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IMDbPro

La belle et la bête

Original title: Beauty and the Beast
  • TV Series
  • 1987–1990
  • Tous publics
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
8.4K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,199
475
Linda Hamilton and Ron Perlman in La belle et la bête (1987)
Beauty & The Beast: Above Below & Beyond
Play trailer1:36
2 Videos
59 Photos
Dark FantasyFairy TaleCrimeDramaFantasyRomance

The adventures and romance of a sensitive and cultured lion-man and a crusading assistant district attorney in Manhattan, New York City.The adventures and romance of a sensitive and cultured lion-man and a crusading assistant district attorney in Manhattan, New York City.The adventures and romance of a sensitive and cultured lion-man and a crusading assistant district attorney in Manhattan, New York City.

  • Creator
    • Ron Koslow
  • Stars
    • Ron Perlman
    • Roy Dotrice
    • Jay Acovone
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    8.4K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,199
    475
    • Creator
      • Ron Koslow
    • Stars
      • Ron Perlman
      • Roy Dotrice
      • Jay Acovone
    • 73User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 6 Primetime Emmys
      • 12 wins & 34 nominations total

    Episodes55

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated

    Videos2

    Beauty & The Beast: Above Below & Beyond
    Trailer 1:36
    Beauty & The Beast: Above Below & Beyond
    Beauty And The Beast
    Trailer 1:38
    Beauty And The Beast
    Beauty And The Beast
    Trailer 1:38
    Beauty And The Beast

    Photos59

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Ron Perlman
    Ron Perlman
    • Vincent
    • 1987–1990
    Roy Dotrice
    Roy Dotrice
    • Jacob 'Father' Wells
    • 1987–1990
    Jay Acovone
    Jay Acovone
    • Deputy D.A. Joe Maxwell…
    • 1987–1990
    Linda Hamilton
    Linda Hamilton
    • Asst. Dist. Atty. Catherine Chandler
    • 1987–1989
    Renn Woods
    Renn Woods
    • Edie
    • 1987–1989
    David Greenlee
    • Mouse
    • 1988–1990
    Ellen Geer
    Ellen Geer
    • Mary
    • 1988–1990
    Armin Shimerman
    Armin Shimerman
    • Pascal
    • 1987–1990
    Ritch Brinkley
    Ritch Brinkley
    • William
    • 1988–1990
    Stephen McHattie
    Stephen McHattie
    • Gabriel
    • 1989–1990
    Edward Albert
    Edward Albert
    • Elliot Burch
    • 1987–1990
    Irina Irvine
    • Jamie
    • 1988–1990
    Jo Anderson
    Jo Anderson
    • Diana Bennett
    • 1989–1990
    Cory Danziger
    Cory Danziger
    • Kipper
    • 1987–1988
    Zachary Rosencrantz
    • Zach
    • 1988–1989
    Bill Marcus
    • D.A. John Moreno
    • 1987–1989
    Marcie Leeds
    • Samantha
    • 1988–1989
    Tony Jay
    Tony Jay
    • Paracelsus…
    • 1988–1989
    • Creator
      • Ron Koslow
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews73

    7.08.3K
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    Featured reviews

    tomcat2155

    I have always been a fan.

    I thought this television series was well done and family oriented. Yes, it was overly romantic and may have been "sappy" to some viewers; but that was a large part of its appeal then and still is today. I was very surprised that this series was not on DVD.

    It is probably better for family viewing than half the material that is out on DVD from a television series. If there are plans to release "Beauty and The Beast" on DVD, it should be released immediately and is long over due. I'm sure that there are many people out there who have forgotten about this series like myself, due to it not being shown on cable or satellite television in many viewing areas. Yet, we have not forgotten the wonderful exchanges between two (2) character's who had a romantic chemistry and truly grew to love each other; a love that our current society needs to find a lot more of.

    If you here anything regarding the DVD collection please post info or drop me a line. Thank you.
    Venus-25

    A Totally Misunderstood Program

    The brilliance of this series was its romance and its excellent early stories. We could entirely believe that this could happen in New York -- except that any New Yorker would tell you that there are people far stranger than Vincent walking the streets. We were never told how he came to be as he is, but it almost didn't matter. I don't think it was any accident that he had such a feline appearance.

