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DVD The Rockford Files - Season One:

  • Rate:
  • Actor(s): James Garner 
  • Director(s): James Garner - Stuart Margolin - Lou Antonio - Stephen J. Cannell - Richard Crenna 
  • Editor: Universal Studios
  • Category: Drama - Movie - TV Shows - Television
  • Availability: Usually ships in 6 to 11 days

    List Price: $39.98
    Our Price: $29.99  YOU SAVE $9.99!   Buy it





  • DVD The Rockford Files - Season One


    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 gun, 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 father "Rocky" (Noah Beery, 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

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    Review(s): DVD The Rockford Files - Season One
    ROCKFORD REVISITED


    AFTER WAITING NEARLY 10YRS TO GET A SET OF 'THE ROCKFORD FILES' I FINALLY GOT MY WISH. WATCHING THE ORIGINALS BACK IN THE 70's AND THEN THE RE-RUNS IN THE 80's WAS MY ENTERTAINMENT AFTER A DAYS WORK. THEN IT STOPPED BEING ON NETWORK AND UHF CHANEL AND ONLY APPEARED ON CABLE. SO WHEN I SAW OL' JIMMY WAS BACK IN A SEASON ONE AND SEASON TWO I HAD TO HAVE THEM. I WAS NOT DISSAPOINTED. WELL, MAYBE I WAS. THE PRODUCT OVERVIEW DOES STATE SOME PEOPLE REPORTING THE DVD FREEZING UP ON TRACKS. WELL THAT'S WHAT HAPPENED TO ME. I HAVE A TOP OF THE LINE SONY DVD PLAYER THAT IS 3YRS. OLD. FIGURING TECHNOLOGY WAS BEATING ME UP, I WENT AND PURCHASED A NEW ONE. THAT DID NOT STOP DISC ONE, SIDE TWO FROM FREEZING UP ON THE 2nd EPISODE.... RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE. EPISODE THREE WOULD NOT PLAY ART ALL. I WROTE TO AMAZON AND HAD A NEW SET IN TWO DAYS. THERE HAVE BEEN NO PROBLEMS WITH IT. I TOOK BACK THE NEW DVD PLAYER AND AM ENJOYING ROCKFORD AGAIN. NOW.....I STILL HAVE SEASON TWO TO WATCH. I HOPE NO FREEZE-UPS OCCUR WITH THIS SET. AFTER ALL THAT IS OUT OF THE WAY, I MUST SAY THAT THIS IS THE ULTIMATE IN TELEVISION WATCHING. THEY DON'T MAKE 'EM LIKE THIS ANYMORE. THE 'TWO HUNDRED DOLLARS A DAY PLUS EXPENSES' NEVER SEEMED TO PAN OUT FOR JIM ROCKFORD WHO WAS ALWAYS GETTING THE SHORT END OF THE STICK ON ALL OF HIS TOUGHEST CASES. WHETHER IT WAS GETTING KNOCKED AROUND BY 'GORILLAS' OR HAVING ROCKY WHACK HIM ON THE 'NOGGIN WITH A SKILLET,OR GETTING RIPPED OFF BY ANGEL (STUART MARGOLIN AT HIS BEST) OR A CLIENT, JIM ROCKFORD PULLED HIMSELF BACK UP TO FINISH THE JOB AND MAKE EVERYONE HAPPY. ESPECIALLY THE VIEWER. I CAN'T WAIT TO SEE IF A SEASON THREE AND FOUR ARE IN THE WORKS.

    Heaven on Earth


    During the last year I've been sampling many of the extraordinary TV series as well as
    mini-series like "Winds of War." Most of these have been via the Sunnyvale Public Library
    which has a great collection of DVD sets, but also from purchases. In earlier days
    I bought the whole Columbia House VHS catalog of 30 minute "Gunsmoke" episodes,
    all the "Have Gun Will Travel" epsiodes, and, yes, all the "Maverick" episodes.

    "Maverick" of course is where James Garner launched his TV and film career, and "The Rockford Files"
    clearly is derived from "Maverick." It is amazing to me that Garner was
    only 29 when "Maverick" was started, and that he could carry it in such
    a unique direction. From the first episode (when I saw it as an adult) it was
    obvious that he was going to be a major film star.

    "Rockford" is the best detective series ever, with a sense of humor and humanity that
    that many of the major dramatic series wpuld be lucky to stumble into.

