

Jan-Michael Vincent stars as Stringfellow Hawke, a reclusive renegade pilot who's assigned to top-secret missions for the CIA by the mysterious Archangel (Alex Cord). Hawke's weapon of choice is the high-tech battle helicopter of the future, Airwolf. Loaded with cutting-edge surveillance equipment and unbelievable firepower, Airwolf takes Hawke and his friend Dominic (Ernest Borgnine) around the globe in search of dangerous international spies and criminals.Contents:Season 1Ep.1: Shadow of the Hawke Jan. 22, 84Ep.2: Daddy's Gone a Hunt'n Jan. 28, 84 Ep.3: Bite of the Jackal Feb, 4, 84Ep.4: Proof Through the Night Feb. 11, 84Ep.5: One Way Express Feb. 18, 84Ep.6: Echoes from the Past Mar. 3, 84 Ep.7: Fight Like a Dove Mar. 10, 84Ep.8: Mad Over Miami Mar. 24, 84Ep.9: And They Are Us Mar. 31, 84Ep.10: Mind of the Machine Apr. 7, 84Ep.11: To Snare a Wolf Apr. 14, 84Season 2Ep.1: Sweet Britches Sept. 22, 84Ep.2: Firestorm Sept. 29, 84Ep.3: Moffett's Ghost Oct. 6, 84Ep.4: The Truth About Holly Oct. 13, 84Ep.5: The Hunted Oct. 20, 84Ep.6: Sins of the Past Oct. 27, 84Ep.7: Fallen Angel Nov. 3, 84Ep.8: HX-1 Nov. 10, 84Ep.9: Flight #093 Is Missing Nov. 17, 84Ep.10: Once a Hero Nov. 24, 84Ep.11: Random Target Dec. 8, 84Ep.12: Condemned Jan. 5, 85Ep.13: The American Dream Jan. 12, 85Ep.14: Inn at the End of the Road Jan. 26, 85Ep.15: Santini's Millions Feb. 2, 85Ep.16: Prisoner of Yesterday Feb. 9, 85Ep.17: Natural Born Feb. 23, 85Ep.18: Out of the Sky Mar. 2, 85Ep.19: Dambreakers Mar. 16, 85Ep.20: Severance Pay Mar. 23, 85 Ep.21: Eruption Apr. 6, 85 Ep.22: Short Walk to Freedom Apr. 13, 85Season 3Ep.1: The Horn of Plenty Sept. 28, 85Ep.2: Airwolf II Oct. 5, 85 Ep.3: And a Child Shall Lead Oct. 12, 85Ep.4: Fortune Teller Oct. 14, 85Ep.5: Crossover Oct. 26, 85Ep.6: Kingdom Come Nov. 2, 85Ep.7: Eagles Nov. 9, 85Ep.8: Annie Oakley Nov. 16, 85Ep.9: Jennie Nov. 23, 85Ep.10: The Deadly Circle Nov. 30, 85Ep.11: Where Have All the Children Gone? Dec. 14, 85Ep.12: Half-Pint Dec. 21, 85Ep.13: Wildfire Jan. 11, 86Ep.14: Discovery Jan. 18, 86Ep.15: Day of Jeopardy Jan. 25, 86Ep.16: Little Wolf Feb. 1, 86Ep.17: Desperate Monday Feb. 8, 86Ep.18: Hawke's Run Feb. 15, 86Ep.19: Break-In at Santa Paula Feb. 22, 86Ep.20: The Girl Who Fell from the Sky Mar. 15, 86Ep.21: Tracks Mar. 22, 86Ep.22: Birds of Paradise Mar. 29, 86Season 4Ep.1: Blackjack Jan. 23, 87Ep.2: Escape Jan. 30, 87Ep.3: A Town for Hire Feb. 6, 87Ep.4: Salvage Feb. 13, 87Ep.5: Windows Feb. 20, 87Ep.6: A Piece of Cake Feb. 27, 87Ep.7: Deathtrain Mar. 6, 87Ep.8: Code of Silence Mar. 13, 87Ep.9: Stavograd: Part 1- Mar. 20, 87Ep.10: Stavograd: Part 2 Mar. 27, 87 Ep.11: Mime Troupe Apr. 3, 87Ep.12: X-Virus Apr. 10, 87Ep.13: Rogue Warrior Apr. 24, 87Ep.14: Ground Zero May 1, 87Ep.15: Flowers of the Mountain May 8, 87Ep.16: The Key May 15, 87Ep.17: On the Double May 22, 87Ep.18: Storm Warning May 29, 87Ep.19: The Golden One July 3, 87Ep.20: The Puppet Master July 10, 87 Ep.21: Malduke July 17, 87Ep.22: Poppy Chain July 24, 87Ep.23: Flying Home July 31, 87Ep.24: Welcome to Paradise Aug. 7, 87 Review: Brilliant - Brilliant Review: Airwolf - Fantastic!

