Films Four
feature-length films have been produced following the end of the NBC/CBS run of the TV series: • 1980:
The Nude Bomb (dir.
Clive Donner)—also known as
The Return of Maxwell Smart or
Maxwell Smart and the Nude Bomb—was theatrically released. It was panned by critics and barely returned its budget at the box office. • 1989: The made-for-TV
Get Smart, Again! (dir.
Gary Nelson) on
ABC • 2008:
Get Smart (dir.
Peter Segal) starring
Steve Carell as Smart alongside
Anne Hathaway as 99. Distributed by
Warner Bros., the film includes a dedication to Adams and Platt, who had died in 2005 and 1974, respectively. It received mixed critical reviews but was a commercial success, earning over $230 million worldwide. • 2008: ''
Get Smart's Bruce and Lloyd: Out of Control'' (dir.
Gil Junger), a
made-for-DVD spin-off revolving around minor characters, Bruce and Lloyd (
Masi Oka and
Nate Torrence), the masterminds behind the high-tech gadgets that are often used by Smart. In October 2008, it was reported that Warner Bros.,
Village Roadshow Pictures and
Mosaic Media Group were producing a sequel. Carell and Hathaway were set to return, but the status of other cast members had not been announced. As of 2019,
Get Smart 2 is no longer in development
Television Get Smart, Again! eventually prompted the development of a short-lived 1995 weekly series on
Fox also titled
Get Smart, with Adams and Feldon reprising their characters with Maxwell Smart now being the Chief of Control as their bumbling son, Zach (
Andy Dick), becomes Control's star agent (Zach's twin sister is never seen nor mentioned – though the new leader of KAOS, a hidden female figure, would have been revealed as the other twin if the show had continued). 99 is now a congresswoman. The beginning teaser shows Maxwell Smart and Zach driving to Control headquarters in a car wash separately; Smart, Zach and their secretary cram themselves into a secret elevator: a soda machine which "disappears". (A cleaning lady sits down in the open space when all of a sudden the machine pops up and knocks the woman into the ceiling.) A late episode of the 1995 series shows that just as Siegfried is leaving a room, Maxwell Smart accidentally activates an atomic bomb just before the end of the show. (The teaser for the episode shows an atomic bomb going off.) This ending is similar to a device used by the
Get Smart-inspired series
Sledge Hammer! at the end of its first season. Hopes for the series were not high, as Andy Dick had already moved on to
NewsRadio, which premiered weeks later in 1995. With the revival series on Fox,
Get Smart became the first television franchise to air new episodes (or made-for-TV films) on each of the aforementioned current four major American television networks, although several TV shows in the 1940s and 1950s aired on NBC, CBS, ABC and
DuMont. The different versions of
Get Smart did not all feature the original lead cast.
Get Smart was parodied on a sketch in the Mexican comedy show called , making fun of the Spanish title of the series () and the way the series is dubbed. An early
MadTV sketch titled "Get Smarty" placed the Maxwell Smart character in situations from the film
Get Shorty. An episode of
F Troop called "Spy, Counterspy, Counter–counterspy" featured
Pat Harrington Jr. imitating Don Adams as secret agent "B. Wise".
The Simpsons episode "
Bart vs. Lisa vs. the Third Grade" parodies the opening of
Get Smart in the couch gag. Homer goes through many futuristic doors and passageways until he reaches the phone booth, falls through the floor, and lands on the couch, with the rest of the family already seated. This couch gag was later repeated in two other
The Simpsons episodes: "
The Fat and the Furriest" and "
A Star is Torn".
Adams in similar roles In the 1960s, Adams had a supporting role on the sitcom
The Bill Dana Show (1963–1965) as the hopelessly inept
hotel detective Byron Glick. His speech mannerisms, catchphrases ("Would you believe...?"), and other comedy bits were adapted for his "Maxwell Smart" role in
Get Smart. In 1971, Adams starred as Sgt. Lennie Crooks, a bumbling police detective similar to the bumbling secret agent he played on
Get Smart, on
The Partners. His partner and best friend, Detective George Robinson, was a not-quite-as-bumbling policeman played by
Rupert Crosse. They reported to Captain Andrews, played by
John Doucette, a similarly harried supervisor in the tradition of Edward Platt's "Chief."
