Family Matters

1989

Seasons & Episodes

  • 9
  • 8
  • 7
  • 6
  • 5
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
6.6| 0h30m| TV-G| en| More Info
Released: 22 September 1989 Ended
Producted By: Lorimar Television
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

A long-running dramedy centering on the Winslow family, a middle-class African American family living in Chicago, and their pesky next-door neighbor, ultra-nerd Steve Urkel. A spin-off of Perfect Strangers.

... View More
Stream Online

Stream with HULU

Director

Producted By

Lorimar Television

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime. Watch Now

Trailers & Images

Reviews

PodBill Just what I expected
Listonixio Fresh and Exciting
Megamind To all those who have watched it: I hope you enjoyed it as much as I do.
Bea Swanson This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.
ComedyFan2010 I must say I enjoyed the show. It is very predictable and has many clichés, but to me it just gives a sweet nostalgia of the past television. While I am happy with the shows we have now, the past is sometimes great to watch again, and Family Matters is a good choice. It is a good sweet show that could be enjoyed by adults and by kids. It is a typical family show where at the end the characters teach us a moral lesson with their incident. Some of them were not my taste, but for the most time I found it tolerable.I know everyone says it became the "Urkel Show". But I just don't see it. I think people just associate it with the whole pop culture boom relating Urkel that happened in those days, I missed it, I didn't live in North America back then. But when it comes to the show, the rest of the characters still played an important role. Except for the ones who disappeared, which would be Judy, Rachel and Estelle. I didn't care much for the first two (and I wouldn't mind if Rachel would have taken her kid with her), but I do wish there would still be more Estelle. Loved her character. An older woman with more energy and adventure personality than anyone younger.My favorite character was Carl. He did bug me a few times, mainly at the end, but for the most I loved him. I would also say that this is due to the fact that Reginald VelJohnson is a brilliant actor. I absolutely loved his comedic talent as well as his performance in serious moments. I really want to see more of him now.Jaleel White was a good actor as well. Just seeing how he created that icon that Urkel was as well as him performing all the Urkel alter egos who were very diverse.The rest of the actors did a good job as well. This also goes for the secondary characters such as Waldo or Carl's bosses.I think the show slightly overran its time. I didn't mind the unrealistic plots with Steve's inventions as long as it was funny, but the problem is that I didn't find Stefan too funny and there was too much of him. Also the show started repeating similar plot lines, which was killing the fun.I did like though how they wrapped it up. At first I wasn't sure I want Urkel end up with Laura. yes, one would want his character to get what he always wanted, but Laura always rejected who he is. But they made it well by making Laura accept his hobbies such as polka and even get fun with it herself.
krswlkr56 In all honesty, the ABC / CBS television show "Family Matters" was and still is one of the best TV shows ever made! In all honesty, the characters seemed to mesh well with one another and it made you feel as though you were right at home with them experiencing the same issues they were as if you were a part of the Winslow family paying a visit to them every single week. You were there when Steve Urkel became Stefan Urkelle, when Steve's zany antics drove the Winslows crazy, or when Steve's family came by and visited him and also the Winslows. You saw the love between Laura and Steve become reality and you witnessed them falling for each other, thus revealing Laura loved Steve after all! To say this show is "excellent" is an understatement, but that's how high the IMDb will let us rate it. But, in actuality, it's "perfect". The show came at the right time and addressed many of issues such as race and it wasn't afraid to touch subjects like that and I have to admit it knocks the socks off of "Full House" and "Step by Step" hands down, done deal.
branh0913-256-160972 Family Matter's started off innocently enough as a Cosby Show ripoff, set to be centered around a "middle class" black family living in suburban Chicago. Using the momentum of Perfect Stranger's sassy elevator operator (a job I would imagine was in sharp decline in the late 80s), it is a spin off of that show.Like any long running show, Family Matters can be broken up into different phases. The first phase was of course the "Cosby Clone" phase. However the thing about this approach is that it was no Cosby show. Instead this show had a bunch of under performing actors and characters who were one dimensional. The child actors in this show were all pretty bad. The adult actors were better, but given the juvenile nature of the script, not much could be done.In this direction this series would have vanish umm, 3rd season, maybe 4th season at best. The fact of the matter was is that the comedy styling was more slap stick (as opposed to Cosby's more subtle comical styling). The Cosby show also