Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

DRAGNET

Dr Doran

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,854
Location
Los Angeles
I recently got the first 3 episodes of the old tv show, hoping for some noir fun. I only watched the first one. IT WAS HORRIBLE.

Am I missing something?
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,697
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
There was never anything noirish about Dragnet -- never any ambiguity as to who was good and who was evil, never any shadings of grey in the characters. What it was, was the first meticulously accurate police-procedural program, on both radio and TV, the first program to treat police officers not as either heroes or stooges but as ordinary working people doing a difficult job. Jack Webb had a very meticulous approach to his material, and it isn't to everyone's taste -- but in his own quiet way he was a revolutionary.

An essay I wrote some years ago about the radio version of Dragnet can be found here --

http://www.lofcom.com/nostalgia/columns/retro/199909.phtml
 

Vornholt

One of the Regulars
Messages
170
The radio versions are vastly better than the stiff first episodes on TV. Don't judge the program by that early TV effort.
 

Doh!

One Too Many
Messages
1,079
Location
Tinsel Town
My take on Dragnet is thus:

The radio shows are superb, from the pacing to the sound effects.

The black-and-white version is a good, solid police drama. Noirish in look if not in tone.

The color ones are pretty campy with today's eyes. But also the most entertaining -- and watchable.

There was a syndicated version in the '90s that was just... lame.

The most recent Ed O'Neill version was a nice try, but they didn't seem to "get" it. They paired Friday with a much younger partner whereas the joy of watching/listening to the Webb versions was that the two cops were always peers and thus quite comfortable with each other.

Finally, the Dan Ackroyd/Tom Hanks movie was pretty damned funny at the time, although I haven't seen in many years.

(Ms. Maine, nice essay!)
 

dostacos

Practically Family
Messages
770
Location
Los Angeles, CA
remember that was a totally pro LAPD program and the badge they show at the beginning was actually "issued" to Jack Webb.

I loved how every week they worked for a different unit, one week day watch bunco, the next time robbery/homicide on nights. No wonder Joe Friday never wanted to get married.

As for quality, please judge against other TV shows of the time, you will find it not nearly as disagreeable in that light.;)
 

Flivver

Practically Family
Messages
821
Location
New England
dostacos said:
As for quality, please judge against other TV shows of the time, you will find it not nearly as disagreeable in that light.;)

I watched the black & white Dragnet as a kid in the 1950s. Actually, it was one of my favorite shows back then...but I was only in elementary school!

I'll have to pick up some episodes on DVD and see if I still like it. I know I still enjoy Highway Patrol, with Broderick Crawford.

10-4
 

dhermann1

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,154
Location
Da Bronx, NY, USA
Even in the 50's Dragnet was a popular target for lampooning. Jack Webb's utterly flat delivery was about as exciting as watching paint dry. And especially irksome was how he ended each episode with a flat snide comment about the perp of the day. It was really the show you love to hate.
 

funneman

Practically Family
Messages
851
Location
South Florida
I've watched the Dragnet movie from 1953, I believe, and it never disappoints. And it's in color!

From the double barreled shotgun blasts that open the movie to the twist at the end this is not the TV version at all.

Even the dialog is pretty good.

Lab guy: "The first two blasts cut him in half."

Friday: "Yeah, and the last two turned him into a crowd."

I recommend.
 

Mr. 'H'

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,110
Location
Dublin, Ireland, Ireland
Why are you all so negative about Dragnet?

[huh]

It is a good show that helps explain the inner workings of the LAPD. I read a lot of Ellroy and when I later watched the Dragnet show it helped a lot in realizing how he used the show as an inspiration. Even some of the characters appeared in his novel (Thad Green/Thad Brown).

I think the procedure-based show is great when you think how murky the whole history of the LAPD in those days really was.
 

Benny Holiday

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,792
Location
Sydney Australia
Like everything, Dragnet was a product of its time and my parents remembered it as being down to earth and even, for those days, kind of gritty - as LizzieMaine says, it was meant to show everyday cops doing a difficult job.

