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21 Jump Street

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For the film of the same name, see 21 Jump Street (film)
21 Jump Street
Genre
Created byPatrick Hasburgh
Stephen J. Cannell
StarringJohnny Depp
Holly Robinson
Peter DeLuise
Dustin Nguyen
Steven Williams
Michael DeLuise
Michael Bendetti
Frederic Forrest
Sal Jenco
Theme music composerLiam Sternberg
Opening theme"21 Jump Street Theme" performed by Holly Robinson
ComposersPeter Bernstein
Jay Gruska
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons5
No. of episodes103
Production
Camera setupSingle-camera
Running time45–48 minutes
Production companies20th Century Fox Television
LBS Communications (1990–1991)
Patrick Hasburgh Productions
Stephen J. Cannell Productions
Original release
NetworkFox (seasons 1–4)
Syndication (season 5)
ReleaseApril 12, 1987 (1987-04-12) –
April 27, 1991 (1991-04-27)
Related
Booker (1989–1990)
21 Jump Street (2012)

21 Jump Street is an American police procedural crime drama television series that aired on the Fox Network and in first run syndication from April 12, 1987, to April 27, 1991, with a total of 103 episodes. The series focuses on a squad of youthful-looking undercover police officers investigating crimes in high schools, colleges, and other teenage venues.[1] It was originally going to be titled Jump Street Chapel, after the deconsecrated church in which the unit has its headquarters, but was changed at Fox's request so as not to mislead viewers into thinking it was a religious program.

Created by Patrick Hasburgh and Stephen J. Cannell, the series was produced by Stephen J. Cannell Productions in association with 20th Century Fox Television. The show was an early hit for the fledgling Fox Network, and was created to attract a younger audience.[2] The final season aired in first-run syndication mainly on local Fox affiliates. It was later rerun on the FX cable network from 1996 to 1998.

The series provided a spark to Johnny Depp's nascent acting career, garnering him national recognition as a teen idol. Depp found this status irritating,[3] but he continued on the series under his contract and was paid $45,000 per episode. Eventually he was released from his contract after the fourth season.[3][4] A spin-off series, Booker, was produced for the character of Dennis Booker (Richard Grieco); it ran one season, from September 1989 to June 1990.

Plot

The series focuses on a group of police officers headquartered at the titular address. These officers were all young and had especially youthful appearances, which allowed them to pass for teenagers. Their assignments generally consist of undercover work in high schools or, less commonly, colleges, where they generally investigated drug trafficking and abuse. The show's plots covered typical issues of its time, including alcoholism, hate crimes, drug abuse, homophobia, AIDS, child abuse, and sexual promiscuity. Similarly, each problem is often solved by the end of the hour-long episode, giving an implicit moral about the impact of a particular activity. When the show originally aired, some episodes were followed immediately by public service announcements featuring cast members.

Cast

The show starred prominent actors and actresses at the time, including:

Jeff Yagher was originally cast as Officer Tom Hanson in the pilot. He was replaced after the original pilot episode was filmed, and his scenes were reshot with Johnny Depp. Midway through the first season, Frederic Forrest was replaced by Steven Williams. On the show, Forrest's character Richard Jenko is killed by a drunk driver.

Guest stars

Some notable guest stars on the series include: Dom DeLuise, Josh Brolin, Bridget Fonda, Jada Pinkett Smith, Brad Pitt, Vince Vaughn, Blair Underwood, John Waters, Rosie Perez, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Mario Van Peebles, Christina Applegate, Paulie Shore, David DeLuise, Bradley Gregg, Jason Priestley, Sarah Buxton, David Paymer, and Shannon Tweed.

Episode guide

Season 1

  • 1 "21 Jump Street (part 1)" (also known as "Jump Street Chapel part 1"; April 12, 1987)

Police officer Tom Hanson runs into trouble on the job because he looks younger than he is. At the end of the episode, he is offered a chance to work with other young-looking cops who go undercover in local high schools.

