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Airwolf

  • TV Series
  • 1984–1986
  • TV-14
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
14K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,769
166
Ernest Borgnine, Jan-Michael Vincent, and Alex Cord in Airwolf (1984)
Series Trailer
Play trailer1:17
1 Video
99+ Photos
ActionAdventureSci-Fi

As part of a deal with an intelligence agency to look for his missing brother, a renegade pilot goes on missions with an advanced battle helicopter named Airwolf.As part of a deal with an intelligence agency to look for his missing brother, a renegade pilot goes on missions with an advanced battle helicopter named Airwolf.As part of a deal with an intelligence agency to look for his missing brother, a renegade pilot goes on missions with an advanced battle helicopter named Airwolf.

  • Creator
    • Donald P. Bellisario
  • Stars
    • Jan-Michael Vincent
    • Alex Cord
    • Ernest Borgnine
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,769
    166
    • Creator
      • Donald P. Bellisario
    • Stars
      • Jan-Michael Vincent
      • Alex Cord
      • Ernest Borgnine
    • 46User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 4 wins & 7 nominations total

    Episodes55

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    Videos1

    Airwolf: Complete Series
    Trailer 1:17
    Airwolf: Complete Series

    Photos408

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    Top Cast99+

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    Jan-Michael Vincent
    Jan-Michael Vincent
    • Stringfellow Hawke
    • 1984–1986
    Alex Cord
    Alex Cord
    • Michael Coldsmith Briggs III…
    • 1984–1986
    Ernest Borgnine
    Ernest Borgnine
    • Dominic Santini
    • 1984–1986
    Jean Bruce Scott
    Jean Bruce Scott
    • Caitlin O'Shannessy
    • 1984–1986
    Deborah Pratt
    Deborah Pratt
    • Marella
    • 1984–1985
    Lance LeGault
    Lance LeGault
    • Narrator…
    • 1984–1986
    Monty Jordan
    Monty Jordan
    • CIA Pilot…
    • 1984–1986
    Robert Apisa
    • Jenkins…
    • 1985–1986
    Louie Elias
    • Sullivan - Zebra Squad Leader…
    • 1985–1986
    Tony Epper
    Tony Epper
    • Burke…
    • 1984–1986
    Sandy Kronemeyer
    • Lydia
    • 1985–1986
    John Brandon
    John Brandon
    • Zeus…
    • 1984–1986
    Ismael 'East' Carlo
    Ismael 'East' Carlo
    • Sanchez…
    • 1984–1986
    Anthony Tyler Quinn
    Anthony Tyler Quinn
    • Everett
    • 1984
    Kandace Kuehl
    • Amanda…
    • 1985–1986
    Gary Epper
    Gary Epper
    • Morgan…
    • 1984–1985
    David Cadiente
    • Freedom Fighter…
    • 1984–1985
    Anne Lockhart
    Anne Lockhart
    • Tess Dixon…
    • 1984–1986
    • Creator
      • Donald P. Bellisario
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    6.714.1K
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    Featured reviews

    Hawke-3

    A classic show, better than Knight Rider

    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.
    Big Movie Fan

    FANTASTIC ACTION SHOW

    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.
    7mike_cable

    Action, drama, adventure, helicopters!

    Airwolf is a good example of dramatic action television that came out of the 1980s. What makes this different is that most, if not all, of its episodes involves aircraft at some stage in the story.

    The four seasons of Airwolf feature the main characters getting mixed up in all kinds of drama that eventually needs the Airwolf helicopter to help. Airwolf is an advanced prototype combat helicopter capable of supersonic speed that is deployed on missions of personal and national interest, flown by two of the main characters described below.

    Jan Michael Vincent plays Stringfellow Hawke, an ex-Vietnam helicopter pilot and Ernest Borgnine who plays Domenic Santini, an old pilot from way back. Together as buddles, they secretly fly Airwolf with funding provided by an FBI-like firm that agrees to support them until they can locate String's brother, believed to be missing and still in Vietnam.

    After an ambitious pilot two-part episode (later re-trimmed into a telemovie) which sets up the ongoing series, Airwolf settles into a typical action TV show formula, however the overuse of repeated aerial footage of the Airwolf helicopter (often sped up to make it more exciting) will spoil it for late comers to the series.

    For helicopter enthusiasts it will reward them with countless sequences involving Airwolf (a modified Bell 222) and many other types, often seeing Hughes 500s deployed as the enemy gunships.

    For trainspotters, it's always "fun" to see the footage from the pilot or early episodes being used in later episodes, or being surprised to see they have shot new footage. It's easy to assume that the running costs of the helicopters had a major impact on the production. The "dramatic" original landing sequences were often a highlight.

    Some episodes were grounded in personal drama, some were just ridiculous by today's science and some were standout stories and made you wish for more. Many episodes end with a montage of Airwolf flying around with the wonderful Slyvestor Levay electronic theme music as the credits roll.

    Season 4 was a low-budget cable-funded continuation of the series featuring new characters mixed with old helicopter footage. It is almost dis-owned by fans of the earlier 3 seasons in much the same way Galactica 1980 was by Battlestar Galactica fans.
    chris02

    Ahead of it's time.

