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1%% Please note that the standard (all over the Wiki) is for episodes titles to be within "quotes". Only works titles are in italics.
2%%
3[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/buck.jpg]]
4[[caption-width-right:300:[[Franchise/StarWars Does this remind you of anything?]]]]
5
6->''"In the year 1987, NASA launched the last of America's deep space probes. Aboard this compact starship, a lone astronaut, Captain William "Buck" Rogers, was to experience cosmic forces beyond all comprehension. In a freak mishap, his life support systems were frozen by temperatures beyond imagination. ''Ranger 3'' was blown out of its planned trajectory into an orbit one thousand times more vast, an orbit which was to return Buck Rogers to Earth, 500 years later."''
7-->-- '''Second season's OpeningNarration'''
8
9''Buck Rogers in the 25[[superscript:th]] Century'' is an American science-fiction series that ran from 1979 to 1981. The feature-length {{pilot movie}} was released theatrically several months before the series itself aired, inspired by the success of ''Franchise/StarWars'' two years earlier. The film and series were based upon the ComicStrip/BuckRogers character created by Philip Francis Nowlan that had been featured in comic strips and novellas since the 1920s, and on the CBS and Mutual radio networks, airing several times each week from 1932 to 1947.
10
11The series starred Gil Gerard as Captain William "Buck" Rogers, a US Air Force pilot who commands ''Ranger 3'', a spaceship resembling the Shuttle that is launched in May 1987. Because of a freak combination of gases, he is frozen in space for 504 years and is revived in the 25[[superscript:th]] century. There, he learns that the Earth was united following a devastating nuclear war that began on November 22, 1987, and is now under the protection of the Earth Defense Forces, headquartered in New Chicago. The latest threat to Earth comes from the spaceborne armies of the planet Draconia, who are planning an invasion. Aiding him are Col. Wilma Deering (Creator/ErinGray), a Starfighter pilot, and Dr. Elias Huer, head of Earth Defense Forces, and a former star pilot himself.
12
13----
14!!''Buck Rogers in the 25[[superscript:th]] Century'' provides examples of:
15
16* ActorAllusion:
17** In "A Blast for Buck", Legion of Death leader Kellogg is on the long list of suspects who may have sent the deadly riddle. Appropriate as Kellogg was played by Frank Gorshin, who once played [[Series/Batman1966 a Riddler]].
18** Buster Crabbe guest stars as [[RemakeCameo "Brigadier Gordon"]] in the 1st non-pilot episode. After showing his combat capabilities, he is asked by Buck where he learned to shoot like that, only for Gordon to quip he's been doing it since before Buck was born. Not only is the character's name and actor a reference to ''Film/{{Flash Gordon|Serial}}'', Crabbe's most famous role, Crabbe also played Buck Rogers in the [[Film/BuckRogers 1939 film serial]].
19* AfterTheEnd: The series proper takes place 504 years after a nuclear war on November 22, 1987.
20* AlternateUniverse: The two-part episode "Flight of the War Witch".
21* AlwaysSaveTheGirl: Subverted in "Hand of the Goral" where the Evil Alien puts Buck through a SadisticChoice, having to choose between saving Wilma Deering and Hawk (an alien from a ProudWarriorRace of birdmen). He chose Hawk because he guessed that the [[DamselInDistress cowering Wilma]] was really a double put in by the Evil Alien, reasoning that the real Wilma Deering [[ActionHeroine wouldn't have been such a wuss.]] When Buck makes his decision, [[spoiler:"Wilma" melts right down in front of him, into a puddle of smoking burnt stuff.]]
22* AmbiguouslyGay: Dr. Theopolis. In the pilot movie, he calls Buck "attractive" within seconds of first meeting him, and all he seems to notice about Ardala is her hat. Averted in the rest of the series, though: in most episodes Theo shows no signs of being attracted to any gender, and in the first season's "Cruise Ship to the Stars" he asks Buck to turn him over, under the excuse of needing to "re-align his circuitry", so he can face the table in which Miss Cosmos is sitting, which would make him AmbiguouslyBi as a whole. [[note]]Unless he either wanted to look at Miss Cosmos' two male bodyguards (unlikely since neither of them looked particularly remarkable), or that since Miss Cosmos was not only a galactic beauty pageant winner but also a genetically perfect woman (and played by Dorothy Stratten), it counted as a case of [[EvenTheGirlsWantHer Even the Gays Want Her.]][[/note]]
23* AncientAstronauts: Part of Hawk's backstory; his race lived on Earth in the distant past until humans drove them into space.
