Hear No Evil | |
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Genre | Crime Drama |
Written by | Tom Lazarus |
Directed by | Harry Falk Jr. |
Starring | |
Composer | Lance Rubin |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producer | Paul Pompian |
Cinematography | Michael P. Joyce |
Editor | Ann E. Mills |
Running time | 120 minutes (with commercials) |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | CBS |
Release | November 20, 1982 |
Hear No Evil is a 1982 made-for-television-film directed by Harry Falk Jr. [1] [2] and written by Tom Lazarus. [2] The TV film stars Gil Gerard, Bernie Casey, Wings Hauser, Mimi Rogers, Christina Hart, Brion James, Ron Karabatsos, Mickey Jones, Raven De La Croix, and Robert Dryer. [2] [3] [4]
After a cop becomes deaf in a fight, he tries to break up a drug ring run by bikers.
Hear No Evil is based on the true story of William O. "Bill" Zerby, a former Marine who, as a Solano County Sherriff's Office narcotics detective, aggressively perused members of the Hells Angels suspected of producing and distributing methamphetamine in the San Francisco Bay Area. [5] Zerby was injured, suffered severe hearing loss and was forced to retire from his law enforcement agency as a result of an explosive device detonated as he was entering his car in front of his home on January 30, 1978. [6] He was en route to court for a prehearing in the methamphetamine possession trial of Oakland Hells Angels chapter vice-president James Ezekiel "Jim-Jim" Brandes at the time. [7] Brandes, who had previously been found to be in possession of a military handbook on booby traps and an address book containing the address, phone number and the license-plate number of Zerby when he was arrested on drug charges by Zerby and another detective on November 14, 1977, stated to a reporter for Rolling Stone magazine in or around November 1978 that "Zerby drew a line and stepped over it. I don't take that from anybody in the streets, and I sure ain't gonna take that from him. I don't let nobody come around and shove me around. I don't think anyone does if he's a man." [8] [9] The following year, Brandes and Kenneth Jay "K.O." Owen, a member of the Vallejo Hells Angels who had previously been arrested after a raid on his home led by Zerby uncovered narcotics and prohibited firearms on June 21, 1977, were charged with the attempted murder of Zerby as part of a racketeering case. [10] Brandes and Owen were ultimately acquitted of the attempt on Zerby's life. [11] Brandes later committed suicide by hanging himself in prison circa 1994. [12] Owen died July 4, 2016, [13] and Zerby died in 2021 at the age of seventy-nine. [14]
Producer Paul Pompian heard of the Zerby incident while filming a TV pilot in San Francisco and decided to pursue the idea of translating the events into a teleplay. [15] Paul Pompian Productions and MGM Television produced the television film which could have become a television series. [4] [16]
Film critic John J. O'Connor of The New York Times wrote in his review: "TRAINING for a new gimmick in the old police-drama formula, Hear No Evil, tomorrow's television movie on CBS, Channel 2, at 9, comes up with a deaf cop." [17] Staff of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote: "Gil Gerard as Bill Dragon in a routine cop drama with a banal script and what only approximates acting. Even the central gimmick of permanently deafening the hero in an explosion seems to have been transferred by rubbings from ancient stones." [18]