21 Jump Street - Season 3
©1997+
Cyndi Glass

20 Episodes (36-55), 1988-89
Stephen J. Cannell Productions, Fox Network
Regulars: Fuller, Hanson, Penhall, Hoffs, Ioki, Booker
Photo: Sitting:
Holly Robinson; Standing: Dustin Nguyen, Richard Grieco, Peter DeLuise, Steven
Williams, and Johnny Depp
21 Jump Street Episodic Photo
Gallery (contains spoilers) - 21JS Photo Gallery 1
21 Jump Street Cast Photos &
Miscellaneous Stuff - 21JS Photo Gallery 2
Brief summaries © 1994-97, Alan Morton
and John Lavalie with Gustavo Gontijo and their 21 Jump Street Episode Guide. All rights reserved. Used with
permission. Longer summaries, commentary & reviews © 1997+ by Cyndi Glass
and John DeCarli. Character names and storylines © Cannell/Fox.
Season 3
Episodes:
36. "Fun With Animals" (Nov. 6, 1988)
37. "Slippin' Into Darkness" (Nov. 13, 1988)
38. "The Currency We Trade In" (Nov. 20, 1988)
39. "Coach of the Year" (Nov. 27, 1988)
40. "Whose Choice is it Anyways?" (Dec. 11, 1988)
41. "Hell Week" (Dec. 18, 1988)
42. "The Dragon and the Angel" (Jan. 15, 1989)
43. "Blu Flu" (Jan. 29, 1989)
44. "Swallowed Alive" (Feb. 5, 1989)
45. "What About Love?" (Feb. 12, 1989)
46. "Woolly Bullies" (Feb. 19, 1989) (Special page
about Woolly Bullies)
47. "The Dreaded Return of Russell Buckins" (Feb. 26, 1989)
48. "A.W.O.L." (Mar. 19, 1989)
49. "Nemesis" (Mar. 26, 1989)
50. "Fathers and Sons" (Apr. 9, 1989)
51. "High High" (Apr. 23, 1989)
52. "Blinded by the Thousand Points of Light" (Apr. 30, 1989)
53. "Next Victim" (May 7, 1989)
54. "Loc'd Out (1)" (a.k.a. Partners (1)) (May
14, 1989)
55. "Loc'd Out (2)" (a.k.a. Partners (2)) (May
21, 1989)
Season 3 Commentary:
©1997 Cyndi Glass & John DeCarli
Cyndi Glass: Season 3 is often distinguished from the
others by calling it the "Booker season" and with good reason.
Although he is not in the opening theme as a regular (WHY NOT?), Booker is an
equal partner on the Jump Street team., bringing them to five. Alliances form
and shift with Booker's arrival, with Hanson in particular clashing with him
immediately. Season 3 is, in my opinion, the most consistently excellent
season, with one great episode after another.
The issues get even more complex and deep as
the officers start to question themselves and their work. All of them learn,
sometimes with painful consequences, that there are other ways of seeing the
world besides the way they have always seen it. Penhall sees the consequences
of false accusations. Ioki learns firsthand the attraction of gangs to lonely
people who want a family. Booker confronts his latent racism, and Hoffs fights
back against sexual harassment. Hanson sees what happens to the kids they bust
when he is placed in a juvenile facility, and he comes out shaken and more
jaded than we have ever seen him. Romances form and fail spectacularly. The
assignments broaden beyond the high schools, as they work on cases involving
homeless runaways, an AWOL Army enlistee and college radicals. At the end of
the season, the sobering two part season finale ends with Ioki in critical
condition after being shot, Penhall and Booker enemies, and Hanson convicted of
a murder he didn't commit and sent to prison.
John DeCarli: Originally, FOX had plans to produce a
spin-off of 21 Jump Street this season. Titled "Return of the Prince"
but then retitled "City Court", the intention was to follow Jump
Street type cases through the court system. A two-hour pilot was scheduled to feature
a murder trial involving Hanson. But because of the 1988 Writer's Strike, the
series was never produced. I wonder whether the pilot episode was ever filmed.
If so, I don't think it's ever been shown.
This strike-shortened season is marked by
both an important addition and a departure. The introduction of Booker
introduced an element of instability into the established 21 Jump Street
family. Booker is an independent individual who is as sure about what he is
doing as Hanson. I think this is why Hanson and Booker never hit it off. The
departure of series creator Patrick Hasburgh created other concerns. In
separate interviews, both Depp and Hasburgh complained about how the show
seemed to change direction although neither of them elaborated further. I'm not
sure what they meant. The tendency here is to have one or two officers carry
the main dramatic plot while the others carry on in unrelated comedic subplots.
Personal lives are examined more deeply. Source music is used more extensively
here than in the previous season.
It's also in this season that we
begin to see "Depp problems" emerge. To summarize: after initially
turning down the Hanson role without even reading the script, Johnny Depp had
been convinced to take the role under the assumption that it would last only 13
weeks, or maybe a season. But the show became popular and Depp had signed a six
season contract. Perhaps more significantly, he felt exploited by the teen
sex-symbol marketing strategy that FOX was using to promote the show. He was also
becoming bored with the repetitive nature of the role and the lack of creative
opportunities in doing a weekly television series. He wanted out, but the
producers would not release him from his contract. He began to complain about
some of the scripts and refused to do certain episodes which he found
objectionable. "Nemesis (#49)" had to be rewritten for Richard
Grieco's Booker character when Depp refused to participate because of the
"moral ambiguity" of keeping quiet while someone was murdered (in the
end, Depp did appear in one scene).
As the season progresses, there
is less of a tendency to go to Fuller for advice and direction. The cases seem
to affect the officers less than in the previous season. Overall, though, it's
still excellent.
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This page ©1997 by Cyndi Glass, constructed with Microsoft Office/Word 97.