24 opiniones
Long available only from bootleggers, this series which played on TV very, VERY briefly (two months in the summer of 1977) and became a cult item among sci-fi and Get Smart fans is now finally out on DVD.
The look is cheap and cheesy and the humor is almost cringe-inducing at this point, so it hardly needs mentioning that the series has not aged well. Nonetheless, fans who remember the series and fringe-dwelling thrill seekers are advised to give this curious 70s reliquary a look. Basically, it's a lower budget Star Trek spoof with Get Smart level humor, courtesy of Buck Henry. Some gags still work, others just make you gag, but the cast is likable, especially Richard Benjamin as the eponymous Quark and his barely-clad twin female sidekicks, the Bettys. Like Get Smart there are several running jokes - each of the Bettys claim the other is the clone, while Gene/Jean the transmute flip-flops from gung-ho to girlie at random moments - but the show never ran long enough to wear them out, so some are still pretty funny.
A viewer seeking something a little different may find the series entertaining, but low expectations are a must.
The look is cheap and cheesy and the humor is almost cringe-inducing at this point, so it hardly needs mentioning that the series has not aged well. Nonetheless, fans who remember the series and fringe-dwelling thrill seekers are advised to give this curious 70s reliquary a look. Basically, it's a lower budget Star Trek spoof with Get Smart level humor, courtesy of Buck Henry. Some gags still work, others just make you gag, but the cast is likable, especially Richard Benjamin as the eponymous Quark and his barely-clad twin female sidekicks, the Bettys. Like Get Smart there are several running jokes - each of the Bettys claim the other is the clone, while Gene/Jean the transmute flip-flops from gung-ho to girlie at random moments - but the show never ran long enough to wear them out, so some are still pretty funny.
A viewer seeking something a little different may find the series entertaining, but low expectations are a must.
- dave13-1
- 14 abr 2012
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I was a preteen when this show aired and I loved it, but I was savvy enough to realize that most people wouldn't get it. I wasn't surprised at the cancellation. As an adult, I couldn't find ANYONE else who remembered it, even my husband who is a huge SciFi Fan. I finally found a copy of a small film clip in the Television Museum in L.A. Based on the condition of that clip, I fear that there may not be surviving episodes, but I would LOVE a DVD of whatever episodes still exist. I know a great many of my friends who would enjoy it now, even though they missed it then. Perhaps with so much communication through the internet, there will be enough interest generated to get a DVD released, preferably before the turn of the NEXT century!
- jamie486
- 18 ago 2007
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- Woodyanders
- 9 sep 2011
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I was very sorry when "Quark" was taken off the air. The writing was brilliant, and ahead of its time. This is no wonder, with Buck Henry in charge. After all, Henry is the man that brought us "Get Smart", among others.
Richard Benjamin was very good as the idealistic galactic sanitation worker, Adam Quark, and Tim Thomerson, often seen as a heavy, was hilarious as "Gene/Jean", the male-female crewperson. Patricia and Cyb Barnstable carried on ably as the brainless blonds, Bettys I and II, arguing the question of which was the clone and which was the original. Bobby Porter as "Andy the Android", Conrad Janis as "Otto Palindrome", and Alan Caillou as "The Head" were very good in their roles. My favorite was Richard Kelton as "Ficus Panderata", the highly evolved plant man, a Vegaton. I would swear that his was the character in mind when they created the character of Data for Star Trek:TNG.
This show was witty, bright, and more than a bit sarcastic and cheesy. I have read in another comment that a winter storm that knocked out power in the Midwest was responsible for the demise of "Quark", but in my never-to-be-humble opinion, it was that the majority of viewers simply couldn't deal with the fact that it was so different from anything else on TV at that time.
Considering some of the stuff out on DVD today, I don't see why Rhino can't put "Quark" out for us, "Quark"'s small, loyal fan following.
