- AMG Rating:



- Genre: Drama
- Movie Type: Cop Show
- Themes: Serial Killers, Rogue Cops
- Director: Ron Satlof
- Main Cast: Michael Cavanaugh, Fred Dryer
- Release Year: 1984
- Country: US
- Run Time: 96 minutes
TV Series:
Hunter |



| Wikipedia: Hunter (U.S. TV series) |
| Hunter | |
|---|---|
| Format | Action-Crime-Drama |
| Created by | Frank Lupo |
| Starring | Fred Dryer Stepfanie Kramer Charles Hallahan John Amos Bruce Davison Darlanne Fluegel Lauren Lane Arthur Rosenburg John Shearin Garrett Morris James Whitmore, Jr. Ruby Ramos Perry Cook Richard Beauchamp Courtney Barilla |
| Country of origin | |
| No. of seasons | 7 |
| No. of episodes | 153 |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) | Stephen J. Cannell (1984-1985) Roy Huggins (1985-1988) George Geiger (1988-1989) Fred Dryer (1989-1991) |
| Running time | 1 hour |
| Production company(s) | Stephen J. Cannell Productions |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | NBC |
| Original run | September 18, 1984 – April 26, 1991 |
Hunter is a police drama television series starring Fred Dryer as "Sgt. Rick Hunter" and Stepfanie Kramer as "Sgt. Dee Dee McCall", which ran on NBC from 1984 to 1991. However, Kramer left after the sixth season (1990) to pursue other acting and musical opportunities. The seventh season saw Hunter partnered with two different women officers. The titular character, Sgt. Rick Hunter, was a wily, physically imposing, and often rule-breaking homicide detective (badge# 089 in the early seasons, badge# 378 in later seasons) with the Los Angeles Police Department. Originally the show was to be called "Hunter and McCall," but (according to Stepfanie Kramer in later interviews) because there was some other TV show that had the two main character's names in the title, the producers/creators decided to just call it Hunter--even though the show is mainly about both characters.
Created by Frank Lupo and Stephen J. Cannell, the show in its early episodes played as television's answer to Dirty Harry[citation needed]. Even after the show's violence was toned down during the second season in hopes of boosting ratings, Hunter and McCall still managed to resolve many cases by shooting the perpetrators dead.
The show's executive producer during the first season was Stephen J. Cannell, whose company produced the series.
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Initially placed in a Friday-night slot against Dallas, the show struggled to find an audience and drew criticism for its often graphic depiction of violence. In the first season, the producers sought to create a hook by giving the main character a catch phrase, "Works for me", which was sometimes used two or three times an episode and was even tacked on to the end of Mike Post and Pete Carpenter's opening theme music. Several early episodes featured montages set to popular songs from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, in a style not unlike the way Miami Vice used music.
Mid-way through the first season, with ratings showing no sign of improvement, Cannell gave network chief Brandon Tartikoff a private screening of a two-part episode ("The Snow Queen") that had yet to air and asked him to give the show time to find its feet. Tartikoff liked what he saw and put the show on hiatus until a better time slot could be found. Two months later, Hunter returned to the screens on Saturday nights and viewership slowly started to rise. The first season ended in joint 79th place in the Nielsen Ratings.[citation needed]
For its second season, Cannell brought in his mentor, Roy Huggins, best known for his work on Maverick and The Rockford Files, to refine the show. As the new executive producer, Huggins toned down the violence, softened the main character's fractious relationship with his superiors, dropped a backstory concerning Hunter's family ties to the mob, and played up the chemistry between Hunter and McCall. Huggins also moved the show's setting out of the back streets and into the more desirable areas of Los Angeles. Emboldened, Dryer and Kramer frequently toyed with the scripts by ad-libbing, and the Hunter character broke the fourth wall for the first time with an aside to viewers at the end of the two-parter "The Beautiful And The Dead".
Probably the most memorable aspect to the second season was the 2-part episode "Rape and Revenge." It dealt with a psychotic foreign diplomat that meets McCall and wants to have a relationship with her. When she says no, he goes crazy and attacks and rapes her in her home. This two-parter was considered very controversial for its realistic and shocking depiction of a violent rape scene, which was not common in TV shows at the time. Because of the controversy and critic's acclaims for the acting and plot, "Rape and Revenge" was one of the most popular and widely remembered episodes of the series.