24* ApologeticAttacker: In the pilot movie, Buck ends up being confronted by Tigerman during the climax. After being thrashed around a bit, Buck discovers that punches to the face, chest, and stomach do nothing to Tigerman. He tells him "I'm sorry it had to come to this", before kicking Tigerman [[GroinAttack in the family jewels]].
25* ArtificialIntelligence:
26** The Computer Council, although the only member we got to see regularly was Dr. Theopolis.
27** Also Twiki and Crichton.
28* AsteroidThicket: In the episode "Return of the Fighting 69th", the asteroids in the Necrosis asteroid belt are so close together that they are a serious hazard to spacecraft trying to pass through them. Near the beginning of the episode, two Earth starfighters are destroyed by running into an asteroid.
29* BananaInTheTailpipe: Buck's master plan to foil Ardala's surprise attack on Earth in the pilot movie -- load missiles into the exhaust pipes of the Draconian fighter ships. A few seconds after takeoff... '''BOOM'''!
30* BewareTheSuperman: A regular plot in the first season.
31* BilingualDialogue: Twiki communicates in beedees as well as in English. Buck can eventually understand them, although initially he needs Dr. Theopolis to translate.
32* BirdPeople: Hawk is the last survivor of a race of them.
33* BizarreTasteInFood: In-universe. President Hieronymus Fox, who is also from the 20th Century like Buck, is a ten-year-old genius who insists on "real food": cheeseburgers, French fries and milkshakes. Since cows are extinct, he is able to substitute it with meat of the "Rigellian mountain lizard". When one of the mooks who kidnapped him almost starts retching at the thought, he quips, "Wait until you hear what's in the milkshakes!"
34* BluntMetaphorsTrauma:
35** Everyone initially has trouble understanding Buck's [[TheEighties '80s]] idioms. Twiki picks it up fairly quickly because he practically lives with Buck, and Wilma and Dr. Huer eventually learn to infer meaning from context, but Dr. Theopolis never quite gets the hang of it.
36** When Buck remarks that a tired Wilma "looks like something the cat dragged in," she sighs that "for once, I know exactly what you're talking about."
37* BluntNo: Done as a gag at the end of one episode, when Buck asks if Dr. Huer and Wilma don't secretly sorta like the apartment he's cobbled together from random 20th Century artifacts, and the duo immediately reply in a unison with a stone-faced "No."
38* BoxedCrook: After capturing Hawk in the second season premiere, he's effectively left in the custody of Buck and the crew of the ''Searcher''. Hawk agrees to cooperate in the hope that they might find other {{Lost Colon|y}}ies of his people.
39* ButForMeItWasTuesday: To take the place of a noted killer, Raphael Argus, Buck confronts the man in a bar, claiming to be the brother of one of Argus' victims. It works as Argus has killed so many men, he doesn't even recall the fake name and even shrugs "figured something like that," indicating he's used to being attacked by grieving family members.
40* ByTheEyesOfTheBlind: The Vorvon in the episode "Space Vampire" could only be seen or heard by its intended victim.
41* CanonDiscontinuity: A viewer who missed the opening episode could easily go the whole series without realizing there was a radioactive wasteland full of savages waiting just outside New Chicago. And that's just as well, perhaps.
42* CanonForeigner: Dr. Theopolis and Twiki are not characters from the comic strip.
43* CaptainErsatz: Dr. Theopolis and Twiki for [[Franchise/StarWars C-3PO and R2-D2]], though flipped; here, Twiki the humanoid is the incomprehensible "beeper", and Theopolis, the non-humanoid robot is the one who speaks.
44* CarpetOfVirility: Gil Gerard's hirsute chest is displayed on more than one occasion, usually through ClothingDamage.
45* CassetteFuturism: One of the most defining examples ever to exist. It is deeply 1970's science fiction, in a very charming way.
46* CastingGag:
47** RetiredBadass Brigadier Gordon, part of the RagtagBunchOfMisfits brought in to fight an invasion in the second episode, is played by Buster Crabbe -- who of course played Film/{{Flash Gordon|Serial}} in the old serials as well as the original Buck Rogers.
48--->'''Buck:''' We met, Gordon?\
49'''Brigader Gordon:''' I don't think so, Captain. We're from different times.\
50'''Buck:''' Where'd you learn to do shooting like that?\
51'''Brigadier Gordon:''' I've been [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall doing that sort of thing]] [blasting starfighters] [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall since before you were born]], Colonel.\
52'''Buck:''' [[OlderThanTheyLook You think so]]?\
53'''Brigadier Gordon:''' Young man, I ''know'' so.
