(It was thirty years ago today that the TV show Nowhere Man debuted on the newly minted broadcast television network UPN. Along with Star Trek: Voyager and Legend, it was one of three UPN shows I watched faithfully, which was not particularly easy. At the time we did not have a dedicated UPN affiliate, and most of UPN's shows were aired on our local CBS affiliate at 12:30 AM after The Late Show with David Letterman and The Late Late Show with Tom Snyder. The exception was Star Trek: Voyager, which our CBS affiliate showed on Saturday night at 10:30. Anyway, I had to stay up fairly late to watch Nowhere Man. Regardless, I managed to catch the whole run. I later re-watched the entire run more than once on DVD by way of Netflix (when they were still only a DVD-by-mail movie rental service). Sadly, it doesn't appear to be available on streaming, so I will have to buy it on DVD if I want to see it again. Anyway, in 2006, not long before UPN and The WB merged to form The CW, I wrote a post on the show. I am reposting it here, edited for grammar.).
With UPN and the WB soon to be extinct (the two are merging to form the
new network CW), I thought it might be a good idea to write about a
series from the early days of UPN. Many of you might remember that when
UPN first began, its focus was on hour-long action series with the goal of attracting a young male audience. In its first few months such series
as Star Trek: Voyager, Legend, and Marker aired on the young network. Most of those series were forgettable, with two exceptions. One was Star Trek: Voyager. The other was a series called Nowhere Man. Although only running one season, it would go on to become a bit of a cult series. The complete series was released on DVD on December 26, 2005, giving me a chance to see it again nearly ten years after it originally aired.
For those of you who never saw Nowhere Man (which I am taking for granted is most of you), Nowhere Man
starred Bruce Greenwood as Thomas Veil. Veil was a documentary
photographer who abruptly finds his entire life "erased." His friends
and family (even his wife) don't recognise him. The keys to his home and
his studio will no longer open any doors in those places. His ATM and
credit cards no longer work. In fact, any record of his existence is
gone. Veil does not know precisely why this happened, but he suspects
that it might have to do with a photograph he took in South America. It
seems some secret organisation, a conspiracy with people in high places,
wants the negatives of that photograph. And they will do anything to get
it from him. As a result, Veil must flee for his life, travelling from
place to place in an effort to uncover the truth about the conspiracy
and why his life was erased. Effectively, it was a cross between The Fugitive and The Prisoner.
Nowhere Man was created by Lawrence Hertzog, a TV writer with credits including Stingray and Hart to Hart. He would later work on the USA Network's La Femme Nikita.
The series came about after UPN executive Michael Sullivan approached
Hertzog about creating a series for the new network. With only a
few months before the network debuted, Hertzog was under pressure to
deliver a quality series to the network on time. Hertzog apparently
worked well under pressure, as Nowhere Man was easily the best show on UPN besides Star Trek: Voyager. Indeed, the series was well received by critics, even getting a sterling review from no less than The New York Times.
In its short run (only 25 episodes were ever made) Nowhere Man
produced some of the most remarkable episodes in Nineties series
television. In "Something About Her" the Organisation (as the conspiracy
was called in many episodes of the show) created virtual memories of a
romance that never happened in Veil's mind in an attempt to get
information out of him. In "The Spider Webb" Veil finds out that his
life after it had been erased is serving as the basis for a cheap,
public-access TV series. "You Really Got a Hold of Me" featured another
man (played by Dean Stockwell) whose life had been erased and who had been
on the run for 25 years. "Forever Young" featured a nursing home that
was conducting experiments in the restoration of youth to the elderly.
"Stay Tuned (one of two episodes that could be seen as homages to The Prisoner)"
centred on a small town where nearly every single resident is entralled
with a local politician and his TV show. "Through a Lens Darkly" saw
Veil return to Missouri and an old house where he is tormented by
memories of his childhood sweetheart.
