"The Fugitive" The One That Got Away (TV Episode 1967) Poster

(TV Series)

(1967)

User Reviews

Review this title
8 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Plot summary
ynot-1627 November 2006
Police are tracking Felice Greer, played by actress Anne Francis. Her husband Oliver Greer disappeared after embezzling a lot of money, but the police think Felice has the money. She rents the boat on which Kimble works for a trip to Mexico. Detective Charles Schuyler, played by actor Charles Bronson, poses as the brother-in-law of the captain, who pretends to have a family emergency so Schuyler can skipper the boat, find Oliver Greer, and arrest him.

Kimble has his hands full with the devious actions of Mr. and Mrs. Greer. Schuyler also has his hands full after he learns who Kimble is, and thus has two major law enforcement tasks to deal with. When the Mexican police also get involved, Kimble faces danger from all sides.
10 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
The case of the TWO fugitives.
planktonrules29 April 2018
Much of the story is set aboard a yacht heading to Mexico. It seems that the wife of an embezzler (Anne Francis) is headed to this country...and authorities think she's gong there to meet her husband. So, an American agent (Charles Bronson) is assigned to the case. What he doesn't know is that his deckhand is Dr. Richard Kimble!

It's surprising that Charles Bronson would be in the show considering his film career was just starting to heat up. He was very good...and I was impressed how incredibly strong and muscular he was when he did a bunch of topless scenes. Overall, a very good episode...one that continues the fine tradition of excellent installments of "The Fugitive".
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Anne Francis
jsinger-5896912 May 2022
Oh man, was Anne Francis hot! If I were Kimble, I would have given her a call after I was free. She helped him escape and realized what a scumbag her husband was, and he went to prison anyway. If she was interested, I would have dropped that Jean in a heartbeat. And it was lucky for him that Charles Bronson got burnt up in a fire. Kimble winning a fight against a healthy Bronson would have been like Robin beating Kato. Not Kaelin.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/17/67 "The One That Got Away"
schappe124 February 2016
That could be the title of almost any Fugitive episode. Charles Drake, who made a career of playing distinguished-looking but slimy guys, is an embezzler who escaped to Mexico, leaving his wife, (Anne Francis) behind to pretend that she "had no candle burning for him" before leaving the country herself to reunite with him. Kimble is a hand on the boat she hired. The captain of the boat suddenly takes ill and is replaced by Charles Bronson, who actually is an FBI agent after Drake, (the illness was a ruse). He wants to be there when the 'estranged' wife and her husband reunite. When they get to the small Mexican town where Drake is hold up, Kimble finds out there is already a wife of his is there- a new one, his former secretary. Meanwhile Bronson finds out he's got two peas in his pod. He can bring in the embezzler and Kimble at the same time- until he gets injured in a fire and needs Kimble's help.

Anne Francis is a favorite of mine since the "Honey West" days. Unfortunately, she isn't Honey here or she might have been able to take care of the situation all by herself.
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
How does he get back across the border?!
Christopher37018 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This episode moved a little slow for me, but Anne Francis is a pleasure to watch so I didn't mind that too much. I loved how her character just tossed the coins into the sea one by one after telling her cad husband the expensive price of each one before it went flying overboard. Ha!

As another reviewer here has already speculated, I too was impressed (and surprised) at how ripped and muscular Charles Bronson was in his shirtless scenes. I had no idea he was so impressively built.

I liked the episode overall, but what left me confused was the ending showing Kimble being still stuck in Mexico. I have no idea how lax it may have been at that time, but I would think crossing over the U. S./Mexico border by land would be incredibly challenging for anyone...especially a fugitive on the run. I wish there was a scene showing how he made it back into the U. S. without any proper identification before the episode finished.

