Overview
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Release Date:
13 September 1974 (USA)
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Plot:
The cases of an easy going private investigator.
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Awards:
Nominated for 4 Golden Globes.
Another 6 wins
&
17 nominations
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| William Wiard | | (28 episodes, 1975-1979) |
| Lawrence Doheny | | (12 episodes, 1974-1976) |
| Ivan Dixon | | (9 episodes, 1975-1979) |
| Jerry London | | (8 episodes, 1974-1977) |
| Russ Mayberry | | (7 episodes, 1974-1977) |
| Reza Badiyi | | (7 episodes, 1977-1979) |
| Meta Rosenberg | | (6 episodes, 1976-1978) |
| Lou Antonio | | (5 episodes, 1974-1976) |
| Jackie Cooper | | (5 episodes, 1975-1976) |
| Jeannot Szwarc | | (3 episodes, 1975-1977) |
| Stephen J. Cannell | | (3 episodes, 1977-1979) |
| Corey Allen | | (3 episodes, 1978-1979) |
| Stuart Margolin | | (2 episodes, 1974-1977) |
| Alexander Grasshoff | | (2 episodes, 1974) |
| Harry Falk | | (2 episodes, 1978) |
| Arnold Laven | | (2 episodes, 1978) |
| John Patterson | | (2 episodes, 1979) |
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| Lawrence Dobkin | | (unknown episodes) |
| |
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| Stephen J. Cannell | | (122 episodes, 1974-1980) |
| Roy Huggins | | (122 episodes, 1974-1980) |
| Juanita Bartlett | | (35 episodes, 1974-1979) |
| David Chase | | (20 episodes, 1976-1979) |
| Gordon T. Dawson | | (9 episodes, 1975-1979) |
| Rudolph Borchert | | (5 episodes, 1975-1980) |
| Chas. Floyd Johnson | | (4 episodes, 1975-1978) |
| Don Carlos Dunaway | | (4 episodes, 1975-1976) |
| Edward J. Lakso | | (4 episodes, 1975-1976) |
| Lester Wm. Berke | | (3 episodes, 1976-1980) |
| Donald L. Gold | | (3 episodes, 1976-1980) |
| Walter Dallenbach | | (2 episodes, 1976) |
| James Crocker | | (2 episodes, 1977-1978) |
| William R. Stratton | | (2 episodes, 1977) |
| David Taylor | | (2 episodes, 1977) |
| Rogers Turrentine | | (2 episodes, 1979) |
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| Marshall Lindemann | | (unknown episodes) |
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| Stephen J. Cannell | .... | supervising producer / producer (112 episodes, 1974-1979) |
| Meta Rosenberg | .... | executive producer (112 episodes, 1974-1979) |
| Chas. Floyd Johnson | .... | producer / associate producer / ... (91 episodes, 1975-1980) |
| David Chase | .... | producer / supervising producer (66 episodes, 1976-1980) |
| John David | .... | associate producer (22 episodes, 1978-1980) |
| J. Rickley Dumm | .... | associate producer (16 episodes, 1978-1979) |
| William F. Phillips | .... | associate producer (12 episodes, 1974-1975) |
| Juanita Bartlett | .... | producer / supervising producer (11 episodes, 1978-1979) |
| Jo Swerling Jr. | .... | supervising producer / associate executive producer (6 episodes, 1974-1975) |
| Lane Slate | .... | producer (3 episodes, 1975-1976) |
| |
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| Charles Waldo | .... | costumes / costumes: women (26 episodes, 1974-1976) |
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| Richard Belding | .... | editorial supervision / editorial supervisor (23 episodes, 1974-1976) |
| Steve Johnson | .... | colorist (23 episodes, 1974-1975) |
| |
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| Juanita Bartlett | .... | executive story consultant / creative consultant / ... (93 episodes, 1974-1979) |
| Jack Cole | .... | main title design / title designer: main titles (24 episodes, 1974-1977) |
| |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Jim Rockford, Private Investigator (USA) (syndication title)
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Runtime:
60 min (123 episodes)
Aspect Ratio:
1.33 : 1
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Fun Stuff
Trivia:
There were plans to spin the characters of Gandolph "Gandy" Fitch and Marcus "Gabby" Hayes off onto their own series, but they never came to fruition.
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Goofs:
Factual errors: Throughout the series, the Los Angeles Police Department responds to calls at Rockford's trailer in Malibu although it is not part of their jurisdiction. The Los Angeles County Sheriff would be the proper agency.
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Quotes:
Jim Rockford:
A senator and a bus driver? What's the connection?
Lance White:
This is just a hunch but I'd say the bus driver had something on the senator. Like maybe the senator was having an affair with the bus driver's wife.
Jim Rockford:
Lance, where did that come from?
Lance White:
It didn't come from anywhere Jim it's just a hunch. I get a hunch, it turns out to be right and the case is solved. I don't know how you make a living as a private eye Jim. You don't seem to know any of this stuff.
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Soundtrack:
The Rockford Files
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As essayed by James Garner, Jim Rockford is one of the best characters in TV history - in, I might add, one of the best series. The Rockford Files never ceased to be entertaining during its '70s run and remains so in syndication. There's something comfortable about the show, probably because of the well-drawn characters that we feel we know.
If we didn't love Rockford so much, I guess we'd call him a loser. But we love him too much and are pulling for him too much to ever call him a loser. He never has any money. He lives in a dilapidated trailer on the beach. He's not married. He was in prison, though he didn't commit the crime and was pardoned. Helluva way to treat one of our ex-servicemen (Korea). His father, Rocky, was a truck driver and wants his boy Jimmy to take it up. It's steady, and he might get beat up less.
Jimmy, however, would rather be a private investigator. In order to do this, he occasionally runs afoul of police lieutenant Chapman and gets his buddy Dennis in trouble for using the power of the police to do him a favor. He also sometimes winds up embroiled with his con friend and former cellmate, Angel Martin, always in trouble and always looking for the main chance. And if attractive attorney Beth Davenport isn't hitting him up for pro bono help, he needs her to bail him out of jail.
It all sounds a little sad but it's endlessly fun, with some really classic episodes and great dialogue. This is also the series that launched Tom Selleck. In two episodes, he played perfect detective Lance White, a man who, unlike Rockford, couldn't take a wrong step and is beloved by every human being with whom he came in contact. The juxtaposition between Rockford and White is hilarious.
As Rockford, Garner is perfect, and the cast uniformly excellent, particularly Noah Berry, Jr. as his dad. If the clothes and the cars are dated, the acting, the relationships, and the story lines are not. The Rockford Files is one of the classics.