A LOT Sweaty, as I recall!



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Just looked him up.
For a Jewish American born in Massachusetts he did an amazing job playing a blue collar Hawaiian.
He sure did his homework. Excellent acting.
Moderator: Styles Bitchley
A LOT Sweaty, as I recall!
Paul L. Smith was in such classic cinema as POPEYE, MIDNIGHT EXPRESS, and RED SONJA!
Oy vey, Garwood!Little Garwood wrote: ↑Fri May 20, 2022 7:55 pm Season 11? Did someone say “season 11?”
10. The Sleeper
09. Deadly Courier
08. The Bark and the Bite
07. Death Mask
06. A Distant Thunder
05. The Skyline Killer
04. Number One with a Bullet
03. A Very Personal Matter
02. Stringer
01. The Year of the Horse
Number One with a Bullet is an episode I enjoy for its 1979-ness (or perhaps 1978-ness) in that it is a cultural time capsule in a more direct way than any other Five-O episode. It's the only episode that takes me out of that Five-O TV world and has me remembering my childhood during that personally pivotal year (won't bore you with the details).
This era holds a great deal of nostalgia for me--I turned eight in 1979--but it is also fascinating to see the fading days of the Disco culture, which already was on its last (dancing) legs when Number One with a Bullet aired.
Oh, and while I am the most likely the only one who holds this belief, but I've always found Yvonne Elliman to be unconventionally beautiful (recent arrest record aside).
The Execution File would have made my top ten were it not for the music replacement. I'm no Rod Stewart fan, but I'll take his stuff over the generic funk that replaced it on the dvd.
If James MacArthur really was sick and tired of Jack Lord’s Stalinist tactics behind the scenes of the show—as any sensible person would have been— and “phoned in” his performances accordingly, then Jimmy’s departure was not such a bad thing after all. I’m glad he got out…for his own sanity if anything.
Speaking of Jack, if the guy really was a jerk, then why were so many of the Five-O regulars in tears in that Emmy’s Five-O Memories show? Maybe they loved Jack in spite of his rotten behavior.
Gonna go against the grain on this one. I never liked it and while maybe I've warmed to it a bit over the years (mostly because of Ross Martin as Tony Alika, he's always a plus) I still don't care for it. I disagree that this was the best episode of the final season. It wouldn't make my top 5 for the season. I never cared about the kapu being placed on McG (I agree with McG that it was ridiculous, something out of the "dark ages") and I guess I'm in the minority in that I didn't care for the Andy Kamoku character. All that bluster and ranting and raving and slamming things got old real fast for me. Paul L. Smith did alright passing off as a Hawaiian (appearance-wise) but his speech was very "haole". I expected more Hawaiian pidgin from him. For some Hawaiian blue collar guy he sounded too "white bread" and "educated". If it's true that he's Jewish then I guess that's it... he sounded too Jewish (to borrow from a certain Mel Brooks movie).T.Q. wrote: ↑Sun May 22, 2022 12:48 pm A Lion in the Streets
Why this was a double-episode is a mystery.
Too long for the story and a bit dragged out but in the end I didn't mind the episode. Thought it was fine.
Lots of Hawaiian vs Haole stuff and I thought putting the kapu on McGarrett was interesting.
I liked the Andy Kamoku character and Alika was good (how he was out on bail was a stretch though).
Liked Truck too.
First impression of Kimo not great. He was okay. Nothing special. They should have mentioned Danno when McGarrett had the convo with him offering him a position in Five-0.
This is an episode that can be easily ripped a part for a lot of things but if you can ignore them it was okay.
6.5/10
MPI: Moe Keale, Ed Fernandez, Jack Hisatake, Peter Kalua (famous pilot episode goon),
Those of us who like the episode (and the 12th season…meaning just me) will just have to muddle on without your blessing.
"Though the Heavens Fall" is the title. And it happens to be my favorite of the final season.
Aka, a guy with a hideous perm and cheesy mustache exacts revenge on criminal scum! Welcome to 1979-80!ZelenskyTheValiant (Ivan) wrote: ↑Mon May 23, 2022 6:48 pm"Though the Heavens Fall" is the title. And it happens to be my favorite of the final season.I know there are many that don't like it. But I do.
This one was definitely an improvement over "A Lion in the Streets". It's pretty good actually, for a season 12 episode. It's also the last episode directed by Jack "of all trades" Lord!T.Q. wrote: ↑Mon May 23, 2022 8:29 pm Who Says Cops Don't Cry?
Decent episode.
Being bombarded with 'the final seasons are all crap' (mostly on IMDb) I'm trying to just enjoy them for what they are and not be influenced too much.
Kimo grew on me a bit here.
I like what Wilson did throughout. Going out on her own for some justice culminating in a decision at the end.
I didn't find Sharon Farrell's acting very good though. Then wham she joins the show?![]()
I liked the Vietnam brother's dilemma with his brother.
MPI: Alan Fudge, Jorie Remus, Carole Kai, Reginold F.H. Ho, Leeannah Roberts, Mariko Van Kampen
That's probably because Jack was directing the episode, so he decided that McGarrett should be "away" in San Fran for a bit.Little Garwood wrote: ↑Tue May 24, 2022 5:40 pm McGarrett spends the middle of this episode "in San Francisco", which further allows are new haole team members to get to know one another. McGarrett is super mellow here. Perhaps Jack Lord was already thinking of time to be spent in his impenetrable condominium with his beloved Marie.