IMDb RATING
6.8/10
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After a failed mission, Steve Austin goes on vacation and gets a second chance to stop an arms dealer.After a failed mission, Steve Austin goes on vacation and gets a second chance to stop an arms dealer.After a failed mission, Steve Austin goes on vacation and gets a second chance to stop an arms dealer.
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSome changes to the show's premise were made between "The Six Million Dollar Man" (1973) movie and the sequel. In the first film, Austin is described in dialogue as being a civilian, but in this film this is changed to him being an Air Force Colonel (and dialogue confirms this version of the character was a Colonel at the time he walked on the moon). Oliver Spencer (Darren McGavin) was replaced by Oscar Goldman (Richard Anderson) (a character from the original Cyborg novels) and a new actor plays Dr. Rudy Wells. In addition, the organization, for which Colonel Austin works, is now the OSI, not the OSO.
- GoofsAbout the 38 minute 49 second mark of part two, Steve Austin is confined by the bad guys to a small room, and chained to a table. Using his bionics, he breaks the chains, gets up and moves to the door. The hinges are on the right side of the door and the right hand wall is about one foot away from the door facing. He carefully removes the hinge pins, then, instead of swinging it open, or it falling toward him, he slides the door to the right for the full width of the door as if it was a pocket door or sliding glass door. He is in one room at the beginning of the scene and another room at the end.
- Quotes
Cynthia Holland: [Steve is winning at a casino] Oh, is there anything you aren't good at?
Col. Steve Austin: Well, I've never had much success at milking reindeer.
- Alternate versionsRe-edited into two episodes of "The Six Million Dollar Man" for syndication. To pad out the story, scenes were added from The Six Million Dollar Man (1973), The Six Million Dollar Man: The Solid Gold Kidnapping (1973), The Seven Million Dollar Man (1974), Return of the Robot Maker (1975), The Return of the Bionic Woman (1975) and Colossus: The Forbin Project (1970).
- ConnectionsFollowed by The Six Million Dollar Man: The Solid Gold Kidnapping (1973)
Featured review
Serious cool
I saw this first run on tv in 1973 and I believe it was the second 90 min "pilot" episode to the six million dollar man series. I was a 1st grader at the time but I remember the action well. It was pretty James Bondish( even has bond girl Britt Eklund in it) It is the first time I remember seeing ole Six mil in action. Points that impressed me at age 7: there is the scene where Steve Austin breaks through stone wall. Very cool. Also there are some sinister looking black and white painted rockets/nuke weapons that moved around on wheels. Oh then there is Steve's super swim from the submarine. After seeing this I was hooked on the Six million dollar man show that followed. I would love to see this film again and if I ever do, hopefully I'll find it as much fun now as then.
helpful•160
- greatwar
- Nov 3, 2001
Details
- Runtime1 hour 13 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was The Six Million Dollar Man: Wine, Women and War (1973) officially released in Canada in English?
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