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Viper

  • TV Series
  • 1994–1999
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Jeff Kaake, Heather Medway, Joe Nipote, and Dawn Stern in Viper (1994)
ActionAdventureCrimeDramaSci-Fi

In the near future, an organized crime group known as "Outfit" becomes a major force in America.In the near future, an organized crime group known as "Outfit" becomes a major force in America.In the near future, an organized crime group known as "Outfit" becomes a major force in America.

  • Creators
    • Danny Bilson
    • Paul De Meo
  • Stars
    • Joe Nipote
    • Heather Medway
    • J. Downing
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Creators
      • Danny Bilson
      • Paul De Meo
    • Stars
      • Joe Nipote
      • Heather Medway
      • J. Downing
    • 18User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes78

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Joe Nipote
    Joe Nipote
    • Frankie Waters…
    • 1994–1999
    Heather Medway
    Heather Medway
    • Det. Cameron Westlake…
    • 1996–1999
    J. Downing
    J. Downing
    • Sherman Catlett…
    • 1996–1999
    Jeff Kaake
    Jeff Kaake
    • Agent Thomas Cole…
    • 1996–1998
    James McCaffrey
    James McCaffrey
    • Joe Astor…
    • 1994–1999
    Dawn Stern
    Dawn Stern
    • Allie Farrow
    • 1996–1997
    Dorian Harewood
    Dorian Harewood
    • Julian Wilkes
    • 1994–1999
    Fay Hauser
    Fay Hauser
    • Mara Wilkes
    • 1994
    Dawn-Lyen Gardner
    Dawn-Lyen Gardner
    • Ronnie Wilkes
    • 1994
    Camille Winbush
    Camille Winbush
    • Lucy Wilkes
    • 1994
    Lee Chamberlin
    Lee Chamberlin
    • Commander Delia Thorne
    • 1994
    Richard Burgi
    Richard Burgi
    • Lane Cassidy
    • 1994
    Ken Pogue
    Ken Pogue
    • Jerome Midland…
    • 1997–1999
    Stephanie Niznik
    Stephanie Niznik
    • Lena Weisinger
    • 1997–1999
    Jude Ciccolella
    Jude Ciccolella
    • Marcus White
    • 1999
    Bill Macy
    Bill Macy
    • Jack Surber…
    • 1994–1998
    Carol Huston
    Carol Huston
    • Lt. Sally Gerraro
    • 1994
    Duncan Fraser
    Duncan Fraser
    • Arthur Stephenson…
    • 1996–1999
    • Creators
      • Danny Bilson
      • Paul De Meo
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.82.1K
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    Featured reviews

    Jack_Yan

    Like any revival, falls short of the original

    The original Viper (1994) adapted the Bilson–De Meo formula of mixing comic-book adventure with live action, something that the pair had successfully done with The Flash and Rocketeer. With the big-screen Batman and other films of the era re-creating the comic-book feel, Viper, with its part-science-fiction, part-crime storylines brought the style to the small screen. The villains in futuristic concept cars or Richard Burgi playing golf on a life-size simulator; the haunting lair of the Viper team and the excellent special effects – there was courage by a crew that tried to paint a picture of a time just after now. The same philosophy helped the success of series across the Atlantic such as The Avengers or UFO.

    When Viper was revived in 1996, the ingredients that had made the original so charming and distinctive had disappeared. Relocated to another city, Viper was set firmly in the present, rather than the near future. Replacing the science-fiction style was the tried-and-trusted American cop-show formula. Whereas the original team had been outside the law, the new one would be a legally sanctioned police team. Motor pool suit Franklin X. Waters (Joe Nipote) got a larger role but as the Viper mechanic and HQ-based geek, but his promotion meant the disappearance of his beloved Plymouth Barracuda.

    Now, the only difference between the police detectives here and those on any other American police show was the use of a morphing Dodge Viper, updated to the relevant model year.

    This allowed for more unimaginative storylines and plot holes, just as any everyday American police series had. One could easily transfer a story from any other cop show into the new Viper: this series now smells of metooism and cheapness. It had lost any of the originality that the first writers and current executive producers, Danny Bilson and Paul De Meo, injected. Less logical and less distinctive, it was relegated to late-night slots in New Zealand, while its 1994 predecessor had enjoyed prime time. The programmers made the right decision.

