Lois & Clark - The New Adventures of Superman - The Complete First Season

Lois & Clark 0 was one of the sweetest surprises of the 1993 television season, and while it certainly enjoyed a devoted following until the series jumped the tall building in its later years, we can probably thank the Phoenix-like rise of f0i Desperate Housewives 0 ' Teri Hatcher's career to thank for its arrival on DVD. The premise of f0i Lois & Clark 0 is one fraught with peril, particularly for core fans. This incarnation of the Man of Steel saga recasts f0i Superman 0 as romantic comedy. One of the series creators once described this series as "basically, f0i Moonlighting 0 , only Bruce Willis can fly." This is overstating the case by leaps and bounds. Clark Kent (Dean Cain) has not been reinvented as a wisecracking street-wise hipster. The chemistry between the new Metropolis arrival and rookie f0i Daily Planet 0 scribe and ace investigative reporter Lois Lane (Hatcher) is not as sexually charged as David and Maddie, and their banter is not as sharp. But as with f0i Moonlighting 0 it would be a few seasons before the two lovelorn characters consummated their attraction. The dramatic arc of this inaugural season is "the fall of the house of Luthor," but at its heart is the triangle between Clark, Lois, and the charming snake Lex Luthor (John Shea), who, in the pilot episode, Superman vows to bring to justice ("Let the games begin," Luthor responds). Further complicating matters is that Superman has literally swept Lois off her feet. But until the episode "Barbarians at the Planet," in which Lex proposes to Lois, Lois professes her love to Superman, and Clark confesses his love to Lois, f0i Lois & Clark 0 breezily tweaks the touchstones of f0i Superman 0 iconography. "I've never noticed it before," a "drunk with love" Lois observes to a bespectacled Clark in "Pheremone, My Lovely,""You look a lot like Superman." Though special effects have progressed since the 1990s, f0i Lois & Clark 0 has lost little of its sparkle and panache, thanks to its super leads, whose fledgling careers soared to dizzying new heights. f0i --Donald Liebenson 0