I recently watched a few episodes and liked the plots and acting. I wondered where they got all the actors but I'd forgotten about B movies.
What bothered me were the problems with continuity. Several times I saw someone drive off in one car and arrive in another. It makes me wonder if they had a lot of stock footage and just edited some of it in. They also must have filmed all the episodes in the daytime because the "night" scenes have weird lighting and you can see distinct shadows.
Yes, they just put a dark filter over the lens. And you could see shadows in the dark scenes, clouds in the sky, etc.Wasn't putting a ‘sun glass’ type lens on the camera for night scenes common for almost movies and tv back in that time frame?
Yes, they just put a dark filter over the lens. And you could see shadows in the dark scenes, clouds in the sky, etc.
Ματθιας;142197812 said:The one thing I liked about PM was the top of the line cars and the then contemporary styles and fashions - and how clean everything was.
Those who weren't in a Perry Mason episode were probably busy on the set of Gunsmoke. Those two productions probably built as many careers as Saturday Night Live.Many of the actors in the B movies at the time appeared in Perry Mason. Just ask Svengoolie!
I recently watched a few episodes and liked the plots and acting. I wondered where they got all the actors but I'd forgotten about B movies.
What bothered me were the problems with continuity. Several times I saw someone drive off in one car and arrive in another. It makes me wonder if they had a lot of stock footage and just edited some of it in. They also must have filmed all the episodes in the daytime because the "night" scenes have weird lighting and you can see distinct shadows.
Back in the pre-digital film days, there were several ways to get the daylight to dark effect, and the use of different density and color filters over the lens to get the desired effect was just one of them. At present, it is probably done digitally in post-production. Just dial in the computer to provide the degree of darkness and contrast the director wants. Software like Photoshop can do that easily.Thanks for that. I thought maybe they just underexposed it.
The original Law & Order also kept a lot of NY's character actors busy as well.Those who weren't in a Perry Mason episode were probably busy on the set of Gunsmoke. Those two productions probably built as many careers as Saturday Night Live.
... Almost as sterile as watching Dragnet....
Don’t really care for “Dragnet” either. Preferred “SouthLAnd” (I know, different era...)
Try to find a recognizable "character actor" from that general time period who never once was on Perry Mason, Gunsmoke, or Bonanza. Probably there are more who appeared in all three rather than those who were in none![]()