The Invaders may be the first TV show I can recall watching. My parents watched it when I was about four or five, and what stuck with me were the opening credits, with the Invaders' spaceship zooming toward earth, and David Vincent in his car, waking up to see the spaceship landing, and then the way their bodies would glow and disappear when they were killed. Spooky.
A few years ago, I found the DVDs available through Netflix and did a watch of the series. Typical Quinn Martin approach--you mention The Fugitive and that is no accident--and, as others have noted, it was a formula that held few real variations although a number of episodes were intriguing, and it's always fun to spot the guest stars. One of the Season Two episodes, "The Enemy," features a nurse (Barbara Barrie, later of Barney Miller) just returned from a tour of Vietnam and some rather equivocal comments about the war, which were unusual for 1967 from what I can gather. I won't say anything more about the series because you may still be watching it.
Before The X Files, even before Kolchak: The Night Stalker, The Invaders told the paranormal tale with Roy Thinnes's David Vincent the lone voice in the wilderness trying to convince anyone who would listen that there was unusual trouble afoot. So, it's no surprise that Thinnes cropped up on The X Files, as did Darren McGavin from Kolchak. I remember Thinnes in the 1975 film The Hindenburg as a Gestapo agent, but the film itself, despite a fine cast and direction by Robert Wise, exhumes a bit of hot air about a conspiracy to destroy the zeppelin. Oh, the humanity.
If you can find The Invaders' DVDs, by all means do so. Thinnes does an interview that is rather fascinating, but more importantly he does intros for just about every episode. They are short, but they are quietly hilarious. It is hard to tell whether Thinnes is being sincere or is just pretending to be sincere, but they do deserve to be viewed. Make no mistake--he is proud of his work, but there is just something in his manner that seems to pull your leg just a little.
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"The past is never dead. It isn't even past." -- William Faulkner
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