Viewers also responded to Huggins' changes, and the show's second season ended in 38th place in the Nielsen Ratings. Hunter continued this progress to become a mainstay of NBC's Saturday night schedule.
Just before work on the third season began, Dryer threatened to walk out unless his salary, reportedly US$21,000 per episode, was raised and creative changes were made. Cannell hit back with a US$20 million breach-of-contract suit. A compromise was reached, with Dryer reportedly landing a new deal worth US$50,000 per episode. The third season, again helmed by Huggins, saw the arrivals of Charles Hallahan as Captain Charlie Devane and Garrett Morris as police informant and street hustler Arnold "Sporty" James. In the episode "Shades" (which was actually the season finale...but for some reason aired later in the summer--July of 1987) when Hunter went missing, Dee Dee teamed with a somewhat ditzy Columbo-like Detective Kitty O'Hearn (Shelley Taylor Morgan)--who also showed up later during fourth seasons 3-part "City of Passion."
Another remembered episode for 3rd season was "Requiem For Sergeant McCall"--which was a contradiction to a storyline from the beginning of the show. Earlier in the series supposedly McCall's husband (Steven McCall) was killed in 1979 by a drug dealer, during a routine stop--as at that time both Steven and Dee Dee were newly married and starting out as rookie uniform cops. But for 3rd season they created this episode ("Requiem") where supposedly back in '79 Steven was an actual homicide detective (while Dee Dee was still just a rookie) and he was working on a big murder case that ended up getting him killed. In this episode Steven's killer is getting paroled and McCall is doing anything she can to get him back in prison--plus trying to solve the original murder case that her dead husband died trying to solve seven years earlier. This was the show's first season in the top 30, coming in at 25th.
For the third season there was also a strange tie-in with an older detective show--Hart To Hart, with Robert Wagner and Stefanie Powers (1979-1984). In "Hunter's" third season opening theme song, during the montage of pics there is a scene out front of a Los Angeles mansion with a Mercedes station wagon, a Rolls Royce, and a Porsche out front. This was actually a scene-clip from an old episode of "Hart To Hart" (the Mercedes Station Wagon was actually one of the Hart's cars) that for some unknown reason was thrown in for the starting of "Hunter." It's even more strange, considering "Hart To Hart" was an ABC show, while "Hunter" was an NBC show.
Huggins retired at the end of the fourth season, which placed 18th in the Nielsen Ratings. A three-part storyline, "City of Passion," teamed Hunter and Dee Dee with Detective Kitty O'Hearn (Shelley Taylor Morgan) and her new partner, Sgt. Brad Navarro, played by Erik Estrada. Together they captured the serial rapist called "Big Foot."
Also known as one of the more memorable episodes for fourth season was "The Black Dahlia." The famous unsolved L.A. murder case from 1947 is thrust back into headlines as bones with identical cuts just like the Elizabeth Short (Black Dahlia) murder are discovered under an old building being torn down. Did the killer of the Black Dahlia also murder this woman back in '47? Come to find out the killer is still alive and when he sees McCall (who does somewhat resemble Elizabeth Short), he thinks the Black Dahlia has come back from the dead to "get" him. He of course goes insane and comes after Dee Dee! Supposedly Hunter and McCall solve the famous murder case 41 years to the day (1947-1988) as the episode aired on the anniversary date of the real-life murder! As a special message at the end states, the real-life case is still open and the real killer has never officially been caught (although in the years since '88 there have been several new theories and evidence supporting them--however none have been definitely proven).
For the fifth season, George Geiger took on the role of executive producer, having worked in the same capacity on Scarecrow and Mrs. King and as co-executive producer on Miami Vice. In the first four seasons, Hunter and McCall typically worked on cases together, allowing the producers to showcase the chemistry between the actors. But the fifth season increasingly had them working apart, ostensibly to lessen the workload of Dryer and Kramer and to allow richer, more complex stories.
One of the most remembered aspects to the fifth season was the special 3-parter "City Under Siege"--which had a special intro for each of the 3 parts. It dealt with a psychotic woman and her crazy boyfriend that go around terrorizing people in Los Angeles that the woman felt had "wronged" her in some way--Hunter being one of the intended victims! It also focused on the huge crime spree throughout the city and the pressure the police department was under to get it under control. It must have been a tribute to the Los Angeles Police, as at the end there was special statistics that gave the numbers of how much crime was down in L.A. that year. The fifth season placed 17th in the Nielsen ratings.