54** In the second season episode "Journey to Oasis", Mark Lenard plays [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries another]] alien {{Ambadassador}}.
55* CharacterizationMarchesOn: Hawk's BoxedCrook status is mostly forgotten after the first episode. He becomes the equivalent to a fully trusted senior officer aboard ''Searcher''. Without having seen the two part first episode "Time of the Hawk", one could not be blamed for assuming that Hawk's backstory was the typical run of the mill ProudWarriorRace, IOweYouMyLife scenario without the darker aspects of his GenocideBackfire.
56* {{Chickification}}: Wilma lost a lot of her tough endurance in the second season ReTool.
57* ClipShow: The episode "A Blast for Buck".
58%%* ColdSleepColdFuture
59* ComicBookAdaptation: Creator/GoldKeyComics published an adaptation of the movie, followed by about 10 issues of original stories. It stands as the last TV series to be adapted by Gold Key, which used to get the rights to virtually every action-adventure TV series and sitcom on the air back in the 1960s.
60* ComicBookMoviesDontUseCodenames: Killer Kane he's not. He's just plain Kane.
61* CoolGate: The stargates [[Franchise/StargateVerse (no relation)]].
62* CoolStarship:
63** Hawk's bird-shaped spaceship.
64** The ''Searcher'' from the second season.
65* CoyGirlishFlirtPose: Wilma, on occasion.
66* CrystalSpiresAndTogas: The city of Oasis. New Chicago looks pretty sharp as well.
67* DaddysLittleVillain: Princess Ardala of Draconia is at least as evil as her father Emperor Draco.
68* DatelessGrave: In the Pilot Movie for the series, Buck finds the gravestones of his parents, but doesn't find any dates on them. Dr. Theopolis tells Buck that dates weren't that important as people were dying due to the war in the late 20th century.
69* DeathByOriginStory: Hawk's girlfriend Kourie. She shows up again in a hallucination in a later episode. Or possibly ''not'' a hallucination. The plot of that episode is that reality is coming apart at the seams. Or possibly the artifact they are transporting is only making them ''hallucinate'' that reality is coming apart at the seams. (No, it isn't better in context. It was the last episode of a series cancelled mid-season.)
70* DefrostingIceQueen: Wilma Deering.
71* DigAttack: The episode "Unchained Woman". As Buck and his fellow prison escapee Jen Burton are trekking across a desert, Jen is attacked by an underground monster that uses a tentacle to pull her into its clutches.
72* DistressedDude: More often than not, the episodes are driven by a villain holding Buck captive. Much less frequent in the second season.
73* DomedHometown: New Chicago.
74* DontTellMama: In "Space Rockers," two teens, driven berserk by the villain's treated music, steal Buck's fighter for a joyride. Eventually, the music wears off and Buck has to rescue them. After Buck gets them back, he tells Dr. Huer that he doesn't want to press charges. Dr. Huer agrees and they tell the teens that they are going to do something worse than arrest them; they are going to send them back to their parents. The teens suddenly have OhCrap written all over their faces, and it's obvious that they would prefer being arrested than face their parents' wrath.
75* DoppelgangerCrossover: In one episode Buck meets a man called Brigadier Gordon who's strongly implied to be an older ''Franchise/FlashGordon''. His actor, Buster Crabbe had played both ''[[Film/FlashGordonSerial Flash Gordon]]'' and ''Film/BuckRogers'' in old serials.
76* TheDragon: Tiger Man. (His name is a ShoutOut to the Martian Tiger Men of the original comic.) Later replaced by Panther Man.
77* TheEmpire: The Draconian Empire.
78* EnemyMine:
79** In the first season two part Finale, "Flight of the War Witch", Buck and Wilma join forces with Ardala and Kane to fight the Zadds who are a bigger threat from another universe. It is strongly suggested that Earth and Draconia become much friendlier towards each other. Ardala and Kane appear to genuinely appreciate the new found friendship.
80** Buck and Hawk, at the beginning of the second season. Hawk then joins the heroes.
81* EvilDiva: In "Space Rockers", the music of the band Andromeda is used by their producer to drive the youth of the galaxy to riot in a bid for power.
82%%* ExplosiveLeash
83* EyeBeams: ODX from "Journey to Oasis" -- his are telekinetic and resemble lightning.
84* FakeoutEscape: In "Flight of the War Witch", Buck, Princess Ardala and a Pendaran captive use this to get out of their cell. Buck and the captive use a CeilingCling to hide, while Princess Ardala simply hides under the bed.
