Code Name: Diamond Head

Code Name: Diamond Head

1977 ""
Code Name: Diamond Head
Code Name: Diamond Head

Code Name: Diamond Head

2.7 | 1h18m | en | Drama

A failed Quinn Martin pilot for a series starring a Hawaii-based government counter intelligence agency run by the indomitable Aunt Mary. In this, his only adventure, Diamond Head has to prevent the evil Tree from stealing a deadly nerve toxin gas and selling it to foreign powers. To help Diamond Head is the Dragon Lady and Zulu.

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2.7 | 1h18m | en | Drama , Crime , TV Movie | More Info
Released: May. 03,1977 | Released Producted By: , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

A failed Quinn Martin pilot for a series starring a Hawaii-based government counter intelligence agency run by the indomitable Aunt Mary. In this, his only adventure, Diamond Head has to prevent the evil Tree from stealing a deadly nerve toxin gas and selling it to foreign powers. To help Diamond Head is the Dragon Lady and Zulu.

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Cast

Roy Thinnes , France Nuyen , Ward Costello

Director

Jeannot Szwarc

Producted By

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Reviews

verbusen I'm guessing that all the other reviewers (7) watched this as an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000 like I have. I also see that most people voting hate that the (7) reviewers disliked the film so all the reviews have negative votes. So I'm going to go middle of the road and give this a 6. I actually could have enjoyed this enough in a non riffed straight viewing (which will never happen now that I've seen it already). Folks tend to go very low with the voting on anything that has been riffed by MST3K and 95% of the time they are right, the films are terrible. However there are SOME exceptions. "This Island Earth" was a GOOD sci fi film that MST3K riffed as their only theater film, it was edited down heavily (about 1/3 cut) to aid in the riffing which is not being very fair to the 1950's film, another GOOD sci film was Marooned, which the cast of MST3K got a lot of heat over using. Both of these films are in the 5's now on IMDb probably because a lot of votes are coming from people who only watched the MST3K version first. Their loss because both were good films to see in their original content and if were never riffed would probably be high 6.5 to 7.5 range on IMDb. So back to Code Name: Diamond Head. I watched this (MST3K version) a few years ago and was not impressed, it seemed slow to me, I think I stopped watching it without being 1/3 way through. I just watched it again today and I was entertained. I also noted all the actors who were actually in a lot of films. The first one was the Asian woman France Nuyen. I Immediately recognized her as the ultra hot Asian goddess in Star Trek in 1968, a strong reason why I'm infatuated with Asian women today because I watched that episode so many times as a kid in reruns after school. She was smoking hot in 1968. I even looked up her bio and she was in a film called just Diamond Head with Charlton Heston and played his lover, pretty impressive and I'm surprised the MST3K crew didn't give her any props for those two pop culture references. Here she is 38 and definitely not a hottie. Maybe thats why this series was never picked up, it's too close to reality. I know a lot of the film is far fetched but the locations they picked ARE actually in Honululu, I know because that's were I would be when on shore leave. They are the gritty parts of Hawaii though and there are not many glamor shots as say a Hawaii Five O would show. Perhaps thats why they chose France Nuyen, she is a middle aged Asian woman and plausible as a large night club owner? But lets face it, if you are watching spy in Hawaii shows on TV you don't really want that kind of reality do you? The other actors I recognized immediately were Ian Mcshane, Eric Braeden, and Don Knight (and of course Zulu, who got too big for his britches and was dropped from H5O after the first four seasons, and in 99 Hawaii Five O epsiodes). Don Knight was in SIX Hawaii Five O episodes and usually plays a great bad guy, here he is a scruffy charter boat owner in a bit part. Eric Braedon has a running joke in the MST3K version with them saying who is that guy, but I knew him right away because he was in the great sci fi thriller "Colossus: The Forbin Project" as the lead, and also as the German Officer constantly after The Rat Patrol. MST3K eventually grants him the Rat Patrol credit and THREE Hawaii Five O episodes, but the guy is a very successful actor (also years as a lead in the Soap Opera The Yound and the Restless) and that joke was stale over and over. Ian Mcshane is also pretty well know and they keep using his Lovejoy role as a joke, since I never watched that show it wasn't that funny to me. Another flop in the riffing to me was they tried really really hard to equate this as a really cheesy 70's TV show from QM complete with the soundtrack, but the times they keep doing the soundtrack noises the actual film is not using it, they used that joke going on through a third of the show, lame. The lead actor I did not recognize but he's been in a lot of shows, I only recognized him when I went to his bio page and saw a 1963 pic of him from General Hospital and realized immediately that he was in an episode MST3K had riffed early in it's existence with Joel. He was also in The Invaders as the lead actor, I'm surprised that wasn't referenced at all since it's a cult favorite sci fi TV show.Bottom line, I don't think this was a great choice to get riffed by MST3K. There are too many decent actors in this and it was not nearly cheesy enough with 70's references to make the riffs all that funny. Why didn't it get picked up for a series? It was too serious and in gritty reality based on a concept that requires over the top fantasy (Hawaii Spy Show in the 1970's). I give the straight film version a 6 of 10 for a TV pilot, and I give it a 5 of 10 as an MST3K episode. BTW, there is a Coast Guard joke in this toward the very end that would have made me spit out my drink because it was so radical and funny, so watch out for that if you are drinking in front of your laptop!
