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Buck Rogers

Original title: Buck Rogers in the 25th Century
  • TV Series
  • 1979–1981
  • TV-14
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
11K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,151
1,357
Gil Gerard and Erin Gray in Buck Rogers (1979)
Trailer for Buck Rogers In The 25th Century: The Complete Epic Series
Play trailer0:22
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Space Sci-FiActionAdventureSci-Fi

20th century astronaut Buck Rogers emerges out of 500 years of suspended animation into the 25th century to become Earth's greatest hero and to explore the unknown reaches of deep space.20th century astronaut Buck Rogers emerges out of 500 years of suspended animation into the 25th century to become Earth's greatest hero and to explore the unknown reaches of deep space.20th century astronaut Buck Rogers emerges out of 500 years of suspended animation into the 25th century to become Earth's greatest hero and to explore the unknown reaches of deep space.

  • Creators
    • Glen A. Larson
    • Leslie Stevens
  • Stars
    • Gil Gerard
    • Erin Gray
    • Felix Silla
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,151
    1,357
    • Creators
      • Glen A. Larson
      • Leslie Stevens
    • Stars
      • Gil Gerard
      • Erin Gray
      • Felix Silla
    • 62User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
    • 45Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Episodes32

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    Videos2

    Buck Rogers In The 25th Century
    Trailer 0:22
    Buck Rogers In The 25th Century
    Buck Rogers In The 25th Century
    Trailer 0:23
    Buck Rogers In The 25th Century
    Buck Rogers In The 25th Century
    Trailer 0:23
    Buck Rogers In The 25th Century

    Photos244

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    Top cast99+

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    Gil Gerard
    Gil Gerard
    • Capt. William 'Buck' Rogers
    • 1979–1981
    Erin Gray
    Erin Gray
    • Colonel Wilma Deering
    • 1979–1981
    Felix Silla
    Felix Silla
    • Twiki…
    • 1979–1981
    Mel Blanc
    Mel Blanc
    • Twiki
    • 1979–1981
    Tim O'Connor
    Tim O'Connor
    • Dr. Elias Huer
    • 1979–1980
    Eric Server
    Eric Server
    • Dr. Theopolis
    • 1979–1980
    Thom Christopher
    Thom Christopher
    • Hawk
    • 1981
    Jay Garner
    • Admiral Efram Asimov
    • 1981
    Wilfrid Hyde-White
    Wilfrid Hyde-White
    • Dr. Goodfellow
    • 1981
    Dennis Haysbert
    Dennis Haysbert
    • Communication-Probe Officer…
    • 1980–1981
    Bob Elyea
    • Twiki…
    • 1981
    Pamela Hensley
    Pamela Hensley
    • Princess Ardala
    • 1979–1980
    Paul Carr
    Paul Carr
    • Lieutenant Devlin
    • 1981
    Alex Hyde-White
    Alex Hyde-White
    • Technician…
    • 1981
    Michael Ansara
    Michael Ansara
    • Kane
    • 1979–1980
    Anthony James
    Anthony James
    • Varek…
    • 1979–1981
    Patty Maloney
    Patty Maloney
    • Twiki…
    • 1979–1980
    Mitch Reta
    • Technician
    • 1979–1980
    • Creators
      • Glen A. Larson
      • Leslie Stevens
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews62

    6.910.9K
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    Featured reviews

    KUAlum26

    The Disco-rific future!

    I was a addict of this show when it was first ran,lo over thirty years ago. More straight ahead in its approach than "Star Trek" and twice as difficult to take seriously,this show was "Cheese" for the Sci-fi loving kid of the late 70s. That was me,grade school addict of cartoons and things involving rocket ships,robots and laser guns.

    With an opening credit sequence intro(narrated by none other than "Voice of God"-like basso profundo William Conrad)that is priceless and memorable,this show was able to both incorporate a cool,"Star Wars"/"Battlestar Galactica" element into what seemed to be little more than a sort of Disco era sensibility. The Out-of-his-element title character(played by soap opera stud Gil Gerard,fantastic hair)helps future Earth,now reconfigured from devastating nuclear damage,against hostile aliens and various other rogues. He's paired with comely Col.Wilma Dearing(comely Erin Gray)and a cute,utterly one-dimensional robot named Twiki(voiced by the greatest animated voice talent ever IMHO,the late Mel Blanc)and supervised by a kindly professor(Tim Ryan)who is in charge of some sector of New Earth's security.

