Product Description
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The world's most unlikely detective comes to DVD for the first
time ever in all 23 thrilling Season One episodes of The Rockford
Files. Emmy winner James Garner stars as the offbeat Jim
Rockford, an ex-con-turned-private-investigator who would rather
fish than fight, but whose instinct on closed cases is more
golden than his classic Pontiac Firebird. From his mobile home in
Malibu, this wisecracking private eye takes on the cases of the
lost and the dispossessed, chasing down seemingly long-dead clues
in the sun-baked streets and seamy alleys of Los Angeles.
Including an interview with James Garner himself, this phenomenal
DVD set contains 23 TV hours of classic Rockford action and
includes such stellar guest stars as Lindsay Wagner, James Woods,
Abe Vigoda, Suzanne Somers and Ned Beatty. The Rockford Files are
now open and declassified for mystery fans everywhere!
Bonus Content:
Disc 1:
* James Garner On-Camera Interview
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From the premiere of its first hour-long episode on September
13, 1974, The Rockford Files was a critical and commercial
success that gained a large and loyal following. Like other
private-eye shows of the 1970s (such as Columbo and David
Janssen's Harry O), the series offered smart mystery plots in the
hardboiled-sleuth traditions of Dashiell Hammett, Raymond
Chandler, and Rex Stout, given a sunlit spin in contemporary
California. But ex-convict turned private investigator Jim
Rockford (who served time for a crime he didn't commit) was
anything but a conventional gumshoe; for one thing, he rarely
carried a , and resorted to violence only when he'd exhausted
his options. As played to perfection by James Garner (in what
would become his signature role, surpassing his previous success
as Maverick), Rockford preferred wisecracks over violence, and
his going rate ("$200 a day, plus expenses") was typically
applied to cold cases, missing persons, and family disputes,
frequently leading to entanglements with organized crime and
L.A.P.D. Sergeant Dennis Becker (Joe Santos), whose friendship
with Rockford lent the series one of its pivotal character
relationships. As Rockford pursued the truth from his rusty
trailer-home on the Pacific Coast Highway, his inherent warmth
and compassionate sleuthing were further enhanced by engaging
interplay with his retired ex-trucker her "Rocky" (Noah y,
Jr.), his lawyer and on-and-off girlfriend Beth Davenport
(Gretchen Corbett), and his weasely former cell-mate "Angel"
Martin (Stuart Margolin), a trio of supporting players as
memorably appealing as any in '70s television. As a loose-knit
ensemble, they followed Garner's capable lead with intelligent
dialogue (the best of it written by series cocreator Stephen J.
Cannell and frequent contributor Juanita Bartlett) and
occasionally burst of stunt-laden action, typically involving
Rockford's expert driving of a versatile Pontiac Firebird. (As
Garner fondly recalls in the disc 1 bonus interview, "That car
could do anything.")
With a catchy Mike Post theme song, The Rockford Files began
each week with a new message on Rockford's telephone answering
machine, usually a humorous indication that Rockford's life was
always in some kind of financial disarray. Garner played this
angle to the hilt, portraying Rockford as a nice guy who knew all
the scams and wasn't above using them if it aided his case. His
portrayal, and the show's excellent writing, attracted a wide
variety of new and established guest stars, and these 23 episodes
(24 if you count the two-part "This Case Is Closed," originally
broadcast as one 90-minute episode) feature appearances by Joseph
Cotten, James Woods, Sharon Gless, Lindsay Wagner, James
Cromwell, Suzanne Somers, Ned Beatty, and others, along with
lesser-known but familiar TV regulars like Sian Barbara Allen and
Mills Watson, all adding flavor to a series that was routinely
hailed by mystery writers as one of the best private-eye shows in
TV history. Speaking of mysteries, one can only wonder why
Universal failed to include the series' 90-minute pilot
(originally aired in March 1974), and while this reviewer
experienced no playback problems with these three double-sided
DVDs (four episodes per side), many consumers have reported DVD
freeze-ups likely resulting from lower-quality players less
capable of handling high-compression DVDs. These caveats aside,
season 1 of The Rockford Files is a bona fide treat, setting the
tone for even better episodes that followed in subsequent
seasons. --Jeff Shannon