For today's audiences it can seem cheesy and funny, but of course our versions of entertainment will seem just as trite 50 years down the track. The episode with the guy who went around breaking into people's houses and stealing their canaries was funny, especially when Sgt Friday asks if a lady's checked on her bird lately and they move into the next room to find an empty birdcage. The the melodramatic music comes on: Dum, dum-dum-dum! Dum, da-dum-dum-DUUUM!

Still entertaining I think, but then again, I dig 1950's B-grade flying saucer/juvenile delinquent/mutant monster flicks too!
 

dostacos

Practically Family
Messages
770
Location
Los Angeles, CA
Flivver said:
I watched the black & white Dragnet as a kid in the 1950s. Actually, it was one of my favorite shows back then...but I was only in elementary school!

I'll have to pick up some episodes on DVD and see if I still like it. I know I still enjoy Highway Patrol, with Broderick Crawford.

10-4
ah yes, Highway Patrol, where every week, Broderick Crawford shoots the bad guy while holding his 2" barreled 38 at his waist WHAT A SHOTlol
 

dostacos

Practically Family
Messages
770
Location
Los Angeles, CA
Benny Holiday said:
Like everything, Dragnet was a product of its time and my parents remembered it as being down to earth and even, for those days, kind of gritty - as LizzieMaine says, it was meant to show everyday cops doing a difficult job.

For today's audiences it can seem cheesy and funny, but of course our versions of entertainment will seem just as trite 50 years down the track. The episode with the guy who went around breaking into people's houses and stealing their canaries was funny, especially when Sgt Friday asks if a lady's checked on her bird lately and they move into the next room to find an empty birdcage. The the melodramatic music comes on: Dum, dum-dum-dum! Dum, da-dum-dum-DUUUM!

Still entertaining I think, but then again, I dig 1950's B-grade flying saucer/juvenile delinquent/mutant monster flicks too!
this and other programs were really at the dawn of TV.

The Roy Rogers Show
Sky King
Whirlybirds
Sea Hunt
Dragnet

none of these are known for great actinglol
 

Doh!

One Too Many
Messages
1,079
Location
Tinsel Town
funneman said:
I've watched the Dragnet movie from 1953, I believe, and it never disappoints. And it's in color!

From the double barreled shotgun blasts that open the movie to the twist at the end this is not the TV version at all.

Even the dialog is pretty good.

Lab guy: "The first two blasts cut him in half."

Friday: "Yeah, and the last two turned him into a crowd."

I recommend.

Great dialogue! Yeah, the '53 movie is definitely worth a rental!
 

Dr Doran

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,854
Location
Los Angeles
Well, all I have seen is the first episode ever. A married, middle-class woman has been stealing from department stores. She keeps being described by witnesses as beautiful and in her mid to late 20s. When we finally meet her, she is NOT beautiful by any stretch and at least 42.

I'll read Lizzie Maine's essay. Maybe I'll change my mind.
 

FourKingTwenty

New in Town
Messages
27
Location
Saint Louis, Missouri
Are you referring to "The Big Shoplift?" That's not the first episode ever, it's from the third season. The first episode ever is called "The Human Bomb." It's about a man who threatens to blow up Los Angeles City Hall. I think I know what DVD you have. While "The Big Shoplift" is Episode 1 of Volume 1, it's not the first episode of the series.
 

Dr Doran

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,854
Location
Los Angeles
FourKingTwenty said:
Are you referring to "The Big Shoplift?" That's not the first episode ever, it's from the third season. The first episode ever is called "The Human Bomb." It's about a man who threatens to blow up Los Angeles City Hall. I think I know what DVD you have. While "The Big Shoplift" is Episode 1 of Volume 1, it's not the first episode of the series.

I must have assumed since it was Episode 1 of Volume 1 it was the first episode. OK. Well, it was ... uninspiring.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
108,988
Messages
3,072,174
Members
54,029
Latest member
Flgator954
Top