I’m
between Saturday morning TV series right now, and so thought I would use this
opportunity to take a look at a long-forgotten (but much beloved) oddity.
As
readers of the blog know, I have written sometimes about a Saturday morning
series from the mid-1970’s called Run Joe Run (1974-1976).
There
has still been no official DVD release for this series, but an episode or two
has cropped up on YouTube recently, and this may be my only opportunity for a
re-visit of the 43 year old series (pending that never-coming official
release.)
So
today, I am looking at the seventh episode of the first season of Run
Joe Run, titled “Homecoming.”
To
refresh everybody’s memory about Run Joe Run it is basically The
Fugitive (1963-1967)…starring a German shepherd.
The
star of the series is Joe (Heinrich), a military dog who is accused of biting
his master, Sgt. Corey (Arch Whiting) during training.
Rather
than be executed, Joe escapes custody and flees to the countryside, helping
families and friends on his journey to clear his name.
The
series ran for two seasons, and aired on NBC at 7:30 am on Saturdays in 1974.
Below, you can see a print ad for the series.
In
“Homecoming,” Joe is still on the run.
The
episode starts with Joe being harassed by a home-owner (for entering his yard).
Joe then retrieves a toy for a child in an outdoor playpen, until chased away
by the child’s father. This is the life of a loner, and a rejected loner, at
that.
Finally,
Joe ends up at a farm, where he is taken care of by a girl named Judy (Kristy
McNichol). She feeds him and gives him water, but Judy’s dad, Clyde, doesn’t
like dogs around his farm animals.
Soon,
Joe confronts a coyote in the hen house, but Clyde misinterprets his actions
and thinks he was on the attack.
The
farmer leashes the whimpering Joe, but Joe soon proves his worth to the entire
family when he rescues an injured Judy. For this, he earns the family’s
gratitude and respect.
After
army officials tell the farmer and his family that “there’s a warrant out on the dog,” and that he’s a “time bomb,” the family sets Joe free, to
continue his journey.
As
the preceding summary makes plain, Run Joe Run pretty much follows The
Fugitive format to the letter.
The
ingenuity of the series comes in the application of that familiar,
man-on-the-run format (and tropes) to a canine protagonist.
Here,
intriguingly, there are three slow-motion flashbacks to Joe’s time in the
military, and the day of the event that cost him his freedom.
Yes, these are Joe’s
flashbacks I’m talking about.
The series not only puts a dog in the role of “The Fugitive,” it gives him flashbacks
too. Joe, as is plain, is suffering from PTSD.
The
episode soundtrack, by Richard LaSalle, does much of the heavy lifting in “Homecoming,”
understandably, since Joe cannot talk, or tell the audience, himself, precisely
what he is feeling.
And
yet -- with the music backing it up -- the episode is actually pretty
effective, and tragic. Joe is a lonely figure, rejecting by all those he
encounters; by those especially, who fear him, and his breed of dog. His existence is sad, and lonely.
It’s
all very heavy for a kid’s show, airing on Saturday mornings, and yet it is a
perfect fit for the 1970’s. In a powerful way, Run Joe Run encourages
empathy in kids. It’s not just about taking care of a dog, but feeling his
pain, as this isolated pack animal walks America alone and despised, doing
good, but never being treated as if he is even capable of “good.”
There’s
one more episode on YouTube, which I’ll look at here next week.
Those times are for Salt Lake City, Utah. From what I remember of 1974, it looks like KUTV was running in synch with the East Coast on Saturdays, and not running in pattern but delayed on tape an hour as was common practice in the Mountain Time Zone.
ReplyDeleteOn the East Coast, STAR TREK (TAS) was a late morning show and THE JETSONS and GO aired in the afternoon just before the network turned things over to sports or local programming at one Eastern. My local NBC affiliate in Virginia aired ST:TOS reruns at 7:00 AM on Saturday mornings in 1974. When possible, I was awake that early for them. (Even as a kid, I was more of a night owl than a morning person. Remind me to tell you of 9 year old me camping out on my grandmother's couch so I could watch Year One of SPACE: 1999 after that same affiliate moved it from Fridays at 7:00 PM to Friday night/Saturday mornings at 2:30 AM in early '76.)