85* {{Fanservice}}:
86** Erin Gray in spandex jumpsuits and miniskirts. In an infamous scene in the second season episode "Shgoratchx", a curiously unresistant Wilma is stripped naked by a group of alien midgets using telekinesis.
87** Pamela Hensley in [[{{Stripperiffic}} even less]].
88** And the opening credits to the theatrical version of the pilot episode.
89* FemmeFatale: Princess Ardala.
90%%* FighterLaunchingSequence
91* FireForgedFriends: Hawk and Buck. Also Ardala/Kane and Buck/Wilma during the events of "Flight of the War Witch". The ending of that two part season one finale heavily suggests that Draconia and Earth will bury the hatchet.
92* FishOutOfTemporalWater: Buck is from five centuries in the past, though he adapts quickly enough that it's no longer a prominent trait in the second season.
93* {{Flanderization}}: Buck's actor Gil Gerard complained that Buck was cracking too many jokes and that the FishOutOfTemporalWater aspect of Buck's character had gotten stale. This may be why Buck gets a lot more serious in Season 2. In addition, his relationship with Wilma becomes more serious instead of a different GirlOfTheWeek.
94* FlyingWeapon: A subversion in "Journey to Oasis"; Ezerhauden is really an invisible swordsman, vulnerable only to a thrown spear type of attack, but until he is killed, he resembles a flying self-wielding sword.
95* FoodPills: In "Planet of the Slave Girls", they become an important plot point; the manufacturer was poisoning them.
96* ForgottenThemeTuneLyrics: The theme tune had lyrics that were sung by Kip Lennon during the opening credits of the original PilotMovie.
97* TheFuture: Buck wakes up in 2491.
98* FutureImperfect:
99** There were few records of the 20[[superscript:th]] century, so 25[[superscript:th]] century historians confuse a hairdryer with an "early model hand laser".
100** In "Return of the Fighting 69[[superscript:th]]", a 20[[superscript:th]]-century belt-fed machine gun is mistaken by the bad guys for an "ancient communications device". They are quite surprised when a captured Buck demonstrates its proper use during his escape.
101--->[[MoreDakka DAKKADAKKADAKKA]]\
102'''Buck:''' Get the message?
103* FutureMusic: Complete with an entire episode devoted to the idea.
104* FutureSpandex: In the first season, Colonel Deering and Buck sometimes wore spandex jumpsuits.
105* GirlOfTheWeek: To the point where they did a LampshadeHanging of it ''halfway through first season.''
106* GoodLookingPrivates: Admit it, Wilma Deering looked great in her black dress uniform at the diplomatic function in the PilotMovie. She also looks pretty good while wearing her standard white Earth Defense Directorate pilot's uniform.
107* HammerAndSickleRemovedForYourProtection: In "Testimony of a Traitor" it was revealed that just before Buck left Earth, there was a conspiracy of high-ranking American officers to launch a first strike against "The Other Side".
108* HarmlessFreezing: For 500 years...
109* HeavyWorlder:
110** A one-shot character by the name of Toman, who used his heightened strength to become a hitman.
111** Another heavy-worlder in an earlier episode had [[MindOverMatter telekinetic powers]].
112* HeelFaceTurn: The super-powered minion Varek in "Plot to Kill a City" refuses to allow the plan to go through because it would doom the survivors to the same torment as the people of his own world.
113* HeelRealization: In "Flight of the War Witch", Ardala confronts a far crueler villain than herself, who then proceeds to destroy all Ardala's personal JerkJustifications and makes her realize what a spoiled, pathetic wretch of a person she is. She later comes to Buck in tears, and he's basically sympathetic; he's always viewed her more as spoiled and naïve than really evil.
114-->'''Zarina:''' ''[to Ardala]'' On the contrary, we couldn't be more different. I have '''earned''' my position. You've been ''given'' yours.
115* HeroicSacrifice: Subverted in "Plot to Kill a City" as, after a HeelFaceTurn, Varek tries to shut down an overloading reactor core that would blow New Chicago off the map. He does but is seemingly vaporized, the group mourning him. Just as Buck says "I wonder if he realized he saved us," Varek shows up behind them, having just managed to escape in time, albeit badly injured. Thanks to his effort, he's pardoned for his past crimes and allowed to return to his home world.
116* HumanPopsicle: Buck himself.
117* InspectorJavert: The android guard in "Unchained Woman" never ceases his pursuit of Buck and Jen.