While much of the quality of Nowhere Man
was due to its writing, the series was also helped by the quality of
its guest stars. Many of them were well-established actors. In the pilot, Michael Tucker (of L.A.Law) played a psychiatrist. In "You
Really Got a Hold on Me" Dean Stockwell played the man who had been on
the run from the Organisation for 25 years. In "Father" Dean Jones
played Veil's father. Dwight Schultz, of A-Team and Star Trek: The Next Generation fame, guest-starred in the episode "Hidden Agenda." The final episode, "Gemini Man," featured Hal Linden (of Barney Miller
fame) as a United States senator. The series also featured actors who
would later become stars. Carrie Moss (later to become famous for The Matrix trilogy) guest-starred in "Something About Her." Maria Bello was featured in the episode "An Enemy Within." Nowhere Man
also benefited from some of the most talented directors in the
business. Film director Tobe Hooper directed the pilot and the second
episode, while veteran TV directors James Whitmore Jr., Stephen
Stafford, and Ian Toynton all directed episodes.
None of this is to say that Nowhere Man
was a perfect TV show. While it produced some truly great episodes and
the majority of its run was good at best, it did produce some truly
awful episodes as well. "A Rough Whimper of Insanity" attempted to
capitalise on both the Internet and Virtual Reality (both fads at the
time) and failed in doing either. "It's Not Such a Wonderful Life"
featured a Christmas reunion with Veil's wife with the expected results.
"Heart of Darkness" is a fairly pedestrian episode dealing with a
paramilitary organisation. Fortunately, such episodes were generally few
and far between.
As mentioned previously, Nowhere Man
received fairly good reviews. It also did well in the ratings given that
it was on a brand new and very small network (at least when compared to
such major players as NBC and CBS). Sadly, good ratings would not be
enough for the show to survive. During its first season on the air UPN
saw changes which would result in a decision to focus on urban comedies
instead of action series as it originally intended. There were many in
the upper echelons at UPN who simply did not like Nowhere Man
to begin with. With the series out of favour with many network heads and
not exactly reflecting the new direction UPN chose to take (it was
hardly an urban comedy), Nowhere Man was cancelled at the end of its first and only season. The bitter irony is that Nowhere Man
and many of the other action series which aired on the network in its
first year received higher ratings than the urban comedies it would
later air. In fact, I have to wonder if much of the failure of UPN (the
ultimate result of which was its merger with the WB) was due to its
decision to change directions in its first season.
Fortunately, Nowhere Man
would not be forgotten and has remained a cult series ever since it
first aired. This would, of course, result in the relatively recent
release of its entire run on DVD. The DVD set is remarkable for a TV
show, especially one that ran only one season. The set features several
extras. Many of the episodes have audio commentaries, and sometimes
video commentaries as well. There are several featurettes on various
aspects of the making of the series. There is even a short featurette on
purported CIA mind control techniques on the last disc of the set
entitled "Fact or Fiction (I personally found this a bit far-fetched, if
interesting--conspiracy theorists may feel free to disagree with me)."
Among the best parts of the extras are the scripts for every single
episode of Nowhere Man, which one can download to his or her computer.
Although it had its share of bad episodes, Nowhere Man was a remarkable series for its time. In fact, in some ways it was a bit ahead of its time. First, since Nowhere Man first aired there have been several successful, cerebral action series. The USA Network had La Femme Nikita (which Lawrence Hertzog himself would work on). ABC has had Alias and Lost. F/X has The Shield. Nowhere Man
would fit in perfectly with all these series. In fact, I rather suspect
that had it aired just a few years later, it may have found a home on
one of the various cable channels. Second, when Nowhere Man
first aired, identity theft was relatively rare. In the ten years since
the show originally aired, identity theft has increased dramatically,
making the series even more pertinent than it once was. Its questions
regarding the nature of identity and the tension between the individual
and the group remain as relevant as ever. While it is regrettable that Nowhere Man only lasted one season, it remains one of the most fascinating series of the Nineties and probably will not soon be forgotten.
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