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IMDbPro

Queer as Folk

  • Fernsehserie
  • 2000–2005
  • 16
  • 45 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
8,5/10
23.471
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
2.145
117
Sharon Gless, Hal Sparks, Michelle Clunie, Robert Gant, Thea Gill, Gale Harold, Randy Harrison, Scott Lowell, and Peter Paige in Queer as Folk (2000)
Home Video Trailer from Showtime
trailer wiedergeben2:07
6 Videos
99+ Fotos
DramaRomanze

Das Leben und die Liebe einer Gruppe von schwulen Freunden, die in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, leben.Das Leben und die Liebe einer Gruppe von schwulen Freunden, die in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, leben.Das Leben und die Liebe einer Gruppe von schwulen Freunden, die in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, leben.

  • Stoffentwicklung
    • Ron Cowen
    • Daniel Lipman
    • Russell T. Davies
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Gale Harold
    • Hal Sparks
    • Randy Harrison
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    8,5/10
    23.471
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    2.145
    117
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Ron Cowen
      • Daniel Lipman
      • Russell T. Davies
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Gale Harold
      • Hal Sparks
      • Randy Harrison
    • 179Benutzerrezensionen
    • 9Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 8 Gewinne & 34 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Episoden83

    Folgen durchsuchen
    HöchsteAm besten bewertet

    Videos6

    Queer As Folk: Season 4
    Trailer 2:07
    Queer As Folk: Season 4
    Queer As Folk
    Trailer 3:22
    Queer As Folk
    Queer As Folk
    Trailer 3:22
    Queer As Folk
    Queer As Folk: Season 5
    Trailer 1:49
    Queer As Folk: Season 5
    Queer As Folk: Season 1
    Trailer 1:32
    Queer As Folk: Season 1
    Queer As Folk: Season 3
    Trailer 0:52
    Queer As Folk: Season 3
    Queer As Folk: Season 2
    Trailer 0:33
    Queer As Folk: Season 2

    Fotos454

    Poster ansehen
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    + 448
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    Topbesetzung99+

    Ändern
    Gale Harold
    Gale Harold
    • Brian Kinney
    • 2000–2005
    Hal Sparks
    Hal Sparks
    • Michael Novotny
    • 2000–2005
    Randy Harrison
    Randy Harrison
    • Justin Taylor
    • 2000–2005
    Michelle Clunie
    Michelle Clunie
    • Melanie Marcus
    • 2000–2005
    Thea Gill
    Thea Gill
    • Lindsay Peterson
    • 2000–2005
    Scott Lowell
    Scott Lowell
    • Ted Schmidt
    • 2000–2005
    Peter Paige
    Peter Paige
    • Emmett Honeycutt
    • 2000–2005
    Sharon Gless
    Sharon Gless
    • Debbie…
    • 2000–2005
    Robert Gant
    Robert Gant
    • Professor Ben Bruckner
    • 2002–2005
    Jack Wetherall
    • Vic Grassi
    • 2000–2004
    Diane Higgins
    • Passerby
    • 2000–2005
    Sherry Miller
    Sherry Miller
    • Jennifer Taylor
    • 2000–2005
    Makyla Smith
    • Daphne Chanders
    • 2000–2005
    Harris Allan
    Harris Allan
    • James 'Hunter' Montgomery
    • 2003–2005
    Stephanie Moore
    • Cynthia
    • 2000–2005
    Logan Hoover
    Logan Hoover
    • Gus Peterson-Marcus…
    • 2003–2005
    Kegan Hoover
    Kegan Hoover
    • Gus Peterson-Marcus…
    • 2003–2005
    Peter MacNeill
    Peter MacNeill
    • Detective Carl Horvath
    • 2002–2005
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Ron Cowen
      • Daniel Lipman
      • Russell T. Davies
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen179

    8,523.4K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10Rogue-32

    Best of Show(time)

    QAF is, in my opinion, the best cable TV series of all time (since Rude Awakening is off the air). Kudos to Showtime for having the courage to put it on. The most important reason this show works is because of THE ACTORS, who are all superb, creating 3-dimensional characters that you care about, deeply, week after week. It's impossible to imagine any different actors in the main roles, in fact - the true sign of brilliant casting. This is the only show on television, cable or network, that I watch religiously and I couldn't be any more thrilled that it's been renewed for another 2 seasons.

    Added on August 8th (a day after the series finale aired) - Just wanted to say that this show has changed television forever, not just because it pushed the envelope - actually, it EXPLODED the envelope - but also because of all the lives it touched, informed and/or changed. This show crossed all barriers, appealing to every kind of viewer, thanks to the beautifully written characters, magnificently realized by the superb cast, and I for one am sad to see it end, this once-in-a-lifetime bold and redemptive journey.
    mermatt

    Hot and funny

    It's always fashionable to negatively critique US versions of British material, but I am not always into that fashion.

