EPISODE
Zero Hour - Season 1
The series follows Hank Galliston, publisher of a paranormal-skeptics magazine who gets pulled into one of the most compelling conspiracies in human history after his wife, Laila, is abducted.
4 November 1936, Prague, Czechoslovakia [now Czech Republic]
27 January 1970, USA
5 August 1945, Newark, New Jersey, USA
5 December 1951, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
30 December 1989, Malibu, California, USA
29 July 1970, Brooklyn, New York, USA
22 August 1975, London, England, UK
17 October 1945, Manchester, New Hampshire, USA
February 13, 2013
A decent thrill-ride; albeit one with more than a few logic gaps and some outrageously painful dialogue.
February 14, 2013
Zero Hour largely delivers the goods with an effectively paced script and compelling plot points that succeed at drawing you in - and making you think.
February 13, 2013
Ambitious and intermittently entertaining, Zero Hour -- and its celebrated lead -- don't quite hit all their marks. But at least the mystery's a hoot.
February 20, 2013
They looked at the television landscape and saw families, zombies, doctors, werewolves and cops, and said, "Where are the Nazi babies?"
February 14, 2013
Lucidity is not a strong point of Zero Hour. Neither are acting or plot.
February 14, 2013
Nonsensical dialogue, non-characters, clunky plotting, and sub-par production values, Zero Hour is a waste of time.
February 14, 2013
Zero Hour had zero believability for me.
February 14, 2013
Maybe you'll want to jump aboard this crazy train. But if you do, hold on tight, and don't let your head explode.
February 13, 2013
Zero Hour is a conspiracy drama that makes you wonder if network programmers are running their own conspiracy - to lose viewers.
February 14, 2013
The dialogue is laughable: When the kidnapper calls Hank to find out about the location of the clock, Hanks blusters that he doesn't know anything. "It's good that you don't, brother, because if you knew the real truth, you'd lose your mind."

