Airwolf#Hawke

{{Short description|American action military drama television series (1984–1987)}}

{{other uses|Airwolf (disambiguation)}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}

{{Infobox television

| image = AirwolfTitlecardOR.jpg

| runtime = 48 minutes (CBS episodes)
45 minutes (USA Network episodes)

| genre = {{Plainlist|

}}

| creator = Donald P. Bellisario

| starring = {{Plainlist|

}}

| theme_music_composer = Sylvester Levay

| composer = {{Plainlist|

  • Sylvester Levay (S1–3)
  • Udi Harpaz (S2–3)

}}

| country = {{Plainlist|

  • United States
  • Canada (S4)

}}

| company = {{Plainlist|

}}

| language = English

| network = {{Plainlist|

  • CBS (1984–1986)
  • USA (1987)

}}

| first_aired = {{Start date|1984|01|22}}

| last_aired = {{End date|1987|08|07}}

| num_seasons = 4

| num_episodes = {{Plainlist|

  • 79 (first-run)
  • 80 (syndication)

}}

| list_episodes = List of Airwolf episodes

}}

Airwolf is an American action military drama television series. It centers on a high-technology attack helicopter, code-named Airwolf, and its crew. They undertake various exotic missions, many involving espionage, with a Cold War theme. It was created by Donald P. Bellisario and was produced over four seasons, running from January 22, 1984, until August 7, 1987.

The main cast for the first three seasons is Jan-Michael Vincent, Ernest Borgnine, Alex Cord, Deborah Pratt (who left after season two when her husband Bellisario left the series), and Jean Bruce Scott (who became a regular in seasons two and three). The program originally aired on CBS and was cancelled after the third season. USA Network picked up the show for a fourth season that was completely recast, with Jan-Michael Vincent having only a minor role in the first episode. The fourth season was filmed in Canada, with the aerial scenes relying heavily on stock footage or repeated footage from the first three seasons.

The distinctive musical score was composed and conducted mainly by Sylvester Levay.

Plot

The fictional Airwolf is an advanced prototype supersonic helicopter with stealth capabilities and a formidable arsenal. Airwolf was designed by Charles Henry Moffet (David Hemmings)—a genius with a psychopathic taste for torturing and killing women—and built by the Firm, a division of the Central Intelligence Agency (a play on the term "the Company", a nickname for the CIA). Moffet and his crew steal Airwolf during a live-fire weapons test. During the theft, Moffet opens fire on the Firm's bunker, killing a United States Senator and seriously injuring Firm deputy director Michael Coldsmith-Briggs III (codenamed Archangel). Moffet takes Airwolf to Libya, for acts of aggression such as sinking an American destroyer, as a service for Muammar Gaddafi, in exchange for giving Moffet sanctuary on Libyan soil.Season 1, episode 1 "Shadow Of The Hawk"

{{Anchor|Hawke}}Archangel recruits the reclusive Stringfellow Hawke (Vincent), a former test pilot during the development of Airwolf, to recover the gunship. Archangel leaves his assistant Gabrielle Ademaur (Belinda Bauer)—who becomes Hawke's love interest—at Hawke's cabin to brief him for his mission. One week later, after an undercover operative in Libya is killed in the line of duty, Gabrielle is sent in undercover and Hawke is sent in sooner than originally planned. With the assistance of pilot and father figure Dominic Santini (Borgnine), Hawke finds and recovers Airwolf, but Gabrielle is tortured and killed by Moffet. Hawke obliterates Moffet with a hail of missiles from Airwolf before returning to the US. Instead of returning the gunship, Hawke and Santini booby-trap Airwolf and hide it in "the Lair", a large natural cave in the remote "Valley of the Gods" (actually filmed in visually similar Monument Valley). Hawke refuses to return Airwolf until the Firm can find and recover his brother, St. John (Christopher Connelly), who has been missing in action since the Vietnam War. To obtain access to Airwolf, Archangel offers Hawke protection from other government agencies who might try to recover Airwolf; in return, Hawke and Santini must fly missions of national importance for the Firm.