Richard Benjamin was very good as the idealistic galactic sanitation worker, Adam Quark, and Tim Thomerson, often seen as a heavy, was hilarious as "Gene/Jean", the male-female crewperson. Patricia and Cyb Barnstable carried on ably as the brainless blonds, Bettys I and II, arguing the question of which was the clone and which was the original. Bobby Porter as "Andy the Android", Conrad Janis as "Otto Palindrome", and Alan Caillou as "The Head" were very good in their roles. My favorite was Richard Kelton as "Ficus Panderata", the highly evolved plant man, a Vegaton. I would swear that his was the character in mind when they created the character of Data for Star Trek:TNG.
This show was witty, bright, and more than a bit sarcastic and cheesy. I have read in another comment that a winter storm that knocked out power in the Midwest was responsible for the demise of "Quark", but in my never-to-be-humble opinion, it was that the majority of viewers simply couldn't deal with the fact that it was so different from anything else on TV at that time.
Considering some of the stuff out on DVD today, I don't see why Rhino can't put "Quark" out for us, "Quark"'s small, loyal fan following.
- jfg1-1
- 1 ene 2005
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I've read comments from folks that were just kids (7 - 15 years) when this show aired. I was an adult and found it hilarious! Except for my best friend who watched it with me, no one I've talked to seems to remember it! I've searched the internet on and off for years to find it again. It was a great show, some very clever writing, but too short-lived. I'm glad to find more information and renewed interest in this show. The Sci-fi channel should air it as a summer replacement and then Sony could release it on DVD, they'd make a killing. I'd definitely buy it, and I think from the comments, many more would like it, too. I think my favourite line (and episode) was "goodbye, Polumbus", cracked me right up!
- craft47
- 6 jun 2006
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QUARK, a sci fi spoof from the mind of Buck Henry, aired in the fall of 1977. It lasted only eight episodes, and understandably so. It wasn't good, particularly the first four episodes. Much of the humor was flat and groan-inducing. Yet there was lovely potential. With nods to both STAR WARS and STAR TREK (they used the same audio library), it was obviously a labor of love. The hero is Quark (a well-cast Richard Benjamin), the long-suffering commander of an interstellar garbage ship. His first mates are Betty and her clone Betty (Cyb and Patricia Barnstable, the Doublemint twins), both in love with him. He's in love with her too, but can never consummate because he can't figure out which one is the original (another beautiful moment lost to monogamy's insidious grasp, or just the ugly face of anti-clone prejudice?). Crewmember Gene/Jean (Tim Thomerson) is a transmute, whose personality shifts unpredictably between macho male and fey female. The snarky HQ supervisor Palindrome is well-played by Conrad Janis (MORK AND MINDY). There's a homemade robot who is (unsurprisingly) annoying. The greatest character is Vegeton crewmember Ficus (Richard Kelton), a plant-creature who looks exactly like a human. His dry debates with Quark (no slouch at dry himself) are beautiful, and he takes his place admirably in the emotionless Vulcan/android continuum. Guest stars include Henry Silva (BUCK ROGERS) in "May the Source be with You", and Joan Van Ark in "All the Emperor's Quasi-Norms", the greatest episode of a too-brief run.
- robrosenberger
- 13 mar 2011
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I was an adult when this show came out. I changed my whole schedule on Friday evening so I could see the show, and then the network would change their scheduling. My niece, who was in grade school, would act out female characters in the show. It had a great, great following, and I think the network had rocks in their head to discontinue the show. As more and more space themed TV shows came back after the original Star Trek, their decision appears more and more flawed.... Richard Benjamin was great as the captain. It would work even now if they brought it back in new form. Buck Henry was a comedic genius. I am sure something like this would work very well now.... and we need something like this again.
- DennyBeMe
- 2 ago 2007
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I think Quark was one of the classics of comedy Sci-Fi. At the time it was unequaled Adam Quark (Richard Benjamin) as the Bumbling Captain of the garbage space scow was well acted. His antics trying to avoid the continual advances and affections of the two Betties Clones played by (Cyb Barnstable) was always a laugh. Then there was the gentle but strong Vegiton human appearance but was from a planet where vegetables had evolved as the higher life form. The brave warrior who was really a coward. The Head he was the commander at base and not to mention the robot. Looking back I would say Quark had aspects of many Sci-Fi's before and after. Lost in Space TV series not the movie, Red Dwarf, even early Star Trek. I'd love to get it on DVD to add to my collection.