118* InsufferableGenius: Crichton, who substituted for Dr. Theopolis as Robotic [[TheSmartGuy Smart Guy]] in the second season. However, at least in "The Crystals" he was willing to admit to a serious mistake in his findings about the terrible fate of the humanoid beings of a planet degenerating into mindless monsters; he found that he got the process completely backwards and the brutes were actually metamorphosing into sapient beings.
119* {{Invisibility}}: Ezerhauden in "Journey to Oasis". The reason Odee-X could not defeat him.
120-->'''Odee-X:''' Could you see Ezerhauden? Nor could I. And since my power is in my eyes...
121* IronicEchoCut: When Buck is on trial and Dr. Theopolis is defending him.
122-->'''Dr. Theopolis:''' We haven't a thing to worry about.\
123''[cut]''\
124'''Judge:''' Captain Rogers, the council finds you guilty.
125* KillSat: The Draconian weapon in "Escape from Wedded Bliss".
126* LadyLand: The planet Xantia, as seen in "Planet of the Amazon Women".
127* TheLancer: Hawk from the second season.
128* LandmarkingTheHiddenBase: In "Testimony of a Traitor", the U.S. President had a secret bunker built under the sculptures of Mount Rushmore in 1986 for him to use in the event of a nuclear war.
129* LargeHam:
130** Joseph Wiseman, best known for playing a [[Film/DrNo calm, cold villain]], really feasts on the scenery in his brief appearance in the pilot. [[note]]His later appearance as a different character in the episode "Vegas in Space" was more in line with his most famous role.[[/note]]
131** Then the very next episode, "Planet of the Slave Girls", has Creator/JackPalance in full "crazed space cult leader" mode.
132* LastOfHisKind:
133** Hawk, the last survivor of a LostColony of hawk-people.
134** And of course Buck himself, the last living human of the 20th century.
135* LikeADuckTakesToWater: The UrExample in all incarnations. Even though his education and skills are 500+ years out of date, Buck has absolutely no problem adapting to 25[[superscript:th]]-century life and exploiting technology to his advantage, and Dr. Huer has no problem sending him on sensitive missions as a result. Buck using 20[[superscript:th]] century knowledge to solve 25[[superscript:th]] century problems is the theme of almost every episode. Among the highlights:
136** 20[[superscript:th]]-century weaponry (including the nerve gas the bad guys have stolen).
137** Sign language (almost unknown in the 25[[superscript:th]] century) to communicate with a mute servant girl who proves critical to the plot.
138** Electricity (an obsolete technology in the 25[[superscript:th]] century). It being obsolete is used inconsistently, as another episode has Buck being zapped by Twiki to [[ItMakesSenseInContext thwart the villain's plan]].
139** Gambling ability in a computer-driven casino. He wasn't even counting cards -- he was just the only one able to ''add''.
140** Adapting American football plays for use by the Earth Defense Directorate's pilots in squadron maneuvers.
141** Buck is also apparently the only pilot employed by Earth who is not completely dependent upon his ship's targeting computer because of his 20[[superscript:th]]-century dogfighting skills.
142* ALittleSomethingWeCallRockAndRoll: Both in the original pilot movie and in a later episode about space rockers.
143* MarsNeedsWomen: Subverted big time in "Planet of the Amazon Women". Instead, it is Buck who is kidnapped by the planet Zanita and sold as a breeding slave to repopulate their world as most of their men were lost in a war.
144* MechanicalLifeForms: Earth's Computer Council (Dr. Theopolis and his colleagues) are descendants of A.I. that reached the point of building and programming themselves; they're treated as citizens, and viewed as the saviors of humanity after the nuclear apocalypse.
145* MemoryGambit: In "Testimony of a Traitor", Buck finds himself on trial for causing World War III. In fact, he had allowed himself to be brainwashed in order to infiltrate a conspiracy in an unsuccessful attempt to ''prevent'' World War III. It's stated that Buck's mission succeeded.[[note]]Buck's reward for succeeding in his mission was assignment to the space mission which led to his being frozen.[[/note]] World War III just happened in spite of his efforts.
146* MilitaryScienceFiction: In effect it was two shows, with the first season being ''Film/JamesBond'' RecycledInSpace, and the second being a full-out ScienceFantasy.
147* MythologyGag:
148** Buster Crabbe, who played the title role in the 1939 serial ''Buck Rogers'', guest starred as Brigadier Gordon in "Planet of the Slave Girls". It also serves as a ShoutOut to his ''other'' famous role, that of [[Film/FlashGordonSerial Flash Gordon]].
149** Buck being revived in the year 2491 is an obvious reference to the title of the original ''Buck Rogers'' story, ''Armageddon 2419 A.D.''
