The unprecedented success of Star Wars resulted in a sci-fi boom in the late seventies. Not the gigantic insects invading earth variety (like in the fifties); this time it was the "space opera" that captured our attention. And so, Hollywood gave us things like Battlestar Galactica, Buck Rogers, The Black Hole, Logan's Run (TV series) and Flash Gordon.... but where were the science fiction sitcoms? Sitcoms were in their prime in the late seventies, so it seemed the logical thing to do: capitalize on the sci-fi craze with a situation comedy! Surprisingly, I can't think of any attempts in the U.S. to do this (Mork & Mindy doesn't count)... that is except for the short lived series Quark.The series had all the makings for success with Buck Henry at the helm. A pre-Love at First Bite Richard Benjamin plays "Adam Quark", an interstellar garbageman, with his usual smirky flair.
So what happened? Why did it tank? First of all, most of the jokes miss their mark by a mile. Watching Quark's pet alien Ergo attack him was nothing short of awkward. Even the canned laugh track couldn't make this scene funny. The show is full of poorly executed gags.
Plus, there's a lot of inside jokes that only sci-fi fans would get. Let me illustrate: in one episode an otherworldly Source speaks to Quark from the great beyond. An unarmed Quark must put his complete trust in the Source to defend himself against the laser blasts from the gender confused humanoid and the Bettys.
This is really the crux of the problem. The show's strong points can't override the fact that Quark is essentially just a parody- and how many successful TV shows can you think of that are primarily parodies? In other words, Spaceballs was funny, but I wouldn't want to watch it every week. Buck Henry spoofed the spy genre with Get Smart, but the gags came first and spoofing second.
All in all, the show wasn't too terrible. I'd give it a score somewhere between CPO Sharkey and Love, American Style. However, I have to admit the last few episodes showed real signs of improvement and it started to grow on me. In fact, given a little time it could have developed into a very entertaining program.