  • 2 "21 Jump Street (part 2)" (also known as "Jump Street Chapel part 2"; April 12, 1987)

Hanson's first undercover job with the 21 Jump Street crowd.

  • 3 "America, What a Town" (April 19, 1987)

A Polish exchange student comes to town and begins to act out.

  • 4 "Don't Pet the Teacher" (April 26, 1987)

Someone is stalking a teacher.

  • 5 "My Future's So Bright, I Gotta Wear Shades" (May 3, 1987)

Rich kids rape and murder a 16 year old girl.

  • 6 "The Worst Night of Your Life" (May 10, 1987)

An unstable girl sets fires at a Catholic school.

  • 7 "Gotta Finish the Riff" (May 17, 1987)

Laid-back Captain Jenko dies and is replaced as head of the Jump Street program by the strict Captain Fuller. A gang banger takes a whole school hostage.

  • 8 "Bad Influence" (May 24, 1987)

A school girl turns hooker to support her recovering drug addict mother. Meanwhile two teenagers go on a spending spree after an ATM is broken into.

  • 9 "Blindsided" (May 31, 1987)

While busting drug dealers, two undercover cops discover a girl who is being abused by her father who is a high ranking police officer.

  • 10 "Next Generation" (June 7, 1987)

A young man takes after his loan shark father and begins to hurt his teachers and fellow students who can't pay back their loans.

  • 11 "Low and Away" (also known as "Running on Ice"; June 14, 1987)

People from New York try to kill a young baseball player because of his father.

  • 12 "16 Blown to 35" (June 21, 1987)

Officers Penhall and Hoffs go under, then out of cover in a teenage modeling agency to arrest the leaders of a high school porno ring.

  • 13 "Mean Streets and Pastel Houses" (June 28, 1987)

In the season one finale, Hanson goes "punk" to infiltrate suburban rival gangs in an attempt to halt their destruction and rescue one member caught between academics and anarchy.

Season 2

  • 1 "In the Custody of a Clown" (September 20, 1987)

The Jump Street team investigates whether a relative is responsible for a child's kidnapping.

  • 2 "Besieged (Part 1)" (September 27, 1987)

A sixteen-year-old crack dealer is mysteriously murdered and the Jump Street squad goes undercover in the seedy world of narcotics and prostitution.

  • 3 "Besieged (Part 2)" (October 4, 1987)

In the two-part conclusion, Penhall suspects that a hired outside police expert is responsible for the wave of crack-related deaths.

  • 4 "Two For the Road" (October 11, 1987)

The Jump Street squad puts a sting on a bar serving alcohol to underage kids and ironically has to cope with the drunk driving arrest of their own captain.

  • 5 "After School Special" (October 18, 1987)

Captain Fuller and Officer Hoffs go undercover on a violent high school campus where both student and faculty carry lethal weapons just to stay alive.

  • 6 "Higher Education" (October 25, 1987)

Ioki faces a paternity suit and jail when a teen fingers him as the father of her child.

  • 7 "Don't Stretch the Rainbow" (November 1, 1987)

As Burgard High students and faculty sit on a powder keg of racial tension, Officers Hanson and Hoffs go undercover to diffuse the potentially explosive situation in the racially divided high school.

  • 8 "Honor Bound" (November 8, 1987)

Hanson, Penhall, and Ioki investigate a rash of brutal assaults on gay men.

  • 9 "You Ought to Be in Prison" (November 15, 1987)

A perp that Hanson busted during his first Jump Street case returns to even the score along with a Hollywood heartthrob that Hanson is protecting.

  • 10 "How Much is That Body in the Window?" (November 22, 1987)

When an Olympic-bound gymnast dies of complications linked to steroid overdose, Officers Penhall and Hoffs go undercover on the athletically competitive Augustana High School campus to discover the source.

  • 11 "Christmas in Saigon" (December 20, 1987)

Officer Ioki may not be what he claims to be as he is faced with immediate dismissal from the chapel when it's discovered that he is not Japanese, but in fact a Vietnamese refugee.

  • 12 "Fear and Loathing with Russell Buckins" (also known as "Doin' The Quarter Mile In a Lifetime"; December 27, 1987)

Officer Hanson experiences a late teenage rebellion, putting his friendships...and his career...in jeopardy.

  • 13 "A Big Disease With a Little Name" (February 7, 1988)

Hanson reluctantly takes a case where he must protect a teen AIDS patient.

  • 14 "Chapel of Love" (February 14, 1988)

To pacify their dateless state on Valentine's Day, the Jump Street squad plays poker and reminisces about their worst dates, while Hanson recollects on his prom night when his father was killed.

  • 15 "I'm OK- You Need Work" (February 21, 1988)

Hanson goes undercover and is trapped inside an in-patient adolescent abuse center while investigating reports from Hanson's first Jump Street case that the center is mistreating patients.

  • 16 "Orpheus 3.3" (also known as "The Convenience Killer"; February 28, 1988)

Hanson stalks a ruthless killer to avenge the cold-blooded murder of his girlfriend.

  • 17 "Champagne High" (March 6, 1988)

Hanson and Penhall pose as the battling McQuaid brothers to infiltrate a gang of students being bussed from the wrong side of the tracks.

  • 18 "Brother Hanson & the Miracle of Renner's Pond" (March 13, 1988)

Hanson poses as a bible-thumping student and befriends a teen whose strong faith almost costs him his life.

  • 19 "Raising Marijuana" (April 17, 1988)

The Jump Street gang may lose Judy Hoffs when she falls for a guy on the wrong side of the law.

  • 20 "Best Years Of Your Life" (May 1, 1988)

Penhall is forced to recount painful memories of his mother's suicide when a youth he's investigating takes his own life.

  • 21 "Cory and Dean Got Married" (May 8, 1988)

When a young murderer and his bride are busted at their wedding, a desperate groom takes Hoffs hostage.

  • 22 "School's Out" (May 22, 1988)

In the season two finale, The Jump Street cops must find temporary jobs when school's out for the summer, and maybe forever.

Season 3

  • 1 "Fun With Animals" (November 6, 1988)

Hanson comes to blows with a new partner, officer Dennis Booker, whom he suspects is as bigoted as the gang of racists they're to bust.

  • 2 "Slippin' Into Darkness" (also listed as "Date With an Angel";[5] November 13, 1988)

While Hanson and Booker try to catch a drug dealer, their investigation is impeded by a gang of young vigilantes committed to help clean the streets of crime.

  • 3 "The Currency We Trade In" (November 20, 1988)

Penhall almost wrings a confession from a falsely accused child molester and must then find a way to help the man overcome the devastation of a false charge.

  • 4 "Coach of the Year" (November 27, 1988)

Penhall and Booker join an all-state football team to investigate possible criminal negligence on the part of the coach when hi star linebacker is crippled for life.

  • 5 "Whose Choice is it Anyways?" (December 11, 1988)

The Jump Street team goes undercover to find out who has been vandalizing pregnancy clinics, while Booker tries to lift Blowfish's self-esteem by getting him a date with a beautiful stranger.

  • 6 "Hell Week" (December 18, 1988)

Jump Street goes undercover on a college campus to investigate a rape on fraternity row.

  • 7 "The Dragon and the Angel" (January 15, 1989)

Ioki infiltrates a Vietnamese gang to break up an extortion ring and is offered a chance to contact his grandmother who was left behind in Vietnam after the war.

  • 8 "Blu Flu" (January 29, 1989)

When the police union calls a strike, the Jump Street cops are torn over which side of the picket line to place their allegiance.

  • 9 "Swallowed Alive" (February 5, 1989)

Hanson, Penhall, Booker and Ioki pose as inmates in juvenile lock-up in order to learn how heroin is entering the facility.

  • 10 "What About Love?" (February 12, 1989)

Hoffs learns that her new lover is married and when she tries to break up the relationship he sexually harasses her until she complains to her boss.

  • 11 "Woolly Bullies" (February 19, 1989)

While trying to infiltrate a high school computer club, Penhall is picked on by a bully who prompts stories from each of the cops who were all terrorized by a bully at some time in their lives.

  • 12 "The Dreaded Return of Russell Buckins" (February 26, 1989)

When a dangerously revealing magazine article about the Jump Street program is written by Russell Buckins, Hanson is suspended and goes gunning for his old friend.

  • 13 "A.W.O.L." (March 19, 1989)

Penhall and Hanson are assigned to bring a young private back to the Army base before he's charged with desertion.

  • 14 "Nemesis" (March 26, 1989)

Booker deals with the guilt of knowing an innocent student has been killed because his friends mistook him for a narc.

  • 15 "Fathers and Sons" (April 9, 1989)

When the Jump Street cops are on the verge of busting the mayor's son for drug dealing, the mayor steps in and suspends Fuller.

  • 16 "High High" (April 23, 1989)

When drug-dealing gets out of hand at a prestigious performing arts school, the Jump Street undercover team must join the act.

  • 17 "Blinded by the Thousand Points of Light" (April 30, 1989)

The Jump Street cops go undercover on the streets as homeless runaways to find a missing teenager.

  • 18 "Next Victim" (May 7, 1989)

When the controversial host of a radio talk show is nearly killed in an explosion, Booker takes over the show in an attempt to flush out the guilty party.

  • 19 "Loc'd Out (part 1)" (also known as "Partners (part 1)"; May 14, 1989)

When Hanson and Ioki go undercover with two rival gangs to find their weapons supplier, Ioki is shot in the crossfire.

  • 20 "Loc'd Out (part 2)" (also known as "Partners (part 2)"; May 21, 1989)

Although forensics proves that a third gun was fired the night Officer Tower was killed, a jury finds Hanson guilty of murder.

Richard Grieco joins the cast during this season as Officer Dennis Booker. Although appearing in nearly every episode of the season, he is always credited as a guest star. Originally his character was going to be killed at season's end, but he proved so popular that Fox worked out a spin-off series ("Booker") which lasted a single season.

Season 4

  1. "Draw the Line" (September 18, 1989)
  2. "Say It Ain't So, Pete" (September 25, 1989)
  3. "Eternal Flame" (October 2, 1989)
  4. "Come from the Shadows" (October 9, 1989)
  5. "God is a Bullet" (October 17, 1989)
  6. "Old Haunts in a New Age" (October 30, 1989)
  7. "Out of Control" (November 6, 1989)
  8. "Stand by Your Man" (November 13, 1989)
  9. "Mike's P.O.V." (November 20, 1989)
  10. "Wheels and Deals, Part Two" (November 27, 1989; Part One aired as part of the spin-off series Booker)
  11. "Parental Guidance Suggested" (December 4, 1989)
  12. "Things We Said Today" (December 18, 1989)
  13. "Research and Destroy" (Jan. 8, 1990)
  14. "A Change of Heart" (Jan. 15, 1990)
  15. "Back from the Future" (January 29, 1990; A clip show framed by interviews of the retired cops)
  16. "2245" (February 5, 1990)
  17. "Hi Mom" (February 12, 1990)
  18. "Awomp-Bomp-Aloobomb, Aloop Bamboom" (February 19, 1990)
  19. "La Bizca" (February 26, 1990)
  20. "Last Chance High" (March 19, 1990)
  21. "Unfinished Business" (April 9, 1990)
  22. "A New Breeze Blowing" (April 30, 1990)
  23. "How I Saved the Senator" (May 7, 1990)
  24. "Rounding Third" (May 14, 1990)
  25. "Everyday is Christmas" (May 21, 1990)
  26. "Blackout" (June 18, 1990)

