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Get Smart, Again!

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Get Smart, Again!

KAOS has invented a weather machine so Maxwell Smart and Agent 99 are called back into action to foil this evil plan.

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Release : 1989
Rating : 6.1
Studio : IndieProd Company Productions,  Lionsgate,  Phoenix Entertainment Group (PEG), 
Crew : Production Design,  Set Decoration, 
Cast : Don Adams Barbara Feldon Bernie Kopell Richard Gautier King Moody
Genre : Action Comedy Science Fiction Family TV Movie

Cast List

Reviews

KnotMissPriceless
2018/08/30

Why so much hype?

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Vashirdfel
2018/08/30

Simply A Masterpiece

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Kien Navarro
2018/08/30

Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.

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Staci Frederick
2018/08/30

Blistering performances.

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ShadeGrenade
2009/11/01

The '80's saw a number of U.S. made-for-television movies reuniting the casts of old shows, including 'The Man From U.N.C.L.E.', 'The Munsters', 'The Six Million Dollar Man' and 'The Wild Wild West'. Amongst these was 'Get Smart Again!' which brought back Don Adams as incompetent CONTROL secret agent 'Maxwell Smart' and Barbara Feldon as fellow agent and wife '99'. Created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry, the original was a huge hit which ran for five years.Directed by Gary Nelson ( who made the 1979 Disney sci-fi adventure 'The Black Hole' ), 'Get Smart Again!' opens in Washington where Commander Drury ( Kenneth Mars ) is wondering what to do about the revived threat of KAOS, who have built a weather machine with which to blackmail the world. Major Waterhouse ( John De Lancie ) suggests reactivating Max Smart. The man in question is at a funeral, as one of the pallbearers, when his old shoe/phone rings for the first time in years. While he goes off to answer it, the other pallbearers drop the coffin and it slides down a grassy knoll, eliciting a chase.Max is given the assignment of defeating the KAOS plan and sets about reuniting his crack team of agents, amongst them Hymie the robot ( Dick Gautier ), currently working as a test dummy in a driving school, and Larrabee ( Robert Karvelas ), who has a habit of popping up where you least expect him, such as in a filing cabinet and a fire hydrant.The previous attempt at reviving the Smart character was the 1980 movie 'The Nude Bomb', which strangely failed to include '99' and was not generally liked by fans. 'Again' works better because it feels like an extended episode, with the famous title sequence and theme tune back in place, and Bernie Kopell reprising his role as Nazi-like KAOS villain 'Siegfried'. Though Mel Brooks did not have a hand in the script, his zany sense of humour is very much in evidence. For instance, when Smart, Drury and Waterhouse wish to exchange secrets, they go up onto the roof of their headquarters and attempt to speak while helicopters hover overhead. Unfortunately, most of what they say is rendered inaudible by the choppers' engines and they are nearly blown off the roof by the draught caused by the blades.Later, a KAOS killer breaks into Max's house at night. Not wishing to disturb 99, Max tries to fight as quietly as possible, a process that involves him tossing cushions and shoving chairs around so that the killer will not make a sound when he falls on the floor.All of Max's catchphrases ( 'Missed it by that much!', 'Would you believe...' and 'And loving it!' ) are present and correct, as is the famous 'Cone Of Silence'. There are new gadgets too; Max wears magnetic boots which pull the villain's gun out of his hand. Then there's 'Dr.Denton's Hall Of Hush', a room in which speech is converted into words which then magically appear in mid-air. Soon there are so many floating about it becomes impossible for either Drury or Max to read them.Adams is as wonderfully deadpan as ever, spitting the absurd dialogue through clenched teeth as though he actually believed it. The chemistry between him and Feldon is nicely preserved. Max continues to call his partner '99' even though they have been married for twenty years! In a nice touch, the film is dedicated to the late Edward Platt, who played 'The Chief' in the original series.In the mid-90's, a new series was made, once again starring Adams and Feldon, but focusing on the exploits of their equally incompetent son, played by the unfortunately-named Andy Dick. It lasted only seven episodes. In 2008, the inevitable 'Get Smart' movie was released, starring Steve Carell as 'Max'. I have not seen it, so won't comment.Though made on a typical television budget, 'Again!' manages to be a lot more amusing and inventive than Mike Myers' overrated 'Austin Powers' movies.

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MartinHafer
2006/07/08

With most TV series, it is just better never to look back. Again and again and again, TV movie reunion shows based on beloved TV series are in the end moribund messes that rarely reunite the cast, since so many of them are dead!! The worst of these awful TV movies that I have seen would have The Beverly Hillbillies (where almost all the cast was dead), Leave It To Beaver (where Ward was dead so June just talked to his tombstone) and Andy Griffith (where Otis was no longer a drunk and Barney was too pathetic to talk about further). While not AS bad as these movies, this GET SMART reunion movie isn't a whole lot better. At least it does have most of the original cast, though Ed Platt (the Chief) was too dead to appear--even with the assistance of Disney Animatronics or by way of a pact with Satan. Dick Gautier (Hymie), Barbara Feldon (99), Bernie Koppel (Ziegfried) and several other familiar faces from the original program do make appearances. The only problem is that although they did an impressive job as far as the cast goes, they gave them a terribly unfunny and uninvolving script. In the end, it's a time passer at best, and an insult to fans at worst.

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pwoods1
2006/06/16

Given that the premise of the film is that Smart, Agent 99 and the rest of the (still alive) rag-tag Control agents are reactivated to fight Kaos, one really has to be a fan of the original series to enjoy the movie.I can't remember how old Don Adams was when he started the series, but, make-up aside, in this production, he looks 70s-ish. Barbara Feldon still looks amazing, and Bernie Kopell as "Siegfreid" doesn't seem to have aged a bit.HOWEVER, if you're not a fan of the original series, this is not for you. There are constant references back to the series but, there are many one-liners referring to the current (at the time of release) US government.They only work as comedy/irony if applied to the Govt of the time. Nothing ages as fast as political satire - unless that satire is timeless. And this ain't. Still...Poke fun at the intelligence gathering community, because if we don't, who will?

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uds3
2002/03/28

Goes a long way in making up for the abysmal THE NUDE BOMB nine years earlier. Dedicated to the memory of Ed Platt who died in 1974, Max is reunited with "99" and all the old favorites, Siegfried and Agent 13 as he takes on the awesome task of putting the Chaos "weather machine" out of action.With wife "99" gone domestic and the twins in college, Max tries to handle his assignment without 99's knowledge as "working mothers" are not allowed to spy. Predictably, the wheels fall off for Max, and it is left to "99" to save the day, after which she joins him in his assignment.The old magic is still there and both Adams and Feldon reprise their roles effortlessly. Ed Platt as chief is sorely missed, but wherever he is now, watching this would have brought a smile to his face.

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