Welcome back to my episode-by-episode recap of and reaction to Quantum Leap. The spoilers ahead are only through this episode. I provide a short summary at the top, a long and much more thorough recap below that, and a reaction section at the bottom.
My previous episode recaps can be found HERE.
THE QUICK AND CLEAN SUMMARY:
Sam is Frank Bianca (Robert Jacobs), a male hair stylist living with his girlfriend, Laura (Doran Clark), and her son Kyle (Joseph Gordon-Levitt). When Kyle witnesses the murder of a mall drugstore clerk just as Sam leaps in, Laura won't let him tell the police what he saw, and the killer is getting closer and closer to make sure that he never will. Note: This is Scott Bakula's directorial debut. He later directed two other episodes, this season's "Roberto" and season 5's "Promised Land".
THE EXTRA DUSTY RECAP:
via https://quantumleap.fandom.com/wiki/Permanent_Wave
June 2, 1983 - Dr. Sam Beckett leaps into Frank Bianca (leapee played by Robert Jacobs), a popular hair stylist, just in time to let his girlfriend's son Kyle (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) go next door to go buy some candy. One of the workers at the place, Chloe (Lela Ivey), tells him that Laura (Doran Clark) never lets him go off on his own. Sam asks why just in time for two gunshots to be heard. Sam tells everyone to get down and then goes off to check on Kyle who he sees hiding behind the counters. The gunman's gloved hand is visible as he shoots at Sam before he manages to duck down behind the counters himself.
The owner of the pharmacy, Phil, was killed and witnesses saw Sam and Kyle running into the store. Sam did not see anything significant and Laura won't let Sam tell the police about Kyle although Detective Ward (Harry Groener) suspects that he saw something. Sam further worries Ward when he needs to look in his wallet to get his home address and doesn't realize that he lives on top of his store. Sam does get to have some fun, though, brazenly flirting with two gorgeous blonde twins in front of Al just to get revenge for Al always complaining about how Sam handles women whether he flirts with them or not.
Sam tries to convince Laura to go to the police but her husband was killed after agreeing to testify to a mob killing she witnessed and so she is too scared to let him. Sam independently tries to get Kyle to describe the killer to him but Kyle says that he can't really remember. He knows that the man was white and in a suit but he mostly just saw the man's shoes which had money in them.
Kyle also remembers that the man who shot Phil was arguing with him first and said he didn't need any more of Phil's junkie money. Al examines Phil's financial records and finds out that he was in deep debt awhile ago but has since managed to pay back all of his creditors with interest and had $200,000 in the bank. The obvious conclusion is that Phil was selling drugs illegally. The biggest customer was Eloch and so Sam tips Ward off to this but can't explain how he knows.
Because Al says that Kyle's body is found on the way to Frank's cabin and Laura's body is never found at all, Sam is taken by surprise when gunshots come through the apartment window and Chloe suffers a flesh wound. Sam goes back to the pharmacy to see if he can find anything and manages to locate a penny. When he returns, Chloe tells him that Laura took Kyle out to Frank's cabin.
Sam decides that it's gone too far and he disobeys Laura's wishes and calls Ward. He learns that Ward has already left as a woman called twenty minutes ago and gave her location. It might have been Laura but Sam is still concerned and takes off after Laura. Since he has to borrow Chloe's car, she insists on coming after him.
Al reports that Laura's car is wrecked in an accident but she and Kyle are both fine. When he checks in on Ward and tries to will the detective to go faster, he notices that the man has a penny on the top of his shoe and realizes that that was where the penny Sam found came from and thus Ward must be the killer. Sam thinks it's okay because Ward is going to the cabin and Laura and Kyle are stranded ten miles away but they manage to hitchhike to the cabin.
Ward arrives before Sam does and hits Laura over the head before chasing after Kyle. Kyle's leg brace makes it difficult for him to escape Ward but eventually he gets to the lake and Sam dives in after him. Sam assures Kyle that he is safe but this is premature as Ward has arrived and points a gun at him. Sam gets a terrified Kyle to tell Ward that he has no idea who Ward is so killing him is not necessary. Ward points out that Sam knows, though, and so is prepared to shoot them both. Sam tries to shield Kyle with his body when suddenly Ward falls over, dead.
Chloe got out of the car and shot Ward dead for shooting her. Sam thinks that they are safe until she points the gun at him. Sam realizes that Eloch is an anagram for Chloe and that they really should have realized this sooner. Sam tries to stall Chloe while a bloody Laura sneaks up behind Chloe with a heavy tree branch but Laura ultimately collapses just before reaching her. Chloe spins around to look at Laura once she hears the fall and Sam takes that opportunity to put both himself and Kyle underwater.
Kyle just hides while Sam finds Ward's gun and, when Chloe won't surrender, is forced to kill her. Back at the cabin, Sam finds out that Kyle goes on to win a medal in the special Olympics and when he automatically calls Kyle his son ends up proposing to Laura who accepts... a few seconds after Kyle accepts first.
REACTION:
We are once again driven by an unknown force to change history for the better!
My first reaction to this episode is that it was really weird to see Joseph Gordon-Levitt when he was that young. This episode was a few years even before he did 3rd Rock From the Sun. He seems to be one of the few child stars who turned out reasonably well.
Second... it appears that the history being changed in this episode is predicated not on the actual history, but on a decision Sam made immediately after his Leap. Sam leaps into Frank, who presumably should have known not to let Kyle go to the candy store alone. If that doesn't happen, Kyle doesn't witness the murder, and the rest of the episode is moot. So we might need to assume that the first of the changes that Sam makes to this timeline is causing Kyle to be a murder witness in the first place. Maybe this was the best way, ultimately, to catch Chloe? It wrinkles my brain to think about it, though. That would imply that God (or whoever controls the Leaping) knew that Sam would make the decision about the candy before sending him.
This was a strong episode, intense from start to finish, and with a twist ending that was hard to see coming. Chloe was suspicious, but letting Chloe get shot seemed to take her out of the mix of murder candidates. The clever part was that she wasn't the original murderer. I do wonder though if there was a better way to solve this leap. If Chloe had just been made aware that Kyle didn't actually see the shooter, she wouldn't have sent Ward after him. That didn't happen in the original timeline because Kyle's mom would not let him talk to the cops, so she had to have him killed to be sure Ward didn't get ID'd. Alternatively though, if Sam leaping into Frank changed the decision to let Kyle witness the shooting in the first place, then the purpose of the leap was taking out Chloe, not saving Kyle and his mom. (Maybe the reason Ziggy was glitching so much in this episode is that Sam was making *large* changes to the timeline, as opposed to small ones..)
I'm trying to remember, but have we seen Sam kill anyone before? Surely we have, though it's definitely not a common outcome for his Leaps. I definitely don't remember him killing a woman before, though.
A lot of the comedy of this episode was more than a little over the top (and definitely not appropriate viewing for kids), with Sam/Frank's customers throwing themselves at him sexually inside his salon, and Sam playing along with it (out of character) to antagonize Al. Maybe I just don't have a sense for how rich salon goes from Los Angeles in the early 1980s might have acted, but to me it just came across as gratuitous for the same of being gratuitous. Read into it, however you want, that this was Scott Bakula's directorial debut on the show.
It looks like the run of hyper-intense stories will continue in the next episode, with Sam leaping into a woman again, immediately as she is being confirmed as a rape victim. We'll see how that one is handled, but I must admit that I'm looking forward into something lighter again, at some point.
On the whole, while this was not a safe episode for kids, it was a pretty good "thriller" episode, cleverly written and executed. It was really fun to see a very young Joseph Gorden-Levitt.
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