Robert Karvelas, who had played Agent Larabee on
Get Smart, had a recurring role as Freddie Butler, who felt compelled to confess to crimes he did not commit. The series only lasted a half-season. When
WCGV-TV, a new
independent station in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, signed on the air in 1980, Adams did in-house promos as Agent 86 to let viewers know when the reruns of
Get Smart aired on the station by using his shoephone. In one of Adams' five appearances as a guest passenger in the series
The Love Boat, his character, even when he thought he had been shot, makes no attempt to visit the ship's doctor. The role of the doctor in
The Love Boat was played by
Bernie Kopell, who played Siegfried in
Get Smart. In 1982, Adams starred as Maxwell Smart in a series of local commercials for New York City electronics chain Savemart. The
slogan was "Get Smart. Get SaveMart Smart." In addition, Adams starred in a series of commercials for
White Castle in 1992, paying homage to his
Get Smart character with his catchphrase "Would you believe...?" In the 1980s, Adams provided the (similar) voice of the titular bungling cyborg secret agent in the animated series
Inspector Gadget. This later became a
feature film in 1999 starring
Matthew Broderick in the title role of Inspector John Brown Gadget (in which Adams had a cameo), and its prequel series
Gadget Boy & Heather. Neither was directly related to
Get Smart. In the mid-1980s, Adams reprised his role of Maxwell Smart for a series of telephone banking commercials for Empire of America Federal Savings Bank in
Buffalo, New York. The telephone banking service was called SmartLine, and Sherwin Greenberg Productions (a video production company and bank subsidiary) produced radio and television ads, as well as a series of still photos for use in promotional flyers that featured Adams' Maxwell Smart character wearing the familiar trenchcoat and holding a shoe phone to his ear. The television commercials were videotaped in Sherwin Greenberg Productions' studio on a set that resembled an old alleyway which utilized fog-making machinery for special effect. The production company even secured a lookalike of the red Alpine that Adams used in the television series, making it a memorable promotion for those familiar with the series of nearly 20 years earlier. In the late 1980s, Adams portrayed Smart in a series of TV commercials for Toyota New Zealand, for the 1990 model Toyota Starlet. While it is customary for the actor to go to the foreign location for shooting, Adams' apparent intense dislike of long-distance flying meant that the New Zealand specification car had to be shipped to the US for filming. He also appeared in another series of Canadian commercials in the late 1990s for a
dial-around long-distance carrier. In the movie
Back to the Beach (1987), Adams played the Harbor Master, who used several of Maxwell Smart's catchphrases (including an exchange in which
Frankie Avalon's character did a vague impression of Siegfried). Adams played Smart in a 1989 TV commercial for
Kmart. He was seen talking on his trademark shoe phone, telling the Chief about the great selection of electronics available at Kmart. An exact replica of himself approaches him, and Smart says, "Don't tell me you're a double agent." (This was a reference to a running gag on the original series, in which Max detected some sort of setback or danger, and would say to 99, "Don't tell me..." and then 99 replied by stating a confirmation of whatever Max was afraid to hear, to which Max would always respond, "I
asked you not to tell me that!") Adams also appeared in a number of
McDonald's television commercials, which also featured numerous stars of TV series viewed as classic or with nostalgia, such as
Barbara Billingsley from
Leave It to Beaver,
Buddy Ebsen from
The Beverly Hillbillies,
Bob Denver from ''
Gilligan's Island and Al Lewis from The Munsters''. Adams also starred in a Canadian sitcom titled
Check It Out in which he played a supermarket manager. Adams' running jokes in
Get Smart, such as "the old [something something] trick" and "I told you not to tell me that!" were used in the show but in a supermarket setting.
Books and comics A series of novels based on characters and dialog of the series was written by
William Johnston and published in the Tempo Books series by
Grosset & Dunlap in the late 1960s.
Dell Comics published a comic book for eight issues during 1966 and 1967, drawn in part by
Steve Ditko.
Proposed movies The 1966
Batman movie, made during that TV show's original run, prompted other television shows to propose similar films. The only one completed was
Munster Go Home (1966), which was a box office flop, causing the cancellation of other projects, including the
Get Smart movie. The script for that movie was turned into a three-part episode, "A Man Called Smart", which aired on April 8, 15 and 22, 1967. During the 1980s, Dick Gautier was set to star in a Hymie the Robot spin-off film to be made for TV, following Hymie being recalled and then refurbished by the government. The film was never produced due to legal issues surrounding the ownership of
Get Smart.
Play Christopher Sergel adapted a play in 1967,
Get Smart, based on Brooks's and Henry's pilot episode. ==Home media and rights==