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Brain Movies by Harlan Ellison
Brain Movies by Harlan Ellison





Brain Movies by Harlan Ellison Brain Movies by Harlan Ellison Brain Movies by Harlan Ellison

The first is the oldest, Man Without Time. This eighth volume of the Brain Movies series contains Ellison's work on three television projects, none of which were filmed. In 1977, the Dark Shadows creator came calling at Ellison Wonderland, and Dark Destroyer was the result, though even Cordwainer Bird didn’t stir from his roost to disavow the final product. Nolan, and John Tomerlin–created and/or dramatized tales of the supernatural for producer-director Dan Curtis. Throughout the 1970s, Harlan’s colleagues–Richard Matheson, William F. Having steered the playboy police captain Amos Burke into a life of espionage and masterminded adventures for Napoleon Solo and Ilya Kuryakin, Ellison was a natural choice to bring Derek Flint to the small screen in a pilot movie based on the two big-screen outings of James Coburn’s spy. Aided by Tex, a sentient computer, Strang involves himself in the lives of people whose historical footprints are greater than they could possibly imagine. Created in 1965 and sold to Paramount Televison and NBC in 1969, Man without Time was to have starred Leonard Nimoy as Strang, a time traveler sent from a war-ravaged future to the present day to subtly alter the present day to avert a nightmarish tomorrow.







Brain Movies by Harlan Ellison