Season 4 was the last season to air on the Fox Network. In commentary on the Season 5 DVD set, Peter DeLuise said that Fox had decided to cancel the show after Season 4 because the ratings had fallen below a set limit. Following this season Johnny Depp and Dustin Nguyen left the show. The departure of their characters Officers Hanson and Ioki was never explained in the narrative. The Booker spin-off crossover episode, "Wheels and Deals Part One", is included with 21 Jump Street's syndication package, and is also included on the fourth season DVD set.

Officer Dean Garrett (David Barry Gray) makes his first appearance in "Everyday is Christmas". As it became harder for the original cast members to plausibly pass as high school students, his character and Officer Kati Rocky (Alexandra Powers) were intended to be "youthful" replacements, so the show could maintain its original premise of younger looking cops posing as high school students.

Season 5

  1. "Tunnel of Love" (October 13, 1990)
  2. "Back to School" (October 20, 1990)
  3. "Buddy System" (October 27, 1990)
  4. "Poison" (November 3, 1990)
  5. "Just Say No! High" (November 10, 1990)
  6. "Brothers" (November 17, 1990)
  7. "This Ain't No Summer Camp" (November 24, 1990)
  8. "The Girl Next Door" (December 1, 1990)
  9. "Diplomas for Sale" (December 8, 1990)
  10. "Number One with a Bullet" (December 22, 1990)
  11. "Equal Protection" (January 5, 1991)
  12. "The Education of Terry Carver" (January 14, 1991)
  13. "Baby Blues" (January 21, 1991)
  14. "Film at Eleven" (February 9, 1991)
  15. "In the Name of Love" (February 16, 1991)
  16. "Coppin' Out" (February 23, 1991)
  17. "Under the Influence" (March 23, 1991)
  18. "Crossfire" (March 30, 1991)
  19. "Wasted" (April 6, 1991)
  20. "Bad Day at Blackburn" (April 13, 1991)
  21. "Homegirls" (April 20, 1991)
  22. "Second Chances" (April 27, 1991)

During this season, Michael Bendetti joined the cast as Officer Anthony "Mac" McCann. Michael DeLuise also joined the cast as Joey Penhall, Doug Penhall's younger brother. Peter DeLuise was credited as a "Special Guest Star" until he left the show in December 1990.

Both Doug and Joey Penhall were written off the show before the season was completed. Peter DeLuise said during his commentary on the Season 5 DVD set that he saw no future for the show, so he decided to leave before it folded with the agreement that he direct two episodes and play in (at least) seven episodes. In the show, Doug Penhall is shot in the line of duty, and after facing his own mortality, decides to leave the force to care for his adopted son, Clavo. As Joey Penhall joined the Jump Street Unit to get closer to his brother, his reason for being at Jump Street no longer existed. His character was written out a few episodes later after mentioning that he was taking a vacation to visit his brother.

Officer Kati Rocky (Alexandra Powers) is introduced in the first episode of the season, "Tunnel of Love." This episode, along with "Back to School" mark the last appearances of Officer Rocky and Officer Garrett, despite the plotlines suggesting that both characters are going to join the main cast. These episodes were both filmed during the fourth season and held over. Neither actor was asked back for the fifth season, and their characters are not mentioned again after their initial appearances.

Production

Location

Jump Street was set in the "Evergreen State", the nickname of Washington State. However, Washington state was never officially identified as the setting location on the show. But the show's filming location Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada is given away in the series' opening. A shot of a city bus with destination "Hastings" is shown briefly, as well as a SkyTrain with a British Columbia Transit (BC Transit) logo barely visible on the side. Every car driven in the series, including the ones driven by the characters, have British Columbia license plates. This was featured in the new opening of Season 3. Additionally, the scene from the series opener where Kenny breaks a store window was clearly filmed in Vancouver's historic Gastown neighborhood featuring its famous steam-powered clock. New Westminster Secondary School was one of the main locations of the series.[6]

DVD releases

File:21 Jump Street S4.jpg
Richard Grieco appears in two shows of season four and is featured on the fourth season DVD cover.