The Firm, during the first three seasons, serve as both ally and enemy for Hawke and Santini; when an opportunity to seize Airwolf arises, Firm operatives often take it. The first season of the series is dark, arc-driven, and quite reflective of the contemporary Cold War, with the Firm personnel distinctly dressed in white, implicitly boasting that "wearing white hats" distinguished them as good instead of evil. Hawke remains unconvinced, and Santini is skeptical. Early episodes detail the efforts of the US government to recover Airwolf from Hawke, who is officially charged with having stolen it. Because CBS wanted to make the series more family-oriented, the program was transformed during season two into a more light-hearted show, with Hawke and Santini portrayed as cooperative partners with the Firm. This persisted into the fourth season with the newly introduced "Company" and the new crew of Airwolf.

Production

{{Main|List of Airwolf episodes}}

{{original research|section|date=April 2016}}

The series ran for 55 episodes on CBS in the United States in 1984 through 1986, and an additional 24 episodes, with a new cast and production company, aired on the USA Network in 1987, for a total of 79 episodes. A reedited version (produced in Germany) of the first episode was also released on home video in the UK and several other countries; it received a theatrical release in Indonesia.{{cite journal|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sqm2AAAAIAAJ&q=%22Care+Bears%22+-+ABC+network|title=Emmy, Volume 8|author=Staff|year=1986|journal=Emmy|publisher=Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (ATAS)|volume=8|page=20}} The show was broadcast in several international markets. Parts of the series were filmed in Monument Valley, Utah.{{cite book|last1=D'Arc|first1=James V.|title=When Hollywood came to town: a history of moviemaking in Utah|date=2010|publisher=Gibbs Smith|location=Layton, Utah|isbn=9781423605874|edition=1st}}

=''Magnum, P.I.'' connection=

Creator Donald P. Bellisario first toyed with the idea of the adventures of an ace combat pilot in a third-season episode of Magnum, P.I. titled "Two Birds of a Feather" (1983), starring William Lucking, which, in turn, was inspired by several episodes of Bellisario's Tales of the Gold Monkey — "Legends Are Forever" and "Honor Thy Brother" (1982) — in which Lucking had played a similar character. The Magnum episode was intended as a backdoor pilot, but a series was not commissioned. Bellisario heavily reworked the idea, and the final result was Airwolf.[https://www.get.tv/gettv-blog/airwolf-10-facts-about-1980s-series-starring-jan-michael-vincent-and-ernest-borgnine "10 facts about 1980s series starring Jan Michael Vincent and Ernest Borgnine"]

=Season 1=

Airwolf was a late-season replacement on CBS with a pilot episode completed but not yet aired. A decision was made to order an initial eight episodes. Airwolf ranked in the top 60 of TV shows towards the bottom while sitcom shows such as The Golden Girls, The Cosby Show, Cheers and Family Ties all remained at the top of ratings. Despite this, the ratings were good enough to extend the season with a 'back nine' order to bring season one up to twelve episodes in total, with the pilot making up two of those episodes. Much footage shot for the pilot episode was re-used by editors throughout the show which helped reduce production costs for aerial footage and special effects (a process which would become integral to the production of season four).

The two pilot episodes were later edited into a theatrical-style movie for home video release titled Airwolf: The Movie, and included a number of differences such as later-style music from the show, shorter scenes and dialogue changes for an older audience. It has since been released on DVD and Blu-ray as a stand-alone title separate to the TV series.

=Season 2=

Season two was commissioned for thirteen episodes initially with a later 'back nine' order for the remaining nine episodes to complete the season.

To improve ratings, the studio wanted to add a regular female character and jettison the dark and moody tales of international espionage. This was accomplished at the start of the second season with the addition of Caitlin O'Shannessy (Jean Bruce Scott) and new stories that were domestic and more action oriented. These changes proved unsuccessful, however, and while production costs remained high, creator Bellisario left both the studio and the series after Season 2. Bellisario's then-wife, Deborah Pratt, also left at that time (she was nearly three months pregnant with their daughter, Troian, as Season 2 drew to a close). Series star Jan-Michael Vincent's problems with alcoholism also contributed to the show's problems.Dangaard, Colin, [https://books.google.com/books?id=tF0EAAAAMBAJ&dq=%22Jan-Michael+Vincent%22&pg=PA54 "Danger: Falling Idol"], Los Angeles Magazine, March 1997: 54–64 Bernard Kowalski stepped in as executive producer for the third season, but the ratings remained low and the series was cancelled by CBS.

=Season 3=

Season three was produced in the same manner as season two (13 episodes, then an additional 9), however the show's loss of original production staff, ratings decline, escalating problems behind the scenes and significant increases in production costs led to CBS selling off the show to the new USA Cable Network.

=Season 4=

The USA Network funded a fourth season in 1987, to be produced in Canada by Atlantis and The Arthur Company (owned by Arthur L. Annecharico) in association with MCA. This was intended to increase the number of episodes to make the show eligible for broadcast syndication so that a return could be generated against the series' overall production costs. The original cast was written out of the fourth season: Jan-Michael Vincent appears in a first transitional episode; a body double for Ernest Borgnine seen only from the back represented Santini, who was killed off in an explosion; Archangel was said to have suddenly been assigned overseas. "The Firm" was replaced by "the Company"; no mention was made of Caitlin. Stringfellow's brother St. John Hawke, (now played by Barry Van Dyke), was suddenly revealed to be alive, having been working for many years as a deep undercover agent for American intelligence, contradicting characterizations in the previous three seasons. St. John replaced Stringfellow as the central character. Production moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada on a reduced budget that was less than one-third of the original CBS budget. The production crew no longer had access to the original Airwolf helicopter, and all in-flight shots were recycled from earlier seasons; the original full-size studio mockup was re-dressed and used for all interior shots. Actress Michele Scarabelli, who played Jo Santini, said in a Starlog magazine interview that all 24 scripts were in place before the cast arrived, leaving the actors little room to develop their characters.

Cast

Season 1 (CBS, 1984) – two-hour pilot and ten additional episodes.

  • Jan-Michael Vincent – Stringfellow Hawke (Captain, U.S. Army) (noted as 34 years of age in the 5th episode)
  • Ernest Borgnine – Dominic Santini (the owner of Santini Air)
  • Alex Cord – Michael Coldsmith Briggs III (deputy director of CIA division named "The Firm;" code name: Archangel)
  • Deborah Pratt – Marella, Archangel's assistant

Seasons 2–3 (CBS, 1984–1986) – two seasons of 22 episodes each.

  • Vincent, Borgnine, Cord, Pratt (semi-regular, not season three), and
  • Jean Bruce Scott – Caitlin O'Shannessy (former helicopter pilot of the Texas Highway Patrol)

Season 4 (USA Network, mid-1987) – 24 episodes, bringing the total hours to 80.

  • Barry Van Dyke – St. John Hawke (reserve Major, U.S. Army)
  • Michele Scarabelli – Jo Santini (inherited Santini Air from her uncle Dominic Santini after his death)
  • Geraint Wyn Davies – Mike Rivers (Major, U.S. Air Force)
  • Anthony Sherwood – Jason Locke (a core agent in the government agency called "The Company")
  • William B. Davis – Newman (Locke's supervisor in the company; Newman was played by Ernie Prentice just in the first episode, "Blackjack")

''Airwolf'' helicopter

{{Infobox aircraft

|name= Airwolf
(fictional info)

|image= File:Full-size replica of the Airwolf.JPG

|caption= Full-size replica of Airwolf at the Tennessee Museum of Aviation in Sevierville, Tennessee

|type= Disguised military helicopter

|manufacturer= "The Firm"

|designer= Dr. Charles Henry Moffet

|first_flight= 1983{{citation needed|date=November 2015|reason=is that in the pilot?}}

|introduction=

|retired=

|status=

|primary_user= Stringfellow Hawke

|more_users=

|produced=

|number_built= 1

|developed_from= Bell 222

|variants=

}}

The flight-capable Airwolf helicopter was a cosmetically modified Bell 222, serial number 47085 and tail number N3176S, sometimes unofficially called a Bell 222A.Van Hoten, C: [http://wolfslair.airwolf.tv/issue03.html "The Wolf's Lair, Issue 3, p. 6"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080103024458/http://wolfslair.airwolf.tv/issue03.html |date=2008-01-03 }}. Veritas Fan Publishing, 2005. wolfslair.airwolf.tv During filming of the series, the helicopter was owned by Jetcopters, Inc. of Van Nuys, California.Credits at the end of the episodes state "Helicopters provided by Jetcopters, Inc." The helicopter was eventually sold after the show ended and became an ambulance helicopter in Germany, where it later crashed in low visibility and was destroyed on June 6, 1992, killing all three crew members.{{cite web|url=http://www.rund-um-ramsbeck.de/archiv/1992/0792ub.html|title=Rund um Ramsbeck Archiv – Juni 1992|work=rund-um-ramsbeck.de}} Andrew Probert designed the Airwolf uniform insignia patch worn by the flight crew members, a snarling bat-winged wolf's head wearing a sheepskin.

File:Bell 222a.jpg

After the show was canceled, the modifications were removed from the aircraft and are now owned by a private collector. The helicopter was repainted and eventually sold to the German helicopter charter company, Hubschrauber-Sonder-Dienst (aka HSD Luftrettung and Blue Helicopter Alliance), and given the registration number D-HHSD.{{cite web|url=http://www.helionline1.de/cgi-bin/ImageFolio31/imageFolio.cgi?search=D-HHSD&img=0&cat=&bool=and |title=Helionline.de: D-HHSD |date=29 September 2007 |work=archive.org |access-date=22 June 2016 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929165516/http://www.helionline1.de/cgi-bin/ImageFolio31/imageFolio.cgi?search=D-HHSD&img=0&cat=&bool=and |archive-date=September 29, 2007 }} While operating as an air ambulance, the helicopter crashed into a mountain in fog on June 6, 1992, killing all three occupants onboard.{{cite web|url=https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/150981 |title="Airwolf" Crash|work=aviation-safety.net|access-date=11 November 2023}}

A new, full-size replica of the Airwolf helicopter was created by Steven W. Stull for display in the short-lived Helicopter Headquarters museum in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee that opened in August 2006, using a non-flying Bell 222 with molds taken directly from the originals used in the show.{{Cite web |url=http://www.verticalmag.com/control/news/templates/?a=2525&z=6 |title=Vertical Magazine article on the Museum |access-date=2007-05-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928210919/http://www.verticalmag.com/control/news/templates/?a=2525&z=6 |archive-date=2007-09-28 |url-status=dead }}{{Cite web |url=http://projects.airwolf.tv/ssmockup/index.html |title=Airwolf mock-up build site |access-date=2007-03-09 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070313131435/http://projects.airwolf.tv/ssmockup/index.html |archive-date=2007-03-13 |url-status=dead }} The museum was unsuccessful, and offered the replica for sale through eBay.{{cite magazine|url=http://blog.wired.com/cars/2008/05/airwolf-for-sal.html |title=Airwolf for Sale on eBay|magazine=wired.com|access-date=22 June 2016}} The replica was housed between 2007 and 2015 in the Tennessee Museum of Aviation in Sevierville, Tennessee.{{cite web | title=Tennessee Museum of Aviation - Aircraft | website=tnairmuseum.com | date=2011-07-23 | url=http://www.tnairmuseum.com/node/19 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110930181233/http://www.tnairmuseum.com/node/19 | archive-date=2011-09-30 | url-status=dead}} It was then sold to a private collector in California, having been further modified at West Coast Customs during September 2015.{{Cite tweet|user=officialwcc |number=644919305335762945 |access-date=2022-09-06 |title=Get to the chopper! The #Airwolf has landed back in the shop. #WestCoastCustoms}} The replica was then placed on top of a mansion in Bel Air, California.{{Citation |title=Visiting the Airwolf Replica in Compton, CA! | date=29 October 2021 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vnvft5OUEo |language=en |access-date=2022-09-06}}{{cite web|url=http://ktla.com/2017/01/18/at-250-million-bel-air-mansion-is-priciest-home-for-sale-in-us-cost-includes-helicopter-30-million-car-collection |title=$250 Million Bel-Air Mansion Is Priciest Home for Sale in US; Cost Includes Helicopter, $30-Million Car Collection|work=KTLA |date=18 January 2017 |access-date=18 January 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180825220635/https://ktla.com/2017/01/18/at-250-million-bel-air-mansion-is-priciest-home-for-sale-in-us-cost-includes-helicopter-30-million-car-collection/ |archive-date=25 August 2018 |url-status=live}}

=Appearance=

Airwolf was painted "Phantom Gray Metallic" (DuPont Imron 5031X)Van Hoten, C: [http://wolfslair.airwolf.tv "The Wolf's Lair"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071012041407/http://wolfslair.airwolf.tv/ |date=2007-10-12}}, Issue 3, page 7. Veritas Fan Publishing, 2005 on top, and a custom pearl-gray (almost white) on the bottom, in a countershaded pattern. The craft was also fitted with various prop modifications, such as "turbojet" engines and intakes, an in-air refueling nozzle and blister cowling on the nose, retractable machine guns at the wingtips, and a retractable rocket launcher, known as the "ADF Pod" (ADF standing for All Directional Firing, as the pod could rotate 180 degrees to fire at targets at the sides—90 degrees to the left, forward, or 90 degrees to the right){{Citation needed|date=July 2008}} on its belly.

The look of the modifications was designed by Andrew Probert,{{Cite web |url=http://www.probertdesigns.com/Folder_DESIGN/A-WOLF_Designs1.html |title=Andrew Probert's website, with pictures of Airwolf's construction |access-date=2007-03-08 |archive-date=2007-06-28 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20070628154833/http://www.probertdesigns.com/Folder_DESIGN/A-WOLF_Designs1.html |url-status=dead }} and they were first applied to the non-flying mock-up (built from the body of the very first Bell 222, serial number 47001).Van Hoten, C: "[http://wolfslair.airwolf.tv The Wolf's Lair] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071012041407/http://wolfslair.airwolf.tv/ |date=2007-10-12 }}", Issue 2, page 6. Veritas Fan Publishing, 2005 From this mock-up molds were made so that parts could be made to FAA specifications before they were added to the flying helicopter. After the maiden flight with the modifications, primary pilot David Jones told the producer that "It flies better now than before!""[http://airwolf.tv-series.com/default.asp?ModuleID=2&PageID=12&ArticleID=50007 Q&A with Andrew Probert] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717114646/http://airwolf.tv-series.com/default.asp?ModuleID=2&PageID=12&ArticleID=50007 |date=2011-07-17 }}". airwolf.org

The machine guns mounted on the side of the landing gear sponsons were mock-ups that used spark plugs and fuel to simulate gun firing. Other modifications were implied with Foley and sets; the interior sets were of a fantastical high-tech nature, and there were implied "stealth" noise-reducing capabilities with creative use of sound effects. On the show, the deployment of the weapons systems were usually shown via close-ups of the action; in reality, these close-ups were produced on props off-site, while the non-moving prop components were attached to the aircraft by a technician in the field or at the JetCopters hangar.

The concept behind Airwolf was a super-fast and armed helicopter that could "blend in" by appearing to be civilian and non-military in origin, a "wolf in sheep's clothing". Airwolf's insignia patch (also designed by Probert){{cite web|url=http://www.probertdesigns.com/Folder_DESIGN/A-WOLF_Designs3.html|title=Probert Designs|work=probertdesigns.com|access-date=22 June 2016|archive-date=11 June 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160611003017/http://www.probertdesigns.com/Folder_DESIGN/A-WOLF_Designs3.html|url-status=dead}} as worn by the flight-crew was a snarling wolf's head with gossamer wings that appears to be wearing a sheepskin complete with the head of a lamb over the wolf's forehead. Airwolf is sometimes referred to in-show as "The Lady" by Santini and Hawke.

In the show, Airwolf was an armored, stealthy aircraft. It could perform impossible maneuvers and stunts, including traveling at Mach speeds (the theoretical maximum speed of a helicopter is significantly below Mach 0.5, or half the speed of sound), and flying into the stratosphere. Some of these impossible capabilities are explained in the show by such features as auxiliary jet engines (visible at the roots of the landing gear sponsons), rotor blades that can be disengaged for supersonic flight and a lifting body fuselage.

Sound effects were also associated with many of the aircraft's abilities. When Airwolf bolted across the sky in "turbo boost" mode, one would hear it "howl like a wolf" as it made a glass-shattering sound effect. When sitting idle, the aircraft made a mechanical trilling sound, and while hovering the rotor blades made a ghostly wind drone.

The weapons were state-of-the-art, with machine guns that could rip apart tanks and bunkers. The belly missile pod could fire a variety of rockets, including air-to-surface Mavericks, Hellfires, and heat-seeking air-to-air Sidewinders. When fired, these rockets usually glowed like a laser bolt or "photon torpedo" from Star Trek. Airwolf was also equipped with an advanced computer system which could identify and track aircraft and ground vehicles. It could display 3D wireframe models and schematics of its targets. The communications system could eavesdrop on radio and telephone conversations, tap into and foul up computer systems, jam enemy transmission frequencies and disrupt ground-based electrical systems. The stealth systems were capable of rendering Airwolf invisible to radar, as well as producing multiple radar returns. The weapons system could be tied in with the communications system to lock the missiles onto any monitored electronic system. In the first episode, a Bullpup missile was launched from Airwolf against an American destroyer while the helicopter was being used by its in-story inventor, Doctor Charles Henry Moffet.

In the second episode of Season 3 ("Airwolf II"), Airwolf had a twin, Airwolf II, also known as Redwolf. Redwolf was secretly built by The Firm to replace Airwolf, but was subsequently stolen and flown by Harlan Jenkins, its egotistical creator and test-pilot rival of Stringfellow Hawke. Redwolf differed from Airwolf in that its underbelly was painted red (where Airwolf was painted pearl-grey). It was also equipped with a powerful laser weapon coupled with a quick-firing, single-tube rocket pod (although in reality it had no external modifications to the Bell 222). Season 4 also featured a similar copter to Redwolf, known as the Scorpion, though the footage of the dogfighting was recycled from the "Airwolf II" episode.

=Specifications=

class="wikitable" style="float:left;"

|+ Airwolf{{'}}s "Design Specifications"

style="vertical-align:top"| Range

| 950 miles (armed crew of 3){{cite episode |title=File A56-7W |episode-link=List of Airwolf episodes#Season 1: 1984 |series=Airwolf |series-link=Airwolf |network=CBS |airdate=1984 |season=1 |number=6–9 (opening credits)}}
Midair refuel capable
1,450 miles long range (crew of 2)

style="vertical-align:top"| Flight
Ceiling

| {{convert|11000|ft|m}} unpressurized
89,000 feet (27,127 m) pressurized

Third season:
100,000 feet (30,480 m) pressurized{{cite episode |title=Where Have all the Children Gone |episode-link=List_of_Airwolf_episodes#Season_3:_1985.E2.80.931986episode |series=Airwolf |series-link=Airwolf |network=CBS |airdate=1985-12-14 |season=3 |number=11}}

style="vertical-align:top"| Speed

| {{convert|300|kn|abbr=on}} (conventional)
Mach 1+ (turbo thrusters)
Mach 2 Maximum speed

style="vertical-align:top"| Wing
guns

| 30 mm cannon (×2){{cite episode |title=Shadow of the Hawke |episode-link=List of Airwolf episodes#Season 1: 1984 |series=Airwolf |series-link=Airwolf |network=CBS |airdate=1984-01-22 |season=1 |number=1}}
.50 BMG Chain guns (×4)
Firing up to 40 rounds per sec.

style="vertical-align:top"| Missiles
and
'Heavy weapons'

| First season:
AGM-12 Bullpup missiles
AIM-9 Sidewinder missiles
AIM-95 Agile missiles
AGM-45 Nuclear Shrike missiles
AGM-114 Hellfire missiles
Paveway bombs
Second and Third seasons:
(ADF Pod launched)
M712 Copperhead shells (×6)
FIM-43 Redeye missiles (×12)
AGM-114 Hellfire missiles (×6)
(Auxiliary bay launched)
AIM-4 Falcon missiles (x4)
Fourth season:
Red Laser

style="vertical-align:top"| Defensive systems

| Sunburst anti-missile Flares
Chaff (radar countermeasure) anti-missile decoys
Bullet-proof armored fuselage
Learning flight/combat computer{{cite episode |title=Mind of the Machine |episode-link=List of Airwolf episodes#Season 1: 1984 |series=Airwolf |series-link=Airwolf |network=CBS |airdate=1984-04-07 |season=1 |number=10}}
Radar/Radio Jammer
90% Radar absorbent skin
IR suppressor (IRCM)

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

|+ Airwolf vs. Bell 222

! Bell 222

! Airwolf

Crew

| 2 (pilot & copilot)

| 2–3 (pilot(s) & weapons technician)

Passengers

| 5–6

| 1–2 (non-crew may use the copilot seat and/or a seat behind the technician's seat)

Length

|colspan="2"| {{convert|49.54|ft|abbr=on}}

Height

|colspan="2"| {{convert|11.68|ft|abbr=on}}

Weight

| {{convert|4555|lb|abbr=on}}

| unspecified

Speed

| {{convert|149|mph|abbr=on}}

| {{convert|345|mph|abbr=on}} conventional, Mach 1+ with turbo thrusters

Range

| {{convert|373|mi|abbr=on}}

| {{convert|950|–|1450|mi|km|abbr=on}}

Ceiling

| {{convert|12800|ft|abbr=on}}

| {{convert|11000|ft|abbr=on}} unpressurized
{{convert|100000|ft|abbr=on}} pressurized

Power (×2)

| {{convert|618|hp|abbr=on}}

| 45,000 lb-ft (turbo thrusters)mentioned by Archangel in Season 1 episode "Bite of the Jackal"

{{clear}}

=Models=

==Static-display models==

Over the years a number of licensed Airwolf models have been available.

  • Ertl 5" (~1:100 scale) die-cast toy model (1984) – available carded (alone) and boxed (with a Santini Air helicopter and jeep)
  • Ertl 14" (~1:36 scale) die-cast toy model (1984) – available boxed
  • AMT/Ertl 1:48 scale plastic model kit (1984) – many knock-offs are also available
  • Charawheels (Hot Wheels in Japan) 94 mm (1:160) scale die-cast toy model (2004)
  • Aoshima 1:48 scale die-cast collector's model (2005–2007) – available in cobalt blue ("normal"), black ("Limited"), weathered (2006), and matte black (2007)
  • Aoshima 1:48 scale plastic kit (2009) – superior in moulding and detail to earlier ERTL/AMT models.

==Flyable models==

  • Airwolf 1:19 scale Fuselage kit (unknown) – designed to fit the T-Rex RC helicopter
  • Cox gas-engined Airwolf (1988). Non-RC. Engine powered a small rotor which lifted the model up; a larger free-wheeling rotor auto-rotated the model down when the fuel ran out. Location of touchdown at the mercy of prevailing winds.
  • Different fuselage kits by German RC helicopters manufacturer Vario{{Cite web|url=https://www.vario-helicopter.biz/de/|title=VARIO Helicopter - Ferngesteuerte RC Modellhubschrauber & Ersatzteile kaufen|website=www.vario-helicopter.biz}} with optional functional retractable machine guns (firing blanks).

Music{{anchor|Music and soundtrack releases}}<!-- Anchor for merged content from [Airwolf Themes]; caution when altering/changing. -->

The theme music for the show's opening titles was composed by Sylvester Levay,{{cite web |last1=Terrace |first1=Vincent |title=Television Introductions: Narrated TV Program Openings since 1949 |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Television_Introductions/EDsYAgAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1 |publisher=Scarecrow Press |access-date=6 March 2025 |page=61 |language=en |date=7 November 2013}} who also scored most of the music in the show's early episodes. Udi Harpaz, Ian Freebairn-Smith and Bernardo Segáll contributed scores to later episodes.{{cite web |last1=Tildsley |first1=Andrew |title=Interview: AIRWOLF EXTENDED THEMES |url=https://www.starburstmagazine.com/features/interview-mark-cairns-airwolf-extended-themes/ |website=STARBURST Magazine |access-date=6 March 2025}}

Books

During the original series run, two books were published. Both were written by Ron Renauld and are titled Airwolf and Trouble From Within, respectively.[https://www.goodreads.com/series/55928-airwolf Airwolf Series] A graphic novel was published in August 2015, titled Airwolf Airstrikes, which recasts Archangel as a woman, and Dominic Santini's son, who is black.[https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/25572645-airwolf-airstrikes-volume-1 Airwolf Airstrikes Vol 1]

Merchandise

  • Airwolf Themes: 2CD Special Limited Edition (arrangement closely based on the original TV soundtrack)
  • Airwolf: The Wonderweapon (German CD soundtrack)
  • Airwolf Replica Helmet (fully functioning)[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C6SzpPsGIFI Video of Helmet working], youtube.com
  • Models of the Airwolf helicopter

A series of tie-in novels was printed by Star, adapted from the scripts of various episodes, and coloring books for children (printed in the UK by World Publishing), and a UK annual, which, though produced in 1985 (to cover 1986), was based around the first season. For several years, the children's TV comic magazine Look-In ran an Airwolf comic strip to tie in with the original UK broadcast of the series.

