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24 out of 24 people found the following review useful:
Ahead of it's time., 27 September 2002
Author:
Chris Lee from Post Falls, ID
This show was very well written in the first three seasons, we will not
talk of the fourth season,(Airwolf II -a disgrace to the
original
series).
The scenes were spectacular and the plots where well knitted in most of
the
episodes. I liked the attention to detail and the ability for it to be
fairly believable, despite the fictional capability of Airwolf. The
characters complimented each other and made the show very dynamic. Even
the
music created by S. Levay was really good.
It is very unfortunate that the series ended the way it did. Jan M.
Vincent had problems with alcohol and the politics with universal
infringed
on Bellisario's ideas. The "lady" did not go down with a blaze of glory
but rather an un-answered and open ended destruction with the final
series.
I think that is why so many enthusiast still hang on to Airwolf, it was a
killer show that just suddenly ended, even though the ratings were so
high.
It would be cool to have a new movie produced to give Airwolf a final
resting place in T.V. history. But that is unlikely. However, there are
all
kinds of fan clubs and sites that celebrate this one of a kind 80's show,
you will see that Airwolf is very much alive out on the internet. C.L.
17 out of 20 people found the following review useful:
One of the last intelligent suspense shows!, 11 February 2002
Author:
Jim Hannaford (sp27343) from Alexandria, VA
AIRWOLF, which debuted as a heavily promoted CBS movie of the week in January 1984 (and continued as a weekly series until July 1986); was well written, produced (CBS kicked in a great deal of money for its production) and acted. It was a thinking person's action (and espionage) show, that truely emphasized personal relationships over technical gimickery. Every week Stringfellow Hawk and Dominic Santini (J.M. Vincent and Ernest Borgnine) fetched the ultra high tech AIRWOLF helicopter from its lair in the California desert to do the bidding of Archangel (Alex Cord) of the CIA to do one thing or another, though not usually until the last third of the episode which gave time to build a story amongst the players. The stories mostly centered around SoCal, but occasionally AIRWOLF took a trip overseas (curteousy of USAF tanker support) to fight a cold war type battle. Like most show's, the best episodes were in the first two seasons. However, by season three AIRWOLF started to look tired. By that time Jan Micael Vincent's alcholism problems caused serious production delays (in several 3rd season episodes Vincent is noticably intoxicated), such that CBS ultimately canceled the show; though not with out giving Vincent ample attempts to straighten himself out. The show still had legs, and was taken over by the USA Network (shot in Canada on a much tighter budget) for a fourth season with a new cast (Barry Van Dyke stepped in as Hawk's long lost older brother St John Hawk) to carry on the CIA's "chores". For the USA show's; cold war espionage was the theme of most of the stories as oposed to the CBS show's getting involved more in current events and family interests of Hawk's and Santini's. I liked the show alot, and was fortunate to have recorded many when USA rebroadcast them. It is of interest to note that Jan Michael Vincent went from a per episode salary of $250,000 (for the 58 CBS episodes 1984-1986) to now (2002) near poverty, and is living in a minimum security re-hab type jail, due to several arrests for public intoxication.
14 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
Classic 80's TV Show, 17 July 2001
Author:
weedheid from Scotland
This show was one of my favourites as a child. Everyone I knew wanted to be stringfellow hawke, if only for the chance to fly Airwolf. The characters were good and interacted well (hawke being the moody one, Dom the comic relief). The only bad thing was towards the end of Airwolfs run they changed all the characters (actually killing off "Dom" (or a lookalike)) and making String disappear giving the helicopter to the now magically rescued St John Hawke! IF you want to enjoy this show then under no circumstances should you watch the pathetic end season (aka Airwolf II) and stick with the original characters!
12 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
FANTASTIC ACTION SHOW, 6 May 2002
Author:
Big Movie Fan from England
If you've read my review of the pilot movie for this series you'll notice I
have nothing but praise for Airwolf. It really was the best show of the
1980's.
There were so many good things about this series. Alex Cord, Jan-Michael
Vincent and Ernest Borgnine were very good in their roles (the lovely
Jean-Bruce Scott joined them in season 2)and very convincing.
The plots were good. Throughout the series Airwolf went to battle against
rogue dictators, wicked scientists and bad guys who wanted their hands on
Airwolf.
The action scenes were always fantastic. The music accompanying the action
was brilliant. There was always an action scene at the end where Airwolf
went to war against the bad guys who usually had their own
helicopter/plane.
It was a typical 80's show which aired when the cold war was still very hot.
