NCIS (season 1)
NCIS (season 1) | |
---|---|
Season 1 U.S. DVD Cover | |
Starring | |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 23 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | September 23, 2003 – May 25, 2004 |
Season chronology | |
The first season of the American police procedural drama NCIS was originally broadcast between September 23, 2003 and May 25, 2004 on CBS. The first season dealt with introducing the characters and their strengths, skills, and weaknesses. Three recurring characters are also introduced: the main foe for the first two seasons, Ari Haswari; Special Agent Timothy McGee and Jimmy Palmer who replaces Gerald Jackson, Ducky's assistant, after he was shot. The season also introduces Sasha Alexander as Special Agent Caitlin Todd who serves as Special Agent Vivian Blackadder's (Robyn Lively) replacement, who was a member of Gibbs's team during the two-part JAG backdoor pilot.
Cast
Main
- Mark Harmon as Leroy Jethro Gibbs, Senior Special Agent assigned to Washington's Navy Yard
- Sasha Alexander as Caitlin Todd, former Secret Service Agent recruited to NCIS
- Michael Weatherly as Anthony DiNozzo, Special Agent, second in command
- Pauley Perrette as Abby Sciuto, Forensic Specialist attached to NCIS
- David McCallum as Dr. Donald Mallard, Chief Medical Examiner
Supporting
- Joe Spano as Tobias Fornell, Senior FBI Special Agent
- Sean Murray as Timothy McGee, Probationary Agent who works at the Norfolk Naval Base
- Jessica Steen as Paula Cassidy; Senior Special Agent
- Alan Dale as Thomas Morrow, NCIS Director
Guest appearances
- Rudolf Martin as Ari Haswari, rogue Mossad Agent
- Alicia Coppola as Faith Coleman, JAG Commander
- Pancho Demmings as Gerald Jackson, Ducky's first assistant
- Patrick Labyorteaux as Bud Roberts, JAG Lieutenant from Falls Church
- Adam Baldwin as Michael Rainer, Navy Commander
- Eric Ladin as P.O. Thompson
Episodes
No. in series |
No. in season |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Production code |
U.S. viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Yankee White" | Donald P. Bellisario | Teleplay by: Donald P. Bellisario Story by: Donald P. Bellisario & Don McGill | September 23, 2003 | 101 | 13.04[1] |
While on Air Force One, a Navy commander, Ray Trapp (Gerald Downey) who was tasked with carrying the "football" dies under mysterious circumstances, forcing an emergency landing in Wichita, Kansas but while his death is originally thought to be a tragic accident, NCIS eventually uncovers evidence suggesting the commander was in fact murdered and that it might be connected to a possible assassination attempt on the President. | |||||||
2 | 2 | "Hung Out to Dry" | Alan J. Levi | Don McGill | September 30, 2003 | 102 | 12.08[2] |
A Marine (Brian Patrick Wade) dies during a night-time training jump. The culprit seems to be a faulty parachute, but the standard investigation reveals that the death might not have been an accident after all. Gibbs begins to believe that the supposed accident which resulted in the Marine's death might actually be murder after all and he and Tony, along with new recruit Kate Todd, set out to find out who tampered with the dead Marine's faulty parachute and eventually sent him to his death. Note: This is the first crossover with JAG in this series, with the appearance of Lt. Bud Roberts Jr. (Patrick Labyorteaux). | |||||||
3 | 3 | "Seadog" | Bradford May | John C. Kelley & Donald P. Bellisario | October 7, 2003 | 103 | 11.26[3] |
When a driver-less boat and several bodies, including that of a Navy commander wash up on the beach, seemingly during a freelance drugs deal gone sour, the media is quick to link him to drug trafficking and the evidence stacks up. Being a former Marine himself, Gibbs refuses to believe that a good officer could be so corrupt, and in his efforts to clear the commander's record and good name, uncovers a turf war between two rival drug gangs, and a terrorist's scheme to knock out the national power grid. The NCIS team is aided in its investigation by a DEA Agent (played by William R. Moses), and FBI Special Agent Tobias Fornell. | |||||||
4 | 4 | "The Immortals" | Alan J. Levi | Darcy Meyers | October 14, 2003 | 104 | 11.70[4] |
The discovery of a drowned sailor in dress whites, with an officer's ceremonial sword and weights chained to his waist, sparks a suicide investigation and eventually sends the team to the USS Foster so that they can dig into the deceased officer's life and find out what his colleagues thought of him. Kate refuses to believe that the deceased sailor committed suicide as, like her, he came from a Catholic family where suicide is considered a mortal sin. Meanwhile Abby discovers a link between the crew of the USS Foster and an MMORPG known as The Immortals, and begins searching the game for clues and evidence in order to assist Gibbs and the team in solving the case and saving the ship from possible destruction. | |||||||
5 | 5 | "The Curse" | Terrence O'Hara | Teleplay by: Don McGill, Jeff Vlaming & Donald P. Bellisario Story by: Donald P. Bellisario | October 28, 2003 | 105 | 13.50[5] |