- rasilon2000
- 29 jul 2006
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Lasting only Six episodes, this is another attempt at doing SF-Comedy. It has some funny ideas, like the cloned twins and hermaphrodite crewman, but altogether, it just isn't that funny.
- mhorg2018
- 2 jul 2018
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- richard.fuller1
- 19 mar 2011
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I'm watching the DVD now. I am less than impressed so far. The humor is a bit off, the music is cheesy rip-offs and the acting is weak. Tim Thomerson stands out as extra terrible. It is amazing how well he has stayed employed. The Barnstable Twins are about as bad actresses as you would expect. It was fun watching Conrad Janis. Richard Kelton actually appears to be fairly good.
I don't know why, but I watched all 8 episodes yesterday. I would recommend you pass on watching it again. Rent Get Smart instead. That has held up very well and the acting and writing and humor was far better. If you want Sci-Fi humor rent Red Dwarf.
Watching Quark did inspire me to see if the Wild Wild West is available yet. It is and I added it to my Q.
Ross Martin of Wild Wild West played a Ming the Merciless like villain in Episodes 5 & 6. (7 was the final but the first was 0).
I don't know why, but I watched all 8 episodes yesterday. I would recommend you pass on watching it again. Rent Get Smart instead. That has held up very well and the acting and writing and humor was far better. If you want Sci-Fi humor rent Red Dwarf.
Watching Quark did inspire me to see if the Wild Wild West is available yet. It is and I added it to my Q.
Ross Martin of Wild Wild West played a Ming the Merciless like villain in Episodes 5 & 6. (7 was the final but the first was 0).
- jrfranchi
- 24 ene 2009
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I long for this complete series (only 9 episodes, what was NBC thinking?) to be available on DVD. After 26 years I still laugh when remembering the Star Wars parody (Tatooine became PooPoo, so that the battle-cry of the planet's defenders was, "We must save our beloved PooPoo!"), and the pollination ritual of Richard Kelton as the plant man and guest star Joan Van Ark as the princess of an insect culture ("Bee bee bee bee bee beebeebeebeebeeBEEBEEBEEBEEBEE!"). See how well it fits with today's sense of humor? This material is just too good not to be shared with all the potential fans who weren't even born when it was first aired. In current jargon (and with the Barnstable twins in mind) it's like Farscape meets Eurotrip.
- cobblerjon
- 6 jun 2004
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Still very funny. Parodies not only Star Wars ... spotted a Zardoz parody too. Remember watching it way back. Canceled too soon! Get Smart vibes. Richard Benjamin is spot on. Ahead of its time. Don't know if rest of episodes are on YouTube. Didn't check. I hope so!!
Politically incorrect by today's standards ... but who cares! Not mean spirited at all! Great supporting cast. Costumes and sets are very seventies. But dialogue isn't. Worth the watch if you enjoy the humor of Buck Henry ... aka Get Smart. Also ... if you're a Richard Benjamin fan .., check out the movie The Last of Shiela ...one of my favorites ... but you have to be wide awake ... very complicated plot!!!
Politically incorrect by today's standards ... but who cares! Not mean spirited at all! Great supporting cast. Costumes and sets are very seventies. But dialogue isn't. Worth the watch if you enjoy the humor of Buck Henry ... aka Get Smart. Also ... if you're a Richard Benjamin fan .., check out the movie The Last of Shiela ...one of my favorites ... but you have to be wide awake ... very complicated plot!!!
- hfyjnyyjm
- 1 mar 2024
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I also remember watching it on TV when i was a kid and enjoying it. I recently had the chance to view about 5 of the few episodes of this show that were ever made and though it was a lot of fun to see it again, i'm not so convinced it would do so well thru a DVD release.
The humor is rather dated, of course, but the show also suffers from a huge lack of direction in some cases. Most of the episodes i watched had a feeling of being pieced together rather hap-hazard.