No-body knew who to trust. Even Michael Archangel played by Alex Cord seemed
to have his own agenda. Stringfellow Hawke also had his own agenda. He was
holding onto Airwolf until the government found his missing in action
brother. Until that time Hawke flew Airwolf on missions to protect the free
world.
A fantastic series.
10 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Fun Flight While It Lasted! Warning: Spoilers, 5 March 2005
Author:
louiepatti from Manassas, VA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
From the opening music (possibly the coolest theme song in the history
of television) to the sleek dark helicopter, to the brooding pilot
movie for this series, there was everything for action fans to love!
Airwolf began with so much potential: Its brooding anti-hero
Stringfellow Hawke and his search for spiritual cleansing and atonement
after his experiences in Viet Nam; his gruff mentor, Dominic Santini,
whose checkered past sometimes caught up with him; and Archangel, real
name Michael Coldsmith Briggs III, a suave and occasionally very
dangerous spy with whom the first two form a reluctant agreement. Add
to these three different characters some female help and a dose of
high-tech espionage, and what emerged was a winner from the mind of
Donald P. Bellisario, who also brought the public Quantum Leap and
Murder, She Wrote.
Airwolf began as a mid-season replacement show and started off the
series with the top secret chopper being stolen by its developer, Dr.
Charles Moffett, and taken to Libya to be used as Qaddafi's personal
weapon against anyone he dislikes. Stringfellow is approached by
Archangel, who very nearly died when Moffett stole Airwolf, and is
offered plenty of money to get Michael's pet project back. Hawke,
however, has little need of money; he's already comfortable and
cultured, so the offer of riches means little to him. There IS
something else Hawke wants and, being a top-level spy with access to
classified information, Archangel may be able to get it for him. String
wants his MIA older brother St. John found. Alive or dead, he doesn't
care, but he wants his brother brought home from Viet Nam. Dominic
objects vigorously to Hawke having anything to do with Archangel, but
he's talked into the deal. He and String retrieve the stolen Airwolf
but then refuse to return it to Michael. Hawke wants to use the chopper
to force the spy to help him. Archangel seems more amused than annoyed
at Hawke's actions, and is amazingly unsurprised by Airwolf's theft.
The three men form a shaky alliance: Archangel will try to use his
resources to find St. John Hawke, and String and Dom will fly missions
for the spy and his organization, the FIRM.
The implausible technology aspects aside(helicopters cannot attain
supersonic speeds without destroying themselves), this was a decent
show. The effects were passable, the writing generally good, and the
acting was solid. Airwolf was unusual in that it had three former movie
veterans in its lineup. Jan-Michael Vincent was great as gloomy
Stringfellow Hawke, Ernest Borgnine was perfect for tough old Dominic
Santini, and Alex Cord made a sophisticated yet vulnerable Archangel.
Deborah Pratt played Michael's assistant Mirella for the first
half-season. She was later replaced by Jean Bruce Scott as spunky
Caitlin O'Shaughnessy, a pilot that Hawke had helped in a previous
episode.
Airwolf never sank significantly in the ratings but was pulled after
the second full season. Part of the problem was CBS's efforts to tone
down the brooding dark quality of the show that made it so unique. The
network wanted a more "family-friendly" program, which caused the
episodes to veer almost schizophrenically between human interest fluff
and cool espionage stuff. The biggest obstacle to the show's success
was the escalating substance abuse problem of its main star,
Jan-Michael Vincent, which negatively affected his work. Airwolf was a
fantastically expensive series, even by 80's standards, and having its
star showing up with increasing frequency unprepared for work couldn't
be tolerated for long. We at first thought it was a cross between Blue
Thunder and Firefox, but soon realized that it was neither. It was, and
remains, a very original program that we seriously hope comes out on
DVD someday---soon! It was a fun flight of imagination in the 80's and
is still one today.
13 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Airwolf - a show a head of it's time?, 6 February 2005
Author:
Gillian from Israel
In my opinion - the answer is definitely yes. I'm not speaking of the monstrous super-copter, or at least, not mainly of it. The character of Stringfellow Hawk, who is the main attraction of the show, is one you might find in nowadays shows. Not a shallow hero, but rather a complex and deep one. In fact, I found Hawk's character to be very similar to another, more recent one - that of FBI's legendary agent Fox Mulder. I'm sure many eyebrows must be raised right now but think of the following - Both characters are eccentric, isolated and have only one close friend whom they trust, both Hawk an Mulder are obsessed with a missing sibling and their lives are centered around that issue. Both have their own truth and won't hesitate risking their lives for that truth. Need I say more? Jan Michael Vincent was the perfect choice for Hawk's roll - Hawk and Vincent are one. JMV brought a lot of him self into his character, the two are one, practically inseparable. In on of the discussions forum I'm participating in, a question was raised regarding the possibility of making an Airwolf movie. I said that I hope no such movie will be made because I can't see anyone entering JMV shoes as Stringfellow hawk. All of the forum members agreed. All in all, I think that what made Airwolf the great show it was, is JMV and of course we must not put down Ernest Borgnines contribution. Airwolf will always remain a classic.
