I wonder if Charlie Jane will respond to me pointing out that QL is not indeed body-jumping. They're usually pretty good about that.
Boxed Set, Vol. V: Just a Hint of Denial and a Dash of Retcon
A topic for the discussion of Doctor Who, Arrow, and The Flash. Beware possible invasions of iZombie, Sleepy Hollow, or pretty much any other "genre" (read: sci fi, superhero, or fantasy) show that captures our fancy. Expect adult content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
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Whitefont all unaired in the U.S. ep discussion, identifying it as such, and including the show and ep title in blackfont.
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I only ever saw one episode of QL, and it was the one where he leaped into the guy just as he got electroshock therapy. That was a cool ep.
I tried to rewatch it a couple years ago, and hit a racially preachy episode and ran screaming. Tarnished good memories, that did.
I saw a couple of episodes but never got hooked. HOw did it work if he was not body jumping? There in his own body with an illusion that made him look and sound like the person he was displacing to others? Was the illusion light & sound or mind control? What happened to the person he replaced while he was there?
QL was never much with the sense-making. And I'm still kind of bummed out about how unsatisfying the finale was.
HOw did it work if he was not body jumping?
Once Sam stepped into the quantum accelerator thingy, he never stopped jumping from body to body. He never went back "home".
There in his own body with an illusion that made him look and sound like the person he was displacing to others? Was the illusion light & sound or mind control?
Never explained. In the beginning of the series, I think it was actually that only his mind was "leaping", but later on they wrote it as being his whole body - body-switching with people in the past. Which annoyed me because I think they did it for the amusement value of having big tall Sam walking around in dresses and high heels - with no explanation of how he could fit into them, or into the clothes of a man smaller than him, either. It just made no damn sense at all, and the show was stretching disbelief pretty hard anyway.
What happened to the person he replaced while he was there?
They had an alien/government abduction experience. They woke up in the Waiting Room, in Sam's body, and probably ended up believing it was all a hallucination or a dream. I always wondered what happened to them after they went back to their own bodies, after Sam fixed their problems. They'd have no recollection of what Sam did while he was "standing in for them", and he always made major changes in their lives - for the better, of course, that was the premise, but still - if you wake up from an intensely vivid and weird dream to find that days have passed, you've apparently done things you cannot recall, and your life is different and you've no idea how it got that way - isn't that, itself, kinda going to mess up your life? Sam was basically putting all those people in danger of being committed, of being thought insane or thinking themselves insane, and disappointing and/or frightening all the people around them that he'd managed to save/woo/impress/whatever?
And yeah, the series finale sucked. It was cool, right up to the point where we realized it made more questions than it answered, and we never really found out what *really* happened to Sam.
Wow, I have strong feelings about Quantum Leap. I watched that show during a very difficult part of my life, and it gave me something to enjoy and lose myself in, but I've never been able to re-watch any of the episodes with the same enjoyment.
They woke up in the Waiting Room, in Sam's body
Not according to what Tom and I quoted. It was full body transportation, and they just looked like Sam.
Zenkitty's right. Early on, it was just his mind. He gave birth in one ep, for example. Later, they changed the "mechanics", and you get things like the double-amputee and the fathering-a-child-who-is-clearly-his. This is also reflected in a change in what Al saw when he looked at Sam.
Did they retcon, or did they change how it worked within the show? Everything I can find indicates it's a retcon, which means that's the way it "always" happened.
My recollection is that it's generally treated (and I don't know if this is in fandom or officially) as "Well, it's a time travel show, so something that he did in the past changed the timeline in such a way that the mechanics are this", which, I suppose, makes it more retconny than not.