By the sixth season, Dryer's growing influence had won him the role of executive producer. Probably the most remembered episode of the sixth season (and one of the more famous ones of the series) was the episode "Unfinished Business." During this episode we suddenly learn that Hunter and McCall had actually once slept together, causing a rift in their working relationship! For this season homicide was moved to the more updated Parker Center, instead of their old downtown division building. So, a lot of the time, instead of jeans and an old sports jacket we now see Hunter in a full suit and tie. However, at the end of the sixth season, which placed in the top 25 of the Nielsen Ratings, Stepfanie Kramer decided to leave the series to pursue a career in music. After six long but "beautiful" years fans were saddened with the season's final episode (another famous 2-part episode "Streetwise"), where McCall was shown marrying an old flame and moving out of Los Angeles.
For the seventh and final season, the producers moved Hunter and Capt. Devane from divisional homicide to the elite "Metro" unit based at the Parker Center, and NBC shifted the show to 10 p.m. on Wednesdays. A new female co-star, Darlanne Fluegel as Officer Joanne Molenski, was brought in, only to leave halfway through the season when her character was murdered by a female serial killer. Her replacement for the second half of the season was Lauren Lane as Sgt. Chris Novak. Hunter's signature unmarked vehicle, a moss green 1977 Dodge Monaco, was also finally replaced (after an accident with Molenski's cruiser in the season's first episode) by an updated new silver 1990 Ford LTD Crown Victoria. Last season, when homicide was moved to the Parker Center, Hunter began wearing a suit and tie...now he was back to jeans and a shirt. But, he was still...Hunter! Also for the first time (barring the sixth season finale) Hunter also made sporadic appearances in uniform.
But the new partners and changes did little to appease fans/viewers after Stepfanie Kramer (McCall) left. Hunter without his McCall was like trying to drive his old Monaco without any gas--the show just didn't go anywhere. Ratings took a nose-dive and after seven awesome gun-blasting, fist-smacking, car-chasing years it was officially cancelled at the end of the season.
Four years after the original series ended, a reunion NBC TV movie, The Return of Hunter: Everyone Walks in L.A., saw Dryer and Charles Hallahan reprise their roles as Rick Hunter and Charlie Devane--Hunter had now also been promoted to lieutenant! Airing on NBC on March 6, 1995, the movie ironically took the Dirty Harry idea as the plot--a psycho wants fame and/or to be noticed and begins terrorizing the city to gain media attention. Of course along the way he becomes infatuated with attention from Hunter, eventually wanting to kill him. The ironic part is that when the show first started back in '84, Hunter's no-nonsense shoot-first-ask-questions-later style was openly compared to Harry Callahan's (Clint Eastwood) style in the 1971 blockbuster movie "Dirty Harry." "Everyone Walks In L.A." also took the O. J. Simpson case (which was the biggest media event at the time) as part of its inspiration--a woman is murdered and the abusive/estranged ex-husband is the prime suspect, but later other evidence suggests maybe he didn't do it--but if you have money and the right lawyers anyone can walk in L.A.! Stepfanie Kramer, pregnant at the time, did not reprise her role as "Dee Dee McCall". The TV-movie co-starred Barry Bostwick, Miguel Ferrer, and John C. McGinley.
Seven years later in November of 2002, eleven years after the original series ended, the reunion TV movie Hunter: Return to Justice made its premiere to strong ratings! This time Stepfanie Kramer also returned to her role of "Dee Dee McCall", and the show's setting switched from Los Angeles to San Diego--as Hunter's current L.A. partner is killed in the line of duty. So Hunter decides to take some time off and go see McCall, who is now living and working as a cop in San Diego. As usual, when the "dynamic duo" of Hunter and McCall get together the bullets begin to fly! Also, ironically in this movie McCall is engaged to be married--however of course tragedy prevents this from happening. The ironic part is, when Kramer left the original series after the sixth season she supposedly left to get married to an old boyfriend--her last episode ending at her wedding. In this reunion movie her marriage and/or husband from before is never explained or mentioned. During the last scene we learn that Hunter has requested a transfer from L.A. to San Diego so he can now work with McCall again. Sadly Charles Hallahan was not able to appear as "Capt. Charlie Devane", for he'd passed away from a heart attack five years earlier, in 1997. This reunion movie was dedicated to his memory at the end.
