Outlaws (1986 TV series)
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Outlaws | |
---|---|
Format | Science Fiction / Western |
Created by | Nicholas Corea |
Starring | See Cast below |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 12 |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | CBS |
Original run | December 28, 1986 – May 30, 1987 |
External links | |
IMDb profile | |
TV.com summary |
Outlaws is a short-lived action-adventure American television series which aired Saturday nights on CBS. The original series began as a 2-hour pilot movie, and was followed by eleven one-hour episodes.
Contents |
[edit] Origins
The story originally began in Houston, Texas in 1899, as Sheriff Jonathan Grail tried to round up the villainous four-man Pike Gang, of which he had once been a member. After cornering the four-man gang in a stormy graveyard, a bolt of lightning struck all five men - teleporting them 87 years forward in time, to 1986. With no way to get back to their original time, the five men worked out a truce, and started a private investigation / detective agency.
During the run of the series, the five men, now working as the "Double Eagle Detection Agency," helped right wrongs, protect the downtrodden, fought off druglords and gang leaders - all while continuing to operate with 19th-century weaponry, including revolvers and shotguns. Several of the episodes dealt with problems the men faced in the 1880's, and now had to resolve the problems in the 1980's.
Although the pilot episode was one of the most-watched shows that week, future episodes drew fewer and fewer fans. The series' final episode, in fact, featured a "flashback" scene from another television show, The Oregon Trail, in which Outlaws actors Rod Taylor and Charles Napier both starred.
[edit] Characters
Character | Actor |
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Sheriff Jonathan Grail, former member of the Pike Gang and now leader of the Double Eagle Detection Agency | Rod Taylor |
Harland Pike, who took over the gang when Grail left | William Lucking |
Billy Pike, Jr., Harland Pike's younger brother | Patrick Houser |
Wolfson Lucas, the Pike Gang's spiritual leader | Charles Napier |
Isaiah "Ice" McAdams, an escaped slave from New Orleans who rode with the Pike Gang | Richard Roundtree |
Deputy Maggie Randall, who assisted the Double Eagle Detection Agency on several of their cases | Christina Belford |
[edit] Episode listing
Title | Original air-date | # | ||
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"Outlaws" (pilot episode) | December 28, 1986 | 1 | ||
Sheriff Jonathan Grail corners the villainous Pike Gang in an Indian graveyard; as all five men braced for a showdown, a bolt of lightning struck the graveyard - and all five men - hurtling them 100 years into the future. Several of the Outlaws run afoul of a druglord, and it's up to the rest of the Outlaws, working together in an unfamiliar era, to stop the druglord. Shannen Doherty, in an early role, appears in this episode. | ||||
"Tintype" | January 3, 1987 | 2 | ||
While working security for a wealthy client, Harland Pike discovers that the client's wife is a mirror image of his long-lost love from the 19th century. When the woman shows signs of physical abuse, the Outlaws rescue her and her son, only to discover her husband has an evil streak in him and wants to take it out on the Outlaws. | ||||
"Primer" | January 10, 1987 | 3 | ||
While trying to stop a protection racket that preys on shopkeepers, Billy Pike joins an adult education class (he never learned to read in the 19th century), where he comes face to face with the leader of the protection racket, whose followers are also terrorizing the adult education class. | ||||
"Orleans" | January 17, 1987 | 4 | ||
Running short on cash, Ice McAdams leads the Outlaws to a treasure of buried gold coins he once stole from his slave overseer; it leads him to participate in a duel with his master's great-grandson. | ||||
"Hymn" | January 31, 1987 | 5 | ||
The Outlaws travel to New York City to protect a female televangelist from a murderous stalker. During the episode, Wolfson Lucas and the televangelist battle over each other's view of faith and worship. | ||||
"Madrid" | February 7, 1987 | 6 | ||
Jonathan Grail and the Outlaws are hired to watch over the ghost town of Madril, which has been purchased by a man to build a new shopping center. Unbeknownst to the Outlaws, the owner's wife is plotting to steal the town for her own uses - and compounding matters is the town's oldest living resident, who remembers the day Jonathan Grail (in the 19th century, and as a villain) shot down his father. | ||||
"Potboiler" | February 28, 1987 | 7 | ||
A Western historian has discovered that the Double Eagle Detection Agency's members look remarkably like his archival photograph of the Pike Gang from 1885. Meanwhile, the Outlaws have to stop a crimelord - and keep the inquisitive historian at bay. | ||||
"Pursued" | March 7, 1987 | 8 | ||
The Outlaws must find the estranged daughter of a dying mob leader - only to discover that not only does the daughter not want to see her father, but that there are several members of the mob who want to find her father - even if it means kidnapping the daughter. | ||||
"Independents" | March 21, 1987 | 9 | ||
The Outlaws work as taxi drivers to protect an independent cab fleet from the vicious competition. | ||||
"Hardcase" | March 28, 1987 | 10 | ||
After the Outlaws take in a troubled youth who is on the run from a murderous crimelord, Billy Pike realizes the teen's rebellious attitude was the same attitude that turned Pike to a life of crime - and now must be diverted to a path of good. | ||||
"Jackpot" | April 4, 1987 | 11 | ||
After another successful job completed, the Outlaws are rewarded with a trip to Las Vegas - where they must protect an accountant who has valuable information that could put a mob family away for good. | ||||
"Birthday" | May 2, 1987 | 12 | ||
After the Outlaws take some time to prepare a birthday party for Detective Maggie Randall, the Double Eagle Detection Agency ranch comes under siege from sharpshooters. During the episode, thinking it might be their last moments together, Grail confides a story about how he and Wolfson Lucas first met - featuring film footage from a television series, The Oregon Trail, in which both actors starred. |
[edit] Low ratings and cancellation
Outlaws was considered a "high concept" series, mixing three separate genres - time travel, the Western, and a detective series. After very high ratings for the series pilot, Outlaws aired its regular episodes on Saturday nights, which at that time was the lowest watched night of broadcast television. Eventually the series was taken off the air for weeks at a time, and its final episode aired with virtually no promotion at all.