3rd Rock from the Sun

3rd Rock from the Sun

3rd Rock from the Sun title card
Format Science fiction
Situation comedy
Created by Bonnie Turner and Terry Turner
Starring John Lithgow
Kristen Johnston
French Stewart
Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Simbi Khali
Elmarie Wendel
with Wayne Knight
and Jane Curtin
Country of origin Flag of the United States.svg United States
No. of seasons 6
No. of episodes 139 (List of episodes)
Production
Executive
producer(s)
Marcy Carsey
Caryn Mandabach
Bonnie Turner
Tom Werner
Terry Turner
Bill Martin
Mike Schiff
Linwood Boomer
Bob Kushell
Christine Zander
David Sacks
Danny Smith
Joe Fisch (co-executive producer)
Producer(s) Patrick Kienlen
David Goetsch
Jason Venokur
David Israel
Jim O'Doherty
Andrew Orenstein
Michael Glouberman
Gregg Mettler (producer)
Tim Ryder
Aron Abrams
Gregory Thompson (co-producer)
Location(s) Studio City, Los Angeles, California, USA[1]
Running time 22 min. (per episode)
Distributor USA:
Carsey-Werner Distribution
NBC
Anchor Bay Entertainment
Non-USA:
TV6 (Hungary)
British Broadcasting Corporation (UK)
Network
Sunfilm Entertainment GmbH (GER)
TV6 (Estonia)
Universal Pictures (UK)
Veronica (Netherlands)
Kanal A (Slovenia)
TV3_(Catalonia) (Catalonia)
Broadcast
Original channel NBC
Original run January 9, 1996 – May 22, 2001
External links
Official website
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

3rd Rock from the Sun is an Emmy Award-winning American sitcom that aired from 1996 until 2001 on NBC. The show is about a group of extraterrestrials on an expedition of what they consider to be the least important planet, Earth (the "3rd Rock" from the Sun), while posing as a human "family" of four, to observe human beings. Reruns currently air in the United States on TV Land.

Contents

Overview

Basic premise

"As many intelligent people know, aliens are all around us. This is a story of a band of four such explorers. In order to blend in, they have assumed human form. This is the High Commander [Dick]. He has assembled an elite team of experts: A decorated military officer [Sally], a seasoned intelligence specialist [Tommy] and, well, they had an extra seat [Harry]."[2]

The premise of the show revolves around an extraterrestrial research expedition attempting to live as a "normal" human family in the fictional city of Rutherford, Ohio, where they live in a loft apartment. Humor was principally derived from the aliens' attempts to study human society and, because of their living as humans themselves while on Earth, to understand the human condition. In later episodes, they became more accustomed to Earth and often seemed to be more interested in their human lives than in their mission. The episode "Dick's Big Giant Headache" insinuates that this may be due to the effect the frailty of the human condition has on them.

Dick Solomon (played by John Lithgow), the High Commander and leader of the expedition, is the family provider, and takes a position as a physics professor at Pendelton State University. Information officer Tommy (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) has been given the body of a teenager and is forced to enroll in high school (later college), leaving security officer Sally (Kristen Johnston) and communications officer Harry (French Stewart) to spend their lives as thirty somethings hanging out at home and bouncing through short-term jobs.

The family often communicates with their off-world (and usually unseen) boss, The Big Giant Head, who apparently only got the job by kissing "The Big Giant Butt." His orders are received by Harry, who unexpectedly (and often in inconvenient circumstances) stands erect, his arms stiff (acting as the antenna), and proclaims: "Incoming message from the Big Giant Head."

See also: Rutherford, Ohio

Sources of humor

The show derived much humor from the contrast between the outward appearance adopted by each of the aliens and his or her actual, internal nature. Dick, far from being a wise and fatherly figurehead, is arrogant, self-absorbed, petulant, faddish, and often downright foolish. Inside Sally’s glamorous form lives the weapons and security officer: uncouth, swaggering, and macho. Tommy, the oldest of the group, is morphed into a teenager, his former wisdom at odds with the strange and often humiliating life in which his teenage persona and raging hormones casts him. Only the oddball of the group, Harry, seems comfortable with Earth — yet he is the weirdest of them all, particularly when his built-in "radio" function takes unexpected control over his body, relaying orders from the aliens' home world in an odd, booming voice.

