Hawaii Five-O (season 4)
Not to be confused with Hawaii Five-0 (season 4).
Hawaii Five-O Season 4 | |
---|---|
DVD cover | |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 24 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | September 14, 1971 – March 7, 1972 |
The fourth season of Hawaii Five-O, an American television series, began September 14, 1971, and ended on March 7, 1972. It aired on CBS. The region 1 DVD was released on June 10, 2008.[1]
Episodes
See also: List of Hawaii Five-O episodes
No. in series |
No. in season |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Production code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
74 | 1 | "Highest Castle, Deepest Grave" | Charles S. Dubin | Story by: Elick Moll & Joseph Than Teleplay: Jerome Coopersmith | September 14, 1971 | 1729-0361 |
A ten-year-old missing-persons case is reopened when an archaeological dig reveals the bodies of a man and a woman who were murdered. | ||||||
75 | 2 | "No Bottles… No Cans… No People" | Michael O'Herlihy | Jerry Ludwig & Eric Bercovici | September 21, 1971 | 1729-0355 |
An ambitious hoodlum tries to eliminate the competition and open the way for a mainland crime syndicate to operate in Hawaii. Before he became a series regular, Al Harrington played one of the hoodlum's henchmen in this episode. | ||||||
76 | 3 | "Wednesday, Ladies Free" | Michael O' Herlihy | Story by: Paul Playdon Teleplay: Paul Playdon & Jerome Coopersmith | September 28, 1971 | 7104 |
A strangler murders women and leaves each wearing a blonde wig and their faces garishly made up. | ||||||
77 | 4 | "3,000 Crooked Miles to Honolulu" | Jerry Thorpe | Jerome Coopersmith | October 5, 1971 | 7103 |
A cunning college professor (Buddy Ebsen) runs an elaborate scheme to cash $750,000 worth of stolen travelers checks in Hawaii. | ||||||
78 | 5 | "Two Doves and Mr. Heron" | Charles S. Dubin | Anthony Lawrence | October 12, 1971 | 7105 |
A tourist (Vic Morrow) declines to press charges after being robbed of his wallet by a hippie (John Ritter), after he mistakes the tourist as a Homosexual. The wallet contains a key to a storage locker containing $250,000, which the tourist embezzled from the mainland and is using the identity of another person and is determined to get it back, even if it means stalking the hippie who now has his stash, but makes matters worse after he finds a woman staying at their place overdosed on heroin, then cover his tracks by torching their place. | ||||||
79 | 6 | "…And I Want Some Candy and a Gun That Shoots" | Michael O'Herlihy | John D. F. Black | October 19, 1971 | 7106 |
A psychotic sniper endangers the lives of motorists as he fires at cars from a hillside bunker on Diamond Head that overlooks a major highway. | ||||||
80 | 7 | "Air Cargo… Dial for Murder" | Michael O'Herlihy | Meyer Dolinsky | October 26, 1971 | 1729-0367 |
McGarrett discovers an air cargo hijacking ring while investigating the death of an airport security officer working undercover as a freight handler. | ||||||
81 | 8 | "For a Million… Why Not?" | Ron Winston | Story by: Eric Bercovici & Jerry Ludwig Teleplay: Jerome Coopersmith | November 2, 1971 | 7108 |
Five upstanding citizens team together to steal $6 million from an armored car in a seemingly perfect crime. | ||||||
82 | 9 | "The Burning Ice" | Paul Stanley | Ken Pettus | November 9, 1971 | 7109 |
A doctor becomes a suspect in the murder of his wife when McGarrett does not believe the killer's confession. | ||||||
83 | 10 | "Rest in Peace, Somebody" | Paul Stanley | John D.F. Black | November 16, 1971 | 1729-0353 |
McGarrett receives calls from a man threatening to kill someone in 51 hours and the only clue as to the identity of the victim is a key. | ||||||
84 | 11 | "A Matter of Mutual Concern" | Ron Winston | Alvin Sapinsley | November 23, 1971 | 1729-0368 |