| ASIN | B01CZ3K21Q |
| Audio Description: | English |
| Best Sellers Rank | 31,500 in DVD & Blu-ray ( See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray ) 5,202 in Box Sets (DVD & Blu-ray) 6,473 in Action & Adventure (DVD & Blu-ray) 7,046 in Television (DVD & Blu-ray) |
| Customer reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (2,656) |
| Is discontinued by manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | 826831071602 |
| Language | English |
| Media Format | Box set, Colour, NTSC |
| Number of discs | 14 |
| Product Dimensions | 1.78 x 19.05 x 13.72 cm; 961.62 g |
| Release date | 1 Jan. 2019 |
| Run time | 166 hours and 39 minutes |
| Studio | AIRWOLF: COMPLETE SERIES |
K**N
Brilliant
Brilliant
D**E
Airwolf
Fantastic!
W**G
Never gets old
Still as good now as I remember in my youth. That theme tune never gets old.
G**R
Airwolf
The DVD copies are excellent
M**S
Budget price, budget box. Quality show.
I opted for this release mainly because of the price, just under £15 new. I was very dismayed with the very cheap packaging, that was made even worse by our incompetent postie who squashed and rammed it through the door!. The discs themselves are fine and the picture quality is fab for programmes of their age. Just one note, make sure you have a region free player as these are region 1, and wont play on region 2.
H**L
Airwolf is the lady and she is great
I am happy that I have my own Airwolf Dvd complete series and it is great.
C**E
Blue Ray's box
Love them
A**R
Great series
Brings back fond memories
F**S
Eu comprei sabendo que não tinha legendas nem dublagem brasileira, mas ao assistir senti muita falta da dublagem clássica. Ela é o reforço da nostalgia, e as vozes originais não são marcantes como eram as dos dubladores. Também fique atento que os dvds são da região 1 e não rodam nos aparelhos de dvd/bluray da região 4. Só se for desbloqueado ou region free. Apesar de tudo, e de alguma decepção no confronto memória x atualidade, ainda valeu a pena por ter comprado em boa promoção.