    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.
    cynvision

    what Airwolf laid ground for

    I think a lot of reviews look at this series and complain about recycled footage without taking into account this series was before effects computers. It's a large way humbling just how that and video changed TV and movie production in just a few short years. Years where Airwolf 'coming ahead of its time' by just three years or so, the show suffers for trying to do things with pre-computer-age film technology. I have to think they did more hours filming Airwolf cruising around the southwest than the studio suits thought they needed and budget complaints prevented more because it wasn't until season three that stuff got notable as repeated. Like things happen with the Stargate series and Cheyenne Mountain exterior for *six seasons*. It would have continued if HD tech didn't prompt needing a new set of Cheyenne exteriors shot. As with Stargate SG-1, if Airwolf had kept a driving force behind it's direction from the start we well could have seen a new round of footage. And probably with newer cameras of the day, too. But it was not to be. The budget item kept getting dropped. By season two the writing was on the wall that it just wasn't going to be needed.

    Besides suffering from a divided series vision and objective where some shows were fluff and some writing actually had a message and a way to drive it home, Airwolf series was as much a victim of small-studio Hollywood limitations. As X-files suffered Vancouver-itis, Airwolf suffers from outdoor locations being a bit too southern California or blatantly the Universal back lot to pull off Russia, Germany or the snowy waste of Northern Alaska. And the show had to fake glaciers, volcanic explosions, Mexican deserts, and Russia and night flights time with refilming existing film with filters. With scale models and wind machines. People tugging on strings and pushing buttons. The old fashioned way. Like thirty years of TV before it. In time to make a schedule. So someone better get off their backs! They made that flying prop look gooood.

    I think people also slam the believability factor without considering audiences back in 1984 weren't all that sophisticated. They didn't question if the Road Runner and Coyote cartoons had proper physics. Those were fun because it didn't. Consider that the Airwolf show (all TV shows) was a one-off, once a week thing to catch on TV and not see again unless you had one of them new, expensive VCRs. People saw shots once and the human mind filled in any mistakes. And people didn't have the Internet to hop onto and find out choppers don't surpass X knots of speed. The Boob Tube was the source of news and entertainment everyday. And people would simply believe it if the pretty scientist lady says it turns off the blades and acts like a jet.

    Then they go on about how the Bell 222A was a dog of a ship to fly around. And when they weren't making it look like a Travel California tourism film, they made that thing look like a barn swallow dogging cats on a lawn. That's true magic! The ability to turn that worked up Bell into The Lady people still fill Internet boards discussing so seriously. I just don't think we have the same kind in the present day. At least not in this age of 'reality' TV... It got young people interested in helicopters and general aviation. And maybe just a touch of science? I almost can't call it an action show. It's a science fiction show actually set on the planet Earth. You really just have to roll with it without there being cell phones and fax machines and personal computers. The hero can't type a letter, but can redirect a sidewinder. He and his mentor actually get their hands dirty and fix aircraft and basic electronic circuitry. About the only show I can think of as its descendant is Heroes for bending the "they can't do that" suspension of disbelief like Airwolf did. And now all TV adventure shows/cop shows are done with a bit more attention to how long it takes to fly and drive places. To way more medical science, bombs, physics and laptops than people in 1984 ever cared to think about... As a result from shows like Airwolf and Nightrider. And who knows? Maybe fifteen years from now people will be slamming Heroes the same way?

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    Related interests

    Bruce Willis and Taniel in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    Still frame
    Adventure
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jan-Michael Vincent's addiction to alcohol and drugs was a constant problem during filming.
    • Goofs
      Airwolf's control stick has two buttons controlled by the thumb: On the left side to enable "turbos", on the top to fire a missile. Throughout season 3 Hawke and Dominic sometimes press the top "missile" button to engage turbos.
    • Quotes

      [Opening Narration, to the series]

      Narrator: This briefing is from file A56-7W. Classified Top Secret. Subject is, Airwolf. A Mach 1+ attack helicopter with the most advanced weapons system in the air today. It's been hidden somewhere in the Western United States by it's test pilot Stringfellow Hawke. Hawke has promised to return Airwolf only if we can find his brother, St. John, an MIA in Vietnam. We suspect that Archangel, deputy director of the agency that built Airwolf is secretly helping Hawk in return for Hawke flying Airwolf on missions of national concern.

      Narrator: Stringfellow Hawk is 34, a brilliant combat pilot. His only friend is Dominic Santini, who's air service is the cover for their government work.

      Narrator: With Hawk and Santini working as a team and flying at speeds rivalling the fastest jets, maxed by unmatched firepower, Airwolf is too dangerous to be left in unenlightened hands. Finding it is your first priority.

    • Alternate versions
      In the Italian version Hawke's surname is "Stradivarius".
    • Connections
      Featured in Jan-Michael Vincent Is My Muse (2002)

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    FAQ22

    • How many seasons does Airwolf have?Powered by Alexa
    • -What unit was Hawke in during the Vietnam War?
    • -How come they were both serving in the same unit?
    • What is Hawke to Dominic?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 22, 1984 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Lobo del aire
    • Filming locations
      • Monument Valley, Utah, USA(establishing shots of the Valley of the Gods)
    • Production companies
      • Belisarius Productions
      • Universal Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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