150* NewNeoCity: New Chicago, New Detroit, New Manhattan, New Phoenix, New Tulsa, Boston Complex, New London, and "City-on-the-Sea" (formerly New Orleans). Averted by the episode "Vegas in Space" in which the orbital casino is named Sinaloa (but bears no resemblance to the Mexican state of the same name) and, other than Buck, none of the characters draw a connection between Sinaloa and Las Vegas.
151* NewOldFlame: Mark Lenard's character to Wilma in "Journey to Oasis".
152* NoNewFashionsInTheFuture: Buck's civilian clothes wouldn't look out of place in the late 1970s. The other characters wear clothing that at least looks futuristic (albeit {{Zeerust}}ed).
153* NotQuiteDead: At the end of "Plot to Kill a City", Kellogg (played by Frank Gorshin) was apparently blown away in a climactic space battle. In "A Blast for Buck", however, although Buck felt that Kellogg wasn't the one who sent the weird yo-yo doomsday message device, he knew that Kellogg was still out there and really pissed at Buck.
154* OlderThanTheyLook: In "Return of the Fighting 69[[superscript:th]]", Buck notes that the members of the squadron don't look any older than 60 when Wilma informs him that they've all reached the mandatory retirement age... of 85.
155-->'''Buck:''' ''Eighty-five''?!
156* OldSchoolDogfight: Pretty much used in every episode. With the same stock footage almost every time.
157* OldSoldier: All members of the title squadron in "Return of the Fighting 69[[superscript:th]]". Including one ''Badass Grandma''.
158* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Just as Hawk is about to be sentenced to death in the two-parter ''Time of the Hawk'', Buck cuts them off, approaches the stand and whispers to Hawk, desperately trying to get him to speak up and not resign himself to his fate. This is the first time Buck utters any form of swear word on the show.
159-->'''Buck:''' Damn it, Hawk! Do you understand they're going to sentence you to death?
160* OpeningNarration:
161** First season, delivered by William Conrad:
162--->''"The year is 1987, and NASA launches the last of America's deep space probes. In a freak mishap, ''Ranger 3'' and its pilot, Captain William "Buck" Rogers, are blown out of their trajectory into an orbit which freezes his life support systems, and returns Buck Rogers to Earth... 500 years later."''
163** It was changed for the second season, as shown with the article quote, this time delivered by Hank Sims. Both versions were abbreviated and altered from the narrative of the original pilot movie, which was longer.
164* OurVampiresAreDifferent: The episode "Space Vampire" has a creature called a Vorvon. It has the abilities of HypnoticEyes, {{Shapeshifting}} (to a floating red ball of light), VampiricDraining (of LifeEnergy), {{Invisibility}} to electronic viewing and turning the humans it killed into zombies. It can be fended off by a "power lock" instead of a crucifix and is WeakenedByTheLight of the sun.
165%%* PilotMovie
166* PleasurePlanet: The episode "Vegas in Space".
167* PopCulturalOsmosisFailure:
168** A running gag is Buck making remarks on the 20[[superscript:th]] century that go over the heads of people in the 25[[superscript:th]].
169** 20[[superscript:th]] century "Whiz kid" Hieronymus likewise will make jokes (such as calling a kidnapper ComicBook/DoctorDoom) based in the past. He also replaced his world's gladiator games with a tennis court.
170* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Hawk in the second season.
171* RagnarokProofing: The videotape in "Testimony of a Traitor" is still playable after a nuclear war and 500 years of storage, making this a very literal example. Even assuming a working player still existed, the polyester tape itself would have disintegrated after 200 years at most.
172* ReallyGetsAround: Buck has an extensive social circle, as illustrated when Wilma works on a guest list for his surprise birthday party:
173-->'''Wilma:''' Yes. Let's see. Now, there's, um, Jen, Joella, Marla, Alison, Tangie, Falina, Miss Cosmos. I do believe that there is a pattern emerging here.
174* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: Buck Rogers was born in 1957, and is doing his thing in the 2400s.
175* RecycledInSpace: Space mummies and space vampires, among others.
176* RedEyesTakeWarning: The space vampire.
177* RemakeCameo: The first episode of the TV show has Buster Crabbe guest star as Bridgadier Gordon. Buster Crabbe previously played Buck Rogers in the [[Film/BuckRogers 1939 film serial adaptation]].
178* RetCon: In the second season, Twikki and the other robot aboard the ''Searcher'' are specifically described as ThreeLawsCompliant. Which appears to directly contradicts the two-parter "Planet of the Slave Girls", which has Twikki flying a starfighter and blasting away at enemies, but it's possible it was only programmed to be ThreeLawsCompliant after the retool for the second season.
