During a time travel experiment, a scientist becomes lost in time, swapping lives with a variety of different people during different time periods. To return to his present, he must solve th... Read allDuring a time travel experiment, a scientist becomes lost in time, swapping lives with a variety of different people during different time periods. To return to his present, he must solve their problems and change history for the better.During a time travel experiment, a scientist becomes lost in time, swapping lives with a variety of different people during different time periods. To return to his present, he must solve their problems and change history for the better.
- Won 6 Primetime Emmys
- 18 wins & 43 nominations total
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This year (2022) a TV series re-boot of sorts, still called "Quantum Leap", is intended as a continuation of the 1989 series that had Scott Bakula as the Quantum-leaping Sam and Dean Stockwell as the holographic accomplist Al. As the new series opens it references the old series and that Sam never returned but the technology is a continuation of the old. So with that came my desire to revisit the older series. Fortunately it is also available streaming on NBC's Peacock service. While I did see some episodes back 30-odd years ago I never watched much of it.
Now, watching it from the beginning, and comparing it to the re-boot, the main difference (aside from the actors) is that the original has a lot more humor. While each story has mostly serious elements the overall mood is humorous. Not broad, slapstick comedy but humor built in by 1) excellent scripts and 2) the acting abilities of Bakula and Stockwell. They made a really good team and every episode, no matter what the subject, is entertaining.
Now, watching it from the beginning, and comparing it to the re-boot, the main difference (aside from the actors) is that the original has a lot more humor. While each story has mostly serious elements the overall mood is humorous. Not broad, slapstick comedy but humor built in by 1) excellent scripts and 2) the acting abilities of Bakula and Stockwell. They made a really good team and every episode, no matter what the subject, is entertaining.
An absolutely perfect show. It wasn't too technical, it wasn't too Sci-fi. It had the drama of life, and offered some comedy at the same time. Instead of seeing the same person with the same people dealing with their own life, we saw many, many, many different lives all being influenced by one great man who in the end could be deemed a saint. I am happy that the show was able to finish, and just disappear like some other great shows. The show had a good conclusion. It was happy, but it wasn't sappy or ultra-moralistic and joyful. It was the perfect ending for such a case. There isn't a thing they could change about this show. The only thing they could do to make it worse would be to make a movie for TV. Those type of things usually ruin a good show. Quantum Leap though is definitely a TV legend.
A highly imaginative idea from Donald P. Bellisario.
The selection of Scott Bakula and Dean Stockwell to play the roles of Sam (the quantum leaper) and Al (Sam's advice-giving & holographic guide) was spot on.
The story lines were great. The series consisted mainly of fictional plots, interspersed with the odd story based on real life events. In addition, the show's original signature tune was great!
The acting, especially from Scott and Dean, was first class. In fact, you don't need to be a sci-fi buff to enjoy Quantum Leap ........ a Bellisario masterpiece!
________ 9 out of 10! ________
Carl Giwa.
The selection of Scott Bakula and Dean Stockwell to play the roles of Sam (the quantum leaper) and Al (Sam's advice-giving & holographic guide) was spot on.
The story lines were great. The series consisted mainly of fictional plots, interspersed with the odd story based on real life events. In addition, the show's original signature tune was great!
The acting, especially from Scott and Dean, was first class. In fact, you don't need to be a sci-fi buff to enjoy Quantum Leap ........ a Bellisario masterpiece!
________ 9 out of 10! ________
Carl Giwa.
Oh boy, where do you start. Quantum Leap was an innovative science fiction/fantasy show but at its heart it was also a drama of hope, second chances and change.
The idea behind the show was simple. Dr Sam Beckett, a quantum physicist from the near future (late 1990s it seems) becomes lost in time following a time travel experiment.
He leaps into other people's bodies, temporarily taking the places of them 'to put right what once went wrong.'
Dean Stockwell played Al who appeared as a hologram that only Sam could see as well a some animals and young children. As well as trying to help Sam because Sam suffered from holes in his memory, he also provided the humour.
The series had an easy going charm. It mixed humour, drama, social commentary and nostalgia which gave it broad appeal. There tended to be little science fiction outside its central conceit.
When the episode finished you will see Sam leaping into his next body. The series was strongest when it went into social commentary such as leaping into the body of a black man in the 1960s southern states.
There were also sly parodies of films. Scott Bakula and Dean Stockwell had good chemistry.
There were flaws in the series, although it was set in the near future, all the leaps seem to take place pre 1989 when the series started.
Some of the stories could also become rather similar. The producers kind of challenged that by having an evil leaper or politicians in the present trying to pull funding for the project leaving Sam stranded.
