12:00 a.m.-1:00 a.m.
- Episódio foi ao ar 1 de mar. de 2002
- TV-14
- 1 h
Jack Bauer é chamado ao seu gabinete porque há uma ameaça à vida de um senador dos EUA que está concorrendo à presidência; Jack também descobre que sua filha pulou a janela do quarto.Jack Bauer é chamado ao seu gabinete porque há uma ameaça à vida de um senador dos EUA que está concorrendo à presidência; Jack também descobre que sua filha pulou a janela do quarto.Jack Bauer é chamado ao seu gabinete porque há uma ameaça à vida de um senador dos EUA que está concorrendo à presidência; Jack também descobre que sua filha pulou a janela do quarto.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Maureen Kingsley
- (as Devika Perikh)
- (apenas creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
The concept is cool , 24 episode hour by hour, im going to keep watching because of that, otherwise i would have been stop watching, because the Pilot was Unfortunately boring, except for the last 5-6 minutes !! Its actually the last 5-6 minutes that makes this episode a 7/10 and not a 6/10 The Politician/terrorist plot is absolutely boring as of now, i couldnt Care less about what happen, i was already complaning if this plot was for only the Pilot, but now you tell me there will be 24 episodes about a terrorist and a politician man, OMG how can this bé interesting... Who cares about a terrorist attack on a politician ? Their all bad and corrupt people.
I truly Hope they will find a way to make it interesting, at least the fact he is black and knowing the future History with Obama, i kinda understand why they have to save a black politician ( he represent Hope for black people ) The Plot about the daughter is of course the best one, the only one that matter i feel.
The scenes on the plane were the highlight of this episode with the scenes of Jack daughter Pretty Bad start but with potential !
One, this broke serious ground in terms of format for its time; there hadn't been a show like this "in real time" and serialized to the hilt.
And two, buckle up, because you're in for an amazing ride.
This is effectively the show's pilot, which has its work cut out for it in laying the groundwork for the day's terrorist threat and introducing all of the characters. And there are plenty of balls in the air. what's evident almost from minute one is that trust is a precious commodity in this government, and the twists are seemingly around every corner. The cast and the tone are spot-o0n, and it's easy to see why this show was a hit.
There are all sorts of ways in which to view this pilot after seeing where this show has ultimately traveled. For years, I'd wondered if the first season would be tame in comparison. But it holds up.
8/10
An episode whose events unfolded over the course of a single day was a trademark of NYPD Blue (and, more recently, Deadwood); having an entire season of a new series last 24 hours, one per ep (the actual running time is 41 minutes; the remaining 19 are occupied by commercials when the show airs on telly), was the most groundbreaking idea in mainstream television since Hill Street Blues introduced non-linear storytelling (a mandatory element nowadays). And it truly paid off.
Ironically enough, the original plan for the series was to make it revolve around a wedding (fortunately, creators Joel Surnow and Robert Cochran realized the format was more suitable for a conspiracy thriller), which is probably the reason the first glimpse we get of the hero suggests a cheerful atmosphere: looking extremely relaxed, Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) is enjoying a game of chess with his daughter Kimberly (Elisha Cuthbert) and, minutes later, being tender with Teri (Leslie Hope), the wife with whom he has just reconciled. As in The Sopranos, though, something unexpected and shocking is just behind the corner: not only has Kim snuck out of her room, Jack also receives a phone call urging him to get to work immediately. At midnight? I'm afraid so: Bauer is a CTU (Counter Terrorist Unit) agent, and his boss has acquired reliable intel about a possible hit on the life of David Palmer (Dennis Haysbert), an African-American Presidential candidate who will be in Los Angeles for the whole day (oh, right, I almost forgot: events occur on the day of the California Presidential Primary). No time for napping, then: Jack has to spend the next 24 hours working on the case. Unfortunately, he has a tendency to ignore protocol, and that doesn't sit well with George Mason (Xander Berkeley), a slimy man from Division who has been asked to interfere with the operation.
The plot is very dense, making the show hard to recommend for those with a short attention span, but anyone willing to take a look will be rewarded instantly: the writing is sharp and precise, the attention to detail unsurpassed, and the suspense is consistently sky-high, mainly thanks to the real-time trickery which considerably enhances the adrenaline level.
Another great quality of this pilot is the characterization: most genre shows (sci-fi and thriller) tend to simply introduce the key players and then define them later on (a textbook example is CSI, where character development is minimal, but then again that matches the show's unique style), whereas the series debut of 24 offers a rich array of fully rounded people, among whom Jack (Sutherland's best role - ever!) and Palmer (the real revelation of the show) stand out for being perfectly described after one episode only (the former divided between job and family, reckless but humane, the latter honorable and endowed with great integrity). A couple of supporting parts border on stereotype (Mason and Tony Almeida especially), but two factors ought to be taken into account: a) this is the first episode; b) there's so much going on most viewers won't even complain about a "flaw" or two. After all, how many network programs manage to begin with a conspiracy, a missing teenager AND a huge explosion - and still have equally satisfying material for the rest of the season?
Tick, tock, tick, tock...
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesSarah Clarke was cast as Nina Myers on the morning filming for the pilot episode was to begin. The costume department did not have time to fit her, so she wore her own outfit for the entire season.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe show changed production designers after the pilot episode was filmed, resulting in a different appearance for CTU HQ in from the second hour onwards.
- Citações
Jack Bauer: You can look the other way once, and it's no big deal, except it makes it easier for you to compromise the next time, and pretty soon that's all you're doing; compromising, because that's the way you think things are done. You know those guys I busted? You think they were the bad guys? Because they weren't, they weren't bad guys, they were just like you and me. Except they compromised... Once.
- ConexõesEdited from Inimigo do Estado (1998)
- Trilhas sonorasIt's All Good
(uncredited)
by Fearless Freep