179* ReTool:
180** The second season, which tried to {{Follow the Lead|er}} of ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|1978}}'' and ''Franchise/StarTrek''.
181** To a lesser extent, the first season is retooled from the pilot movie, where Earth was a scaredy-cat backwater burg compared to the rest of the galaxy with roaming gangs of mutants in the barren regions between cities, and where New Chicago is the only point of civilization. The TV series retooled this to feature numerous cities on Earth, and with the planet being part of an interstellar community.\
182Although some things said in "Flight of the War Witch" imply that Earth has only recently joined the interstellar community, following their development of the now-ubiquitous Stargates, with the first person to ever use one still being alive. The first season has multiple, independent human factions, some of which (like the Draconians) being hostile to Earth. The second season shows humans as highly fragmented, and the whole point of the ''Searcher'' is to try locating and establishing contact with all the lost colonies.
183* RidiculouslyHumanRobots: Most of the computers and androids have some kind of PersonalityChip. A few actively despise humans as lower life forms.
184* RobotBuddy: Twiki, one of the {{Trope Codifier}}s. He may look rather innocuous, but he can pilot a fighter and dogfight with the best.
185* RobotMe: Three of them, actually, in "Ardala Returns".
186-->'''Ardala:''' Captain Buck Rogers, meet Captain Buck Rogers.
187* RunningGag:
188** Buck's cooking and use of 20[[superscript:th]] century slang.
189** Also the rubber plant.
190** 25th century natives, including historians, who completely misunderstand the function of common 20th century items.
191* ShoutOut:
192** In "Plot to Kill a City" part two the intercom pages ComicBook/AdamStrange and those departing for [[ComicBook/{{Hawkman}} Thanagar]].
193** In the episode "A Dream of Jennifer", the intercom can be heard paging [[ComicBook/SilverSurfer Norrin Radd]] as Buck is arriving, and [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries Captain Christopher Pike]] a short time later.
194** The second season has the character Admiral ''[[Creator/IsaacAsimov Asimov]]'', as well as the assertion that Twiki and Crichton are equipped with positronic brains. Lampshaded by Crichton -- see ThreeLawsCompliant below.
195** [[Creator/MichaelCrichton Crichton]] himself.
196** Lampshaded in "A Blast for Buck". The doomsday device came with a riddle. Kellogg from "Plot to Kill a City" is one of the suspects. Buck decides, however, that Kellogg "... wouldn't be bothered with riddles, it's not his style. When he decides to come for me, he'll want me to know it's him, how he's gonna do it and how much it will hurt." Not what we were expecting as Kellogg was played by Frank Gorshin who is definitely known for his [[Series/Batman1966 riddling tendencies elsewhere]].
197** Gary Coleman's recurring guest character, Hieronymous Fox, is named after the creator of ''The Garden of Earthly Delights'', Hieronymous Bosch.
198* UsefulNotes/SignedLanguage: In "Return of the Fighting 69th", Buck encounters a young deaf girl named Alicia, being held as a slave on an asteroid by space pirates. Showing a previously unknown ability to use ASL, Buck communicates with her to help with his and Wilma's escape after they're captured.
199* SleptThroughTheApocalypse: Buck Rogers was frozen when World War III broke out.
200* SmokeOut: In the episode "Vegas in Space", Buck has devices which cause a complete blackout in the immediate area. He uses one to escape from enemies.
201* SpaceClothes: Oh so very much! Between the heavy use of Future Spandex and shiny metallic fabrics, even in military uniforms, the show is very true to its Raygun Gothic roots.
202* SpaceFighter: The starfighters are some of the most gorgeous ships of this type ever designed. They were rejected models from the 1978 ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|1978}}'' series.
203* SpaceOpera: The series is based on one of the {{Trope Codifier}}s, ''ComicStrip/BuckRogers''.
204%%* SpacePirates
205* SparedByTheAdaptation: Ardala's [[TheBrute bodyguard]], Tiger Man, was killed in the pilot movie; the TV series version of the story let him live to reappear in future episodes.
206* StandardPostApocalypticSetting: In the pilot movie, much of the Earth has been reduced to a desolate wasteland by a nuclear holocaust, inhabited by mutants. The surviving humans (or rather, their descendants) live in isolated, hi-tech cities. The series, however, depicts it as much more habitable.
207* StockFootage: In addition to the previously-mentioned stock footage of space combat (of rejected fighter designs from ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|1978}}''), the first season also has about three stock establishing shots, two of which were also recycled from ''Battlestar Galactica''.