bensonmum2 It doesn't take long to see why Code Name: Diamond Head didn't make it onto the network schedules. The TV pilot movie doesn't get past the credits before it's obvious just how bad it's going to be. Maybe I missed something, because the plot didn't make a whole lot of sense. Based on what I got out of the muddled mess, a terrorist or thief or something named "Tree" (Ian McShane) goes to Hawaii to steal something to do with a secret weapon. The world's dullest secret agent, Johnny Paul (Roy Thinnes), is out to stop him. There might have been more, but trust me – it really doesn't matter anyway.Action movies should have action. Suspenseful moments should have suspense. And dramatic moments should have drama. There's none of that in Code Name: Diamond Head. I've seen others use the word "turgid" to describe this made for TV snoozer – and it's better than any one word description I can come up with. None of the characters is in the least bit exciting or worth caring about. And Roy Thinnes makes for the worst leads imaginable. His charisma is just slightly north of a slug. Ian McShane is easily the best thing the movie has going for it, but unfortunately for everyone else involved, it doesn't appear he was going to be back as a regular cast member. Now if McShane had been cast in the series lead, well then you might have had something.I'm quickly discovering that these Gawd awful 70s made-for-TV movies make great Mystery Science Theater 3000 episodes. And that goes double if Quinn Martin was involved. Very funny stuff from Mike and the Bots. So while I may only give the movie a 3/10, I rate Episode #608 a 4/5 on my MST3K rating scale.
editguy Another turgid action/adventure flick from the Quinn Martin Productions factory. Roy Thinnes plays undercover agent Diamond Head (Mr. Head, to you), working for his G-Man handler "Aunt Mary", looking for "Tree", who's on a mission to...well, just watch the movie. This one deserved and got the full MST3K sendup. As the boys and various reviewers have pointed out, the movie "Fargo" had more Hawaiian locations than this film. Apparently shot on a puny budget, this movie highlights Hawaii's broken-down dive shops, gas stations, and cheapo hotels. Zulu -- later to star as Kono in Hawaii-Five-O -- appears as Thinnes' lumpy, inept sidekick, while France Nguyen models the Jenny Craig diet gone horribly wrong. Others sharing the flickering screen include a drunken Richard Harris knockoff, a George Takai imitator, a not-so-smart hit-man with sprayed-on Sansabelt slacks, and the villain "Tree", sporting a veddy British accent. You can pretty much figure out the plot halfway through the opening credits, but relax--just enjoy the giddy mediocrity of this 70's movie-of-the-week.Whenever I think of this movie (and I think of this movie often), I catch myself humming the theme, written for flute and tuba...no one knows why. Trivia note--Diamond Head was directed by Jeannot Szwarc, one of three contract directors at Universal who would go on to make much bigger films, in his case Jaws 2. The others were John Badham (War Games), and a young fellow named Steven Spielberg...
lemon_magic Think of this pilot as "Hawaii Five-O Lite". It's set in Hawaii, it's an action/adventure crime drama, lots of scenes feature boats and palm trees and polyester fabrics and garish shirts...it even stars the character actor "Zulu" in a supporting role. Oh, there are some minor differences - Roy Thinnes is supposed to be some front-line undercover agent, and the supporting cast is much smaller (and less interesting), but basically the atmosphere is still the same. Problem is, "Hawaii Five-O" (another QM product) already existed at the time and had run for years. It filled the market demand for Hawaii-based crime dramas quite adequately. Code Name: Diamond Head may have been intended as the heir to H50 as the older series eventually dwindled away...but it comes across as a superfluous, 2nd rate copy. It doesn't suck, but it's completely derivative and doesn't do anything as well as the original.There is some decent acting talent involved here. Thinnes is an old pro, and he gives the role his best shot, and he isn't bad. But Thinnes is only as good as his material and his director. Ian McShane is in here as an evil spy master named "Tree", and McShane tends to be the most interesting actor in any scene he appears in. But he's phoning his part in here. Frances Ngyuen is reasonably exotic looking, but her astounding skinniness, opaque features, thick accent and wooden delivery aren't the stuff of which dreams are made. Relying on her to supply the 'romantic interest' for Thinnes was probably the series' biggest mistake. At least for for a series aimed at white audiences brought up with Marsha Brady and Peggy Lee as our love goddesses. Give her another 30 lbs and a year with a dialog/voice coach, and she might cut it. Zulu is, well, his usual self - enjoyable in bit parts, but he isn't a person who can carry a feature by himself. In addition, the plot and dialog are strictly by-the-numbers, with nothing to distinguish them from any other Quinn Martin production. And by this point, the American TV audience had seen a whoooole lot of QM productions....I think "CN: DH" was one too many, and it sank without a trace. It wasn't the really the actors' fault, and I hope they walked away from this with a decent paycheck and one more entry on their C.V.s. MST3000 revived this for their treatment in their sixth season, and they had a lot of good natured fun with it. Worth seeking out in that version if you enjoy the MST approach to movie japery and lampoon, but I can't imagine anyone caring about this pilot for any other reason.