Anchor Bay Entertainment released all five seasons of 21 Jump Street on DVD in Region 1 for the very first time, between 2004–2006. The releases contain extensive music substitutions and inaccurate cover art. Johnny Depp appears on the season 5 DVD cover yet he left the series after the fourth season. As of 2010, these releases have been discontinued and are now out of print.

File:21 Jump Street S5.jpg
Johnny Depp left the show after season four and is used on the fifth season DVD cover.

On October 14, 2009, it was announced that Mill Creek Entertainment had acquired the rights to several Stephen J. Cannell series including 21 Jump Street.[7] They have subsequently re-released the first four seasons. In addition, Mill Creek also released 21 Jump Street - The Complete Series, an 18-disc collection featuring all 103 episodes of the series on DVD on July 27, 2010.[8]

Madman Entertainment has released all 5 seasons on DVD in Region 4.

DVD name Ep # Region 1 Region 4
The Complete First Season 13 January 19, 2010 September 7, 2006
The Complete Second Season 22 May 18, 2010 September 7, 2006
The Complete Third Season 20 July 27, 2010 September 7, 2006
The Complete Fourth Season 25 January 18, 2011 September 7, 2006
The Complete Fifth Season 23 TBA June 7, 2007
The Complete Series 103 July 27, 2010 N/A

Anchor Bay Entertainment later released Season 1 and Seasons 1-5 in a complete box set on DVD. This amended any previous errors mentioned above and has been available since the 5th March 2012.[9]

Film adaptation

On March 16, 2012, a feature film Sequel to the television series from Sony Pictures was released starring Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum and directed by Phil Lord and Chris Miller with the screenplay written by Hill (who is also executive producer) and Michael Bacall. Johnny Depp, Peter DeLuise reprise there roles as Tom Hanson and Doug Penhall. The film proved a critically hailed box office success.

Described in concept by Hill as an "R-rated, insane, Bad Boys-meets-John Hughes-type movie"[10], the film departs from the series' earnest tone to present a parody in whichever, the film is set in the same continuity of the series with Depp, DeLuise and Robinson appearing briefly as their characters in short cameos.

References

  1. ^ Rosenberg, Howard (11 April 1987). "Weekend Tv : 'Jump Street' Bows On Fox Network". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  2. ^ Mansour, David (2005). From Abba to Zoom: A Pop Culture Encyclopedia of the Late 20th Century. Kansas City, MO: Andrews McMeel Publishing. p. 501. ISBN 0-7407-5118-2. OCLC 57316726.
  3. ^ a b Blitz, Michael; Krasniewicz, Louise (2008). Johnny Depp: A Biography. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. p. 28. ISBN 0313343004. OCLC 166290770. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  4. ^ Horowitz, Josh (14 May 2008). "Jonah Hill To Adapt '21 Jump Street' For The Big Screen: Report". mtv.com. Retrieved 2009-02-25.
  5. ^ "21 Jump Street - 'Date With an Angel' Episode Info". MSN TV. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  6. ^ 21 Jump Street at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  7. ^ "Cannell and Mill Creek Ink New Distribution Deal" (Press release). TVShowsOnDVD.com. 14 October 2009. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  8. ^ Lambert, David (21 May 2010). "21 Jump Street - Mill Creek to Roll Out 'Season 3' and 'The Complete Series' on DVD". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  9. ^ http://www.cult-labs.com/forums/21-jump-street/7910-21-jump-street-official-announcement.html
  10. ^ Coll, Kevin (28 May 2009). "Jonah Hill Talks 21 Jump Street Remake Movie". Fused Film.

External links

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