Another source of humor in the show, once pointed out by the character Don, is that the names of the three male aliens, are Tom, Dick and Harry..

Typical episode themes

Almost all the episodes revolve around the Solomons' difficulty integrating themselves into Earth culture and understanding human customs — often their view of Earth realities is distorted by the fact that almost all of their experience of Earth comes through the media, especially television, rather than firsthand experience.

Details about their alien nature are rarely given and inconsistent, except to reinforce the idea that their former lives were almost barren of emotion and most of the relationships humans have with each other. Their original forms, for example, are described as nonsexual, with reproduction a matter of sending packets of genetic material to each other in the mail. Leaders like The Big Giant Head are unelected and assumed infallible (in fact, it is stated that politicians on their planet are chosen by seeing which one can outrun the "giant fireball"). The upshot is that living in an Earth culture provides the Solomons with an almost intolerable degree of emotional stimulation and conflict, which they are very ill-equipped to handle.

Some of the episodes seemingly derive their comedy from affectionate send-ups of TV and films. For example, in the episode "Father Know Dick," when Harry finds out he is a transmitter, he "goes off the rails" (complete with red jacket as worn by Jim in Rebel Without a Cause), yells "You're tearing me apart!" and goes off to play "chicken" with a tough guy in a bar. In the episode "Dick's Big Giant Headache," both Dick and the Big Giant Head mention seeing something on the wing of the plane after having traveled by airline, a nod to both John Lithgow and William Shatner having played the role of the passenger who sees a gremlin on the wing in The Twilight Zone. In another episode, a face-slapping session with Dick and Sally pastiches the Chinatown sequence: "She's my daughter; my sister; my daughter." In "When Aliens Camp," the Solomons and Mary go on a disastrous camping trip. Dick is captured by a bunch of boy scouts and instantly turns "native." painting his face and sighing "The horror" in a spoof of Marlon Brando's character in Apocalypse Now.

Common mythology

Occasionally references would be made to specific features of the aliens' abilities and of their experiences on their own world, which built up a common mythology for the show. The theme of the idiot savant repeatedly resurfaces, since each member of the family makes up for their extreme naïveté with some special skill owing to their alien nature.

Though Dick's understanding of physics is weaker than his "son" Tommy's, it is implied that even his basic scientific knowledge makes advanced Earth physics appear rudimentary, leading to his becoming respected in his field despite his childish behavior. A well-known segment from an episode has him reading a passage from A Brief History of Time and laughing hysterically at Stephen Hawking's description of virtual particles. Even so, Dick is often shown as the member of the family with the least to recommend him in terms of ability, leading them to question his right to his command. Sally, for instance, is depicted as not only having an attractive body (she is often described as being "Amazonian"), but being amazingly physically strong and fit, able to fight and defeat large groups of men much larger than she (even when doing so is unnecessary and culturally inappropriate).

Tommy, similarly, has been trained with the ability of near-instant recall and has an encyclopedic knowledge about Earth society, which unfortunately seems useless in terms of helping him make appropriate decisions, but ensures that he remains a straight-A student.

Harry is most fascinating, since his behavior is bizarre, unstable and borderline mentally retarded even for a Solomon (a condition, it is implied, engendered by the chip in his brain that allows him to communicate with the home planet), yet somehow this mental condition gives him an inexplicable sex appeal for women and makes him the only Solomon with any talent in the arts — Harry often seems to have a knack for all fine arts, including music and theater, and is consistently shown as being an incredibly talented painter, especially as a portraitist and caricaturist, though his inability to verbally articulate his artistic ideas – or, in fact, any ideas at all – in an intelligent fashion sinks his efforts at making a living through his talent.

One of Dick's driving motivations becomes his desire to master drawing, acting, music, or other pursuits - all of which he fails at miserably because of his lack of understanding of how the clearly less intelligent Harry could possibly possess talents he does not.

Relationships with humans

Each alien became involved in various relationships with humans throughout the course of the series, primarily focusing on Dick's infatuation – at first met with disgust and then, finally, reciprocation – with anthropology professor Dr. Mary Albright (Jane Curtin), who shares an office with him. Much is often made of Mary's angst, insecurity, and neuroses brought on by a lifetime of studying the human condition as well as an unstable relationship with her parents, and the cheerful, childlike naïveté displayed by Dick, the primary factor in him that attracts her.

Sally similarly acquires a long-term boyfriend, Officer Don Orville (Wayne Knight), an overweight and incompetent police officer who becomes attracted to her after several incidents in which he is forced to confront or arrest the Solomons for various crimes. The two generally have conversations while speaking in a manner similar to an old 1930s crime drama.

Tommy manages an on-again/off-again relationship with August Leffler (Shay Astar), a reserved "ice queen" teenager and later the more bubbly Alissa Strudwick (Larisa Oleynik).

Harry has a relationship with his landlord Mrs. Dubcek's (Elmarie Wendel) daughter Vicki (played by Jan Hooks), in an on-screen relationship that often features overly melodramatic scenes. Harry, despite no apparent skills in the art of seduction, also manages to foil a plot to dissolve the Earth by seducing Cindy Crawford.

Some humor comes from the fact that at some point in the show most of the character relationships have been "mixed up" — a strange attraction is briefly shown between Mary and Tommy because of their similar passion for the social sciences and the study of humanity, in which Tommy disturbingly chooses to "step aside" and let Dick pursue her instead. Nina (Simbi Khali), Dick's assistant who primarily serves as his straight man and comic foil, is seen briefly having a fling with Harry. Mrs. Dubcek also, who is at first merely a source of comic relief, her own bizarre foibles and imperceptibly causing her to be a terrible role model for proper human behavior to the Solomons, is revealed to have had a fling with Harry.

Plot twists

As time went on, the show began to intersperse concrete references to the aliens' nature and their homeworld which played a role in affecting the show's plot. They usually described their original bodies as "gelatinous purple tubes" that lacked sex organs or most of the forms of physical definition that humans possess. In fact, when Sally asks why she had to be "the woman," Dick reminds her that she lost "the draw". Evidently, individuals in their species are so near-identical to each other that the Solomons were unaware of the concept of race or ethnicity, and had never invented one for themselves, leading to them to attempt to "choose" one (a source of humor since the Solomons all appear quite white), eventually deciding that they are Jewish because of their surname, which they had taken from the side of a truck.

Occasionally, the Solomons would encounter or think they encountered other extraterrestrials — the most long-lasting such gag being the Solomons' belief that Jell-O is an offshoot of a hostile, amorphous, carnivorous species they have often encountered, prompting them to go into hysterics whenever they see it served and attempt to destroy it. Their first brief encounter with snow was believed to have been attacks from a swarm of albino brain chiggers.

The name of the Solomons' home planet (if they indeed have one) is never revealed throughout the course of the series; in the show's dialogue, it is referred to as simply "The Home Planet." It is located in a barred spiral galaxy on the Cepheus-Draco border. Major twists in the plot, often shown in the various season finales, tended to involve contact with the home planet, involving their superiors' ongoing disapproval at the Solomons' antics and their becoming a "laughing stock" among their peers.

Cast

3rd Rock maintained a constant ensemble cast, the four main characters – Dick, Sally, Tommy, Harry – with the exception of Tommy, all appearing on the show for every episode of the six seasons it ran. Several other main characters who left or joined the show through its original run supplemented these four, and numerous guest stars and one-time characters supplemented all of them.