Would be interesting to see what a network could do with the show and premise if they decided to bring it back to a television series. Chances are very good that if one of the three networks did give it a go .... they would completely mess it up though. It would probably be best served on a pay channel. HBO could use more comedy series, thats for sure.
The humor is rather dated, of course, but the show also suffers from a huge lack of direction in some cases. Most of the episodes i watched had a feeling of being pieced together rather hap-hazard.
Would be interesting to see what a network could do with the show and premise if they decided to bring it back to a television series. Chances are very good that if one of the three networks did give it a go .... they would completely mess it up though. It would probably be best served on a pay channel. HBO could use more comedy series, thats for sure.
- rwglites
- 2 mar 2008
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This Buck Henry created satire reminds me a bit of When Things Were Rotten as it is a series that just didn't have mass appeal while being very funny except for the pilot episode. I honestly have no idea how the series was green lit after watching how the unfunny hour long pilot turned in the very humorous half hour show.
Richard Benjamin leads a fine cast with many talented guest stars and the jokes come quickly. I suspect, as others have mentioned, that some of the jokes went over the audience's head. Available on DVD finally and also on streaming platforms like Crackle. Enjoy.
Richard Benjamin leads a fine cast with many talented guest stars and the jokes come quickly. I suspect, as others have mentioned, that some of the jokes went over the audience's head. Available on DVD finally and also on streaming platforms like Crackle. Enjoy.
- stevenehrman
- 21 abr 2022
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Like many of the reviewers, I saw "Quark" during its initial run in 1977-78. I had relatively fond memories of the show and wanted to see if time was kind to it...and whether I'd still like it as an adult (I was only 13 when the series aired). Well, the short of it is no...it really was NOT a very good show despite my recollections. I would also challenge those who scored this series very high and with glowing reviews, have you seen it recently or only back in 1977-78? This is because MOST of the glowing reviews complained they couldn't find it on DVD or YouTube and the RECALL the show being funny. If you only saw it then, try watching it again (it's on YouTube) and see if you still enjoy the program.
What in particular do I dislike about the show? The most egregious problem is the laughtrack. While it's MUCH worse in the pilot episodes (where any thing Quark or his crew did was accompanied with HUGE laughs...even when it wasn't intended to be funny). The same thing continued, to a slightly lesser extend in subsequent episodes...a HUGE turnoff for me. Second, I was shocked that with only eight episodes, so many were rip-offs of "Star Trek" episodes! About half the shows were such rip-offs. And, finally, the second worst problem...it just isn't funny...or at least isn't funny for an adult audience.
What in particular do I dislike about the show? The most egregious problem is the laughtrack. While it's MUCH worse in the pilot episodes (where any thing Quark or his crew did was accompanied with HUGE laughs...even when it wasn't intended to be funny). The same thing continued, to a slightly lesser extend in subsequent episodes...a HUGE turnoff for me. Second, I was shocked that with only eight episodes, so many were rip-offs of "Star Trek" episodes! About half the shows were such rip-offs. And, finally, the second worst problem...it just isn't funny...or at least isn't funny for an adult audience.
- planktonrules
- 18 abr 2024
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Buck Henry's 1978 Series "Quark" was one of those shows that will always be remembered by its' few fans as the one that got away. Most people don't really remember it since they were watching something else on Friday nights but those of who do know that Buck Henry should have had another "Get Smart" on his hands and didn't. The satire was VERY dry and a lot of the gags missed with those few viewers who weren't sci-fi fans. I don't blame NBS for cancelling the show I just wish there was a Sci-Fi channel back then because they would have immediately snatched it up. Richard Benjamin at least got a lot of exposure and this helped his career despite it being cancelled so soon.
- GTDMAC
- 1 jun 2005
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This was an excellent satire program of Sci-Fi in general and traditional "Space Operas" in particular. Should you ever happen to run across the odd episode of Quark, be prepared for laughs in the extreme.
Quark tells the tale of an inter-galactic garbage hauler and his crew of misfits as they find adventures well outside of their normal duties. The humor, though rooted in the cultural strangeness of the 70s, will be very entertaining to adults who remember the 70s as "the good old days". Quark poked fun at most popular culture of the era and the Science Fiction of the day was not spared. Star Wars and Buck Rogers were almost constant targets of jabs and pokes. Even the venerated Star Trek series was humorously taken to task on occasion.