14 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
String and Dom kicked @$$ when they showed 'em The Lady, 9 August 2003
Author:
(HUAhmad) from Blackburn, England
Of course, Airwolf was one of the premier action shows of the 80s and was
more believable than the sugar-coated antics of Knight Rider and A-Team,
because it was set in the world of espionage and Stringfellow killed LOADS
of bad guys when he battled them in The Lady. The series started off as a
spy thriller with Airwolf duking it out with Russians, German terrorists,
war criminals, renegade US agents and hardened mercenaries. If I remember
rightly, ITV showed these episodes on Friday nights at 7pm back in November
'84.
When the 2nd season kicked in, they moved it to an afternoon Saturday slot.
This is when a new co-pilot Caitlin was introduced. She wasn't bad, and they
still did good intrigue episodes such as the gripping thriller Moffatt's
Ghost, Fallen Angel and HX-1 (Once A Hero was a spectacular actioner), but
gradually, the series became cornier, as the Airwolf team began helping out
ordinary people and there were some soapy stories such as String falling for
a rock singer. They also started using stock footage in some episodes, more
so in the third season.
The 3rd season got off to a cracking start with the menacing Horn Of Plenty.
Richard Lynch did a good job as the manipulative Van Horn and Caitlin proved
she could be a bad*** as well. Other top episodes were Airwolf II, Annie
Oakley and Deadly Circle, but as I said before, they started over-using
stock footage from previous series and the stories were becoming slushy.
Despite this, Airwolf was arguably the best action-packed thriller on the
small screen during the Reagan era.
10 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
A classic show, better than Knight Rider, 18 October 1998
Author:
Ian Kerr (ostrog@softhome.net) from Meols, England
Even though most people remember Knight Rider from the fad of the 80's to have vehicles as the stars of TV shows, Airwolf was a far superior product. Donald 'Quantum Leap' Belissario created this show about a high tech attack chopper, and oversaw its best years. Even though near the end Belissario left and the stories began to degrade, the earlier episodes are classic examples of good 80's TV, with good solid performances and breathtaking aerial sequences that put the Blue Thunder TV series to shame. A series that should be brought back.
8 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
A classic, 8 September 2000
Author:
Diamond UK (diamond@pmail.net)
What a great TV show, that deserves to have been made into a movie, the flying squences are great,the cast were so right. The only stain on the series are the people that tried to remake the series on a home movie budget and replaced all the actors from the original series. This is a show that deserves to be rerun for many years to come.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Another great 80's show, 28 January 2008
Author:
Graeme (Roverthemoon25) from Lancs, England
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Why isn't this kind of show made anymore, in the 80's two producers
ruled the roost of TV action series, Stephen J Cannell and Donald
Belasarius, Cannell was the more the family kind of show, The A Team,
Hunter, Simon And Simon etc. Belasarius produced a little darker drama
such as Magnum and Airwolf and has carried it on lately with the
brilliant NCIS.
Airwolf was the story of a super powered battle helicopter that had
been stolen by it's creator Moffit and taken to Libya, Micheal
Archangel who was nearly killed in Moffits stealing of Airwolf tried to
recruit Stringfellow Hawke to retrieve Airwolf.
Hawke at first rejects the offer and pressure is put on him by his art
collection being taken from his home, Hawke wants Archangel to trace
his brother St John who is MIA in Vietnam. Hawke agree's to get Airwolf
back and with the help of his friend Santini, they both get Airwolf
back and kill Moffit in the process and blow any planes out of the sky
that get in their way.
Hawke decides to keep Airwolf and will fly missions for Archangel on
the understanding that Archangel continues looking for Hawke's brother.
Overall a great action drama series, the music was fantastic, Sylvester
Levy's theme tune fitted the show so well not just at the beginning and
end, but when Airwolf was starting up, you would see Hawke pushing the
button's to start Airwolf, the blades would slowly turn as the music
started to build up, the music got faster and the blades on Airwolf got
faster, you would see the instrument panels light up ready for action.
Thye air battles were great although some scenes were reused quite a
lot especially in the disaster of a 4th series. A movie would be a
fitting tribute to the series and the unfortunate Jan Micheal Vincent
who has suffered over the years through various abuses of substances,
but knowing Hollywood it wouldn't be right unless Belasarius was
involved as producer.
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