    Despite the return of James McCaffrey in the lead in 1998 and a guest appearance by original cast member Dorian Harewood, little improved. The new formula is just that: a formula. About the only distinction remaining is one's ability to observe Chrysler product placements. Like so many American shows, Viper became far weaker on its revival and was probably another victim of US network tinkering.
    roadrunner-71

    Lots better than Knightrider

    OK so the year was 1994, this series dropped on me out of the blue, I accidentally watched the pilot episode and got drawn in. The near future looked amazing, the mood was dark and desperate, special effects were amazing for TV back then(love the snake morph, love the stylized damages on the car when it gets hit by a rocket) the idea of a lone hero with a dark past kinda like Knightrider but much cooler looking and feeling here played by an actor that wasn't very conventional looking but had some good points to him. Viper may have been a product placement thing from Dodge/chrysler corporation but it was certainly worth its while, anyone notice the designs of the buildings ? kinda reminiscent of Tim Burton's first batman movies, amazing, loved those busts on the ceiling beams of the Viper hideout. For the technology I can only say bravo and I suspect the automobile industry had a lot of advice to give, who else had shown us those flatscreen monitors and TV's back in those years, who else had handsfree carphones the way we have now back then (bluetooth technology anyone ?)actually the only thing that looks a little dated by now is the red Viper. Even the Defender still looks hot. The first 13 episodes absolutely rocked and the final episode where Joe and Julian steal back the replacement heart for a kid who needs it was absolutely fantastic. If it had to stop somewhere, it was there. Season two and three sucked big time, somehow the morphing had changed, the timeframe was different and gone was the dark gloomyness. Jeff Kaake just didn't cut it as a replacement for James Mccaffrey and the proof was that the final series kinda made up for the two crappy ones in the middle when Joe came back. But even then, they should have left it in the near future's darker world, it was not a good idea to turn it into KnightriderII but I guess it made it all more accessible to a younger audience which is what the suits in the offices want these days, no more good storytelling, just sell sell sell and make money. I almost forgot to mention the music, the first season soundtrack absolutely fit the mood, amazing work for a TV show. OK so in short, good points : premisse, looks, music, wardrobe, casting, believable technology (not talking about the morphing here although... who knows), setting, production design, details, stories. Bad points : everything from season 2 on was crap in my opinion except for the new Viper in season 4 and the return of Mccaffrey.
    TheSainT-18

    Viper returns against the bad guys with a new team...

    The NBC show Viper, after the success of first Season returns to the scene as syndicated. Joe Astor left the project together with Julian Wilkes. A new team was created, this time with the support of MetroCity officials. Thomas Cole(Kaake), an expert driver from UN Security Drivers, Cameron Westlake(Medway), a police detective, Frankie X. Waters(Nipote), a mechanic, and Dr.Allie Farrow, an engineer. Viper is the ultimate barrier between the criminals and the city again!
    8starhorsepax

    a great show, even after it lost some concepts

    I loved the addition of Westlake and Frankie was better than ever. The car was still awesome and all new tricks for its gadgets were added.

    The show had some great adventures. I think it did suffer losing Astor and the futuristic element (and its worth noting that we are now IN that future..complete with drones, flat screen tvs and the equivalent of vid phones) and was thrilled he at least returned last season (I assume that is NOT a spoiler since you can see his name right in the credits and if a synops is ever added to those last season shows it'll probably have his name attached.) That isn't to say I didn't like Cole: its simply that Astor had the whole backstory tied into the Viper and I really missed that rogue element.

    The only terrible thing about it: it ended too soon, right when it was picking up speed again in my opinion. Personally I suspect 'rating sabotage' (which is what I call it when the show keeps bouncing around day/time slots in an era where the only way to find it is a TV Guide that had to be printed - and a change after that meant finding your show was like hitting a moving target.) And of course, it just took to long to find its stride after being revamped after the first season.

    I would've loved to see more seasons: the season/series finale was a great wrap up but it also had potential to take it into some new unexplored character arcs plus tie up some loose ends from first season.
    8starhorsepax

    I loved this show

    The only bad thing about this is that it changed so drastically the next season. In spite of this being listed separate from the later seasons, it has the same car and characters (although Joe and Julian didn't return until season 4.) But this first one was the best and most unique. While I loved Westlake being added in later seasons, I'm sorry the show in later seasons lost the 'rogue' edge it had and that so many characters vanished. I liked the way it was developing and always felt Joe was (as Frankie put it) part of the Defender. Just as the car went from ordinary Viper to Defender, Joe was a guy from the wild side that no one would've suspected had a 'defender' mode. I liked how the team had their independence but were gradually gradually able to work with the law but not UNDER anyone's authority. I am really thrilled its finally on DVD. It had a nice mix of sci fi, mystery, action and...that rogue element that just made it unique. Shame on NBC for letting it go!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The red Viper used in the show was not a production model, they actually used 4 prototypes provided by Dodge.
    • Connections
      Followed by Viper (1994)

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 15, 1995 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Viper 96
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA(1st season)
    • Production companies
      • MEC Viper Productions
      • Paramount Television
      • Pet Fly Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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

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