When an emissary of "Big Uncle," the mainland syndicate's boss of bosses, is murdered, McGarrett fears a gangland war is about to break out among the four bosses in Hawaii. | ||||||
85 | 12 | "Nine, Ten--You're Dead" | Leo Penn | Mel Goldberg | November 30, 1971 | 1729-0352 |
A syndicate boss (Albert Paulsen) seeks revenge when his light-heavyweight boxer's hand is smashed by a punchy ex-fighter (Moses Gunn). | ||||||
86 | 13 | "Is This Any Way to Run a Paradise?" | Michael O'Herilhy | Bill Stratton | December 21, 1971 | 1729-0357 |
McGarrett searches for an ecology fanatic whose pranks are harmless until he threatens the lives of those he feels are the cause of the islands' pollution. | ||||||
87 | 14 | "Odd Man in" | Paul Stanley | E. Arthur Kean | December 28, 1971 | 1729-0360 |
Lewis Avery Filer, last encountered in "Over Fifty? Steal," escapes from prison after devising a plan to steal $4 million from drug smugglers. Hume Cronyn returns as Filer. | ||||||
88 | 15 | "Bait Once, Bait Twice" | Alf Kjellin | Story by: Jerome Ross Teleplay: Will Lorin | January 4, 1972 | 1729-0371 |
A young woman attempts suicide so that her fiance will come out of hiding and expose himself to assassination. | ||||||
89 | 16 | "The Ninety-Second War (Part 1)" | Bob Sweeney | Story by: Leonard Freeman Teleplay: John D.F. Black | January 11, 1972 | 7116 |
McGarrett is framed as a thief by Wo Fat, whose devious plot involves a notebook filled with secret codes--written in McGarrett's handwriting, of all things. | ||||||
90 | 17 | "The Ninety-Second War (Part 2)" | Bob Sweeney | Story by: Leonard Freeman Teleplay: John D.F. Black | January 18, 1972 | 7117 |
Wo Fat's plan revolves around a missile test--and ninety crucial seconds. | ||||||
91 | 18 | "Skinhead" | Allen Reisner | Story by: Will Lorin Teleplay: Alvin Sapinsley | January 25, 1972 | 7118 |
After a young woman is raped in a parking lot and a braggart soldier is arrested and tried for the crime, McGarrett begins to suspect the soldier may be the wrong man. | ||||||
92 | 19 | "While You're at It, Bring in the Moon" | Michael O'Herlihy | E. Arthur Kean | February 1, 1972 | 7119 |
An eccentric billionaire suspected of killing one of his business associates, but who in turn suspects another, is afraid to leave his antiseptic yacht and clear himself of the crime--and he is forced to abduct McGarrett to help him. | ||||||
93 | 20 | "Cloth of Gold" | Michael O'Herlihy | Bennett Foster | February 8, 1972 | 7120 |
Members of a fishy real estate company become victims of poison contained in a rare shellfish. | ||||||
94 | 21 | "Good Night, Baby, Time to Die!" | Alf Kjellin | Abram S. Ginnes | February 15, 1972 | 7121 |
McGarrett sets up an elaborate police protective system around a young woman to capture her former boyfriend who has escaped from prison. | ||||||
95 | 22 | "Didn't We Meet at a Murder?" | Paul Stanley | Jerome Coopersmith | February 22, 1972 | 7123 |
A wealthy young widow is one of the victims in an intricate blackmail plot that leads to the murder of a Chicago mobster (Simon Oakland). | ||||||
96 | 23 | "Follow the White Brick Road" | Michael O'Herihly | John Furia | February 29, 1972 | 7122 |
In cooperation with NIS, Danno goes undercover to flush out a drug ring operating from a vessel in the U.S. Seventh Fleet. | ||||||
97 | 24 | "R & R & R" | Leo Penn | Bill Stratton | March 7, 1972 | 7124 |
McGarrett seeks a killer whose targets have been wives of Army men who have come to Hawaii to meet their husbands on furlough. |
References
- ↑ Hawaii Five-O - The Fourth Season. "Hawaii Five-O - The Fourth Season: Jack Lord, James MacArthur, Zulu, Kam Fong, Dana Wynter, Khigh Dhiegh, Richard Denning, Harry Endo, Al Eben, Jack McCoy, Robert Witthans, Johann Strasser, Alf Kjellin, Allen Reisner, Beau Vanden Ecker, Bob Sweeney, Bradford May, Charles S. Dubin, Jerry Thorpe, Leo Penn: Movies & TV". Amazon.com. Retrieved November 27, 2012.
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