Product Description
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Matlock is a legal drama series starring Andy Griffith as
defense attorney Ben Matlock - a Harvard-educated, fiery
southerner who charges $100,000 a case to brilliantly defend his
clients by finding the real killer.
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High-profile Atlanta defense attorney Ben Matlock loves hot
dogs, strums ain tunes in his office, and isn’t clear on
whether it is "do lunch and take a meeting" or vice versa. But he
is, as one of his employees observes, "a real class act." Matlock
is more urban than Mayberry Sheriff Andy Taylor from The Andy
Griffith Show, but while both characters have a folksy Southern
charm, no one underestimates Matlock; not at his fee ($100,000!).
No matter how carefully a killer plans and no matter how guilty
Matlock’s client appears, Matlock always seems to know
"something," which he reveals in a dramatic "moment of truth" in
the courtroom worthy of Perry Mason. In some episodes, as in
"Blind Justice," audiences are clued in as to the killer’s
identity, but in most, we are in the dark. Matlock was one of
television’s top 15 shows in this second season. It’s no mystery.
Credit Griffith’s down home appeal. He’s as comfortable to
viewers as Matlock’s favorite well-worn pair of shoes, which he
replaces in one episode with a new pair exactly like it). Credit,
too, clever writing, and some sly touches that manage to take
Matlock just a little outside its comfort zone. The episode, "The
Network," takes the format of a celebrity gossip show that
reports on Matlock’s latest case, his defense of a Hollywood TV
producer accused of killing a studio programming chief.
Then-current NBC stars, including Betty White, Corbin Bernsen,
Rhea Perlman, and even Alf, cameo as themselves talking about the
less than admired victim. A stunt episode, "The Hucksters," in
which viewers were invited to call a toll-free number to vote on
the killer, is presented here with all three alternate endings.
Season two saw cast shake-ups; Linda Purl, who portrayed
Matlock’s daughter and partner, departed the series, opening the
door for Nancy Stafford as Michelle Thomas, who is introduced in
the season-opening two-parter, "The Billionaire," in which
Matlock travels to England to defend a man accused of murdering
his tycoon her. Kari Lizer also joined the cast as Matlock’s
cute new law clerk, Cassie. Kene Holliday returns as Tyler
Hudson, Matlock’s questionable investigator. A more worthy foil
for Griffith and Matlock is Julie Sommars in her Golden
Globe-winning role as feisty prosecutor Julie Marsh. They’re not
exactly David and Maddie from Moonlighting, but their playfully
combative relationship gives the show some sparks. This season
features some great guest stars, including David McCallum (The
Man From U.N.C.L.E., David Ogden Stiers (M*A*S*H), Max Gail
(Barney Miller), Marg Helgenberger (C.S.I.), Mason Adams (Lou
Grant), and David Carradine (Kung Fu). But this is Griffith’s
show all the way. There were certainly edgier, contemporary
series, but Matlock endures as the last name in comfort
television, whose old fashioned pleasures of watching justice be
served never get old. --Donald Liebenson