Gibbs and the team are called in when a mummified lieutenant, who was believed to have absconded with 1.2 million dollars of stolen Navy funds nine years previously and later received a dishonorable discharge for allegedly deserting his position, is found in a half-buried cargo pod with Navy markings on it by a deer hunter deep in the woods of St. Mary's River State Park. Two former shipmates who serve with the deceased come under suspicion for both the murder and the theft. Gibbs and Tony work at investigating the murder, while Kate is charged with tracking down the missing funds although she is more devoted to ensuring the dead lieutenant's former wife and young daughter receive his death benefits. Abby uses a computer reconstruction to work a confession out of a possible suspect. | |||||||
6 | 6 | "High Seas" | Dennis Smith | Teleplay by: Jeff Vlaming & Larry Moskowitz Story by: Jeff Vlaming | November 4, 2003 | 106 | 11.77[6] |
One of Gibbs' former team members, NCIS Special Agent Stan Burley who is on board the USS Enterprise investigating a case calls for assistance when a sailor suffers a meth overdose while on leave, despite the sailor in question claiming that he's never taken the drug. Gibbs, Tony, and Kate fly out to investigate. Not long after their arrival, another sailor is admitted to sickbay under the same circumstances and later dies. The team also discovers that the crew is unusually efficient and several senior crew members are behaving strangely. | |||||||
7 | 7 | "Sub Rosa" | Michael Zinberg | George Schenck & Frank Cardea | November 18, 2003 | 107 | 13.21[7] |
NCIS Norfolk Case Agent Timothy McGee works on a case of a partially dissolved corpse found in a barrel of acid at the Norfolk Naval Base, and calls in the Major Case Response Team to help him. As the investigation continues, it soon becomes apparent that the killer took steps to prevent the body from being identified. Gibbs quickly comes to believe that the motive for the brutal murder was identity theft and his suspicions are further confirmed when it's revealed that although a submariner is dead, no one has been reported missing, leading Gibbs to believe that an imposter is on one of the submarines. Tony, Abby, and McGee are tasked with identifying the deceased, while Gibbs and Kate are sent underwater on a submarine to vet five possible suspects, one of whom might have been responsible for the murder and to also prevent a possible sarin attack from taking place. | |||||||
8 | 8 | "Minimum Security" | Ian Toynton | Philip DeGuere, Jr. & Donald P. Bellisario | November 25, 2003 | 108 | 12.71[8] |
The team heads for Cuba when Ducky and Gerald discover that a dead translator from Gitmo they have been working on has a stomach full of emeralds. NCIS Special Agent Paula Cassidy proves to be more than a match for Tony when he is ordered to investigate her involvement, while Gibbs and Kate try to discover where the emeralds came from, how they ended up in their translator's stomach, and prevent the assassination of an important prisoner with links to Osama Bin Laden. | |||||||
9 | 9 | "Marine Down" | Dennis Smith | John C. Kelley | December 16, 2003 | 109 | 12.03[9] |
The team is called to investigate when a dead Marine's wife receives a phone call from her husband who supposedly died under suspicious circumstances. However, the case is complicated when someone impersonates the Marine's CO and Tony. As the investigation continues, the Marine turns up embalmed, having been killed two days after his funeral supposedly took place. Gibbs suspects CIA involvement, and the team soon find themselves tracking a rogue operative who killed the first Marine as a part of a cover-up in regards to a classified mission that ended in disaster and is now attempting to kill off the dead Marine's partner to make sure that the investigation is wrapped up while he flees with the money the CIA previously paid in an attempt to save the two kidnapped Marines. As such, the team find themselves racing against the clock as they attempt to rescue the deceased Marine's partner before another murder takes place and take down the rogue CIA agent once and for all. | |||||||
10 | 10 | "Left for Dead" | James Whitmore, Jr. | Teleplay by: Don McGill & Donald P. Bellisario Story by: Don McGill | January 6, 2004 | 110 | 14.51[10] |
Kate immediately develops a close, personal bond with a young woman (Sherilyn Fenn) suffering from amnesia after she wakes up and crawls from her grave in a national park following a possible murder attempt. Her memory is completely blank but the woman or "Jane Doe" claims to remember that a bomb is present on a Navy ship and that people will die unless it's found, leading Gibbs and the team off on a hunt for the bomb and also to find Jane's true identity. But unknown to Kate and the team, Jane is actually lying to Kate as she is already beginning to secretly remember her past and is probably planning something to strike back against her employers, something that might end in bloodshed not only for her but could affect Gibbs and his team as well... | |||||||