    To be sure,this show was the extension of the very popular comic strip,comic book, radio serials and movies from the 1930s and 1940s,and while I have absolutely no running familiarity with those shows,I'd probably be right in guessing that those "buck Rogers" as much reflected those eras as this one. My critique(actually,more of a loving,back-handed soft slap)of this show comes from the fact that when I reflect back on it,it seems like it had the ambition and production values of a big budget Sci-fi,but lacked the imagination to be anything more than a futuristic discotechque,full of all the right images(i.e. spaceships,deep space,laser guns,laser blasts,force fields,unitards,costumed humans as aliens,etc.),but flavored too heavily by the era its really from(i.e. male-female attitudes,hairstyles,"future music"that sounds suspiciously like Brian Eno/Devo,dated,potentially anachronistic slang and lingo,etc.). Its first season was a hoot and a lot of fun to watch.When they tried to extend this to a next season and add new characters,the show faltered greatly. To me,a cheesy show really needs their characters to stay kind of static or it loses something.

    Here's wondering how and why this show hasn't gotten a bigger push to become a motion picture. Off the air for over twenty-five years,I feel like this could make for a reasonably good(or at least not TOO cheesy)movie for a whole new generation of people not familiar with the famous future man from the "present".
    7tomas208

    Enjoyable but very predictable

    This series is fun and somewhat compelling to watch. But in every episode there are recurring incidents which defy any sense of innovativeness: 1. Panels on walls are destroyed. Approximately three per episode. This is done primarily to lock someone in a room.

    2. Buck Rogers is deep in enemy territory and uses force to get the job done. 9 of 10 episodes' problems are solved in this manner. If he is captured or wants to free someone, he'll just have to start swinging at the guards and everything will be fine. Never any solutions based on intellect.

    3. Buck Rogers is labeled by someone as the most perfect creature in the entire universe.

    4. A new woman is introduced and shows immediate affection for Buck Rogers.

    5. When they are flying in space, there is no variation from the theme of shooting at other spacecraft, and one hit always means the destruction of the target.

    6. Twiki is unable to say anything that isn't deeply annoying.

    7. Dr. Huer is very sensible.

    8. The shows end with Rogers, Deering, Huer and Twiki eating at Buck's apartment and Rogers is laughing as the frame freezes.

    All this aside, it's a good series. Not many dull moments. However, don't watch the episode called "A Blast for Buck", it's just a mixture of various flashbacks from previous episodes, and the real time ending is almost worse than the flashbacks.
    mezzb

    What's not to love

    This stuff is classic. Pretty good plots. Nice little performances. You had Mr. Down-to-earth 20th century macho man Buck (complete with 70's dry-look over-the-ears hair) & straight-laced, but sexy fighter-pilot Wilma, and comic-relief, lusty little robot Twiki. And a talking necklace and boring old man, both named "Doctor".

    Every week you could count on intrigue, double crosses, and buck knocking out 25 armed henchman, using his patented "Buck Fu" technique. And near the end, Twiki would say something like, "BDBDBDBDBDBD, Buck rocks me like a hurricaine."

    This stuff is infinitely more amusing and entertaining that much of the sullen, sensitive and overly technical tv sci-fi of today.

    It's a simple formula that works. action action action, tight shiny space outfits (on men & women) and a few lame jokes.
    terp_92

    entertaining and watchable

    Although I didn't like this series as much as Battlestar Galactica which was out at the same time, as a kid the more scifi series on TV the better. And I would never pass up the chance each week to see the beautiful Erin Gray. I also thought it was neat when they had one episode where they had the original Buck Rogers, Buster Crabbe, make a special appearance as an old fighter pilot.

    It was too bad that they changed the format of the series in the second season, but it was still watchable.
    Blueghost

    I paid money to see this...

    ...but I don't regret it. Not too much, anyway. Yes, it's true. When the pilot episode was given a theatrical release I went and paid good money to watch it.

    Ah well.

    I wasn't too thrilled at the production values, but I still enjoyed it as a stand alone film. I'd seen the B&W Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon serials rerun on a couple of UHF stations, and figured I'd see an upgraded reprise of Buster Crabbe's role.

