In
“The Flying Dutchman, the ghostly Captain Beane (Stanley Adams) of the Flying Dutchman
materializes in the local graveyard in search of new crew-members for his famous, eternal ghost
ship.
He
and his first mate, Scroggs (Philip Bruns) spot Spenser (Larry Storch), Kong
(Forrest Tucker) and Tracy (Bob Burns) and settle on the trio as perfect
candidates.
“The
Flying Dutchman” is probably the weakest episode, thus far, of The Ghost
Busters. At least the villains of the week are actually ghosts this time, and
not the ghosts of monsters (like a werewolf, or the Frankenstein Monster).
Still, that’s hardly an endorsement, as the
episode features lame gags (“I haven’t had so much fun since Long John Silver
taught me the one step…”) and some poor special effects.
On
the latter front, the interior of the castle this week apparently becomes sea
bound, and sprays of water hit Captain Beane. It looks like someone is
squirting him with a water pistol from right off-camera.
Stanley
Adams is our villain of the week, and this episode aired approximately two
years before his tragic death, in 1977.
Adams is beloved by a generation of TV fans for his work on Star Trek (“The Trouble
with Tribbles,”), The Twilight Zone (“Mr. Garrity and the Graves”) and Lost
in Space (“The Great Vegetable Rebellion”) but The Ghost Busters’ “The
Flying Dutchman” doesn’t represent one of his better or more well-known roles.
Nope, it's just goofy business as usual, for this live action cartoon.
Next
up on The Ghost Busters: “The Dummy’s Revenge.”
Castle set! Nice to see Stanley Adams.
ReplyDeleteSGB