Come to think of it, a whole episode probably could have been devoted to his dilemma of getting back over the border again, and who helps him. Other than that little head scratcher, this episode wasn't half bad, and it was refreshing to see two guest stars who haven't guested before since this series seemed to like recycling the same actors into different guest parts.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Good outing with one miscast
Guad4219 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Another good episode in this high-quality series. Kimble is deck hand on a yacht chartered by Felice Greer (Anne Francis) to go to Mexico. The captain has been replaced by Ralph Schuyler (Charles Bronson) who is a govt agent hoping that Felice will lead him to her husband Oliver (Charles Drake), an embezzler. Schuyler's agency has also zeroed in on Kimble as a background check reveals that his past is a blank, but they don't know who he really is. Schuyler has to get his fingerprints while at sea to get them traced. He does it and send the prints in on a cigarette pack cellophane wrapper. Felice picks a quiet Mexican port as their destination and Schuyler thinks the husband is there. Before they get to the port, a fire aboard ship wounds Schuyler and he is laid up in bed with burns. Once in the port, Kimble takes a letter from Felice to the local hotel for her husband as Felice stays on the boat to care for Schuyler and avoid leading authorities to her husband. While at the hotel, Kimble gets a note meant for Schuyler that identifies the fingerprints as Richard Kimble. Kimble also sees the husband has his secretary with him masquerading as his wife. Kimble goes back to the boat with the message. While he is gone, Schuyler gets on the boat's radio and learns about Kimble's identity. The wife's note brings the husband to the boat and announces he and Felice will sail off together. Down in the cabin, Schuyler who pulls out a pistol and arrests Kimble. He forces Kimble up on deck and now Schuyler covers him and the wayward couple. Schuyler faints due to his injuries and Felice ends up with the gun. Kimble tells Felice about the fake wife. It comes out that she had converted the embezzled money to rare coins. Oliver denies everything so Felice starts tossing coins overboard to get Oliver to talk. He confesses and Felice is mad. Kimble and Oliver fight. The Mexican police show up. Felice tells Kimble to run. He gets away. Oliver gets wounded by the Mexican police and Schuyler ends up with half of a victory.

The cast is good. Always liked Anne Francis. She doesn't have great range as an actress but what she does do, she does very well. There is a depth to her that makes her more than just another pretty face. Tough but vulnerable makes her appealing. Charles Drake can do the bad guy with a veneer of good breeding with the best of them. This is one of Charles Bronson's last TV roles as he moves exclusively to movies. He had already done big supporting roles in several well received movies (The Magnificent Seven and The Great Escape come to mind) so he was a star on the rise. The producers probably felt they were lucky to get him. Unfortunately, he is miscast here. With his craggy looks and intense, slightly menacing demeanor, he would be great at infiltrating a drug ring or biker gang, but he is too rough around the edges for this assignment. The undercover guy here needed to have a high "likeability" factor and be able to project warmth and sincerity to win over Felice. That ain't Bronson! Also, the script does him no favors. He is the skipper of the boat hired by Felice, so he is the 'hired help" so to speak. Some of the remarks he says to Felice are totally inappropriate and makes her wary and suspicious of him. Maybe the director did that to provide a clear contrast with the likeable Kimble. If so, it worked.

Stray thoughts. Felice throws two coins overboard that she identifies as a1894 liberty head dime worth $12,500 and a1875 Philadelphia three-dollar gold piece ($19,000). Good research by the writers as that was about right for the mid 60s. Assuming the 1894 dime is from the San Francisco mint, the few out there today go for over a million dollars each.

As a kid in the mid 60s, my family watched The Fugitive every week as my mother loved David Janssen. There are two trends obvious throughout its four-year run. One I spotted as a kid - women always fall in love with Kimble after about two days. Those that don't fall in love still like him enough to help him escape even if it costs them, as in this episode. I guess if Kimble had showed up at our house, my mother would have helped him get away. The other trend that I didn't notice back then but is clear now is how many times Kimble gets drawn into police business through no fault of his own but because of the actions of the people around him. This episode is 4-17. Just a quick look back reveals it happens in 4-16, 4-13, 4-11, 4-9, and 4-8. Kimble is very unlucky in that regard. He is like Caine in "Kung Fu". That guy could get into more trouble just walking down a road minding his own business.

Once again, Kimble gets away with nothing and in Mexico, no less. The next episode is in Nebraska, so he travels fast. In the final scene with closing narration, is that the Coronado bridge in San Diego behind him? I think it is. This is a good episode that loses a star for Bronson but do see it.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Bronson and Janssen
jameselliot-118 January 2022
I caught this on Metv and they often cut footage to add more commercials. We see Kimble pull Schuyler (Bronson) out of the burning engine room but its not explained exactly what his injury is and how the boat was able to get to the town where Drake the embezzler is hiding. Thats why I'm thinking the episode was chopped up.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Kimble was really lucky he got away!
kennyp-4417713 April 2022
Boy! Even in real life there would have been no contest physically between Jannsen and Bronson. Charles would have beaten the crap out of David if he had tried to escape. However this is a family show, so that kind of violence isn't shown and there's little aggression between them. In fact the Goliath that Bronson can be is helped by David, when a fire breaks out on the boat.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed