The best episode directed by Peter Werner is "Gunfight at the So-So Corral", rated 10/10 from 1 user votes. It was "written by Glenn Gordon Caron". "Gunfight at the So-So Corral" aired on 3/5/1985 and is rated 0.0 point(s) higher than their second highest rated, "The Next Murder You Hear".
Dave and Maddie face a difficult situation when they have to tell their client that the son he hired them to find is a notorious contract killer.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Glenn Gordon Caron
Maddie becomes infatuated with a radio talk-show host who has apparently been murdered while he was on the air.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Glenn Gordon Caron
Dave and Maddie find a dead body as they try to collect money for a collection agency, but it disappears without a trace when they try to report it.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Mary Ann Kasica
Dave's older brother shows up unexpectedly, flashing a big roll of money and determined to impress a bemused Maddie, unaware that he's pursued by a drug dealer who wants his money back.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Glenn Gordon Caron
Maddie fears David's old flame is using him when she returns and asks him for help with a bad marriage.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Ron Osborn
Maddie becomes obsessed by the portrait done of her by an artist she never knew and who killed himself upon completing it.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Ali Marie Matheson
Ms. Dipesto finds a baby left in her apartment by a woman named Mary fleeing from the hit men who killed her husband, and Dave and Maddie quarrel over using the agency phones as a "Santa hot line."
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Glenn Gordon Caron
Dave hires an unlucky con woman who accidentally became a heroine when she stopped an assassination attempt against a United States senator, but who is still pursued by a determined crooked cop.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Roger Director
Melinda becomes involved with a couple of ghosts who refuse to cross over after she finds that they are causing trouble for another couple. The ghosts make Melinda play a game of twenty questions.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Teddy Tenenbaum
Bull impulsively agrees to have Benny represent Adam Harris, a young man charged with murder for helping his terminally ill girlfriend end her life, a decision which clashes with Benny’s religious beliefs.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Veronica West
Bull hires an eccentric attorney to represent him when a celebrity sues him after his advice regarding her custody case backfires.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Sarah H. Haught
Dave and Maddie each dream their own solutions to an unsolved 1946 murder case after hearing the story while finishing an investigation.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Debra Frank
Melinda reconnects with old high-school friends after one of their classmates dies mysteriously.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Laurie McCarthy
Bull turns down a major pay day for his company in order to assist a cook accused of murdering his socialite fiancé when he realizes the man's confession to the crime was coerced by the police. Also when Marissa, Cable, and Danny find out Chunk is going on a date with a man he doesn't know well, they try to convince him to use their collective skills to investigate him beforehand.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Cole Maliska
A shocking murder forces Raylan to face past mistakes. Meanwhile, Boyd goes up against Harlan's corrupt sheriff.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Graham Yost
As the Reagans rally together to take down the leader of the gang responsible for the murder of someone close to them, Danny looks to the gang leader’s girlfriend to lead them to him. Meanwhile, Frank is left reeling from a second loss.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Kevin Wade
Melinda must help the ghost of an African-American man who had been attacked and killed by a white co-worker in the 1970's. The ghost is haunting the prosecutor who had enough evidence but still failed to file charges against the white co-worker. Melinda tries to help the ghost find justice and help his son to change his racist views before they're passed on to the next generation.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Rama Laurie Stagner
Danny becomes the lead hostage negotiator when a prime informant in a large drug case holds Erin at gunpoint inside the courtroom.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Siobhan Byrne O'Connor
Raylan realizes he wasn't the sole target of an attempted assassination, and confronts the unlikely culprit once and for all.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Benjamin Cavell
Raylan has a few drinks and gets himself beaten up, after being suspended as a Marshall. He pulls himself together and decides to jeopardise his career further by going after the thugs who have been harassing his ex-wife's new husband.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: N/A
Sherlock resumes his hunt for Moriarty when Sebastian Moran reveals that a man who was thought to be dead from a heart attack was actually on the list of intended victims from Moriarty.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Corinne Brinkerhoff
Joe serves his jury duty on a case against a man accused of murdering his rich wife. Allison starts having visions about the man but D.A. Devalos orders her not to work on the case because of a conflict of interests.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Bruce Miller
Allison can't get a psychotic murderer out of her head which makes Joe worry about his daughters' well-being.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Robert Doherty
Allison helps famous FBI Profiler with a serial killer case. Joe gets concerned when Marie starts to watch static on TV.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Craig Sweeny
While working to locate a missing local girl, Allison learns about secrets from Cynthia Keener's past. Meanwhile, Joe's relationship with Allison is tested after Bridgette's science class project sparks his imagination.
Director: Peter Werner
Writer: Diane Ademu-John