    What the audience got was essentially a made for TV movie that would lead to a pretty fun series. I think the other commentators have got it right; the first season of this show was just good fun. A guy tuned in to see Gerard and Gray save Earth from sundry space-vixens and other off world baddies. The most notorious being Princess Ardala, played by the very talented and alluring Pamela Hensley. With the help of Dr. Heur, Theopolis and Twiki, Buck and Wilma thwarted the villains of the 25th century.

    If the viewer tuned in to see some high brow brain-candy moral wrapped in science jargon, then he had the wrong show. Late 1970's Buck Rogers was about adventure, the perils and dazzling technology of the 25th century, lusty and dangerous space-babes, all pitted against a 20th century man's mettle and his equally gallant comrades.

    But that was the first season. The second season took a page out of Roddenberry's play book, and transformed into this cheap "Star Trek" knockoff, complete with a Spock-like character in the form of a man sporting a feathered wig, played by Thom Christopher. Buck was no longer bumping flirtatious intrigues with scantly clad space-babes with his daring-do, and Wilma's hard-nosed gut-driven "I am 25th Century Woman, hear me roar!" character was taken down a notch... that and she rarely wore her very appealing spandex uniform :)

    In short, first season = Good: Second season = bleh.

    I'm not sure what went wrong. The fist season teetered on the high-kamp abyss, but Gil Gerard and Erin Gray had a kind of relaxed and realistic chemistry that helped bring the viewer into their world. The stories were out of Hollywood Formula 101, but they were fun, thrilling, and enjoyable. The action sequences, the alluring fashions of the 25th century, the concept of a man from our time roaming the far future, scantly clad space-vixens, it all adds up to a fun show, if somewhat far fetched... then again plausibility wasn't what Buck Rogers was all about.

    This show could've really gone the distance with its original formula, and should have. Why the show changed for the second season is beyond me, because it didn't need to. Part of the attraction of Buck Rogers wasn't the "science" in this science-fiction show, but Buck and Wilma's daring-do. Whoever thought otherwise, and tried to turn Buck into a more "serious" sci-fi venue, was dead wrong, and, as someone else said, quite thoroughly torpedoed the show by fixing it until it was broke.

    I'm not a big Glen Larson fan. "Manimal" and "Automan" come to mind, but if I had one wish, with regards to a TV show, it would be to go back in time and see to it that Larson continued producing "Buck Rogers" as he envisioned it for the first season. Heck, maybe I could save Dorothy Lee Stratten for another guest appearance on the show. But alas we're only left with the legacy of the first and second season of this very adventurous TV series.

    Well, Larson's helped relaunch BSG, and is now doing a "Knight Rider" revival... maybe he can give Buck Rogers another shot as well, only this time, if he does, let's hope he'll stick to his guns.

    Until then; so long, Buck.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Props, costumes, special effects shots, and sets from Galactica (1978) were used in this series.
    • Goofs
      Through the series, there are many sequences when Buck Rogers and/or Wilma Deering would take off in one configuration of a starfighter and then different cuts would have them sitting side by side and then a moment later one before the other. There would also be different ships (sky sled) where they would take off in one type of ship, exterior shots show them as they fly through space in a totally different looking ship, and then either land in the same ship they took off in, or in another different looking ship.
    • Quotes

      Narrator: [voiceover during narrative] The year is 1987, and NASA launches the last of America's deep space probes. In a freak mishap, Ranger 3 and its pilot, Captain William "Buck" Rogers, are blown out of their trajectory into an orbit which freezes his life support systems, and returns Buck Rogers to Earth... 500 years later.

    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits for the first season finale "Flight of the War Witch" differ from the credit sequences for the rest of the season's episodes (except the pilot). After the series title appears, there follows a succession of short scenes from this episode as well as from the television version of the pilot (including the episode). After about 20 seconds, the credits resume as normal.
    • Alternate versions
      The opening episode "Awakening" was originally released as the theatrical movie Buck Rogers au XXVe siècle (1979). For television, the movie's sensual opening credits were removed, a scene showing Tigerman being killed was omitted, some dialogue was toned down, and several scenes were added including an epilogue setting up the television series. The movie was also re-edited into a two-parter for syndication.
    • Connections
      Edited into Star Slammer: La Prison des étoiles (1986)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 24, 1983 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Buck Rogers in the 25th Century
    • Filming locations
      • Trona Pinnacles - 300 S. Richmond Road, Ridgecrest, California, USA(Featured in fly over during opening credits/titles for the show)
    • Production companies
      • Glen A. Larson Productions
      • Bruce Lansbury Productions
      • John Mantley Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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