    I loved the first two episodes of this Americanized QUEER AS FOLK. It certainly follows the plot of the British version (so far at least). Yet the pace is more leisurely since the US version takes 45 minutes to do what was done in 30 minutes on the British version.

    The US version is also easier to understand -- and it's not just the fact that we aren't getting the British slang in quickly-spoken thick British accents. Maybe it's the more leisurely pace that makes the plot easier to follow.

    Hal Sparks has a wonderful dead-pan dry humor as the narrator, Michael. Randy Harrison is sweet as Justin, the newly-out teenager. When he was rejected by his dream-man Brian, his pain looked genuine and touching.

    Even though the opening narration indicates "It's all about sex," the show is actually about more than that. The narrator is referring to the fact that gay night life in trendy bars is "all about sex," but we see in Michael and Justin the reality of people searching for a sense of connection in a world that doesn't offer a lot of connection -- especially for gay people.

    While the British version was only 8 episodes with a 2 hour finale (which I found disappointing), this US version promises to begin with 22 episodes and possibly go on from there. I look forward to the future developments. So far, I see nothing to complain about.
    smoothhoney1265

    crazy sexy sweet cool

    Two men are standing on the roof of a hospital. Brian and Michael are in their late twenties, gay and best friends. In the past three hours before this rooftop scene, Brian has had sex in a gay nightclub, hooked up with a 17-year old boy (whom he will deflower approximately one hour later) and has become a father. Michael, on the other hand, was about to have a one-night stand and realized but once again that he actually is secretly in love with Brian.

    With drugs inside, Brian goes on a trip, climbs the edge of the roof, pulls Michael to him and whispers in his ear: "Come on, Mickey, let's fly!" In the background, Heather Small sings "I step out of the ordinary…" It is a mild summer night in the middle of a sparkling city and there is magic in the air.

    The first episode of "Queer as folk" was probably the sexiest, craziest, sweetest and best TV show premiere I've ever seen (well, apart maybe from "Desperate Housewives"). It really impressed me and woke my interest. But it was this magical moment Michael and Brian share on the roof that made me fall in love with this show. You can almost smell the night air, feel the warm summer wind breeze and know: it's one of those crazy, unusual moments that make us feel alive. The music, the atmosphere, the scenery – it's all perfect and goes straight under your skin into your heart and soul. The scene gives a promise to the viewer that in the future we will witness unusual, as well as profound and ordinary things, but most of all it is a promise that there will be more magical moments like this one and breathtaking surprises like the ones that happened previously and followed right after. And what better promise can a first episode give – and keep? We witness the lives of four gay friends, a newbie, a gay man's mother and a lesbian couple plus their friends, lovers, relatives and one-night-stands in Pittsburgh. Brian, the main character, is a selfish asshole and Casanova on the one hand and a vulnerable, caring, sweet young man on the other. Michael, whose relationship to Brian I have already described a bit, on the one hand loves his proud mother, on the other tries everything to pretend that he's straight at the supermarket he works in. Emmett, a sweetheart of a queen, always delivers flamboyant one-liners and looks for the man of his dreams. So does Ted, suffering from his not-classically-attractive looks, but having a heart of gold. Young Justin is about to discover the scene and has the (bad) luck to choose Brian as his first love(r). And then there are Lindsay and Melanie, just your average lesbian couple, who has just become mother and … mother with the little help of … Brian.

    After having seen three more episodes I am completely addicted to this show. I could enumerate at least 1000 reasons why it went so quickly with me and scenes like the one above which pulled me inside this "queer" world. But I won't. Because everybody has their own reasons to love (or hate) this show and the right to discover it for themselves. But I would like to mention "QAF" 's greatest strength and maybe THE reason why this is a brilliant series. Today's TV shows have so many clichés, try to judge, to label. You will find none of this in "Queer as folk". It just witnesses the lives of people without commenting on it, judging or trying to justify what they do. If they want to shag, they shag, if they want to take drugs, they do so without asking anyone's permission, if they want to party, they party and they make just as many and stupid mistakes as everyone does. Sometimes they screw up and there are times they don't know if they want to scream of joy or suffering. They just live and the show celebrates them for it. And what better message can it have? I know that the show was already a huge success in the US, I am glad that it finally reached Europe (or at least Germany) and I am very grateful that I have the opportunity to see it. Great performances by a brilliant cast and a plot that simply knocks you off – for me one of the best TV shows that has ever been done.
    toriti

    opening one's eyes...

