The Eighth Part of the Village (3.4)

Rate, review & discuss the episodes from the third season

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How Would You Rate This Episode?

10 (Perfect!)
0
No votes
9.5 (One of the Best)
5
5%
9.0 (Excellent)
16
16%
8.5 (Very Good)
32
32%
8.0 (Pretty Good)
26
26%
7.5 (Decent)
14
14%
7.0 (Average at Best)
3
3%
6.5 (Not So Good)
2
2%
6.0 (Pretty Bad)
0
No votes
5.0 (Just Awful)
1
1%
 
Total votes: 99

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miltontheripper
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#31 Post by miltontheripper »

And am I correct that the actor who played Sato was not only Sato in Karate Kid II but was also in the Season 2 episode Texas Lightning as a deckhand who eventually gets thrown overboard?

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J.J. Walters
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#32 Post by J.J. Walters »

Yep. He was in several other MPI episodes also, as well as many Hawaii Five-0 episodes. He was one of the big name local Hawaiian actors in the 70s and 80s. He passed away in 1996.
Higgins: It's not a scratch! It's a bloody gouge!

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MaiTaiMan
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#33 Post by MaiTaiMan »

I really enjoy watching this one! Pretty wild, with the Japanese girl popping out of the box, pretending to be this innocent/abused girl looking for her fiance...when the whole time she's really this enraged psycho--bent on assassinating her own father! :o

More of Higgins' interesting past is also discussed, and the action scenes on the waterfront were pretty good! The plot twists are excellent and entertaining to watch. Very good episode, and I rated it as such. :)
"It was more ironic than a Robin Masters novel--she thought he was dead, he thought she was dead...and only the chauffeur knew the truth! He should have been the butler!" "Lest We Forget"

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J.J. Walters
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#34 Post by J.J. Walters »

Hey, RC, this might make for a nice addition to the Filming Location Guide (if you decide to release another version).

The pool hall scene with Magnum, T.C., Rick, Mr. Harms (Donald Gibb) and Mr. Jansen (Dick Durock) was filmed on location at the Cebu Pool Hall (Hotel and River Streets), which appears to have been a rather notorious Filipina hangout for many years. The hall was part of the H.Y. Wong building (built in 1906), which at the time of this episode was one of the last remaining wood-flame structures in the downtown Honolulu area. The building was razed in 1992 and replaced with low-income housing.

*Interesting article about the building*

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Higgins: It's not a scratch! It's a bloody gouge!

Braddah Kimo
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#35 Post by Braddah Kimo »

Magnum's v/o sez: "problem with asking people on the docks if they dont know ya, they wont tell ya." This is magnum's problem all thru the show, week after week. As with the earlier scene with da braddah with da forklift. he's acting all impatient and all haole. If he was more braddah braddah, he would get what he needs. there is a way of communication here unknown to outsiders. it's ho'omalimali. Magnum never learns it.

Braddah Kimo
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#36 Post by Braddah Kimo »

"and the rare shot on the Estate on the balcony)" Not balcony. It's a lanai.

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Pahonu
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#37 Post by Pahonu »

Braddah Kimo wrote:"and the rare shot on the Estate on the balcony)" Not balcony. It's a lanai.
Not trying to quibble Kimo, but as the home is Spanish Colonial Revival in style, it would architecturally be termed balcon corrido which is a balcony used as a corridor or hall. All the upstairs rooms open onto this space and there are no internal hallways whatsoever. This is actually quite unusual even for that style as it requires a temperate enough climate to be practical, which you guys definitely enjoy. There is also a style-specific term for the side entrance downstairs that leads to the arcade and the front door. It is termed zaguan, which has no easy translation into English. It is basically an entrance, but not into the house proper. Rather, the doors might lead to a courtyard, loggia, patio, or as in this case the arcade, then onto the front door.

Braddah Kimo
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#38 Post by Braddah Kimo »

architecturally correct. however as it is in Hawaii, it would be a lanai. has been referred to as that since the 30's. Just like ya don't call them flippity flops or whatever they say in the conus. They are rubbah slippahz here. Local culture, Context and all that.

Braddah Kimo
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#39 Post by Braddah Kimo »

also, good info, there, Pahonu. I love architecture and like learning about it. Spanish/Mission revival, et. al., is one of my favorites styles.

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#40 Post by Braddah Kimo »

"All the upstairs rooms open onto this space and there are no internal hallways whatsoever" almost not surprisingly enough, a characteristic also glimpsed at in portions of the Cooke estate/King Kamehameha Club structures...

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Pahonu
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#41 Post by Pahonu »

Hey Kimo,

Glad to hear you enjoy architecture as well. My point was simply that certain terms are applied to specific architectural styles almost regardless of their location. For example, the various Victorian styles used the word hall to describe a large central room around which the more formal public spaces such as parlors, libraries, etc... would connect. This was true from San Francisco to Boston. The term passage would have been used for what we call a hall. Time also plays a major part in the use of this terminology as well. When the Anderson Estate was built in the 30's, for example the architect might have labeled the primary living space as a drawing room rather than living room, and the term family room was unheard of then.

I'm not surprised at all that other homes have open hallways like this. You guys certainly have the weather for it. Here in SoCal today it was 75 degrees and beautifully clear, but I wouldn't want to be roaming around an open hall tonight when it drops to 42!

Speaking of architects, did you ever confirm Pahonu's? Would the Hall of Records have this information or even blueprints?

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J.J. Walters
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#42 Post by J.J. Walters »

Pahonu wrote:Would the Hall of Records have this information or even blueprints?
Yeah, Kimo, can you pay Ms. Jones a visit when you have the time? You'll probably have to wait in line and she will more than likely be on the phone with her husband Ray. ;)
Higgins: It's not a scratch! It's a bloody gouge!

Seaver41
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#43 Post by Seaver41 »

very nice episode.........enjoyed watching it again all these years later. Not that you couldn't figure the sister was up to something, but the dead giveaway was in guest house where she just cleaned the place and went out of her way to distract/entice Thomas........but then there was that cliche' tactic of focusing in on her expression once Thomas left her..........just like in the Football episode, they made it obvious who the crazed fan would be. This was a common issue of that era of television. Goes hand in hand with the opening credits listing the big guest star of the week that gives away who will be the focal point of the episode.

Croix de Lorraine
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#44 Post by Croix de Lorraine »

In the beginning of the episode, when the girl gets out of the crate, Magnum says: "OK, son". So he's supposed to be a PI (and a red-blooded heterosexual man) and he can't tell a girl from a boy? :shock:

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Waterbug Blue
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#45 Post by Waterbug Blue »

This was the 80s - things were different back then ...
Men were men (BUT they might be wearing pink), AND
Boys sang like girls (Communards/Never can say goodbye), whereas
Girls cold sing like male voices (Tanita Tikaram/Twist in my sobriety)...

So as you can see, it wasn't all THAT easy ;)

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