Given the success of the TV movie, Cannell, Dryer and NBC attempted to bring back Hunter as a regular series. In the weeks following the April 2003 airing of another TV movie, Hunter: Back in Force--basically the "Pilot" for the new series, the network decided to broadcast three new one-hour episodes of Hunter ("Vaya Sin Dios," "Untouchable," and "Dead Heat"). Another two episodes were filmed (as originally there were to be 5 episodes aired) but never shown in the U.S, as suddenly NBC decided to cancel the new series. So, there actually are two episodes of the new "Hunter" series that have never been aired before! Later Fred Dryer subsequently cited creative difficulties and budget constraints as the reasons for the new show's unexpected end.
Steve Yager ... Football Fanatic Michael (1990-1991)
Guest stars over the years included James Sikking, who coincidentally played a character called Howard Hunter on Hill Street Blues.
In the first season and for several subsequent seasons, the pistol that Hunter carries is a Heckler and Koch P9S 9 mm with a muzzle compensator attached. It is also the pistol in the title introduction. McCall used a stainless Beretta 90 in the first season. The Walther PPK that McCall uses is most likely a Walther PPK/S. The Desert Eagle that Hunter uses in occasional episodes was a gift from his Mafia father for graduating[citation needed].
During the first two seasons, Hunter used a Desert Eagle in .44 Magnum and McCall used a Walther PPK in .32 ACP.
In several episodes, a Franchi SPAS 12 12 gauge shotgun (slide or semi auto) was kept in the trunk of Hunter's car.
During the second season for a couple of episodes, Rick Hunter used a Smith & Wesson 629 in .44 Magnum (2 1/2" bbl).
During one episode of the second season, Rick Hunter used a .44 Magnum Desert Eagle in stainless steel with an extended barrel.
During seasons 3 and 4, Rick used Smith & Wesson 629 in .44 Magnum (2 1/2" bbl).
During one episode of the fifth season, Dee McCall used a .38 Special S&W Model 60 this time in stainless steel.
During seasons 5 through 7, Rick used a 9 mm Beretta 92F/FS, while during seasons 5 through 6 Dee Dee used a .44 Magnum, Smith & Wesson Model 629 this time in stainless steel.
In the "Pilot" TV Movie (1984), Detective Rick Hunter drove a junker blue 1977 Dodge Monaco and a junker 1970 Ford LTD. Because Hunter constantly was getting into wrecks chasing bad guys and would regularly "bust" up any cop car he was given, supposedly the department would only let him drive the complete junkers that would barely run. Once the series started (Fall 1984), during the first season Detective Hunter drove a junker 1972 Chevrolet Impala with a brief view of a 1973 Chevrolet Impala that was painted to look like the 1972, a junker 1971 Chevrolet Nova, an old 1974 Plymouth Satellite, and a junker 1979 Chevrolet Caprice Classic. A 1971 Impala was actually shown exploding to end the episodes with the Chevrolet Impala. Monacos seemed to be the cop car of choice though, as the first part of second season saw Hunter occasionally driving a junker yellow '77 Dodge Monaco, a junker brown '77 Monaco, and an old black '77 Monaco. But the most popular, and famous Monaco was yet to come!
After the show was more "established" and popular starting part way into second season and clear on through season six and one episode during the seventh season, Detective Rick Hunter was given to regularly drive a Moss Green 1977 Dodge Monaco. This car was in better condition than the previous Monacos and became Hunter's trademark vehicle--to the point that when it blew up in the third season, it was replaced with an identical one! During the seventh and last season, Detective Hunter got and drove a Silver 1990 Ford LTD Crown Victoria.
During the first two seasons, Detective Dee Dee McCall (Stepfanie Kramer) drove a Garnet Red and Silver 1984 Dodge Daytona Turbo Z until it caught fire. During seasons three through five, McCall drove a Bright Red 1987 Dodge Daytona Shelby Z (Sometimes though, a "Turbo X" on this Daytona is clearly visible). During the sixth season, her final season, she drove a Gold 1990 Dodge Dynasty. (There was an episode during the 4th or 5th season that showed the outside of what was supposedly McCall's house and there was a yellow 1987 Mustang out front. However, McCall is only shown driving it once and then it was never shown again.)