had character growth and development(hard to juggle with the increasingly large plot, but it was successful in some instances). Family Matters didn't really allow the characters to grow much. The Carl Winslow of 1989 is the same Carl Winslow of 1998. Heatcliff Huxtable kept his character interesting with his interactions with the cast, and the child actors (who were all superior to Family Matter's child actors).Ah, but alas, Jaleel White who had been roaming around the TV sitcom universe for a few years with cameo appearances here and there comes up as the geeky, annoying, and clumsy next door neighbor. Needless to say, he was an overnight success. And soon enough, he became the show's centerpiece attraction.Steve Urkle became pretty much the face of the show, and he became a merchandise killing. We had a Steve Urkle rap, Steve Urkle doll, Steve Urkle music video, etc. This pretty much started the downward spiral for the show. Steve Urkle saved a show that was going to pretty much be a footnote in history or become an obscure "anyone remember that one show" hit on the internet. But the show lasted a hefty 9 seasons. I'd say from Season 2-6 was the Urkle phase.After awhile, the Urkle character was becoming stale. It was kind of hard to buy that a nerd who looked like he was 6'7 (and had a bassy deep voice) could be some sort of docile nerd. The producers probably started to notice this, and started creating alternate versions of Urkle like Stefan. Of course that wasn't a great hit, and with Ukrle becoming stale, the show pretty much threw any idea at the wall. Some ludicrous situations happened like Urkle crashing a car into the Winslow's living room. Urkle shrinking him and Carl, and Steve Urkle actually separating from Stephan to create a totally separate version of himself. I'm not making this up! The last few seasons pretty much demonstrated that the producers had no idea what they were doing.As producers pretty much came up with dumb idea after another to keep the show interesting, a male nurished supporting cast was suffering. Besides maybe Laura and maybe Karl Winslow, the rest of the characters got little to no screen time. And members of the Winslow family were systematically written out of the show, or retconned out of existence. One such popular tragedy was Judy Winslow, which was a pretty sad story. Contrary to popular belief, her last ever line in the show was "Grandma, when are you getting married", and she appears as a background extra. That's it. Her going up stairs and never coming down would have been too good of a send off. The run upstairs thing is just a urban myth.Mother Winslow and of course Rachael, were written off of the show, along with a revolving door of recurring characters. Characters were introduced to make the show interesting like Waldo, Maxine to give up more asinine idiot characters. But no one triumphed Urkle.Anyway, I'm sure the producers realized that they were at the point of no return. By 1998 Urkle popularity was complete gone, much of the supporting cast left in protest (like Harriett Winslow's actress), and the show was left with pretty much no direction. It appears that the producers were perhaps going to "reboot" the show in Season 10, as there appeared to have been plans to "reintroduce" many forgotten characters like the infamous Judy Winslow.Overall the show surpassed expectations at least. As ABC's Cosby clone, the show probably would have been canned after the second season. Since the writers had no clue how to develop characters, the plots were simply just derivative sitcom filler seen 1,000 times before. I only feel sorry for Jamie Foxworth (she seemed like a pretty girl, but man did she have issues after she was dismissed) and Jahleel White. Jahleel type-casted himself, and could never really distance himself from his Urkle role. He tried with many short lived sitcoms, and failed. But I think he found new life as a voice actor in various cartoons, and animation movies. Eh, not such a bad ending.The rest of the cast was terrible, and the actors who were good Thelma Hoskins all moved on to better things. As for the "kids" who knows what they're doing, but they were pretty much one trick pony's anyway. And Jamie Foxworth character actually seemed like she could have been a good actress, but got fired. The other adult actors like Karl Winslows actor (don't remember his real name) works sporadically, and grandma Winslow passed away in real life. The show was average, and it's commendable it lasted as long as it did.
dwacon-2 It is an interesting paradigm.Garry Marshall made Happy Days, a nostalgic look at the 1950's. It plodded along until a background character, Fonzie, became the focus of the show. And, Fonzie went from being a motorcycle riding tough guy to a cartoon character.The same happened with Family Matters. What was originally a Cosby-esquire warm family drama became a surrealistic cartoon starring none other than original one-off character Steve Urkel.Jaleel White made quite a career for himself in those days. He even had a special that showed off his other talents. However, like Gary Coleman, the joke ran dry and his post Family Matters show failed.I'm still waiting for Jaleel to return to acting in some type of bad-ass role. He has the talent and the range. He just needs a chance.

Similar Movies to Family Matters