    This series was so badly misunderstood and mishandled by its parent network that I am not surprised it lasted only two seasons. Season 3 wasn't even the same program in my book. CBS seemed terribly upset with the fact that its audience was almost entirely female. Was that why the body count of season 3 was higher than in a Bruce Willis movie?

    The worst mistake CBS ever made was to let Linda Hamilton leave after two seasons. Had the network been intelligent enough, they could have talked her into a third season, ending it with the fairytale ending -- she kisses Vincent for real (something CBS was VERY afraid of, but the fans would have loved) and have him turn into a human prince. That would have given it the magical ending it deserved.
    lizashasia3

    Beauty and the Beast

    I remember watching this show when I was 13 with my mother. This show was a great display that two people who love each other can be together no matter what their circumstances are or what there backgrounds are. Further, although Vincent was did not look like the average man, but he was smart, strong, loving and had a wonderful spirit. Most women are looking for a man like him. What he looked like did not bother me at all. Vincent was always their to protect and defend Catherine in any way he could. Their bond was so strong that they knew when each other was in distress. This show was realistic and did focus on many issues that exist today. For example, both Vincent and Catherine had past relationships, but they unlike many people in the real world were honest with each other even if what they said may have hurt them. I watched every episode that was on Netflix, and I was hooked. I only wish they could have ended the show in a better way then they did. The acting was excellent and I wish their were more shows like this. This show was a great adventure.
    tom_amity

    Too strange to succeed on TV

    When it became obvious that this series, which obviously aspired to be the next Star Trek (not just a TV show but a cult, complete with movies, action figures, conventions, t-shirts, books, calendars, etc.) had die-hard fans but not enough of them to sustain the phenomenon, I recall that CBS started running a little promotional blurb for it. The blurb was not very well done, but in any case concluded with the remark: "Are you ready for a different kind of passion?"

    For good or ill, most people weren't. There's a lesson here, or several. I wish I knew what that message was. But here are some thoughts.

    (1) We are told that the audience was heavily female. This is not at all surprising, since it's women who read what is called "romance", which its opponents call "mush": the lovers talking in flowery, quasi-religious language about their relationships; no development or change in the characters; and an absolute lack of humor. You find this sort of thing profound or silly, and in our society it seems the majority find it silly. Statistics suggest that significantly more women than men find it profound. This says something weird about our society, although (I repeat) I don't know exactly WHAT it says. That cheesy popular guru who writes about Mars and Venus appears not to know the half of it.

    (2) On the other hand, a significant portion of our population likes "fantasy" (as opposed to "romance" in the narrow sense), as is proved by the popularity of the Lord of the Rings films. This series is just about the only unashamed fantasy (for adults) which TV seems to have produced with a mass audience in mind and without intending satire, a takeoff, or "camp." Which is, I suppose, why the promoters of this series thought they had a chance.

    (3) I'm not a fan of what is called "romance" (few men are, as I've pointed out); in fact, the overly solemn Winter's Tale is the only Shakespeare play I don't like. And I don't especially like "fantasy", with a few exceptions. But I found this series strangely watchable, and others of my temperament have said the same. Few of the episodes had a plot worthy of the name, but it was often pleasant to hear Ron Perlman reciting poetry. The dialog had a kind of elegance to it, not at all common in TV, which I admit to enjoying. Sort of like enjoying opera, maybe. And Perlman (who from all accounts did take Beauty and the Beast very seriously) did a wonderful a job of acting, through all that getup.

    (4) One fine day, Linda Hamilton decided she wasn't going to spend the rest of her life playing this goody-goody role, trying to breathe life into what she must have begun to see as rather bland and stilted dialog and a relationship which never changed or developed. I suppose it was at this point that the producers made a desperate effort to save the show by altering the whole thing to a dark, moody piece with suggestions of "The Shadow" or the "Dark Knight" side of Batman. And BANG, the last season was a totally different concept, in these terms: (a) there is violence and villainy, the nocturnal creep Gabriel, and in one episode Gabriel's Terminator-style henchman, all of which a lot of the original fans found disturbing; (b) Vincent and Catherine have a baby, which again grated on fans' nerves after they'd been hit over the head for two seasons with how platonic their relationship had been (c) bad symbolism, as when Diana the policewoman announces "This is Catherine Chandler's gun!" before shooting Gabriel in cold blood, as if Catherine had been the type who would have wanted revenge in any case; and so on.