Both Officer Joanne Molenski and Sgt. Chris Novak, during last season, drove a tan/beige 1990 Ford LTD Crown Victoria.
For the revivals/reunion movies and new series: In the first reunion movie, "The Return of Hunter: Everyone Walks In L.A.," Hunter drove a Black 1995 Ford LTD Crown Victoria. In "Hunter: Return To Justice" Hunter was visiting McCall in San Diego so he didn't have a regular or personal vehicle shown, but McCall drove a Silver 2002 Mercedes Benz CLK320 Convertible. In "Hunter: Back In Force" and the subsequent new series Hunter drove a Black 2003 Ford LTD Crown Victoria and McCall occasionally drove a Black 2003 Ford Expedition SUV.
| Pic | Title | Original airdate | Episode # | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Hunter" ("Pilot" TV Movie) | September 18, 1984 | 101 | ||
| "Hard Contract" | September 28, 1984 | 102 | ||
| "The Hot Grounder" | October 5, 1984 | 103 | ||
| "A Long Way From L.A." | October 26, 1984 | 104 | ||
| "Legacy" | November 2, 1984 | 105 | ||
| "Flight On A Dead Pigeon" | November 9, 1984 | 106 | ||
| "Pen Pals" | November 16, 1984 | 107 | ||
| "Dead or Alive" | November 30, 1984 | 108 | ||
| "High Bleacher Man" | December 7, 1984 | 109 | ||
| "The Shooter" | January 4, 1985 | 110 | ||
| "The Garbage Man" | January 11, 1985 | 111 | ||
| "The Avenging Angel" | January 18, 1985 | 112 | ||
| "The Snow Queen: Part 1" | March 23, 1985 | 113 | ||
| "The Snow Queen: Part 2" | March 30, 1985 | 114 | ||
| "The Beach Boy" | April 6, 1985 | 115 | ||
| "Guilty" | April 13, 1985 | 116 | ||
| "The Last Kill" | April 20, 1985 | 117 | ||
| "Fire Man" | May 11, 1985 | 118 | ||
| "Sniper" | May 18, 1985 | 119 | ||
| Pic | Title | Original airdate | Episode # | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Case X" | September 21, 1985 | 201 | ||
| "Night of the Dragons" | September 28, 1985 | 202 | ||
| "The Biggest Man in Town" | October 5, 1985 | 203 | ||
| "Rich Girl" | October 19, 1985 | 204 | ||
| "Killer in the Halloween Mask" | October 26, 1985 | 205 | ||
| "Rape & Revenge: Part 1" | November 2, 1985 | 206 | ||
| "Rape & Revenge: Part 2" | November 9, 1985 | 207 | ||
| "Six Million Dollar Misunderstanding" | November 16, 1985 | 208 | ||
| "The Big Fall" | November 23, 1985 | 209 | ||
| "Waiting for Mr. Wrong" | December 7, 1985 | 210 | ||
| "Think Blue" | December 14, 1985 | 211 | ||
| "Blow Up" | January 4, 1986 | 212 | ||
| "War Zone" | January 11, 1986 | 213 | ||
| "Burned" | January 18, 1986 | 214 | ||
| "Scrap Metal" | February 1, 1986 | 215 | ||
| "Fagin 1986" | February 8, 1986 | 216 | ||
| "62 Hours of Terror" | February 15, 1986 | 217 | ||
| "Death Machine" | March 11, 1986 | 218 | ||
| "The Set Up" | March 25, 1986 | 219 | ||
| "The Beautiful & the Dead: Part 1" | April 1, 1986 | 220 | ||
| "The Beautiful & the Dead: Part 2" | April 8, 1986 | 221 | ||
| "The Return of Typhoon Thompson" | May 6, 1986 | 222 | ||
| "Saturday Night Special" | May 20, 1986 | 223 | ||
| Pic | Title | Original airdate | Episode # | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Overnight Sensation" | September 27, 1986 | 301 | ||
| "Change Partners and Dance" | October 4, 1986 | 302 | ||
| "Crime of Passion" | October 11, 1986 | 303 | ||
| "The Castro Connection" | November 1, 1986 | 304 | ||
| "High Noon in L.A." | November 8, 1986 | 305 | ||
| "From San Francisco with Love" | November 15, 1986 | 306 | ||
| "True Confessions" | November 22, 1986 | 307 | ||
| "Love, Hate, and Sporty James" | December 6, 1986 | 308 | ||