208* {{Stripperific}}: Pamela Hensley as Princess Ardala wore very, ''very'' little.
209* ThreeLawsCompliant: Twiki and other Earth-made robots are explicitly Three Laws Compliant -- Twiki even quotes the First Law in the second season episode "Shgoratchx" and a few moments later [[spoiler:states all three of them after having his brain inserted in Crichton's body]]. Crichton even complains about this in one episode, mentioning that the creator of the Laws [[ShoutOut had the same surname as the ship's commander]].
210* TimePassageBeard: In the Gold Key comic book adaptation of the pilot movie, Buck Rogers grows a beard during the time he spends in suspended animation while on a deep-space mission.
211* TimeTravelersAreSpies: Buck is accused of being a Draconian spy in the pilot movie; his defense against the charge is not helped by the Draconians having installed a tracking device aboard his space shuttle. Buck then has to [[ClearMyName redeem himself in the eyes of Earth]] [[spoiler: by sabotaging the Draconian surprise attack on Earth--during which he is ''again'' mistaken for a Draconian agent by Doctor Theopolis and Twiki]].
212* TrappedInAnotherWorld: In the two-part episode "Flight of the War Witch", the Pendarans send a distress call through a vortex to summon Buck, Dr. Huer, Wilma and Princess Ardala's entire flagship into their universe to help them defeat her.
213* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture:
214** ''Ranger 3'' was launched in May 1987, then almost eight years in the future.
215** WorldWarIII began on November 22, 1987.
216* UltraTerrestrials: Hawk's race evolved from birds and left Earth eons ago.
217* UndeathIsCheap: Episode "Space Vampire". A OurVampiresAreDifferent vampire called a Vorvon changes Wilma into a Vorvon-like version of herself. When the original Vorvon is destroyed by the light of a star, Wilma changes back into a human being.
218* UniquePilotTitleSequence:
219** The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CaPkROwOzgA end credits]] to the pilot feature the theme song's lyrics.
220** And the theatrical version of the pilot features Fanservice images of a swimsuit-clad Pamela Hensley, Erin Gray and an uncredited model. The TV version just uses a standard starfield.
221** The theatrical opening credits also feature the vocal version of the theme song (which is titled "Suspension").
222* UnPerson: In the TV series, part of Dr. Huer's argument in favor of Buck becoming a special agent is that, at least at the beginning of the series, he had no legal identity.
223* TheVamp: Princess Ardala
224* VerbalTic: Twiki adds "Beedee beedee beedee" to the beginning or end of most sentences, except for the episodes in the second season where Mel Blanc is not doing his voice.
225* VillainessesWantHeroes: Princess Ardala to Buck Rogers, sometimes. Although the only time she makes a really HARD play for him is when she needs a ''suitable'' mate to keep her throne. She doesn't get Buck, of course, and it's unclear if she keeps her throne or not.
226* VillainousBreakdown: Ardala, in part 2 of "Flight of the War Witch".
227-->'''Buck:''' Are you okay?\
228'''Ardala:''' ''[snaps]'' Yes, I'm fine!\
229'''Buck:''' Are you sure?\
230'''Ardala:''' I said, I'm FINE.\
231'''Buck:''' Alright, just making sure.\
232'''Ardala:''' ''[pause]'' Buck. I'm NOT fine. I'm ''HORRIBLE''!
233%%* WagonTrainToTheStars
234* WeatherControlMachine: Terran weather is manufactured by Quads because the Earth's ecosystem was destroyed in The Fall. Dr. Theopolis is personally responsible for weather at New Chicago and is particularly proud of his sunsets.
235%%* WeirdScience
236* WeNeedADistraction: Anytime Buck needs to get out of a detention cell, or slip past some guards. Most involve a cellmate pretending to call for help, and when the cell is opened, Buck jumps the guard(s).
237* WeveGotCompany: "Stop breathing, we've got company!"
238* WorldWarIII: World War III broke out on November 22, 1987, only six months after Buck was frozen, when the Soviet Union launched an all-out nuclear attack on the United States, destroying all of its major cities. The US counterattacked, devastating the Soviet Union, and a second wave of missiles was launched against it. Millions of people were killed in the war and millions more died of radiation poisoning in the coming months. Many humans and animals were mutated by the radiation. Society very quickly broke down. The only man made structures to survive the nuclear holocaust were the Egyptian pyramids, various Aztec ruins in UsefulNotes/{{Mexico}} and Mount Rushmore.
239%%* {{Zeerust}}

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