Product Description
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Filmed entirely on location in Hawaii, the show followed Jack
Lord as he played Steve McGarrett, head of an elite state
unit investigating "organized crime, murder, assassination
attempts, foreign agents, felonies of every type." James
MacArthur played his second-in-command Danny ("Danno") Williams,
with local actors Kam Fong, Zulu, Al Harrington, and Herman
Wedemeyer, among others, playing members of the Five-O team.
Guest stars included Helen Hayes, Ricardo Montalban, Leslie
Nielsen, ert Lom, Hume Cronyn among others. McGarrett's
nemesis is the evil Wo -- "a Red Chinese agent in charge of
the entire Pacific Asiatic theatre.
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Solving crimes and putting the perps behind bars is Steve
McGarrett's bag. Why, he says so himself, and in so many words,
in the very first of the 24 episodes collected in this five-disc
set comprising the complete second season (1969-70) of Hawaii
Five-0. Portrayed by Jack Lord, and described by no less an
authority than the New York Times as "a model of steadfast
decency" and "beyond cool but still so square he could have been
Lawrence Welks cop brother-in-law," McGarrett is the leader of
the islands' crack, four-man unit, and as usual, he has
his hands full. Perhaps that's why the man has no discernible
sense of humor and only the merest suggestion of a social life.
Between keeping his famous hair in order, delivering stern
lectures about right and wrong to clueless lowlifes, and, as he
puts it in another Second Season episode, constantly worrying
"about a world without law and justice
where no one gives a damn
about anything," who has time for such trivialities? This season
finds McGarrett and cohorts Danno (James McArthur), Kono (Zulu),
and Chin Ho (Kam Fong) dealing with the usual complement of
sleaze: murderers, gamblers, druggies, prostitutes, insurance
scammers, low-rent terrorists, and so on. But Hawaii Five-0
offers its share of weirdness as well. In "Forty Feet High and It
Kills!", Red Chinese uber-criminal Wo (Khigh Dhiegh) and his
crew orchestrate a fake tsunami warning so they can kip a
brilliant scientist (an amusing performance by Will Geer) and
force him to conduct genetic-tampering experiments designed to
create a master race. In the fairly ridiculous "King Kamehameha
Blues," a group of young folks steal the legendary king's robe
from a museum, just to show they can; it's a measure of
McGarrett's ultra-hardline attitude that the governor's offer of
amnesty to the thieves if they'll return the precious garment
really sticks in his righteous craw. And in "The Singapore File,"
McGarrett travels overseas in order to accompany a comely murder
witness back to Honolulu; though tempted by her charms, he's far
too scrupulous to indulge in any extra-curriculars while on the
job (and Steve McGarrett is always on the job). Hawaii Five-0's
other elements are a mixed bag. As always, the Hawaiian scenery
is gorgeous. Morton Stevens' theme song remains one of the best
ever, and much of the other music, especially the jazzy stuff, is
also terrific. However, the show isn't big on either action or
tension; too many scenes are slow and talky. And in the final
year of the '60s, when men walked on the moon and Woodstock and
Altamont marked the respective high and low points of the hippie
movement, its depiction of the counterculture is laughably
square; it's as if the entire decade barely happened. The box set
includes brief, previous-week promos for each episode, but no
other bonus material. --Sam Graham