Ken Dryden Posted 12 hours ago Report Posted 12 hours ago (edited) There have been a number of TV series over the years inspired by films, though most of them seem to die pretty quickly. M*A*S*H was an obvious exception. Two of the worst film reboots on TV: Super Train: a mediocre movie that was even worse as a TV series. Delta House: A pathetic reboot of Animal House that had a few actor carryovers from the film and Josh Mostel (Zero's son) as the Bluto-like character. The one sitcom I loved that died quickly was The Nutt House, about a NYC hotel that had seen better days, starring Harvey Korman as the manager and Cioris Leachman playing the big-butted head housekeeper who has the hots for the manager and also the elderly hotel's owner. I think that there are two or three episodes posted on YouTube. One of the running gags was the elevator stopping just below the main lobby, so guests had to step up to get out of it. I think Mel Brooks was involved as a producer. Edited 12 hours ago by Ken Dryden Quote
AndreyHenkin Posted 11 hours ago Report Posted 11 hours ago Though quite vapid, the TV series that came from Clueless was actually pretty good and kept all the characters apart from leads Alicia Silverstone and Paul Rudd. Quote
Rooster_Ties Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago 5 hours ago, Ken Dryden said: Super Train: a mediocre movie that was even worse as a TV series. Was there ever a Super Train movie? My Googling isn’t turning anything up — unless you count the first episode (which Wikipedia says was a double-length 2-hr episode). Or did that play in theaters? Quote
Rooster_Ties Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago Addendum. It appears like that first double-episode was released on VHS — probably appearing as though it was a standalone movie at some point… Per the description of this upload to YouTube… • The infamous flop from NBC's 1979 lineup returns with a recording from the 1988 Star Classics release of Supertrain, titled under the name of the first episode, "Express to Terror". • This recording comes from a recent acquisition of a VHS rental copy of the film. Quote
ejp626 Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago Not sure it really counts, as it was animated, but from all accounts Spaceballs: The Animated Series was pretty dire. Mel came back, as well as Joan Rivers and Daphne Zuniga. Dom DeLuise showed up in one episode, but I think the other actors from the movie avoided this. Quote
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