![]() ![]() A few years later my mom accidentally returned one of of my official season 4 discs to Netflix as the film 27 Dresses and I was ignored when I enclosed a letter with the real 27 Dresses requesting my disc back. My bootleg set happened to save me as well. Very glad to have the original Temptation Eyes and never watch the Universal version. So I have the original airings of the series in addition to the official Universal releases which include all the original music. Luckily before season 4 had been officially released, in my best friend's and my anxiousness to see what happened after the Shock Theater cliffhanger, I found online and purchased a bootlegged set of the entire series (At the time I had not heard of a bootleg or at least that term so I had no idea until after placing the order). To my knowledge the only access there is to original airings of the episodes is to download torrents of them. The sound alike music it was replaced with takes away from the feeling in montage. ![]() Personally I am most pissed with their removal of Foreigner's I Wanna Know What Love Is from the episode Temptation Eyes. but at the end, it's wide open as to what he's going on to next.Unfortunately Universal were cheapskates and didn't even desire to attempt to buy rights to a lot of the music. "So I wrote a show that gives some of the reasons that he's been leaping around. "I wasn't going to write a this-is-it kind of episode because I don't think that Quantum Leap is finished," Bellisario told the Times in 1993. So, he wrote an ending with Beckett choosing not to return home and instead continuing to jump and right wrongs. When Bellisario was mapping out Quantum Leap's end, NBC hadn't decided whether to cancel or renew. ![]() ![]() Yet, even the details around the iconic TV ending - and one of TV's most frustrating cliffhangers - prove that the series finale wasn't so final either. Viewers launched fan clubs, hosted conventions, and even footed the $30,000 bill for Stockwell's Hollywood Walk of Fame star (via Time), and also carried out a letter-writing campaign that convinced NBC to propel Beckett through time for two more years. The series' passionate watchers - or "leapers" - saved it the first time. NBC officially canceled Quantum Leap in 1993, but low viewership nearly did it in after its third season. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |