Hear No Evil
GenreCrime
Drama
Written byTom Lazarus
Directed byHarry Falk Jr.
Starring
ComposerLance Rubin
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducerPaul Pompian
CinematographyMichael P. Joyce
EditorAnne Mills
Running time120 minutes (with commercials)
Production companies
Original release
NetworkCBS
ReleaseNovember 20, 1982 (1982-11-20)

Hear No Evil is a 1982 made-for-television-film directed by Harry Falk Jr.[1][2] and written by Tom Lazarus.[2] The TV film stars Gil Gerard, Bernie Casey, Wings Hauser, Mimi Rogers, Christina Hart, Brion James, Ron Karabatsos, Mickey Jones, Raven De La Croix, and Robert Dryer.[2][3][4]

Plot

After a cop becomes deaf in a fight, he tries to break up a drug ring run by bikers.

Cast

  • Gil Gerard as Dragon
  • Bernie Casey as Monday
  • Wings Hauser as Garrard
  • Mimi Rogers as Meg
  • Christina Hart as Sheila Green
  • Brion James as Billy Boy Burns
  • Ron Karabatsos as Lt. Lew Healy
  • Mickey Jones as Blackman
  • Raven De La Croix as Candy Burns
  • Robert Dryer as Vinnie Holzer
  • William Paterson as Minister
  • John G. Scanlon as Summers
  • Parker Whitman as Riles
  • Jana Winters as Hooker
  • Joe Bellan as Cabbie
  • Denise Kerwin as Judy
  • Charles Bouvier as Wilkes
  • Steve Burton as Plainclothesman
  • Sam Conti as Sonny
  • Cab Covayas Hit Man
  • W. Scott Devenney as Rachmil
  • Chuck Dorsett as Dr. Larsen
  • Paul Drake as TD
  • Julianna Field as Rico
  • Emily Heebner as Vicki
  • Bruce Mackey as Captain Shelhart
  • Gary Pettinger as Wrigley
  • Janet Raney as Terri
  • Linda Vee as TV Announcer
  • Danelle Hand as Suzanne
  • Daniel Selby as Jack

Production

Hear No Evil is based on the true story of William O. "Bill" Zerby, a former Marine who, as a Solano County Sherriff's Office narcotics detective, aggressively perused members of the Hells Angels suspected of producing and distributing methamphetamine in the San Francisco Bay Area.[5] Zerby was injured, suffered severe hearing loss and was forced to retire from his law enforcement agency as a result of an explosive device detonated as he was entering his car in front of his home on January 30, 1978.[6] He was en route to court for a prehearing in the methamphetamine possession trial of Oakland Hells Angels chapter vice-president James Ezekiel "Jim-Jim" Brandes at the time.[7] Brandes, who had previously been found to be in possession of a military handbook on booby traps and an address book containing the address, phone number and the license-plate number of Zerby when he was arrested on drug charges by Zerby and another detective on November 14, 1977, stated to a reporter for Rolling Stone magazine in or around November 1978 that "Zerby drew a line and stepped over it. I don't take that from anybody in the streets, and I sure ain't gonna take that from him. I don't let nobody come around and shove me around. I don't think anyone does if he's a man."[8][9] The following year, Brandes and Kenneth Jay "K.O." Owen, a member of the Vallejo Hells Angels who had previously been arrested after a raid on his home led by Zerby uncovered narcotics and prohibited firearms on June 21, 1977, were charged with the attempted murder of Zerby as part of a racketeering case.[10] Brandes and Owen were ultimately acquitted of the attempt on Zerby's life.[11] Brandes later committed suicide by hanging himself in prison circa 1994.[12] Owen died July 4, 2016,[13] and Zerby died in 2021 at the age of seventy-nine.[14]

Producer Paul Pompian heard of the Zerby incident while filming a TV pilot in San Francisco and decided to pursue the idea of translating the events into a teleplay.[15] Paul Pompian Productions and MGM Television produced the television film which could have become a television series.[4][16]

Reception

Critical response

Film critic John J. O'Connor of The New York Times wrote in his review: "TRAINING for a new gimmick in the old police-drama formula, Hear No Evil, tomorrow's television movie on CBS, Channel 2, at 9, comes up with a deaf cop."[17] Staff of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote: "Gil Gerard as Bill Dragon in a routine cop drama with a banal script and what only approximates acting. Even the central gimmick of permanently deafening the hero in an explosion seems to have been transferred by rubbings from ancient stones."[18]

References

Citations

  1. American Motorcyclist 1987, p. 32.
  2. 1 2 3 Terrace 1985, p. 188.
  3. "Hear No Evil". Turner Classic Movies. United States: Turner Broadcasting System. Retrieved March 13, 2018.
  4. 1 2 Terrace 2011, p. 445.
  5. Film's not just a film Lansing State Journal (November 14, 1982)
  6. Organized Crime in America: Hearings Before the Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary (January 27, 1983)
  7. Exile on Front Street: My Life as a Hells Angel George Christie (2016)
  8. Hell’s Angels: Masters of Menace Howard Kohn, Rolling Stone (April 5, 1979)
  9. United States of America v. Charles T. Pasciuti Justia (August 24, 1992)
  10. Second Hells Angels trial under way United Press International (September 30, 1980)
  11. Outlaw Bikers John Kerr (2020)
  12. When Jailbirds Sing Kevin Fagan, San Francisco Chronicle (December 3, 1995)
  13. Kenneth Owen obituary East Bay Times (July 10, 2016)
  14. Bill's story The Binnacle (March 2021)
  15. "Hear No Evil" Plot For Series The Scranton Times-Tribune (November 14, 1982)
  16. Goldberg, Lee (2015). The Best TV Shows That Never Were (Paperback ed.). Scotts Valley, California: CreateSpace.com. ISBN 978-1511590747.
  17. O'Connor, John J. (November 19, 1982). "'HEAR NO EVIL,' WEST COAST POLICE STORY". The New York Times. New York City. Retrieved March 13, 2018.
  18. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Staff 1982, p. 23.

Sources

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