Main characters

Minor characters

Guest stars

Main article: List of Guest Stars in 3rd Rock from the Sun

Episodes

Main article: List of 3rd Rock from the Sun episodes

Nielsen rankings

Season Episodes Rank
1st 1996 20 #22[3]
2nd 1996-1997 26 #28[4]
3rd 1997-1998 27 #44[5]
4th 1998-1999 24 #77[6]
5th 1999-2000 22 #82[7]
6th 2000-2001 20 #89[8]

International broadcasters

Country Channel Current Broadcaster? Notes
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg UK BBC2 No Original broadcaster
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg UK Sky1 No Original broadcaster
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg UK ITV2 No Latter broadcaster
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg UK ITV4 No Latter broadcaster
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg UK Sci-Fi Channel Yes Reruns
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg UK Paramount Comedy 2 Yes Reruns
Flag of Australia.svg Australia Seven Network No
Flag of Australia.svg Australia 111 Hits Yes Reruns
Flag of Germany.svg Germany Kabel 1 Yes Reruns
Flag of Finland.svg Finland Subtv Yes Reruns
Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand TV2 Yes Reruns
Middle East MBC4 No Sixth Season never broadcast.
Flag of Indonesia.svg Indonesia Jak-TV No
Flag of Bulgaria.svg Bulgaria GTV Yes
Flag of Serbia.svg Serbia B92 No

Major TV Awards & Nominations

Main article: List of 3rd Rock from the Sun awards and nominations

In 1997, 3rd Rock won the most Emmy Awards (five from eight nominations) for a television series:

John Lithgow received an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series for each year the show was broadcast, winning the Emmy in 1996, 1997, and 1999. Accepting the 1999 award he said "Many wonderful things have happened to me in my life, but the two best are "3rd Rock" and my family."[9]

Golden Globe Awards

Screen Actors Guild Awards

DVD releases

All six seasons of 3rd Rock from the Sun have been released on DVD by Anchor Bay Entertainment in the US, and Network DVD in the UK. Ironically, the sixth season was the first to be released in the UK, as early as 2002, but it was re-released when the fifth season was released. The complete series box-set featuring every episode is due to be re-released in the UK on November 3rd, 2008.

Season Release Date
Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
1 July 6, 2005 May 17, 2004 November 9, 2005
2 October 25, 2005 June 21, 2004 November 9, 2005
3 February 21, 2006 August 30, 2004 February 8, 2006
4 May 2, 2006 October 25, 2004 July 6, 2006
5 August 15, 2006 January 24, 2005 February 7, 2007
6 November 14, 2006 June 10, 2002 February 7, 2007
Complete Box Set
(Seasons 1-6)
TBA October 25, 2004 TBA

Other media

A tie-in book, 3rd Rock from the Sun: The Official Report, was released in 1997. Its pages are printed in black and white; however, there are several glossy colored pictures in the center pages featuring various cast members on the show.

The book is essentially a report of their findings during their stay on Earth (although in Dick Solomon's foreword, he states that the report has been requested too early). Primarily a source of humor, the book includes such features as "What to do if you encounter Jell-O", a fan biography of Katie Couric written by Harry, and Sally's version of a Cosmo quiz. Portions of the book are included in the Booklets inside each season set of the series.

Despite the report's being set within the fictional world of 3rd Rock, there is a foreword written by John Lithgow himself in which he explains how he was "abducted" by the 3rd Rock producers and forced to work on their production. There is a post-it note attached to the foreword, apparently written by Dick Solomon, stating that he doesn't know why the foreword is there, but that Lithgow is an Earth actor who appeared in "some helicopter movie." A black and white picture of the 3rd Rock cast and crew is also included at the end of the book.

References

  1. 3rd Rock from the Sun "filming locations" at IMDb
  2. "3rd Rock from the Sun: Summary". TV.com. Retrieved on 2007-09-03.
  3. "1995-1996 TV Ratings Retrieved July 25, 2008.
  4. "1996-1997 TV Ratings Retrieved July 25, 2008.
  5. "1997-1998 TV Ratings Retrieved July 25, 2008.
  6. "1998-1999 TV Ratings Retrieved July 24, 2008.
  7. "Top TV Shows for 1999-2000 Season
  8. "2000-2001 TV Ratings Retrieved July 24, 2008.
  9. "Academy of Television Arts & Sciences". Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved on 2007-09-18.

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Cybill
Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series - Musical/Comedy
1997
Succeeded by
Ally McBeal