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Starman

  • TV Series
  • 1986–1987
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Robert Hays in Starman (1986)
Sci-Fi

An alien returns to Earth years after an earlier visit to reunite with his Earth son and together, they search for the alien's human wife.An alien returns to Earth years after an earlier visit to reunite with his Earth son and together, they search for the alien's human wife.An alien returns to Earth years after an earlier visit to reunite with his Earth son and together, they search for the alien's human wife.

  • Creators
    • Mike Gray
    • John Mason
  • Stars
    • Robert Hays
    • Christopher Daniel Barnes
    • Michael Cavanaugh
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Creators
      • Mike Gray
      • John Mason
    • Stars
      • Robert Hays
      • Christopher Daniel Barnes
      • Michael Cavanaugh
    • 15User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Episodes22

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season

    Photos117

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    Top cast99+

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    Robert Hays
    Robert Hays
    • Paul Forrester…
    • 1986–1987
    Christopher Daniel Barnes
    Christopher Daniel Barnes
    • Scott Hayden
    • 1986–1987
    Michael Cavanaugh
    Michael Cavanaugh
    • George Fox
    • 1986–1987
    Patrick Culliton
    Patrick Culliton
    • FSA Agent Wiley…
    • 1986–1987
    Joshua Bryant
    Joshua Bryant
    • Wayne Geffner
    • 1987
    Marilyn Lightstone
    Marilyn Lightstone
    • Lainie Fine
    • 1987
    Buck Taylor
    Buck Taylor
    • Driver…
    • 1987
    Erin Gray
    Erin Gray
    • Jenny Hayden
    • 1987
    Paul Tompkins
    Paul Tompkins
    • Tech #1
    • 1987
    Charles Randolph-Wright
    Charles Randolph-Wright
    • Tech #2
    • 1987
    Philip Weyland
    Philip Weyland
    • Tech #3
    • 1987
    Michael Kelly
    • Tech #4
    • 1987
    Candy Clark
    Candy Clark
    • Shannon McGovern
    • 1986
    Jane Wyatt
    Jane Wyatt
    • Stella Forrester
    • 1986
    Robert Donner
    Robert Donner
    • Joe Connell
    • 1986
    Mimi Kuzyk
    Mimi Kuzyk
    • Liz Baynes
    • 1986
    Lisa Blount
    Lisa Blount
    • Angela
    • 1986
    Marta DuBois
    Marta DuBois
    • Dr. Ellen Dukow
    • 1986
    • Creators
      • Mike Gray
      • John Mason
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.71K
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    Featured reviews

    Gregorso

    Unique

    I liked the way that people would expect Starman to be a jerk (because the guy who's body he copied was kind of a jerk), but he would end up inspiring hope in everyone. I was impressed with how he handled his captor, George Fox, in the next to last episode.

    In the motion picture, I always felt that it was wrong for Starman to get Jennie Hayden pregnant and just leave her. The TV series sort of helped to redeem that.

    It made sense that, as an alien, he had a completely fresh perspective on things, and thus was a very creative photographer.

    The stories were all set in the southwest U.S. The scene of Starman first emerging in Paul's body was cool.

    A unique show that appeals to lovers of peace & social justice. I remember seeing a bumper sticker after it was cancelled: "Starman will return in a moment." The show was something new under the sun.
    9Iwannano

    Didn't deserve to be canceled

    I was 14 years old when "Starman" the TV series premiered and I loved the show from the get-go. It was helpful that CB Barnes was a bit of a babe but it was the quality of writing on the show that kept me watching every week. In fact, I was so disappointed when they kept switching the time-slot that I was not surprised when they canceled it. In fact, I was incredibly upset because they kept really pathetic shows on the air and gave "Starman" the shaft.

    Funny enough, there were enough people that felt the same as me that there were "Blue Lights" clubs all over North America that wrote angry letters and petitions to have "Starman" continue. After months of fighting, it was clear that ABC had no intention of giving it the opportunity it deserved. If anyone knows how I could buy the two seasons that "Starman" was on the air, please let me know. I would love to add this series to my DVD collection and finally give it the credit it deserves.
    mattkratz

    worthy TV sequel to a theatrical film

    This show picks up 14 years after the movie left off. The alien returns to earth to find the woman he had met during the movie and the child he had fathered. He finds the son, now a teenager, and together they search for the mother, while being hounded by a government agent. In the movie, the woman helped Starman (who apparantly had no corporal form of his own and assumes the body of a photographer who has just died in a helicopter accident in the show) learn about earth customs; in the tv show, the son does the same.