    So what is "A different kind of passion"? Well, for one thing, the platonic nature of the Vincent-Catherine relationship, which recalls such images as the knight who prefers to worship his lady chastely, from afar, rather than "defile" her. When women want their horny male companions to leave them alone, they say things like "Let's not ruin our friendship" and "You're making me uncomfortable." Well, maybe men should brood on that a little, and ask why so many female reviewers of this series are saying things like "Vincent is the greatest", "I'd love to have a man like Vincent", etc., and follow that up by asking what Vincent's got that we haven't. I'm serious. (A Don Juan could be defined as a jerk who PRETENDS to be "like Vincent" in order to control women, wouldn't you say?)

    The last season, with its overthrow of many of the series' basic assumptions, shows how confused things can get when you wed a concept like Beauty and the Beast (which inherently caters to a niche audience) to TV (which inherently seeks a common denominator in its fans). The irony is that this show still has such a following. Not hard to understand, but ironic, that the fans of this series still hold their conventions, StarTrek style, and still hope for a movie. I wish them well.

    And I hope that if someone who does figure out the significance of this series' failed attempt to "catch on" will be kind enough to enter a review at IMDb.

    Indeed, maybe there's a good reason why Vincent and Catherine never kissed (leaving aside the last season, which doesn't count). What a drag it would be if the kiss turned him into a handsome prince! He would simply cease to be The Beast and would no longer concern us. Who would want Don Quixote without his delusions, or the Flying Dutchman with no curse on him? ... So here, at the end of my comments, we come at last to the beginning of the subject.

    "Beauty and the Beast will be continued"? No kidding.
    lauraeileen894

    "Your love is where I'll go"...

    There's a reason why "Beauty and the Beast" still holds a place in its legions of fans' hearts after all these years: it's a tender, earnest, lovely little series that celebrates a love that goes beyond shallow expectations. This isn't "The O.C.", where it's only a matter of time before the bland, attractive leads jump in the sack. "Beauty and the Beast" chronicles the unique, powerful love between plucky assistant attorney Catherine (Linda Hamilton) and Vincent (spellbinding Ron Perlman), a courageous, compassionate man-beast. Because they live in two different worlds (she in the bustling world "Above", he in the secret utopia of "Below"), they cannot have a real life together, but, as Catherine assures us in the opening credits, they "will never, ever be apart". Today's jaded viewers might scoff at the fact that Catherine and Vincent never go further than hugs and hand-holding in their relationship, but you know what? Catherine and Vincent express more joy, passion, respect and love in their very first embrace in the pilot episode than all the bed-hopping in the six seasons of "Dawson's Creek". Hamilton is appealing as Catherine, making her strong and vulnerable at the same time. Perlman is unforgettable as Vincent. Unhindered by the prosthetic make-up on his face, he expresses layers of complex emotions with just his eyes. He brings warmth, integrity, and, yes, beauty to a role that even Perlman himself has said is "too good to be real". He deservedly won and Emmy and a Golden Globe. "Beauty and the Beast" is now on DVD for all to discover or re-discover the most innocent, sincere love story ever on TV.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Ron Perlman's make-up took four hours to apply each episode.
    • Goofs
      In the World Below there are often active steam grates, pipes with valves, and sometimes control panels for sewer and water. Even in the most neglected city, eventually maintenance workers would have to check these areas and thus learn the existence of the subterranean world.
    • Quotes

      [opening credits narration]

      Vincent: This is where the wealthy and the powerful rule. It is her world... a world apart from mine. Her name... is Catherine. From the moment I saw her, she captured my heart with her beauty, her warmth, and her courage. I knew then, as I know now, she would change my life... forever.

      Catherine Chandler: He comes from a secret place, far below the city streets, hiding his face from strangers, safe from hate and harm. He brought me there to save my life... and now, wherever I go, he is with me, in spirit. For we have a bond stronger than friendship or love. And although we cannot be together, we will never, ever be apart.

    • Connections
      Featured in The 40th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1988)

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    FAQ18

    • How many seasons does Beauty and the Beast have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1987 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Beauty and the Beast
    • Filming locations
      • Walt Disney's Golden Oak Ranch - 19802 Placerita Canyon Road, Newhall, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Witt/Thomas Productions
      • Republic Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 4:3

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