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Wonderful Private Eye/Romantic Comedy, with Sparkling Brosnan Performance!

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27-9-2020 13:03:07 Mobile | Show all posts |Read mode
"Remington Steele" has become such a 'cult favorite' since it's 1982  debut that the show's many fans can recite episodes, plot lines,  dialog, even the 'unrevealed' aspects of both Laura Holt and the  mysterious Mr. Steele's past, and, amazingly, their futures, as well!  For a show that some critics initially brushed off as a "Moonlighting"  clone, the series has proved to be far more enduring, and  beloved...with much of the credit going to the leads, beautiful and  talented Stephanie Zimbalist, and the remarkable future 'James Bond',  Pierce Brosnan.  The premise of the show was clearly stated in the first season's  opening credits; a brilliant young investigator, Laura Holt  (Zimbalist), decides to start her own agency, but the era's  chauvinistic attitude toward women prevents clients from hiring "a  woman". So she invents a fictional 'boss', Remington Steele, brilliant,  charismatic, but always busy on other cases, so potential clients would  deal with his 'associate', Ms. Holt. The scheme works brilliantly,  although, as the client list increased in stature, it became  increasingly difficult to fend off their demands to meet Mr.  Steele...and then HE appeared!   A young, lean, enigmatic Irishman (Pierce Brosnan), initially involved  in a smuggling operation (although on the "side of the Angels"), gets  out of a difficult situation by declaring himself "Remington Steele",  and quickly discovers the status (and available funds!) the 'Nom De  Plume' gives him. Although Holt is initially furious at the pretender,  an important client happily passes his business to 'Mr. Steele', and  his physical 'presence', documented by the press, forces her to accept  the mysterious stranger...on condition he NOT meddle in cases! Of  course, the new Steele, whose passion is Classic Hollywood movies (as,  indeed, Brosnan's was, as well), simply can't miss the chance to 'live  out' the 'Film Noir Detective' lifestyle, creating a constant source of  episode plot lines...and Holt and Steele would develop an increasingly  romantic bond, as well, which would, eventually become a full-fledged  romance.  For many "Steele" fans, the first season's episodes are the most fun,  with Brosnan less-than-competent as the master detective, Zimbalist  displaying great comic timing in her reactions to his "successes", and  James Read ("North and South", "Charmed"), providing a rugged sex  appeal as her more dependable, skilled associate/'boyfriend'. But the  Steele/Holt chemistry was so strong that Read would eventually be  written out (as well as the two-dimensional secretary, Bernice Foxe,  played by Janet DeMay), and a stronger character, motherly Mildred  Krebs (the wonderful Doris Roberts), would be introduced as the new  secretary/confidant, in the second season; her presence provided a  stability that actually improved the show.  So much has been written about the series, and so many legends surround  it (the most famous being that NBC, on the verge of canceling the show  after four seasons, upon hearing Brosnan had been chosen as the new  James Bond in "The Living Daylights", quickly reprieved it for a season  of 'made-for-TV' "Steele" movies, to take advantage of the  publicity...costing Brosnan the 007 role, for a decade), that  "Remington Steele" has achieved a fame that has far outlasted the  series' five seasons. Certainly, the warmth and camaraderie of the cast  and crew throughout the run made the production 'special' (unlike the  frequently explosive atmosphere on the "Moonlighting" set), and there  is ALWAYS talk of a 'reunion' show, reuniting Steele and Holt for a new  adventure, even after a twenty-year 'retirement'!   Not bad for a "Moonlighting" 'clone'!

score 9/10

cariart 15 December 2006

Reprint: https://www.imdb.com/review/rw1545484/
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