| "The Contract" | December 13, 1986 | 309 | ||
| "The Cradle Will Rock" | January 3, 1987 | 310 | ||
| "Bad Company" | January 10, 1987 | 311 | ||
| "Down and Under" | January 17, 1987 | 312 | ||
| "Straight to the Heart" | January 24, 1987 | 313 | ||
| "Requiem for Sergeant McCall" | February 7, 1987 | 314 | ||
| "Double Exposure" | February 14, 1987 | 315 | ||
| "The Girl Next Door" | February 21, 1987 | 316 | ||
| "Any Second Now" | February 28, 1987 | 317 | ||
| "A Child Is Born" | March 14, 1987 | 318 | ||
| "Crossfire" | April 11, 1987 | 319 | ||
| "Hot Pursuit: Part 1" | May 2, 1987 | 320 | ||
| "Hot Pursuit: Part 2" | May 9, 1987 | 321 | ||
| "Shades" | July 18, 1987 | 322 | ||
| Pic | Title | Original airdate | Episode # | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Not Just Another John Doe" | September 24, 1987 | 401 | ||
| "Playing God" | October 3, 1987 | 402 | ||
| "The Jade Woman" | October 17, 1987 | 403 | ||
| "Flashpoint" | October 24, 1987 | 404 | ||
| "Night on Bald Mountain" | October 31, 1987 | 405 | ||
| "City of Passion: Part 1" | November 7, 1987 | 406 | ||
| "City of Passion: Part 2" | November 14, 1987 | 407 | ||
| "City of Passion: Part 3" | November 21, 1987 | 408 | ||
| "Turning Point" | November 28, 1987 | 409 | ||
| "Hot Prowl" | December 8, 1987 | 410 | ||
| "Allegra" | December 29, 1987 | 411 | ||
| "Renegade" | January 5, 1988 | 412 | ||
| "The Black Dahlia" | January 12, 1988 | 413 | ||
| "Naked Justice: Part 1" | February 2, 1988 | 414 | ||
| "Naked Justice: Part 2" | February 9, 1988 | 415 | ||
| "Girl on the Beach" | February 16, 1988 | 416 | ||
| "Bogota's Million" | March 1, 1988 | 417 | ||
| "Death Signs" | March 12, 1988 | 418 | ||
| "Boomerang" | March 19, 1988 | 419 | ||
| "The Fourth Man" | March 26, 1988 | 420 | ||
| "Murder He Wrote" | April 30, 1988 | 421 | ||
| "Silver Bullet" | May 7, 1988 | 422 | ||
| Pic | Title | Original airdate | Episode # | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Heir of Neglect" | October 29, 1988 | 501 | ||
| "The Baby Game" | November 5, 1988 | 502 | ||
| "Dead on Target: Part 1" | November 12, 1988 | 503 | ||
| "Dead on Target: Part 2" | November 19, 1988 | 504 | ||
| "Presumed Guilty" | November 26, 1988 | 505 | ||
| "No Good Deed Goes Unpunished" | December 3, 1988 | 506 | ||
| "Honorable Profession" | December 10, 1988 | 507 | ||
| "Payback" | December 17, 1988 | 508 | ||
| "Partners" | January 7, 1989 | 509 | ||
| "The Pit" | January 14, 1989 | 510 | ||
| "City Under Siege: Part 1" | February 4, 1989 | 511 | ||
| "City Under Siege: Part 2" | February 11, 1989 | 512 | ||
| "City Under Siege: Part 3" | February 18, 1989 | 513 | ||
| "Me, Myself & Die" | February 25, 1989 | 514 | ||
| "Informant" | March 18, 1989 | 515 | ||
| "Blood Line" | April 1, 1989 | 516 | ||
| "Shoot to Kill" | April 8, 1989 | 517 | ||
| "Code 3" | April 15, 1989 | 518 | ||
| "Ring of Honor" | April 29, 1989 | 519 | ||
| "Teen Dreams" | May 6, 1989 | 520 | ||
| "Last Run" | May 13, 1989 | 521 | ||
| "Return of White Cloud" | May 21, 1989 | 522 | ||
| Pic | Title | Original airdate | Episode # | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| "On Air" | October 14, 1989 | 601 | ||
| "Shallalagh" | October 21, 1989 | 602 | ||
| "Investment in Death" | October 28, 1989 | 603 | ||
| "A Girl Named Hunter" | November 4, 1989 | 604 | ||
| "The Legion: Part 1" | November 11, 1989 | 605 | ||
| "The Legion: Part 2" | November 18, 1989 | 606 | ||