    It's about time that filmmakers created a series that doesn't revolve around the trivial and comic relationships of heterosexual couples - many of the sitcoms these days seem to have that theme in there somewhere do they not? It's controversial, often quite graphic and rarely comic - it's an adult 'soap opera' with alot more content than your average. Apart from anything else, Queer As Folk has thrown a revealing light onto the trials and tribulations of gay relationships - proving to those unfamiliar with the subject that they are not relationships that should be ridiculed or discriminated against. Regardless of the moral merits, it's just a really good series. The acting is great and the storyline keeps you watching week after week. The series explores numerous relationships that all differ in some way or another - yet in many ways they are also very much alike. This series can be enjoyed by anyone, despite some of the reviews I've read in the past. In fact, I'd encourage anyone to try it out at least once - you may be presently suprised.
    gregorybnyc

    Always A Surprise

    As an older man (55), I'm amazed at the level of graphic nudity, the frankness of the sexual couplings whether gay or lesbian sex is involved, and it struck me as astonishing that the reason I would sometimes be uncomfortable viewing these scenes, is that there are virtually no images for gay people on TV that are comparable to those in QAF. I'm no prude, and thank goodness I've stopped squirming. My normal reaction is that if a series is good in its original British guise, the Americanization will be awful. Not so here. QAF started for me as a superficial soap about gay life. But once the first season was half over, I was hooked. I found I cared deeply about these characters. Their insular gay world in Pittsburgh was refreshing. The relationships work beautifully and you see a fairly representative slice of gay life on this series. Sure everyone always seems to be showing up at the big gay club with its go-go dancers and steamy back room. But how wonderful to have a show all about gay people where nobody gets killed for being gay, or commits suicide or is in some sort of depression or any other negative situations that have been such a feature of films showing gay characters as life's losers.

    Gale Harold's Brian took me totally by surprise. His no gamesmanship attitude towards sex and relationships makes total sense. What I responded to is his character's absolute refusal to be liked, unlike the very likable Michael (Hal Sparks) whose insecurity demands that he be liked. Brian's a stunning bad boy, confident of his looks, his talent, his ability to spot bullshit a mile away. He wants to be appreciated for his worth. Nothing wrong with that. He's unapologetic about his sexuality and is not obsessed with settling down into domestic bliss the way Michael is. Michael is a child, but a sweet one with his love of comic books, and his unresolved longing for Brian. His character's worry about everything has finally become endearing. Peter Paige's Emmett is adorable and heartbreaking. I love that he's always picking himself up after every romantic disaster, dusting himself off and heading towards the next with high hopes. Scott Lowell has a natural affinity for Ted Schmidt's insecure and manipulative accountant. I'd like him to settle down for awhile. I sometimes weary of his travails.

    At first I thought Randy Harrison's sweetly beautiful Justin was going to be a fluffy love toy for Brian, but Justin's own problems have shown Brian's caring side, and you get to see that Justin is no dummy. He goes after what he wants. Nothing wrong with that. Sharon Gless's working Mom waitress can be abrasively grating at times, but she presents a loving mother to a gay son, and that's a good thing. Michelle Clunie as Melanie and Thea Gill as Lindsay strike me as an appealing, smart, and caring lesbian couple Their stability as a couple shows what is possible without proselytizing.

    Now in its fifth season, I've come to appreciate the show in big gulps since I rent each season from Netflix. It's a real wallow, and I'm always sorry that it's over. Right now I'm deep into season four and I can't wait to find out what happens next. QAF is excellent series TV, vastly entertaining. Best of all it won't make you feel dumb.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Executive producers Ron Cowen and Daniel Lipman said they encountered an extreme amount of homophobia from other Hollywood industry professionals, during the pre-production and casting process for this television series.
    • Patzer
      There is a hexagon shaped window on the wall between Debbie's front door and the stairs that lead upstairs. In season 1 this window was clear and you could see 'daylight' coming through it. In subsequent seasons the glass panes of this window were covered in gay pride colors and had a non-see-through look. When you see the outside porch and front door of Debbie's house, her house is a semi-detached home with the other half of the house attached to the wall that has the window.
    • Zitate

      Brian Kinney: [whispers in his ear] I love you.

      Justin: [sighs]

      Brian Kinney: I love you.

    • Crazy Credits
      "Queer As Folk is a celebration of the lives and passions of a group of gay friends. It is not meant to reflect all of gay society."
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Prom Fight: The Marc Hall Story (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Spunk
      (Main Title Theme)

      Written by Don Pyle & Andrew Zealley

      Performed by Greek Buck

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 9. Januar 2006 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Kanada
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Official Site
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Q.A.F.
    • Drehorte
      • 6 Church Street, Toronto, Ontario, Kanada(Brian's Loft exterior)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Cowlip Productions
      • Tony Jonas Productions
      • Showtime Networks
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    • Laufzeit
      • 45 Min.
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    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.78 : 1

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