11 | 11 | "Eye Spy" | Alan J. Levi | George Schenck, Frank Cardea & Dana Coen | January 13, 2004 | 111 | 14.00[11] |
NCIS is called in to investigate the murder of a naval officer at Little Creek Naval Base following an anonymous tip-off. McGee manages to track the tip-off to Langley, suggesting that the CIA has been spying on the base. Gibbs and Kate follow the tip-off, coming across a witness who leads the team to several possible suspects. At first the murder seems to be tied in with work the officer was involved with, but Gibbs soon begins to suspect that the motive for the death might not actually be espionage-related and that someone else might be the true killer.. | |||||||
12 | 12 | "My Other Left Foot" | Jeff Woolnough | Jack Bernstein | February 3, 2004 | 112 | 12.31[11] |
When the severed leg of a marine is discovered in a dumpster, Gibbs and the team immediately run into a problem – identifying who the leg belongs to and finding the rest of his body. Kate and Tony are ordered to find the marine's place of burial and exhume the body, only to discover that the marine to whom the leg belongs to was apparently cremated years ago by a very distraught woman claiming to be the deceased marine's sister. Gibbs talks to an old Marine buddy of his and discovers that there is more to this "sister" than meets the eye. The NCIS team decide to investigate closer to home where they uncover a mother and daughter who are both guarding a deep secret... | |||||||
13 | 13 | "One Shot, One Kill" | Peter Ellis | Gil Grant | February 10, 2004 | 113 | 13.18[12] |
When an over-embellishing marine recruiter is killed, the NCIS team quickly discover that a highly intelligent and skilled sniper was behind the attack. Initially, the team believes the sniper had a grudge against the recruiter, but when a second attack occurs the investigation takes on a wider scope and as a result, the FBI are called in, bringing Gibbs into direct conflict with his old friend Fornell. After hitting several dead ends, the team realize that the killer had left a "calling card" in the form of a white feather at each scene and was most likely targeting recruiters in revenge for being rejected by the Corps. Hoping to lure out the killer, Gibbs dons his old Marine uniform and takes over the recruitment office with Kate as his new "commanding officer", while DiNozzo and the FBI team lie in wait. | |||||||
14 | 14 | "The Good Samaritan" | Alan J. Levi | Jack Bernstein | February 17, 2004 | 114 | 13.49[13] |
A local county sheriff calls in NCIS upon discovering a murdered lieutenant commander by the roadside, quickly followed by the murder of a civilian contractor two counties over. As the team struggle to find a motive or suspects for either case, another murder occurs; this time a naval aviator. Ducky points out that while the murders appear to follow the same modus operandi and seem to have been carried out by a serial killer, some elements are different, indicating that the murders were not carried out by the same individual which suggests that there is a copycat on the loose. A DNA sample draws suspicion onto the widow of the third victim, but she has an iron-clad alibi, leaving Gibbs and the team with a complex investigation and many loose ends to tie up. | |||||||
15 | 15 | "Enigma" | Thomas J. Wright | John C. Kelley | February 24, 2004 | 115 | 12.14[14] |
Gibbs puts his career on the line after finding out that a marine colonel, William Ryan (Terry O'Quinn) who also happens to be his former CO has absconded from Iraq with two million dollars, and returned to the States under an assumed name. The FBI, led by Fornell, believe that he staged the ambush and stole the money for himself while Gibbs denies the claim, believing he is innocent. Ryan later contacts Gibbs, and explains that he has discovered a conspiracy to siphon funds out of Iraq for use on black ops while vehement denying any responsibility. Gibbs finds himself a delicate situation as he realizes that Ryan is mentally unstable after the latter kept mentioning a "Lt. Cameron", Gibbs' former company XO who had died in his arms years ago. After being arrested for "pissing off the FBI", Gibbs, along with Fornell, set out to discover the truth behind the Colonel's claims in a tense standoff and discover that Ryan had indeed been framed. With the truth out and the standoff over, Ryan is admitted into a mental hospital so that he can be treated for his paranoid schizophrenia. | |||||||
16 | 16 | "Bête Noire" | Peter Ellis | Donald P. Bellisario | March 2, 2004 | 116 | 12.82[15] |
Ducky responds to an emergency call when the Israeli Embassy sends a Royal Navy officer to NCIS for autopsy, only to find a gunman (revealed in later episodes to be recurring antagonist Ari Haswari) inside the body bag. As Ducky, Gerald and eventually Kate are held hostage in the autopsy lab, the director and Gibbs co-ordinates with an FBI strike team to negotiate their release. Meanwhile, Kate questions herself after she hesitates when presented with an opportunity to kill her captor, while Gibbs and Tony assist with the hostage rescue team. Haswari requests for Gibbs in the autopsy lab and challenges him to try and shoot him. | |||||||