| "Yesterday's Child" | November 25, 1989 | 607 | ||
| "Shield of Honor" | December 2, 1989 | 608 | ||
| "The Fifth Victim" | December 9, 1989 | 609 | ||
| "Brotherly Love" | January 6, 1990 | 610 | ||
| "The Nightmare" | January 13, 1990 | 611 | ||
| "Broken Dreams" | January 27, 1990 | 612 | ||
| "Son and Heir" | February 3, 1990 | 613 | ||
| "Unacceptable Loss" | February 10, 1990 | 614 | ||
| "Unfinished Business" | February 24, 1990 | 615 | ||
| "Lullaby" | March 3, 1990 | 616 | ||
| "Final Confession" | March 17, 1990 | 617 | ||
| "Blind Ambition" | March 31, 1990 | 618 | ||
| "Sudden Withdrawal" | April 16, 1990 | 619 | ||
| "Second Sight" | April 23, 1990 | 620 | ||
| "Street Wise: Part 1" | April 30, 1990 | 621 | ||
| "Street Wise: Part 2" | May 7, 1990 | 622 | ||
| Pic | Title | Original airdate | Episode # | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Deadly Encounters: Part 1" | September 19, 1990 | 701 | ||
| "Deadly Encounters: Part 2" | September 26, 1990 | 702 | ||
| "Where Echoes End" | October 3, 1990 | 703 | ||
| "Kill Zone" | October 10, 1990 | 704 | ||
| "The Incident" | October 24, 1990 | 705 | ||
| "A Snitch'll Break Your Heart" | October 31, 1990 | 706 | ||
| "Oh, the Shark Bites!" | November 7, 1990 | 707 | ||
| "The Usual Suspects" | November 14, 1990 | 708 | ||
| "This Is My Gun" | November 28, 1990 | 709 | ||
| "La Familia" | December 5, 1990 | 710 | ||
| "Acapulco Holiday" | December 12, 1990 | 711 | ||
| "Fatal Obsession: Part 1" | January 9, 1991 | 712 | ||
| "Fatal Obsession: Part 2" | January 9, 1991 | 713 | ||
| "Under Suspicion" | January 16, 1991 | 714 | ||
| "The Reporter" | January 30, 1991 | 715 | ||
| "Room Service" | February 13, 1991 | 716 | ||
| "Shadows of the Past" | February 20, 1991 | 717 | ||
| "The Grab" | March 2, 1991 | 718 | ||
| "All That Glitters" | March 8, 1991 | 719 | ||
| "Cries of Silence" | March 15, 1991 | 720 | ||
| "Ex Marks the Spot" | April 5, 1991 | 721 | ||
| "Little Man with a Big Reputation" | April 26, 1991 | 722 | ||
Anchor Bay Entertainment released the first three seasons of Hunter on Region 1 DVD in 2005--2006. Supposedly, due to "alleged" poor sales no further seasons were released through them.
On October 14, 2009, it was announced that Mill Creek Entertainment had acquired the rights to several Stephen J. Cannell series including "Hunter."[1] Mill Creek plans on releasing the entire series, and the first season from them is scheduled to be released on January 19, 2010. [1]
| DVD Name | Ep# | Release Date |
|---|---|---|
| The Complete First Season | 19 | January 19, 2010 |
In 2009 it was announced that a movie adaptation is in development with a screenplay by Frank Lupo and Fred Dryer, to be directed by Frank Lupo for Columbia Pictures, Overture Films and Warner Bros. Pictures.
In October 2009, it was reported that John Travolta would headline the upcoming adaptation playing Hunter and it was confirmed that Jessica Alba will play Dee Dee McCall. In June 2009, Sony Pictures set a tentative release date of October 15, 2010 for the film. Supposedly filming began in Los Angeles in October of 2009. However, no real info can be found concerning this movie. Even other reputable sites such as IMDB do not have anything about a 2010 "Hunter" movie, and nothing about it or the characters of Hunter and McCall are listed or mentioned under Travolta or Alba. So, whether or not this movie really is in production is not really known or definite.
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