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All three reunion films were included alongside The Six Million Dollar Man in a 40-disc DVD set from Time Life on November 23, 2010 [4] and a 35-disc DVD set from Universal Home Video on October 13, 2015. [5] The films were released by Shout! Factory on Blu-ray in 2022 as part of their Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman complete series ...
A spin-off comic re-imagining The Bionic Woman followed a few months later, and in January 2013 Dynamite launched a crossover mini-series, The Bionic Man vs. The Bionic Woman. The artwork in these series, covers and interiors, varies between Austin being rendered in the likeness of Lee Majors and not.
The original series has no equivalent character, however The Six Million Dollar Man did feature Barney Hiller, a bionic-powered adversary similar to Corvus (an actual equivalent character similar to Corvus was created by Kevin Smith in his comic book reboot of The Six Million Dollar Man called The Bionic Man, named Avery Hull, a 'first Bionic ...
Bionic Ever After? is a made-for-television science fiction action film which originally aired on November 29, 1994 on CBS. The movie reunited the main casts of the television series The Six Million Dollar Man and its spin-off The Bionic Woman .
The film, directed by James Mangold and co-starring Phoebe Waller-Bridges, Mads Mikkelsen and Antonio Banderas, will lean into Ford’s (and Indy’s) advancing age.
‘Bionic Woman’ (2007) Reboot of: “The Bionic Woman” (1976-1978) ... Tommy Lee Jones, and Julianne Moore, flopped as a remake for Quibi — a short-form streaming platform. The show was ...
(The character Barney Miller is seen again in episode 3-09 'The Bionic Criminal', when the seven million dollar man is reactivated. In the latter episode, the character is re-named Barney H iller, probably to avoid confusion with the title character of the then-recently premiered sitcom Barney Miller , also airing on ABC.)
Despite being on different networks, both The Bionic Woman and The Six Million Dollar Man were simultaneously cancelled in the spring of 1978 due to poor ratings; after 2 1/2 and 5 seasons respectively. Unlike The Six Million Dollar Man, which ended with a standard episode, "On the Run" was written and filmed as a resolution to the series.