17 | 17 | "The Truth is Out There" | Dennis Smith | Jack Bernstein | March 16, 2004 | 117 | 13.29[16] |
During a rave party, the body of a petty officer falls through the ceiling. Preliminary investigation suggests that the Petty Officer was killed in the nearby parking lot, and was dressed after his death. Upon checking the victim's room, evidence surfaces that he might have been taking financial bribes or someone else may have been blackmailing him. Gibbs suspects the victim's co-workers of involvement in the death when their separate versions of events are too consistent. Forensic evidence links them to the scene, and they eventually confess that their co-worker's death was a result of a prank gone wrong. However, Gibbs believes that the petty officer's death was more than just an accident. | |||||||
18 | 18 | "UnSEALeD" | Peter Ellis | Thomas L. Moran | April 6, 2004 | 118 | 10.83[17] |
A former Navy SEAL convicted of double homicide escapes from Leavenworth, resulting in Kate and McGee being assigned to protect the son and in-laws of the escaped prisoner. During the night, the SEAL breaks into the house to see his son before fleeing, leaving Todd tied to a chair and unarmed, her weapon having been taken by the SEAL as a form of protection and to be possibly used in another crime of some sort. Using her profiling skills, Kate theorizes that he may actually be innocent and had discovered the identity of the real killer while in jail. At headquarters, the team has to contend with the antagonistic defense and prosecution attorneys, one of which is Lt. Commander Faith Coleman as they review the evidence in order to find the real murderer before the SEAL delivers his own brand of justice: revenge. | |||||||
19 | 19 | "Dead Man Talking" | Dennis Smith | George Schenck & Frank Cardea | April 27, 2004 | 119 | 11.64[18] |
Special Agent Chris Pacci is brutally murdered while investigating a cold case, prompting a guilt-ridden Gibbs to step in and take over the case while attempting to find Pacci's killer. Picking up from where Pacci left off with McGee's assistance, the team follows the trail of millions of dollars embezzled by Navy Lt. Cmdr. Hamilton Voss (who died before trial), and is led to a mysterious woman named Amanda Reed (Jamie Luner) who seems to appear near wherever Voss has been stationed. The agents take shifts conducting a stake-out on the woman's house, until Tony is caught raiding the mailbox. Forced to improvise, he introduces himself as a resident of the neighborhood and strikes up a conversation based on what he had heard via surveillance. This gives him a chance to get close to the suspect in order to find out more, as he goes on a successful date with her. Meanwhile, Abby makes a shocking discovery which turns the direction of the case and will give Kate something to mock Tony about for time to come. | |||||||
20 | 20 | "Missing" | Jeff Woolnough | John C. Kelley | May 4, 2004 | 120 | 10.13[19] |
The disappearance of a marine from a bar draws NCIS in to investigate, and it's discovered that several marines from the same unit have also vanished under similar circumstances. When skeletal remains of one of the missing men is found chained to a pipe in a small sewer room, Gibbs begins to suspect the unit CO (the only team member not dead or missing) as a serial killer. However, when Tony vanishes while tailing the CO from the unit, the investigation takes on a more frantic pace and McGee is called back in from Norfolk to help as Gibbs and Kate work against the clock to find Tony before it's too late. Unfortunately, their only hope of finding Tony and the missing marine alive is an uncooperative journalist.The team ultimately uncovers a shocking truth about some petty matters of the EOD unit gone wrong over 12 years ago and that the survivor of the fatality was the serial killer. It was further proved when she shot and killed the unit CO in front of Dinozzo's eyes. | |||||||
21 | 21 | "Split Decision" | Terrence O'Hara | Bob Gookin | May 11, 2004 | 121 | 11.07[20] |
As Ducky meets his new assistant, Jimmy Palmer who is replacing the injured Gerald Jackson, Gibbs and the team handle the case of a marine found impaled on a tree stump after being shot with a SMAW. The investigation uncovers the sale of decommissioned military weapons on the black market. Tony goes undercover and meets the buyer, only to stumble into an undercover ATF operation. Working with ATF Special Agent Stone, Gibbs poses as a weapons supplier to complete the deal, and must double cross everyone in order to find the corrupt person at the center of the investigation, and the one responsible for the marine's death. | |||||||
22 | 22 | "A Weak Link" | Alan J. Levi | Jack Bernstein | May 18, 2004 | 122 | 10.39[21] |