    All in all, I thought this was a decent television show and a worthy companion to one of my favorite movies of all time.
    9CThreePamO

    Robert Hays as Starman

    I just finished watching the Starman series again. I loved this show as a teenager when it first came out. However, I now realize a lot of the actual storyline and meaning of it was lost on my youth. In watching the show again, I see how well Robert Hays brought to life the character of the alien wrapped in the body of Paul Forrester.

    The interactions between Paul the Alien and Paul Forrester and his old friends, family, or acquaintances are priceless. Each Paul has a different feel to him, the way he stands, the way he moves, or the way he reacts to different things. We truly believe that Paul the Alien is experiencing some things for the first time. However, it's not overkill either.

    This is a great show that probably deserved at least another season. It seems like all the good science fiction shows are cut too short.
    Bats_Breath

    A Forgotten Gem

    "Starman" was a good, quality series. I loved this show back in 1986, and I became so used to the Robert Hays version of Starman that I remember when I looked up the 1984 Jeff Bridges/Karen Allen movie, I had a hard time accepting Bridges as Starman. And I wasn't as blown away by Bridges performance as others seem to have been. Bridges's was actually nominated for an Academy Award in acting in that 1984 John Carpenter film.

    Robert Hays does an excellent job bringing the Starman back to life. Starman isn't as uncomfortable with his human body as he was in the film, and Hays brings a great gentleness and warmth to the character. Hays doesn't try and copy Bridges, but he brings a different but similar take on the Starman character. Like Bridges, Hays plays the character as if he has an IQ of 60, but at the same time possesses the genius of Albert Einstein, Mahatma Ghandi, and Stephen Hawking combined. But thankfully Hays doesn't do the annoying bird like head movements Bridges does, and he doesn't speak with the motor neuron time delay that Bridges did in the film. You can believe that this is the same alien from the movie, but one that has learned things from his first time on Earth. He's still innocent and naive, but he's been around the block a bit more. In the pilot, Hays briefly played Paul Forrester, the photographer Starman cloned to use as a human body. There was a great contrast in the performances of Forrester and Starman as Forrester. So if Bridges could be nominated for an Oscar, why couldn't Hays have been nominated for any Emmy?

    I also prefered the TV series to the movie because the show was far more funny and lighthearted then the dreary and depressing movie. I think a lot of this has to do with the addition of Starman's 14 year old son Scott Hayden, played wonderfully by Christopher Daniel Barnes. In the movie, Starman gives Jenny the sphere and tells her "the baby will know what to do with". We get this sense that the baby will be born a genius and be just like Starman, a weird alien. But Scott is just a typical human kid that has a hard time accepting he is half alien. Back then, Barnes was was known as "C.B. Barnes", who for a while was a very low level teen heartthrob. In the 1990s Barnes got some mild fame playing Greg Brady in the "Brady Bunch" movies and doing the voice of Spider-Man in the Spidey animated series.

    Sure the John Carpenter/Jeff Bridges movie had some funny moments, but I felt that the movie was really depressing and gloomy. It was just this gigantic tragic road love story with such sad, sad, SAD music. The TV series has Scott Hayden to let the air out of it all and there are some hilarious exchanges here between Scott, his father and the people they come across in their quest for Jenny Hayden. I highly recommend this funny, warm and intelligently written series. It was a shame that ABC gave this series the shaft after just 1 year and 22 episodes. They never gave the show any good time slots anyway. They were always yanking "Starman" around on different nights, and always putting the series up against the heavyweights of the day like "Dynasty" or something like that. Yes Sci-Fi channel IS airing "Starman". It comes on Sunday/Monday morning at 2 AM Eastern/1 AM Central.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the original movie Scott Hayden (Jeff Bridges) had seven silver spheres, which were the tools of his civilization. Every time he used one it disappeared. In the series, Paul Forrester (Robert Hays) has only one silver sphere, but this one doesn't disappear after one use.
    • Goofs
      The trouble is the math does not work. NASA launched the Voyager probes in 1977. This was found by the Starman in the first movie and was his "invitation" to visit Earth. The show takes place in 1986 and Scott is now 14 year old. Which means Starman visited Earth 14 years earlier, which would be 1972 -- five years before the Voyagers were launched.
    • Connections
      Follows Starman (1984)

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    FAQ19

    • How many seasons does Starman have?Powered by Alexa
    • What is Starman about?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 19, 1986 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Der Mann vom anderen Stern
    • Filming locations
      • Grass Valley, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures Television
      • Henerson/Hirsch Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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