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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, February 19, 2010

New 'Five-O' off to promising start


By Wayne Harada

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Jack Lord as Steve McGarrett. Alex O'Loughlin has been tapped to take over the role in the new version.

Advertiser library photos

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Daniel Dae Kim of "Lost" has signed on as Chin Ho Kelly, one of McGarrett's sidekicks in the original series.

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5 THINGS 'FIVE-O' SHOULD DO ...

• Keep Morton Stevens' "Hawaii Five-O" theme song in the opening and closing credits.

• Film entirely in the

Islands, taking advantage of the landscape and people.

• Include geographical blunders — like showing McGarrett driving along Kalakaua

Avenue and saying he's heading for the airport, or mixing up mauka and makai. (We adore these blatant miscues; it's been part of the show's charm).

• Continue the stable of secondary characters: Danny, Kono, Ben Kokua, the governor.

• Preserve the "Book 'em, Danno" classic line, from McGarrett to Danny Williams.

— Wayne Harada, Special to The Advertiser

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... AND 5 THINGS IT SHOULDN'T — EVER

• Cast locals only as heavies.

• Abolish recurring roles like Duke and Truck.

• Relocate the "Five-O" headquarters from 'Iolani Palace — the only monarchial palace with historical roots in the U.S. — to a modern-day edifice.

• Neglect familiar Island and Mainland actors — it's comforting to see guest faces we know.

• Throw nonsensical Hawaiian names, like Kalanikanakaolemauka, into the dialogue.

— Wayne Harada, Special to The Advertiser

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A new "Hawaii Five-O" pilot will soon begin filming here, as CBS strives to reboot, recycle and reinvent one of television's iconic shows.

But should the "Five-O" franchise be tampered with? Is Jack Lord, the original Steve McGarrett, rolling in his grave? Does lightning strike again?

It's not the first time that the network is attempting to reignite the magic that was "Five-O."

Remember the earlier debacle with Gary Busey? Recall the recent plan that would have a McGarrett son carry on dad's crimefighting mission? Remember all the buzz of a big-screen reincarnation with bigger names?

Is nothing sacred?

On the one hand, no one can replicate the stilted charm of Lord, who put style and starch in his McGarrett character, and played it with precise control for 12 seasons, from 1968 to 1980, then the longest-running police drama (since eclipsed by "Law & Order").

The show was groundbreaking in its time — the first to shoot entirely in the Islands, with daily rushes sent back to the West Coast (hey, this was before the digital age) — and was a boon to Island tourism thanks to images of the mythical state police unit battling crime and evil-doers in a tropical paradise. The vistas were truly marvelous, particularly during Mainland winter storms.

Imagine what good a sun-baked environment on the tube would do to spur visitors here now, in the wake of the recent whiteout on the East Coast and the lingering down economy.

Which brings up casting. Alex O'Loughlin (pronounced oh-lock-lin), an Australian, has been tapped to take on the Lord/McGarrett challenge, and those are big shoes to fill. He has to curb his Down Under accent; he's kind of a young hunk, which makes him marketable; and he's an apparent darling of the network, who had him starring in two failed CBS shows: the vampire outing "Moonlight," where O'Loughlin played Mick St. John for 16 episodes in 2008,and the medical drama "Three Rivers," where he portrayed Dr. Andy Yablonski for a mere 10 episodes earlier this season. So will three be his lucky charm?

For years, there has been talk about a movie version of "Five-O," with names like George Clooney, Harrison Ford, Michael Douglas and Alec Baldwin heading the rumor mills. More recently, there was that "Five-O" junior-grade update plan, where a McGarrett son named Chris would head the elite police on the big screen.

The 2010 revival heading this way already is blessed with the presence of Daniel Dae Kim, who was the first signed to the show, in the role ofstate police officer Chin Ho Kelly. He's the first "Lost" star to find momentum after the ABC show's closure this season.

Behind the scenes, there are savvy show magicians, with a pedigree of growing success, to tweak "Five-O": "Fringe" writer-producers Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci, who also were the screenwriters of "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" and "Star Trek," and Peter Lenkov, a producer of "CSI: New York."

Movies continue to scope previous TV hits for renewed life, and vice versa, but failures outnumber hits. The losers: "Dragnet," "Starsky and Hutch," "Miami Vice," "I Spy," "Land of the Lost," "The Dukes of Hazzard," "The Addams Family," "The X-Files," and "Bewitched." Among the triumphs: "Mission: Impossible," "The Fugitive," "Star Trek," "Charlie's Angels."

"The A-Team" arrives this summer with Liam Neeson, Jessica Biel, Bradley Cooper and Rampage Jackson, and in a twisteroo, "The Exorcist" will be revived this year with original director William Friedkin downsizing the 1973 horror thriller for a TV mini-series.

The beat goes on and on and on.

Let's hope this "Hawaii Five-O" captures the spirit and flavor of the old, and inspires a new generation of potential visitors to the 50th state. That was a bonus mission of the original. The new one should retain the solid formula of yesteryear — "Five-O" always had solid storytelling based on mythical but logical good-vs.-evil battles — without excessive violence or expletives. Just check the frequent syndicated airings or those season DVD collections — they're classic.

Reach Wayne Harada at 266-0926 or wayneharada@gmail.com. Read his Show Biz column Sundays in Island Life and at http://www.showandtellhawaii.honadvblogs.com.