R**K
Airwolf finally sees light of day on blu-ray for the region 1 release and being an avid fan of the series, I had to have it. I also had the luck of purchasing the UK R2 release when it went up on sale for discounted price, not knowing if R1 would ever be released; I went ahead and got R2 first. Now if you're reading this you may already know about the series so I will keep this brief and use this opportunity to describe differences between the R1 and R2 release of the blu-ray sets. As far as visual and audio quality goes, there is no discernible difference between the two, considering this series is over 30 years old and not nearly as popular as say Miami Vice from that era, this release received a good treatment. Don't be fooled, this set is a vast improvement over the earlier DVD releases so if you had to decide between the two: this set would be the ideal choice. The fuzziness of the DVD is gone and the picture appears much sharper, and colors more vibrant. The audio could have used some fine tuning and upgrade to surround (come on it's Airwolf, it would have sounded amazing), alas that was not to be. Both releases look and sound the same. Even season 4 looks much better than its' earlier DVD release. The footage shot on 16mm transferred well to blu-ray considering the age of the series, although the constant switch from that to standard video quality makes for a jarring experience at times. The difference in this set, at least far as I have explored up to this point, is that it corrects the issues that plagued the UK release. For one, episode Bite of the Jackal is fully intact, no scenes have been cut for this release. Secondly the episode Once a Hero does appear to be interlaced (if that's the correct term for the visual issue) as it did on UK release. However, in episode Proof Through the Night there is a slight audio stutter/ issue in the scene where the duo is driving to the lair of Airwolf, this issue is present on this set as well: probably a problem with original source. Other than that everything seems to be in order, the song Money for Nothing is present in the last episode of the series in both sets. I have not yet checked each episode, but if there is a problem I will come back to edit it in here. As far as German release goes, the only upside to that set is that it has subtitles (aside from music less secondary track) which is lacking from UK and NA release. From what I gathered of German set, that release does not contain any of the teasers for episodes but both R1 and R2 sets do. The packaging for this series comes off cheap but in contrast to Shout-Factory's recent releases, at least I was able to remove discs with ease. The menus are static as is usual for Airwolf's release in NA, I never understood why they never bothered making menus a little neater and animated as R2 releases. Lastly, there are no bonuses in this set or the UK one, and this is where Shout is amazing, they always provide some bonus features and they did for Airwolf, but only the movie version of the pilot that they released. With all that in mind, I would say that this set (R1) is the definitive release of Airwolf on blu-ray if you don't care for subtitles.
J**E
Llego en buenas condiciones muchas gracias
A**ー
価格は満足です。これで声優、字幕があれば言うことなしですが、さすがに高望みですね。
M**R
From the creator of JAG, NCIS, Quantum Leap, and the original Magnum, P.I., comes one of the most impressive spy-fi action dramas ever made. It came from Universal Studios, the same studio which gave us “Knight Rider,” just two years earlier—and has been often described as “Knight Rider in a helicopter.” However, tonally, it’s quite different. It’s generally far more realistic. The “Airwolf” helicopter doesn’t talk and is technologically comparable with today’s helicopter gunships in our modern military, with the exception of its ability to reach supersonic speeds (something actual helicopters, military or otherwise, are yet to achieve—as far as we know!). The tone of the show is also much darker, edgier, much more violent and more “adult” oriented than the family-friendlier “Knight Rider.” It’s actually a very different series and Stringfellow Hawke (Jan-Michael Vincent) is a much darker, tormented soul than Michael Knight, despite both being Vietnam vets. Hawke has no moral qualms blowing the hell out of bad guys as dead as he can make them. More like “The Punisher in a helicopter” than Knight Rider. The production value of this series (well, the during first three seasons—more on that in a minute) is incredible. The number of helicopters, planes, aerial stunts, dogfights, action sequences and explosions rival big budget movies in quality and scope. It was easily one of most expensive series of its day—and holds up extremely well today. While beginning as a Cold War era drama where a typical episode involved our heroes using Airwolf to stealthily infiltrate behind the Iron Curtain, often to extract a Soviet defector or destroy an enemy threat with plausible deniability, the second season (at the network’s request) began to see more domestic storylines—and I’m sure it was a challenge for the writers to keep coming up with reasons why catching domestic bad guys (gangsters, etc.) requires a military helicopter. But somehow they managed to pull it off pretty convincingly—while allowing for international spy capers to be peppered in throughout to keep it from getting too silly. And the result is actually a pretty nice balance of varied storylines. This is aided by the interesting backgrounds of the characters: Stringfellow Hawke, a tormented Vietnam vet and ace fighter pilot, searching for his brother St. John, lost during the Vietnam War. Dominic Santini (Ernest Borgnine) a veteran WWII fighter pilot who served with String’s dad and now serves as String’s Airwolf co-pilot. Caitlin, a former Texas cop and chopper pilot who joins the Airwolf team in season two, and Archangel, a mysterious federal intelligence officer who acts as their handler, with sometimes questionable ulterior motives. The first three seasons are incredible and they look fantastic on this Mill Creek DVD set. I watched these on a 1080p HD television and the picture on these DVDs were so crisp and clear, I could have sworn I was watching a high definition Blu-ray, even though I knew they were actually standard definition DVDs. The quality of the transfer is that good. (Well, at least in the first three seasons.) In season four, everything changed: the cast, the network, the production company, and with that, the production value. Having been cancelled by CBS at the end of season three, following the departure of series creator Donald Bellisario, the series received a last minute resurrection from cable channel, USA Network. Production was moved from Los Angeles to Vancouver, Canada under a new production company, Atlantis—and would air as a USA Network Original. However, this time, “Airwolf,” once one of the most expensive series on television, would now be produced on minuscule budget. So small of a budget, the fledgling production would not even have access to the original helicopter, and would instead have to rely on stock footage from from the first three seasons. It’s a rough start for season four, which seems more like a loose spin-off series than a continuation. Jan-Michael Vincent does guest star as Stringfellow Hawke in the season premiere to hand off the baton to his long lost brother, St. John Hawke (Diagnosis Murder’s Barry Van Dyke), as Airwolf’s new pilot. However, Dominic Santini’s (Ernest Borgnine’s) abrupt departure is shockingly abrupt, but without the emotional and dramatic context he is due. Archangel is “reassigned” and replaced, while the ever loyal Caitlin disappears without a single mention—a glaring omission for an endearing major character. That said, as abrupt and ham-fisted as their introduction is, the new cast is actually quite likable with good interpersonal chemistry. Barry Van Dyke is always a warm, likable hero and Garaint Wyn Davies (best known as vampire cop Nick Knight in “Forever Knight”) is a particularly charming and witty addition to the cast. Jo Santini (Alien Nation’s Michele Scarabelli) replaces both Caitlin as the female teammate as well as replacing Dominic as the new owner of Santini Air and is already a trained intelligence operative. Even Archangel’s replacement, federal agent Jason Locke, is a much more hands-on boss than his predecessor—a skilled combat pilot, former JAG lawyer, and fearless field agent, he is a full co-equal member of the team sharing in the danger first hand. The characters and storylines of season four are actually fine and even underrated. Unfortunately, you have to be willing to look past the low budget look of the show, which sadly distracts from what are otherwise worthy additions to the Airwolf canon. Indeed, the plots and storylines of Season Four are extremely ambitious—perhaps too ambitious for their slashed budget—but ambitious enough to be admirable. The series actually returns to its Cold War roots, most episodes having some connection with international spy games. Production-wise, the first half of the season is atrocious. Whoever was working sound on set needed to be fired. The focus puller seemed to be pulling the wrong direction (I don’t think there’s any amount of remastering that could fix that). The resulting video quality is uneven at best and the special effects were often embarrassing. By the second half of the season, however, the production values improved exponentially. Most of the glaring problems had been fixed. The picture and sound problems had been mostly cleared up and the special effects were vastly improved. Major big name guest stars were beginning to appear, including Barry Van Dyke’s famous comedic father playing a Bond-like villain so over-the-top, only Dick Van Dyke could pull it off. By the second half of season four, the show is beginning to look a bit more like a mainstream network television series again. Unfortunately, it was too little, too late. The audience had already jumped ship. That’s unfortunate, because looking past the terrible production issues, season four actually has some standout episodes and character drama which could stand right alongside the very best of seasons one through three. It’s almost unfair to compare the low budget season four to the movie-like big budget of the first three seasons. But I found the stories and characters enjoyable. Let’s put it this way: If “Airwolf,” Seasons 1-3, are akin to “Knight Rider in a helicopter,” then Season 4 is kind of like “Team Knight Rider”—a low budget sequel that pales in comparison to its predecessor as far as production quality, but gains some ground with a likable ensemble cast and some interesting stories. Suffice to say, seasons 1-3 are incredible, among the best hours of television ever made, while the odd stepchild, season four, at least deserves a second look—and it’s nice to see it included as part of a complete series in this reasonably priced boxset.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
2 months ago