=Video games=

  • Airwolf (Commodore 64, Commodore 16), published by Elite.{{cite web|url=http://www.lemon64.com/?game_id=75|title=Lemon – Commodore 64, C64 Games, Reviews & Music!|work=Lemon64}} There were unrealized plans to rename the European-produced Airwolf C64 game as Fort Apocalypse 2.
  • Airwolf (Amstrad CPC), published by Elite, popular in Europe.{{cite web|url=http://www.cpczone.net/index.php?game=30|title=cpczone.net}}
  • Airwolf (ZX Spectrum), published by Elite, popular in the UK and Europe.{{cite web|url=http://www.worldofspectrum.org/infoseekid.cgi?id=0000127|title=Airwolf – World of Spectrum|work=worldofspectrum.org}}
  • Airwolf (BBC Micro and Atari 8-bit computers){{mobygames|id=/airwolf_}}[http://www.ataricave.com/A/Airwolf.htm Airwolf], ataricave.com Retrieved 2007-03-13. by Elite, adapted from Blue Thunder by Richard Wilcox Software
  • Airwolf (Arcade), by Kyugo Boueki.
  • Airwolf (Family Computer), by Kyugo Boueki,{{mobygames|id=/airwolf__}} released in Japan only
  • Airwolf (Nintendo Entertainment System), by Acclaim.{{mobygames|id=/airwolf}}
  • Airwolf II (ZX Spectrum,{{cite web|url=http://www.worldofspectrum.org/infoseekid.cgi?id=0000128|title=Airwolf II – World of Spectrum|work=worldofspectrum.org}} Commodore 64, Commodore 16, Amstrad CPC and BBC Micro), published by Elite.
  • Super Airwolf (Mega Drive/Genesis), by Kyugo Boueki, released in the U.S. as Cross Fire

Home media

Universal Studios has released the first 3 seasons of Airwolf on DVD in regions 1, 2, and 4. Earlier releases consisted of single episodes on VHS (double episodes in the UK and some countries, edited together into "movie" format; later in the UK, a selection of first and second season episodes were released by Playback on both VHS and DVD), including a United Kingdom 18 certificate cut of the pilot episode, presented as a standalone film (reshuffling and reworking many scenes, and removing much of the continuity ties with the following series, as well as incorporating footage from the first-season episode "Mad Over Miami", and with profanity that was not present in the aired version).{{cite web|url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00004R65K/|title=Airwolf – the Movie [VHS] [1984]|work=amazon.co.uk|date=17 June 2002 }}

Season 4 was released in Region 1 on February 1, 2011.{{cite web|url=http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Airwolf-Season-4/14611|title=Airwolf DVD news: Announcement for Airwolf - Season 4 - TVShowsOnDVD.com|work=tvshowsondvd.com|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101030074357/http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Airwolf-Season-4/14611|archive-date=2010-10-30}}

On September 6, 2011, Shout! Factory released Airwolf: The Movie on DVD in Region 1 for the first time. This single-disc set features the two-hour pilot tele-film fully restored and uncensored. It also contains special features including a new interview with Ernest Borgnine.{{cite web|url=http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Airwolf-The-Movie/15513|title=Airwolf DVD news: Press Release for Airwolf - The Movie - TVShowsOnDVD.com|work=tvshowsondvd.com|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110618125034/http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Airwolf-The-Movie/15513|archive-date=2011-06-18}}

On March 8, 2016, it was announced that Mill Creek Entertainment had acquired the rights to the series and would release Airwolf - The Complete Series on DVD and Blu-ray for the first time on May 3, 2016.{{cite web|url=http://tvshowsondvd.com/news/Airwolf-The-Complete-Series/22069|title=Airwolf DVD news: Announcement for The Complete Series|work=tvshowsondvd.com|access-date=22 June 2016|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160707010556/http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Airwolf-The-Complete-Series/22069|archive-date=7 July 2016}} They also re-released the first season on DVD on the same day.

Fabulous Films have released an all-new, High Definition Series 1–3 Blu-ray (Region B) box-set for the UK market during April 2014. The new HD transfers were created by Universal Studios.

Fabulous Films have since released single season Blu-ray (Region B) box sets, plus the equivalent DVD (Region 2) season box sets including, for the first time, a Canadian Airwolf II Season 4 set from the newly restored prints.

See also

References

{{Reflist}}