Vengeance Unlimited
Vengeance Unlimited | |
---|---|
Created by |
John McNamara David Simkins |
Starring |
Kathleen York Michael Madsen |
Opening theme | Mark Morgan |
Composer(s) | Mark Morgan (all episodes) |
Country of origin | USA |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 16 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | John McNamara |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production company(s) |
McNamara Paper Products Warner Bros. Television |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | September 29, 1998 – February 25, 1999 |
Vengeance Unlimited is an American crime drama series broadcast during 1998-1999 on ABC which lasted for just one season of sixteen episodes. The show starred Michael Madsen and Kathleen York. The show originally aired Thursdays at 8:00 pm up against NBC's Top 5 hits Friends and Jesse.[1]
Premise
Mr. Chapel was a mysterious stranger keen on serving justice to those who had been ignored by the law (similar to The Equalizer). To achieve those ends, Mr. Chapel made use of promised favors from former clients (similar to Stingray). People in trouble were usually contacted by Chapel with an envelope on their front doorstep containing newspaper clippings related to previous clients, along with the phone number 555-0132. When Mr. Chapel took a case, his demand was simple: either pay a fee of one million dollars, or promise to do a favor at some time in the future—-whatever, whenever, wherever and for however long he needed you—-then your debt would be paid in full. In the series pilot, it was clear that Mr. Chapel had been doing this for some time, as he called in a number of favors to help his current client.
A running joke throughout the series was whenever one of those former clients paid their debt to Mr. Chapel's satisfaction, he would say, "We're even. I'm out of your life. Forever." The client would invariably respond, "Thank God!" Some favors are ongoing, such as the one owed from Boone Paladin, owner of The Paladin Motel chain, who grants Chapel permanent guest status in all of his motels. K.C. Griffin (York), a woman who worked in the district attorney's office, was the one former client who stayed after doing her one favor, and continued to assist Chapel with his cases.
Chapel made few promises. Those that he did make, he would fulfill (or die trying). Though he had no compunctions about using lethal force if necessary, Chapel refused entirely to use guns. Current clients were sent away, if at all possible, to keep them out of the line of fire (and provide them plausible deniability). There are hints throughout the series that Chapel began his crusade after suffering a traumatic personal tragedy.
Episode list
- Cruel and Unusual (Pilot). September 29, 1998
- Victim of Circumstances. October 1, 1998
- Eden. October 8, 1998
- Bitter End. October 15, 1998
- Justice. October 22, 1998
- Ambition. October 29, 1998
- Security. December 10, 1998
- Dishonorable Discharge. December 17, 1998
- Noir. December 24, 1998
- Vendetta. January 7, 1999
- Confidence. January 14, 1999
- Judgment. January 21, 1999
- Clique. January 28, 1999
- Critical. February 4, 1999
- Legalese. February 11, 1999
- Friends. February 25, 1999
Ratings and Cancellation
The show was cancelled by ABC, after ranking only 109th out of 156 shows, with an average viewership of just 7.1 million viewers. The show ranked 4th in its timeslot, being beaten by NBC's Friends (2nd, 23.5 million) and Jesse (TV series) (4th, 20.1 million), CBS's Promised Land (51st, 11.5 million), and FOX's World's Wildest Police Videos (77th, 9.6 million). However, the show did beat out UPN's Thursday Night at the Movies (145th, 2.5 million) and WB's The Wayans Bros. (134th, 3.5 million) and The Jamie Foxx Show (129th, 3.8 million).
See also
References
External links
- Vengeance Unlimited at the Internet Movie Database
- Vengeance Unlimited at TV.com
- Vengeance Unlimited at the TV IV Wiki