Featuring one of the
loopier premises in the history of primetime drama, this feature-length pilot
movie launched a short-lived series, which has since become a minor cult favorite among sci-fi fans. Beloved
TV icon Andy Griffith stars in the movie as a junkyard owner who builds his own
private spaceship for a trip to the moon, where he plans to salvage abandoned
NASA equipment and sell it to the highest bidder. Once the concept went to
series, Griffth reprised his role, with his character piloting the spaceship
for missions to remote locations around the globe; in the first regular
episode, the goal was to retrieve monkeys for a zoo and to explore the
possibility of bringing back an iceberg for a California community suffering
from drought. Not hard to see why the series got canceled. Still, two things
make the Salvage-1 pilot movie
charming—Griffith’s affable persona and the lightness of the storytelling.
Written by Mike Lloyd Ross, whose character development and dialogue are as
clunky as his narrative concepts are wild, Salvage-1
introduces Harry Broderick (Griffith) as an expert in repurposing junk—he buys
a World War I biplane for a song, then guts the vehicle and sells parts to
various buyers, making a $14,000 profit in the course of a morning’s work.
Harry’s
gotten hip to the multimillion-dollar value of tech that NASA left on the moon,
and he’s identified an aeronautics expert with a theory that might facilitate
inexpensive space travel. Harry hires the expert, ex-astronaut Skip Carmichael
(Joel Higgins), who in turn enlists the aid of fuel specialist Melanie Slozar
(Trish Stewart). Together with Harry’s regular employees—including a pair of
former NASA ground-control techs—Harry cobbles together a spaceship called the Vulture. Meanwhile, uptight FBI agent
Jack Klinger (Richard Jaeckel) sniffs around Harry’s junkyard because he senses
something strange is happening. Salvage-1
is predicated on an inordinate number of convenient plot twists, and Ross’
script is so upbeat that there’s never any real tension, but Salvage-1 is fun to watch simply because
it’s such a lark. Even the laughably bad special effects featured during the Vulture’s moon shot aren’t enough to
diffuse the good vibes. This is pure gee-whiz escapism, and the saving grace of
the piece is that it never pretends to have meaning or substance. So, yes, the
acting is hokey and the story is borderline stupid, but who cares? Fun is fun.
Salvage-1:
GROOVY
I LOVED this movie as a kid, yet no one remembers it!!
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