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Post-55th Anniversary Viewing
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Hogan's Heroes
"The Hostage"
Originally aired December 16, 1967
The Germans build a rocket fuel depot within sight of the stalag, but it's a trap on the part of General von Heiner (Marcuse), who's accompanied by Marya (Nita Talbot in the first reprisal of her recurring role). Hogan suspects foul play and von Heiner suspects Hogan's involvement with the underground. When the general discovers a bug in Klink's office (but not in the usual place in Hitler's mic), he has the wire traced, but the prisoners are ahead of him and disconnect it, and Hogan tries to pass it off as the work of the Gestapo. With LeBeau as backup, Hogan later makes a rendezvous with Marya at her hotel room in Hammelburg while the general is out, and questions her about potentially having sold the prisoners out while refusing to divulge his own plans.
The prisoners use a tunnel to set a large, timed bomb at the depot (because transporting heavy objects isn't a problem again), but when they're back at the camp, the general has the barracks searched by experts (who never find any of the copious stuff there is to find there), and Hogan is taken to the depot to serve as a hostage. Suspecting the use of a timed explosive, Marya tries to bargain with Hogan for intel about when it will go off in exchange for letting Hogan go. Knowing that the prisoners can't get to the bomb to stop it, Hogan gives von Heiner false intel about partisans planning to attack the place. This ensures that the general is there when the place goes up, while Hogan and Marya are back at the stalag.
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Hogan's Heroes
"Carter Turns Traitor"
Originally aired December 23, 1967
With the situation already in progress, the other prisoners openly threaten Carter with various colorful weapons in view of Schultz under the premise that they suspect him of wanting to defect. When Carter is questioned in Klink's office, he and Hogan drop that Carter is supposedly a chemical weapons expert, and Hogan maneuvers Klink into having experts from the chemical plant come to verify Carter's usefulness to the Reich. In Klink's quarters, Carter gives General Wittkamper (John Myhers) and alluring researcher Fraulein Richter (Antoinette Bower) a story about how he was captured while secretly on a sabotage mission involving a chemical agent. Left alone with Carter, Richter tries to seduce him, but the others intervene via the stove when she tries to poison him and leaves the room.
The general subsequently decides to take Carter to the plant, and Hogan and the others (including Kinch) disguise themselves as hooded Gestapo soldiers to hijack the general's car, announcing that they're there to deal with an unspecified traitor in the party. Schultz confesses to often seeing nothing; Wittkamper confesses to embezzlement; and Richter confesses to being the traitor that the Gestapo is after, who's been sabotaging the general's progress from within. Realizing that she tried to poison Carter because she thought he was for real, Hogan reveals his identity after Schultz has been taken aside and offers to get the general and Richter out of the country so the prisoners can get on with blowing the plant. In the coda, Hogan convinces Klink to sweep the whole matter under the rug to avoid crossing the Gestapo.
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Post-55th Anniversary Viewing
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Hogan's Heroes
"The Hostage"
Originally aired December 16, 1967
Frndly said:Theo Marcuse plays a German general out to get Stalag 13's resident saboteur.
The Germans build a rocket fuel depot within sight of the stalag, but it's a trap on the part of General von Heiner (Marcuse), who's accompanied by Marya (Nita Talbot in the first reprisal of her recurring role). Hogan suspects foul play and von Heiner suspects Hogan's involvement with the underground. When the general discovers a bug in Klink's office (but not in the usual place in Hitler's mic), he has the wire traced, but the prisoners are ahead of him and disconnect it, and Hogan tries to pass it off as the work of the Gestapo. With LeBeau as backup, Hogan later makes a rendezvous with Marya at her hotel room in Hammelburg while the general is out, and questions her about potentially having sold the prisoners out while refusing to divulge his own plans.
The prisoners use a tunnel to set a large, timed bomb at the depot (because transporting heavy objects isn't a problem again), but when they're back at the camp, the general has the barracks searched by experts (who never find any of the copious stuff there is to find there), and Hogan is taken to the depot to serve as a hostage. Suspecting the use of a timed explosive, Marya tries to bargain with Hogan for intel about when it will go off in exchange for letting Hogan go. Knowing that the prisoners can't get to the bomb to stop it, Hogan gives von Heiner false intel about partisans planning to attack the place. This ensures that the general is there when the place goes up, while Hogan and Marya are back at the stalag.
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Hogan's Heroes
"Carter Turns Traitor"
Originally aired December 23, 1967
IMDb said:The location of a chemical plant is the prize when Hogan gets Carter to become a traitor.
With the situation already in progress, the other prisoners openly threaten Carter with various colorful weapons in view of Schultz under the premise that they suspect him of wanting to defect. When Carter is questioned in Klink's office, he and Hogan drop that Carter is supposedly a chemical weapons expert, and Hogan maneuvers Klink into having experts from the chemical plant come to verify Carter's usefulness to the Reich. In Klink's quarters, Carter gives General Wittkamper (John Myhers) and alluring researcher Fraulein Richter (Antoinette Bower) a story about how he was captured while secretly on a sabotage mission involving a chemical agent. Left alone with Carter, Richter tries to seduce him, but the others intervene via the stove when she tries to poison him and leaves the room.
The general subsequently decides to take Carter to the plant, and Hogan and the others (including Kinch) disguise themselves as hooded Gestapo soldiers to hijack the general's car, announcing that they're there to deal with an unspecified traitor in the party. Schultz confesses to often seeing nothing; Wittkamper confesses to embezzlement; and Richter confesses to being the traitor that the Gestapo is after, who's been sabotaging the general's progress from within. Realizing that she tried to poison Carter because she thought he was for real, Hogan reveals his identity after Schultz has been taken aside and offers to get the general and Richter out of the country so the prisoners can get on with blowing the plant. In the coda, Hogan convinces Klink to sweep the whole matter under the rug to avoid crossing the Gestapo.
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Yeah, they didn't seem to address that in this case.Now that definitely ruins Klink's reputation.
Just a recurring actor in the common role of an underground contact.I wonder why. It seems like the regular guys don't get enough to do.
To clarify, the Germans never knew that the Russian was hiding at the stalag, and never held him prisoner. They were searching for him because of the downed plane.Another successful escape from Stalag 13, since they never see him again as himself.
Yeah, one kind of got the subtext that they were actually objecting to it being a straight-up assassination mission, especially with the planned assassination having been sidestepped in the end.It doesn't seem any worse than most of their missions.
I seem to recall TOS-centric discussion of home video and syndication versions sometimes having different audio tracks.I'd like to know the story behind that. Did it have the laugh track on the original broadcast? Maybe an unfinished copy was accidentally sent out. Didn't they send out copies to individual markets in those days, or even individual stations?
It seemed like he was using it as a weather observatory.Maybe it was his day job to finance his weather hobby. I assumed he worked for the government.