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Weird Science (TV series)

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8.1/10
TV

No. of seasons
  
5

Final episode date
  
25 July 1998

6.9/10
IMDb

Country of origin
  
USA

No. of episodes
  
Network
  
Weird Science (TV series) Weird Science TV Series 1993

Based on
  
Developed by
  
Tom SpezialyAlan Cross

Starring
  
John Mallory AsherMichael ManasseriVanessa AngelLee Tergesen

Cast
  
Vanessa Angel, John Asher, Michael Manasseri, Lee Tergesen

Weird Science is a mid-1990s American comedy series made for television, based on the 1985 film of the same name.

Contents

Weird Science (TV series) Weird Science TV series opening Critical Commons

Weird science theme opening scene


Plot

Weird Science (TV series) Cast of Weird Science TV Series Press Photo 1994 Sitcoms Online

The series follows the adventures of Gary Wallace (John Mallory Asher) and Wyatt Donnelly (Michael Manasseri), two socially inept high school students in an unspecified town in California (unlike the movie, which was set in Illinois). Together, using Wyatt's computer, they try to create a computer simulation of a perfect woman in order to practice communicating with women. However, a freak lightning storm brings the computer simulation to life, creating a real woman named Lisa (Vanessa Angel) – a drop-dead gorgeous genius with the powers of a "magic genie". The show followed in the tradition of 1960s fantasy sitcoms like Bewitched and I Dream of Jeannie, combining a sitcom format with supernatural stories.

Weird Science (TV series) Weird Science TV creates the ideal woman Critical Commons

In the pilot episode, Gary claims that creating Lisa is possible because he "saw it in a John Hughes movie", referring to the original Weird Science movie.

Cast

Weird Science (TV series) httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesMM

  • John Mallory Asher takes over the role of Gary Wallace. Unlike his counterpart in the film, Gary is a poor student and a slacker, always looking for shortcuts to get what he wants (usually to impress girls). His father, Al (Jeff Doucette) is a plumber. His mother Emily is played by Joyce Bulifant, Asher's real life mother.
  • Michael Manasseri takes over the role of Wyatt Donnelly. Wyatt's wealthy parents are usually out of town, leaving him and his older brother Chett alone in the house. Most stories have him as the more cautious member of the group, more reluctant than Gary to use Lisa's magic. He is more popular with girls than Gary, and several episodes feature Gary being interested in a girl who likes Wyatt instead.
  • Vanessa Angel takes over the role of Lisa. Lisa describes herself as a "magic genie", able to grant the boys' wishes, though she does this out of choice rather than duty and is free to deny them any wish she does not want to grant. Once she grants a wish, Lisa is unable to reverse it, no matter how badly it turns out; however, most of her spells wear off after an indeterminate amount of time. Other than those basic rules, the limits of her powers are never clearly defined, and she seems to get more or less powerful depending on what a particular episode's plot requires. Although she is physically manifested, she is apparently still a program running on Wyatt's computer, and she ceases to appear if the computer is switched off. She is addicted to Chunky Monkey ice cream.
  • Lee Tergesen takes over the role of Chester "Chett" Donnelly. Chett is a military school graduate who turned down his commission, claiming that he did not want to be sent overseas to work for "Third-World slackers"; he lives with his parents and shows no interest in getting a job. Paranoid and angry, he takes out his frustrations on Wyatt and Gary, though less sadistically than in the movie; mostly he takes Wyatt's things without asking and calls him names like "wuss-boy" and "pit-lick". He also has a vendetta against Scampi (Bruce Jarchow), principal of the boys' high school, whom he remembers as "Ass-istant Principal Scampi". It was finally revealed in the series finale that Scampi was indeed Chett's true biological father. Most episodes have Chett getting caught up unwittingly in the magical shenanigans, often getting hurt or transformed without knowing what is going on. In the fourth season episode, "Master Chett," to expand Lee Tergesen's role, Chett was let in on the secret of Lisa's existence; it was explained that Lisa had so often erased parts of his memory that he had developed a mental callus making him immune to erasure. He occasionally had hints of sexual tension with Lisa. The two started to fall in love until she left him for Wyatt, with whom she broke up.
  • Production

    Weird Science (TV series) Weird Science

    Weird Science was produced by St. Clare Entertainment in association with Universal Television. Premiering on March 1, 1994, the show ran for five seasons on the USA Network for a total of 88 episodes. However, new episodes ceased airing in 1997 with the final six still unaired. They would eventually air in the United States the following year on the Sci-Fi Channel; the show was also reran briefly on what was then the Fox Family Channel in 2001.

    Weird Science (TV series) Hottest Female Character in a Film boardsie

    The theme song for the series was "Weird Science" by Oingo Boingo, the same as that used in the movie (though they received no on-screen credit for the series).

    John Hughes had no involvement with the television version of his film. The creators and showrunners of the series were Tom Spezialy and Alan Cross.

    Kari Lizer, one of the staff writers, who later went on to create The New Adventures of Old Christine, said, "Weird Science turned out to be the best job because it made me realize I was more than an actress who could write monologues for herself. It turned me into a real writer because I had to write about things that weren’t close to home."

    Seth Green was one of the finalists for the part of Gary. He later had a guest appearance in season 2 episode 1, "Lisa's Virus".

    DVD releases

    On January 1, 2008, A&E Home Video released the complete first and second seasons of Weird Science on DVD in Region 1.

    References

    Weird Science (TV series) Wikipedia