We return again during the second season with action and adventure, where there seems to be a powerful bolt, which leads to the destruction of the timer and the siege of Quinn on the plane which is very dangerous. It seems that both skiers are stranded in a world with 1950s technology and Quinn can not be seen by others. Despite the gravity of the situation, he tries to get help from a single person, a girl with a history of hearing voices.
Richard Compton, Jim Johnston, Oscar L. Costo, Vern Gillum, Paris Barclay, Jefery Levy, Adam Nimoy, Allan Eastman, Colin Bucksey, John T. Kretchmer, David Livingston, John McPherson
This is compulsively watchable popcorn TV, fluffy and fun, more compelling in the aggregate than each individual episode might be, with little clues sprinkled here and there that contribute to a larger intrigue.
It's back... and it looks good, a smart, imaginative, often humorous exploration of what it would be like to be trapped traveling from one version of Earth to another, trying to get home.