Le scientifique Sam Beckett se retrouve coincé dans le passé, où il « saute » dans les corps de différentes personnes régulièrement.Le scientifique Sam Beckett se retrouve coincé dans le passé, où il « saute » dans les corps de différentes personnes régulièrement.Le scientifique Sam Beckett se retrouve coincé dans le passé, où il « saute » dans les corps de différentes personnes régulièrement.
- Récompensé par 6 Primetime Emmys
- 18 victoires et 43 nominations au total
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What can I say? I loved this series! It had humor, it had sorrow, it had drama, it had suspense. It spanned the dimensions of every emotion, even when the plot was painfully thin.
Sure, there were some episodes that would have been better left on the cutting floor, but for the most part each episode was a single contained enjoyable event.
I didn't like the ending, but as it has been said the network decided to end the series and so they didn't care much how it ended.
I'm waiting for the entire series to be out on DVD (the first season is already out). I could watch these over and over ... and I will!
Sure, there were some episodes that would have been better left on the cutting floor, but for the most part each episode was a single contained enjoyable event.
I didn't like the ending, but as it has been said the network decided to end the series and so they didn't care much how it ended.
I'm waiting for the entire series to be out on DVD (the first season is already out). I could watch these over and over ... and I will!
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.
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.
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.
I remember watching the 60s classic The Time Tunnel and Quantum Leap was a kind of reboot, with time travel being the main game. Anyway, Scott Bakula was born for this role and I'm pleased it ran five seasons, almost 100 episodes, sort of the magic number for syndication at the time.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn 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.
- GaffesFor 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.
- Versions alternativesAirings 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.
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Chronic Rift: Quantum Leap (1990)
- Bandes originalesPrologue (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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