Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Cry Uncle: Directed by James Goldstone. With David Janssen, Edward Binns, Brett Somers, Ron Howard. When robbers shoot a civilian and a policeman, Kimble's nearby, so he hides in an orphanage's station wagon to get away from the dragnet.

    • (181)
    • Adventure, Crime, Drama
    • James Goldstone
    • 1964-12-01
  2. Kathy. Steve Ihnat. ... Officer Hasboro. Barry Morse. ... Lt. Philip Gerard (credit only) Rest of cast listed alphabetically: William Conrad.

  3. People also ask

  4. Jan 20, 2007 · Amazon.com: The Fugitive Vol. 4 Cry Uncle, This'll Kill You : David Janssen, Ron Howard, Mickey Rooney: Movies & TV

    • VHS Tape
  5. Another strong dilemma for Richard Kimble. He escapes from the police in the back of a station wagon, only to find himself at an orphanage, where he's discovered by a group of three kids: a troubled teen, a young girl who loves him and a younger friend, (the latter played by Ronnie Howard, taking time out from playing Opie on the Andy Griffith Show).

    • Opening Narrations
    • Season 1
    • Season 2
    • Season 3
    • Season 4

    Spoken by William Conrad, the unseen narrator ...just before the train taking Kimble to be executed jumps off the track (Season 1).

    Fear in a Desert City

    1. Opening Narration: Now six months a fugitive, this is Richard Kimble with a new identity, and for as long as it is safe, a new name: James Lincoln. He thinks of the day when he might find the man with one arm, but now is now, and this is how it is with him. Another journey, another place. Walk neither too fast, nor too slow. Beware the eyes of strangers. Keep moving. The right one, or will it be a mistake? Is this the trap where it will end? Safe, for now. Another room. Windows look out an...

    The Witch

    1. Opening Narration: Now, ten months after his escape, take Richard Kimble. Unjustly convicted of murder. Put him down in the Missouri hills. A handyman, driving a truck for a local fuel and feed company. Once again, he has changed his identity. He has become Jim Fowler, a stranger in town. 1. Closing Narration: This is Jim Fowler, about to die. He will last long enough to take the bus out of Hainesville, Missouri, and then a new identity must emerge, a new identity to hide the path of his f...

    The Other Side of the Mountain

    1. Opening Narration: West Virginia. What used to be a town, before the coal mine gave out. A naked relic now, without future, without hope. Another dreary point in time for Richard Kimble. Eight months a fugitive. 1. Closing Narration: Above the mountain, leaving it far below and behind him, Lieutenant Philip Gerard returns home without the man he had come to find and recapture. The other side of the mountain, of many mountains, a road twisting and turning into the future, without promise, w...

    Man in a Chariot

    1. Opening Narration: The man is Richard Kimble and, not surprisingly, the man is tired. Tired of looking over his shoulder, the ready lie, of the buses and freight trains. Richard Kimble is tired of running. 1. (G. Stanley Lazer is disconsolate over a mock trial of Richard Kimble) 2. Richard Kimble: You know that boy actually worshipped you? God knows why but you were the man he wanted to be. In fact he was so hung on the legend of the great G. Stanley Lazer that he believed everything you s...

    World's End

    1. (Kimble enters an all-night diner with newspaper and sits at a table) 2. Opening Narration: Another dreary town, another shabby street. Another weary pause on Richard Kimble's search for the man with one arm, his only real hope for escaping a life of fear. 3. (A waitress approaches Kimble) 4. Richard Kimble: A...bowl of soup, any kind. 5. Opening Narration: (as Kimble opens the paper)No front page. Richard Kimble turns directly to the classified section. Here are the things that really mat...

    Man on a String

    1. Opening Narration: The road is endless for Richard Kimble. Endless, uncertain. 1. Closing Narration: Always new people, always new places. Only one thing is constant for Richard Kimble. At the end, there is always the road. Richard Kimble is a fugitive.

    Wings of an Angel

    1. Opening Narration: When a man has the law at his heels, every stranger becomes a potential enemy, every incident takes on sinister proportions. Dr. Richard Kimble has eluded his pursuers for more than two years. he knows that his freedom depends largely on luck and that, sooner or later, that luck must run out. 1. Closing Narration: When a man is on the run, every stranger is a potential enemy, every friend a surprise. For Richard Kimble, the only real friend is the darkness, and the road...

    Middle of a Heat Wave

    1. Opening Narration: Lake City, New York. A roadhouse hideaway outside of town. Music, a few drinks, and sometimes a momentary escape into a private world for just two people. For Richard Kimble, escape is always momentary, and two people are one too many in a private world already crowded with pursuers. 1. Closing Narration: Another place, another memory to follow him. Another escape through the night. Always the way of a fugitive.

    Crack in a Crystal Ball

    1. Opening Narration: A highway has a life of its own. Each car brings a new face. And for Richard Kimble, working now in a Midwestern gas station, the next might be the face of danger. 1. Closing Narration: An anonymous room, another town. For Richard Kimble, the day has ended, but there’s little time to rest. Tomorrow, his search continues.

    The Last Oasis

    1. Opening Narration: A fugitive has many enemies. A desert is among them. But the desert can also bring friends. 1. Closing Narration: To Richard Kimble, a border is a dark tunnel whose other end might lead to the final encounter with a many-faced enemy. But for the moment, it leads to safety.

    Death is the Door Prize

    1. Opening Narration: For a fugitive, there must be wariness in even the simplest chore: an extra sense, sharpened by the two-fold chase--the fugitive hunted and the fugitive hunting. 1. Closing Narration: A fugitive moves on, through anguished tunnels of time. Down dim streets, into dark corners, and each new day offers fear and frustration, tastes of honey and hemlock. But if there is hazard, there is also hope.

    A Clean and Quiet Town

    1. Opening Narration: A man on the run comes to expect neither justice nor mercy. Every hand is against him; every face turns away from his pain. In such moments, the thread of hope, of life itself, stretches to the breaking point. 1. Closing Narration: A man on the run must never stop. After every fall, he must get up. Push on toward the same elusive goal. A goal so close at times as to be only a heartbreak away.

  6. I also have a suggestion for watching the series. At the same time I purchased the series, I also purchased the book The Fugitive Recaptured by Ed Robertson. It has a wealth of interesting background information in it and lists every single episode, the stars,the director, the opening line, a brief summary, and the final words of the Epilog.

  7. Dec 16, 2023 · The Fugitive S02E10 The Cage. 51:34. 11. The Fugitive S02E11 Cry Uncle. 51:29. 12. The Fugitive S02E12 Detour on a Road Going Nowhere. 51:37.

  1. People also search for