The series finished in what can be regarded at a controversial conclusion. Sam who was lost in time and hoping to find his way back home in the present day.
He ends up with a mysterious barkeeper who informs him that he has a choice either to go home or to keep on leaping and changing people's life.
The idea behind the show was simple. Dr Sam Beckett, a quantum physicist from the near future (late 1990s it seems) becomes lost in time following a time travel experiment.
He leaps into other people's bodies, temporarily taking the places of them 'to put right what once went wrong.'
Dean Stockwell played Al who appeared as a hologram that only Sam could see as well a some animals and young children. As well as trying to help Sam because Sam suffered from holes in his memory, he also provided the humour.
The series had an easy going charm. It mixed humour, drama, social commentary and nostalgia which gave it broad appeal. There tended to be little science fiction outside its central conceit.
When the episode finished you will see Sam leaping into his next body. The series was strongest when it went into social commentary such as leaping into the body of a black man in the 1960s southern states.
There were also sly parodies of films. Scott Bakula and Dean Stockwell had good chemistry.
There were flaws in the series, although it was set in the near future, all the leaps seem to take place pre 1989 when the series started.
Some of the stories could also become rather similar. The producers kind of challenged that by having an evil leaper or politicians in the present trying to pull funding for the project leaving Sam stranded.
The series finished in what can be regarded at a controversial conclusion. Sam who was lost in time and hoping to find his way back home in the present day.
He ends up with a mysterious barkeeper who informs him that he has a choice either to go home or to keep on leaping and changing people's life.
I have to admit I may be a little biased as I've always had a soft spot for this programme. I recall watching the pilot when it was originally aired in the UK (1990 I think?) and remember, even then, being transfixed by the subsequent weekly 'leaps' of its main character, Dr. Sam Beckett.
I always thought it was more than just a Sci-fi/ comedic drama as, at times, it was incredibly insightful. The concept was completely innovative and didn't rely to heavily on expensive effects to convey the belief of time travel.
Sam's holographic sidekick Al Calavici (played by Dean Stockwell) provided an above average level of humour, making the viewer laugh out loud at issues which some would consider untouchable (his remark of 'bigot in a moo-moo' regarding one very ample character's racist comments being an example!)
There appeared to be no subject to dangerous to touch and that was what made the programme so engrossing. By examining key issues that could have affected anyone (sexual harassment, racism and teenage pregnancy to name a few), the viewer could not help but be drawn into a theoretical discussion as to the rights and wrongs of each subject.
I could go on but all I can add is that I highly recommend this T.V classic to newcomers as, once you've seen it, you will become as hooked as the millions of other devotees out there!
I always thought it was more than just a Sci-fi/ comedic drama as, at times, it was incredibly insightful. The concept was completely innovative and didn't rely to heavily on expensive effects to convey the belief of time travel.
Sam's holographic sidekick Al Calavici (played by Dean Stockwell) provided an above average level of humour, making the viewer laugh out loud at issues which some would consider untouchable (his remark of 'bigot in a moo-moo' regarding one very ample character's racist comments being an example!)
There appeared to be no subject to dangerous to touch and that was what made the programme so engrossing. By examining key issues that could have affected anyone (sexual harassment, racism and teenage pregnancy to name a few), the viewer could not help but be drawn into a theoretical discussion as to the rights and wrongs of each subject.
I could go on but all I can add is that I highly recommend this T.V classic to newcomers as, once you've seen it, you will become as hooked as the millions of other devotees out there!
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn the scenes where Sam Beckett is seeing someone else's reflection in the mirror these scenes are shot on a dual set using a clear glass mirror in which Scott Bakula would stand on one side and the actor or actress he'd leap into would stand on the other side.
- GoofsFor the "mirror reflections" in which Sam sees whom he leaps into, the series used a dual set with a clear glass in the "mirror". Scott Bakula would stand on one side, and the actor playing the person he leaped into on the other. Looking closely at the glass, Bakula's reflection can sometimes be seen, especially if the mirror is near a source of light like sunshine.
- Alternate versionsAirings on the Comet digital channel have a recap of the previous episode at the top of some Season 2 shows, and restores Sam's end-of-episode leaps into a rerun, as originally aired, instead of the next scheduled first-run episode.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Chronic Rift: Quantum Leap (1990)
- SoundtracksPrologue (Saga Sell)
Written by Mike Post and Velton Ray Bunch
Performed by Velton Ray Bunch with Deborah Pratt (voice over)
Courtesy of Music Corp. of America (BMI)
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