes aim with Don Hastings at his side.
The show's premise was pretty simple really, or perhaps not. Captain Video heads a worldwide organization of Rangers who help police the world with the aid of all sorts of high-tech gadgetry which allow the team to launch into space and fend off villains from this world and beyond. Every day a live presentation would move the story forward incrementally, not unlike a daily comic strip, the momentum only visible after a longer period. The pacing of the show was aided by the addition of relatively random vintage westerns and other adventures which pretended to be other Rangers in remote parts of the world. Shot live, the few episodes that survive show the usual  hit and miss of live TV production and required actors who were nimble.

Richard Coogan in command.
The first Captain Video was Richard Coogan who played the role a few years before being replaced by Al Hodge. Both had a sidekick named merely "Ranger". This duo talked to one another and others and once in a while did something but mostly the static nature of the show shines through. This is the illusion of adventure and motion, hidden behind two-dimensional sets and overwrought dialogue. It's yeoman work to make it work, but somehow they did for six years with all manner of success including spin-offs of all kinds.

To get a look at some of the fragments left from those long ago shows look below.



For another way to watch these episodes follow this link.

Captain Video was a phenomenon, not alone but with the virtue of being the first such adventure character developed just for the new invader of the home, the TV.


For all the touting of bogus and fictional technology which makes the show tick, it's the intimate nature of this very real technology of television which most explains the success of Captain Video and the Video Rangers.


NOTE: This is a Dojo Revised Classic Post. 

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4 comments:

  1. I've heard of Captain Video but I have never seen the show until now. I watched first 10 mins and it looked ok for the time, but as on says it's a bit "static". However, it has its charms.

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    1. I've found that these kinds of shows take a bit of time to groove into. But static ain't wrong.

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  2. Creo que escuche algo sobre el capitán, al encontrarme con algunas viejas series como estas mas de una vez me he sorprendido con el buen sabor de boca que dejan.

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    1. "I think I heard something about the captain, when I found some old series like these more than once I have been surprised with the good taste they leave."

      I think I concur.

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