Genre: | Science fiction |
Creator: | Mark Verheiden |
Starring: | Ted King Don Stark Kurt Fuller Cristi Conaway |
Theme Music Composer: | Brad Fiedel |
Composer: | Ross Levinson |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Num Seasons: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 9 |
Runtime: | 60 minutes |
Company: | Lawrence Gordon Productions December 3rd Productions Dark Horse Entertainment Universal Television |
Channel: | ABC |
Related: | Timecop |
Timecop is an American science fiction television series. The show was broadcast on the ABC network and first aired in 1997.[1] The series is based on the successful Jean-Claude Van Damme film, Timecop (1994) from Universal Studios, which was in turn inspired by the Dark Horse comic of the same name.[1] Thirteen episodes of the series were ordered,[2] but only nine episodes aired.
The show was broadcast on the ABC network and first aired in 1997, leading off the Monday night lineup at 8 p.m. before Monday Night Football. It did not use any cast from the film and only one character was reused.
In 2007, time travel is a reality using time sleds to enter the time stream. However, the technology has leaked beyond the United States government. Rogue time sleds built by other parties are sending criminals into the past for a price. The Time Enforcement Commission was formed to retrieve and arrest the criminals, preventing the alteration of history.
Hemmings was originally part of the TEC’s science and research division providing support at headquarters. She eventually accompanies Logan in the field on missions. Originally adversarial, she becomes Logan’s romantic interest.
Matuzek is in charge of the TEC and is the only character carried over from the film the show is based on, although recast with Stark replacing Bruce McGill.
The TEC's chief historian, Easter has a range of historical interests and is a film buff who can cite the major historical events in the year any film was released.
In 1996, the Los Angeles Times reported that ABC ordered a new prime-time series based on the 1994 science-fiction movie Timecop. The pilot was written by series creator Mark Verheiden.
Based on differences in cast, characters, costumes, TEC procedures and technology, episode 5, "Rocket Science," appears to be the original pilot episode and changes were made when the series entered production. Among them:
Due to low ratings and poor advertising, the series was cut short after less than a season, and only nine out of the thirteen episodes were aired.[3]
Daniel Parkinson was hired to write an adventure spin-off trilogy based on the series that continues the adventures of Officer Jack Logan.[3] The trilogy consisted of The Scavenger (August 1998), Viper's Spawn (September 1998) and Blood Ties (March 1999). It was published by Del Rey Books.
On April 1, 2021, all aired episodes except #2 "The Heist" became available to stream for free at TubiTV. For unexplained reasons (possibly music clearance issues with use of The Sylvers' "Boogie Fever"), that episode was skipped, and episodes 3-9 were renumbered as 2-8. Episode #2 can be found on YouTube.