Tragically, it was cut short by circumstances of weather. The entire midwestern US was crippled by power outages during the worst ice storm in US history. The resulting loss of rating points cost it dearly.
Quark tells the tale of an inter-galactic garbage hauler and his crew of misfits as they find adventures well outside of their normal duties. The humor, though rooted in the cultural strangeness of the 70s, will be very entertaining to adults who remember the 70s as "the good old days". Quark poked fun at most popular culture of the era and the Science Fiction of the day was not spared. Star Wars and Buck Rogers were almost constant targets of jabs and pokes. Even the venerated Star Trek series was humorously taken to task on occasion.
Tragically, it was cut short by circumstances of weather. The entire midwestern US was crippled by power outages during the worst ice storm in US history. The resulting loss of rating points cost it dearly.
- Ursus CO
- 31 oct 1998
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QUARK was a spoof on the STAR WARS craze and had a limited run in 1978. It's run was brief but it was ahead of it's time. The crew lead by a man named Quark got into weekly intergalactic adventures aboard a space faring garbage scow. The show was funny but it's fate was decided and it was never renewed. The show I believe was on a friday night and it made the ratings battle too hard for QUARK to compete with. However the show was created by BUCK HENRY who had done such things as CATCH 22, and GET SMART and THE GRADUATE. Buck Henry is known for high quality work. The audience henry was dealing with was not prepared for this kind of humor. The spoofing of the science fiction craze just didn't float in 1978.
- LONESOLO
- 13 ago 2004
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Like "Police Squad" and "On the Air", "Quark" is another television series I caused to be cancelled. That's right, I'm responsible. Whenever I find a show I really really like, the series gets cancelled. So obviously it has to be my fault. I can't tell you to see it, there's no way you can. BUT... if you happen to somehow find it showing somehow, somewhere, then see it. If you don't, you'll never get another chance and your life will be poorer for it.
- roarshock
- 20 jul 2000
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I watched the Quark in 1978, and was sorry to see it go. It was fun to get the chance to watch it again. It does a pretty good job of spoofing science fiction movies. It fails a bit when it uses standard (for the time) sitcom gags.
- antiwolf
- 17 jun 2003
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I watched the first run of Quark and later saw a couple episodes on The Comedy Channel. Richard Benjamin was great and the twin gals were babes. I hope it'll be aired again or released on Rhino Video or something. Other Sci-Fi to watch: Hitchikers Guide to the Galaxy, Red Dwarf.
- shaneyfex
- 8 dic 2001
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I vaguely remember this television show from when I was 13 years old. I am not surprised it got canceled, it was pretty bad, but it stuck with me because it was different. I have mentioned the existence of this show to certain people I have met to try and at least remember the damn thing's name and who was the star and all I received was blank looks with them feeling sorry for me losing my mind at such a young age.
Until recently I couldn't think of where I had seen the actor (Richard Benjamin) who was the show's main character, so I was really lost in trying to find something on this show. Now if I could just find something out on the Levitra actress.
One thing I remember about the show was that the ship the main character "flew" around in space in opened up in the front like a jaw to gobble up the trash they had to pick up.
Until recently I couldn't think of where I had seen the actor (Richard Benjamin) who was the show's main character, so I was really lost in trying to find something on this show. Now if I could just find something out on the Levitra actress.
One thing I remember about the show was that the ship the main character "flew" around in space in opened up in the front like a jaw to gobble up the trash they had to pick up.
- demsvcs
- 19 feb 2005
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This show was produced during the writers strike of Hollywood back in the late 70s. That's why the bad directing bad acting bad sheep set design etc. This was a result of them scrambling trying to find replacement shows for the canceled shows that were supposed to be produced during the time that the strike of Hollywood occurred. This was a cute show and I do remember watching this when it was released newly released. The show is cute sexy and cheap. I wish I had more episodes it was quite charming for a low-budget NBC network production.
- JapanMovies
- 17 feb 2022
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