    In short, "Rockford" is the best of all possible television worlds.

    Buy as many as you can.

    TN

    Postmodern before the term existed


    Rockford Files has some of the best writing, acting and cinematography of any series ever produced, bar none--and that includes classics like "The Prisoner" or "Rawhide". Jim Rockford's character is never completely revealed and the writers sometimes abandon the plot before any denouement is possible. Guest characters are often without any affecting qualities; his father never shows him physical affection and often treats him like an estranged buddy. This is LA and SoCal of 197x. Hippies are to be rounded up, hipsters are to be viewed with suspicion.

    Angel (Stewart Margolis) doesn't feature in the first 2 seasons but his character is essential to the humor that later drives the series (after the writers exhaust reworking the basics) and drives it forward to the eventual tragedy that Jim must suffer to find redemption. I will never tire of watching this...I can only hope that the rest of the seasons soon appear on DVD. Enjoy, buy. Order now.


    Related DVD's The Rockford Files - Season One 


    The Rockford Files - Season Two DVD

    "The best detective series ever," according to TV Guide, the second Rockford Files set begins at the beginning. That's because the double-length pilot ("Backlash of the Hunter") appears as an extra. In this episode, Jim Rockford (James Garner) explains to guest star Lindsay Wagner, "I only handle criminal cases that are closed." The first Rockford file also introduces his errant father, Rocky (Robert Donley, who'll soon be replaced by Noah Beery Jr.), detective buddy Dennis (Joe Santos, The Sopranos), and squirrelly pal Angel (Emmy winner Stuart Margolin) with whom he did time at San Quentin (before being granted a full pardon). Season two highlights include the two-part "Gearjammers," in which Rockford discovers his dad's secret life, "Chicken Little Is a Little... More Info about this DVD
    Director(s): Hy Averback - Harry Falk - Bruce Kessler - Stuart Margolin - Lawrence Dobkin 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 13 June 2006
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    Columbo - The Complete Third Season DVD

    Oh, just one more thing, mystery mavens--get ready to be mystified and entertained by the award-winning third season of Columbo, starring Peter Falk as the rumpled but unbeatable Lieutenant. Having taken home Emmys for outstanding limited drama and lead actor in its '71-'72 debut season, Columbo was again named best drama for its third season ('73-'74). The reason for the repeat success? The formula remained the same: intelligent, engaging scripts and direction, guest performances by top actors, and, of course, Falk at center stage as Columbo, the most unlikely of supersleuths, but unquestionably one of the sharpest (the role would later earn Falk three more Emmys between 1975 and 1990). The 10 episodes compiled in this two-disc set again feature top talent from film and... More Info about this DVD
    Director(s): Steven Spielberg 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 09 August 2005
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    Columbo - The Complete Fourth Season DVD

    What can you say about Columbo, the unassuming and bungling, yet brilliant sleuth who always gets his man or woman. Part of the brilliance of this series is that the murder occurs at the beginning of the episode. Columbo is then called to the scene of the crime and in his annoying and ultimately endearing manner slowly unravels the mystery. It becomes obvious early on that Columbo has the uncanny instincts, intelligence and experience to handle the job and almost always has a suspect in mind. The murders are ingenious and sometimes umpremeditated, yet the murderers all ultimately incrimminate themselves by their own behavior and the many clues they drop along the way. When Columbo finally nabs his mouse after a long and determined pursuit, he then reveals to them their one fatal... More Info about this DVD
    Director(s): Steven Spielberg - Bernard L. Kowalski - Ben Gazzara 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 14 March 2006
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    Hill Street Blues - Season 1 DVD

    Created by Steven Bochco and one of television's most influential series, Hill Street Blues was not your father's cop show. The Emmy-winning pilot episode, "Hill Street Station," immediately established the series as less a police procedural than an up-close and personal "interface with the police experience." To establish gritty, documentary-like realism, the show featured sequences, such as the pre-credit roll call, that were filmed with a hand-held camera. There was chaotic, overlapping dialogue. There were sudden, shocking bursts of violence that claimed popular characters. Story lines were not wrapped up at the end of the hour, but instead, unfolded serially throughout the season. It's no wonder that Hill Street, while championed by most critics, was initially not... More Info about this DVD
    Director(s): Lawrence Levy (II) - Jack Starrett - Mark Frost - John D. Hancock - Scott Brazil 
    DVD Release Date: Released the 31 January 2006
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