Routine training results in the death of a U.S. Navy SEAL lieutenant just days before he was due to deploy on a classified hostage rescue operation. The death is initially dismissed as an equipment malfunction, but Abby discovers that the link attaching the lieutenant to his rappelling rope was made of a weaker material than factory standard, suggesting sabotage and potentially murder. Pressure is applied by the CIA for the investigation to be wrapped up within 38 hours so the operation can continue or else the entire mission, which is of national security importance, will be scrubbed. As the case goes on, Gibbs discovers that the lieutenant had a secret, and that his wife might be holding back vital information about his death. Meanwhile, Abby deals with her relationship with McGee. | |||||||
23 | 23 | "Reveille" | Thomas J. Wright | Donald P. Bellisario | May 25, 2004 | 123 | 10.86[22] |
As Gibbs' obsession with tracking down the infiltrator who held Todd and Ducky hostage in "Bête Noire" begins reaching new heights, the team grow more concerned about him. But when Kate is kidnapped and reunited with the terrorist, Gibbs's anger goes into overdrive as he pushes McGee and Tony to find out more information about the man responsible, not realizing that Kate's life might be in great danger.... |
DVD release
NCIS: Naval Criminal Investigative Services- The Complete First Season[23] | |||||
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Set details | Special features | ||||
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Release dates | |||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | |||
June 6, 2006[24] | July 24, 2006[25] | August 10, 2006[26] |
References
Wikiquote has quotations related to: NCIS (season 1) |
- ↑ "No Title Found". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "Cbs Wins Tuesday In Viewers And Households". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ http://www.cbspressexpress.com/div.php/cbs_network/release?id=5031
- ↑ "Against Six Nights Of Baseball, Cbs Is A Solid Second". Cbspressexpress.com. October 21, 2003. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "With Baseball Done, Cbs Back To Number One!". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "CBS Has Its Most Watched Tuesday of the Season and Matches Highs In Adults 18–49 and Adults 25–54". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "CBS Places First In Viewers, Households, Adults 25–54 and Second In Adults 18–49 For the Second Consecutive Week". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "CBS Keeps the Post-Sweeps Momentum Going, Winning Its Fourth Consecutive Week In Viewers, Households and Adults 25–54 While Also Placing First In Adults 18–49". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "Ho, Ho, Ho, Jerry Bruckheimer Steals The Week'S Show". Cbspressexpress.com. December 23, 2003. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "CBS Places First In Viewers For the 12th Time In 16 Weeks". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- 1 2 "Cbs Places First In Households And Strong Second In Viewers To Football-Driven Fox". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "Cbs Enjoys A Very Jerry Week". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "Cbs Places First In Viewers For The Fourth Consecutive Week". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "WEEKLY PROGRAM RANKINGS". ABC Medianet. Retrieved September 28, 2010.
- ↑ "CBS Is First In Viewers and Households and Second In Adults 25–54". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "It'S A Mad, Mad, Mad Week!". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "CBS Places First In Viewers and Households For the Sixth Consecutive Week and For the 10th Time In the Past 11 Weeks". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ ""Csi" Rules The Week'S Ratings". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "Weekly Program Rankings". ABC Medianet. Retrieved September 28, 2010.
- ↑ "CBS Wins Its 24th Week of the Season, More Than Twice the Amount of Weekly Wins of the Other Networks Combined". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "CBS Places First In Viewers For the 25th Week This Season". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "CBS's Comedies and Dramas Dominate the Week's Scripted Programming". Cbspressexpress.com. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ↑ "NCIS Naval Criminal Investigative Service – The Complete First Season". Amazon.com. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
- ↑ "NCIS Naval Criminal Investigative Service – The Complete First Season (2003)". Amazon.com. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
- ↑ "NCIS – Naval Criminal Investigative Service – Season 1 [DVD]". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
- ↑ "NCIS – The Complete 1st Season (6 Disc Set)". EzyDVD. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
- General references
- "NCIS Episodes". TV Guide. Retrieved March 22, 2009.
- "Shows A-Z – ncis on cbs". the Futon Critic. Retrieved March 22, 2009.
- "NCIS: Episode Guide". TV.com. Retrieved March 22, 2009.