"JAG" Shadow (TV Episode 1995) Poster

(TV Series)

(1995)

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7/10
Meg Austin starts the main part of "Season One" with NBC
hindsonevansmike30 June 2021
Following the pilot (broadcast in September 1995) the concept was picked up for a season. Inevitably, some acting personnel had moved onwards to other or "better" opportunities (eg Patrick "Bud" who came back for the CBS-sponsored start of Season Two broadcast at the start on 1997).

A reasonable start to the new working relationship between Harm and Meg. Suspense, suspicion and subterfuge all bring about the desired result.

Sail on!
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8/10
"Shadow"
allmoviesfan14 April 2023
Harm Rabb gets his second partner in as many episodes, teaming up with Lieutenant (j.g.) Meg Austin (played by Tracey Needham) a computer weapons specialist from Texas who is friends with Lieutenant Parker, who was his offsider on the USS Seahawk in the previous episode, and who is now working at JAG headquarters as Admiral Brovo's aide. Austin is similarly feisty, and she quickly forms a good rapport with Harm. Which is just as well, because they are thrown into a real mess: transported aboard a submarine held hostage by a rogue hacker whose programming allows for a missile to shadow it's target for a long period of time. He uses that ability to blackmail the US government and threaten to sink a nearby cruise ship with thousands on board if his demands are not met. Or if someone can't get hold of his laptop first, naturally.

Rex Linn, who in later JAG seasons will portray a Russian intelligence agent who crosses paths with Harm and Mac, is the submarine skipper. Interestingly, President Clinton has a cameo in the first scene post the new credit sequence, thanks to some nifty use of stock footage. Stock footage, too, from "The Hunt for Red October" in some of the external scenes.

Another good episode - a step down from the pilot, albeit only a slight one.
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5/10
The villain is a techno-nerd
ebertip30 May 2019
The show opens with Harm jogging in DC. So is President Clinton, who actually appears in the opening. A helicopter drops down, but it is for Harm, not Clinton. The problem is that a nerd (Dirk) has taken control of a sub (Tigershark) by threatening to use a torpedo, under his control through technical wizardry, to blow up something (later determined to be a British cruise ship with 600 passengers). It seems Dirk was a government employee who invented an English/Japanese translator but got nothing in return but his paycheck. There is a lot of antilawyer banter between Dirk and the JAG folks. Dirk's real threat seems to be not sinking the ship but rather all the resulting law suits "feeding frenzy of PI lawyers". Yes, there is a line about the (non-existent) Princeton law school. This is not one of the better written JAG scripts. Clinton was wise to jog away
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2/10
They never do
SlimJim3930 May 2019
Get their nomenclature straight. Throughout this series they consistently called a door a hatch. "A door is a door whether it is afloat or ashore!" A door goes thru a wall / bulkhead. A hatch goes thru the floor or deck. They constantly and consistently call a door a hatch. My guess is they want to sound "salty!" Well it just sounds stupid.
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