Dan Frazer Movies
Dan Frazer has spent so many years playing police officers and detectives that it's been suggested he should qualify for a departmental pension from the New York Police Department. Most familiar to television audiences for his portrayal of Captain Frank McNeil, the superior to
Telly Savalas' Lt. Theo Kojak on the series Kojak,
Frazer has also played police officers in dozens of other television shows and movies, although the full range of his work is far more vast, in a career dating back to the late '30s.
Born in the Hell's Kitchen section of New York (west and north of Times Square) during the early '20s,
Dan Frazer was one of ten children. He was drawn to acting at a relatively early age, and made his professional debut at 14 with the WPA's Federal Theatre Project. Following his appearance in the play Three Steps Down, he was offered a screen test at MGM, but the outbreak of World War II intervened.
Frazer served in the army and was fortunate enough to be placed in Special Services, where he got some exposure to theatrical writing and directing.
Frazer (whose name was sometimes misspelled in credits as "Don Frazier") resumed his career after the war and made his Broadway debut in the play Christopher Blake; he subsequently appeared in Who Was That Lady I Saw You With, Once More With Feeling, Goodbye Charlie, The Grass Is Always Greener, and A Stone for Danny Fisher.
Frazer's television career dates from the end of the 1940s, when he portrayed Louie, the wheelchair-bound chess-playing G.I. in an installment of the 1949 ABC documentary series Crusade in Europe. He appeared on Lux Video Theatre and other anthology shows during the 1950s, and could be seen in episodes of
The Andy Griffith Show, The Untouchables, and McHale's Navy. His defining television performance, however, was probably in the Car 54, Where Are You? episode "Change Your Partner" as Chief Bradley, the well-meaning NYPD departmental chief who is flabbergasted by the duration of the successful partnership of patrolmen Toody and Muldoon.
During the 1960s, in between appearances on programs such as Route 66, The F.B.I., and My Favorite Martian, and on the few remaining anthology series such as Kraft Suspense Theater,
Frazer also moved into motion picture work. He was among the favorite actors of filmmaker
Ralph Nelson, playing prominent roles in two of the director's best films, Father Murphy in
Lilies of the Field (1963) and Ira Jackson in
Tick...tick...tick (1970), as well as his lesser known
Counterpoint (1968).
Lilies of the Field remains one of the films of which
Frazer is proudest, although he has recalled, with some amusement, that United Artists balked at putting up the budget requested by
Nelson; almost everyone involved with the film seems to have kicked in something to get it made, but UA's management said that if the film could be re-written as a vehicle for
Steve McQueen instead of
Sidney Poitier, the distributor would double the proposed budget.
Frazer also had prominent roles in
George Axelrod's satire
Lord Love a Duck (1966),
Woody Allen's
Take the Money and Run (1969) and
Bananas (1971), and a little-known 1972 feature starring
Jackie Mason entitled
The Stoolie.
It was his performance as Lt. Byrnes in the 1972 crime thriller
Fuzz, however, that brought
Frazer his most visible part -- the producers of the upcoming series Kojak were examining a clip from the movie, looking at the idea of casting another actor as one of the squad room detectives; they rejected the actor they were thinking of but spotted
Frazer as the harried squad commander and suddenly realized they had found their Captain Frank McNeil. For the next five years, he was seen weekly in the role of Kojak's superior officer and friend, and became something of a celebrity in his native New York (though the show itself was filmed almost entirely in Hollywood), mentioned in the television gossip pages and interviewed by journalists. His film appearances became relatively infrequent, though they included performances in
Cleopatra Jones (1973) and
Breakout (1975).
Frazer later appeared in the Kojak made-for-television film
The Belarus File (1985), and was on As the World Turns from 1989 until 1996 in the recurring role of Dan McClosky. In later years, producer
Dick Wolf has used
Frazer as a guest star, and the actor, in the seventh decade of his career, completed the trifecta of essaying major guest roles on
Law & Order,
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, and
Law & Order: Criminal Intent. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

- 1997
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No sooner has serial rapist Lewis Darnell (Burt Young) been released on parole than a young woman is assaulted and murdered. Assistant D.A. McCoy (Sam Waterston) is determined to connect Darnell with this most recent outrage and to put him behind bars permanently. Unfortunately, McCoy's zeal leads to accusations of undue "strongarm" methods on the part of detectives Briscoe (Jerry Orbach) and Curtis (Benjamin Bratt). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1997
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In the second of Law & Order's three "crossovers" with the Baltimore-based NBC crime series Homicide: Life on the Street, a teenaged model dies on the streets of New York, apparently the victim of toxic-shock syndrome. An autopsy reveals that the girl had been raped, a crime that would have to have been committed while she was in Baltimore. Thus, detective Lennie Briscoe (Jerry Orbach) calls in his Baltimore counterpart, John Munch (Richard Belzer), to assist in the investigation. Meanwhile, New York assistant DA McCoy (Sam Waterston) finds himself locked in a jurisdictional battle with the Baltimore DA -- a battle complicated by the actions of the dead girl's parents. In addition to Richard Belzer, Homicide regulars Jon Seda (Falsone) and Yaphet Kotto (Giardello) also appear. The first episode of the two-part "Baby, It's You" aired as the November 11, 1997, installment of Law & Order; the conclusion was seen November 14 on Homicide: Life on the Street. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1985
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After a seven-year absence from the small screen, NYPD detective Theo Kojak (Telly Savalas) made a comeback in the TV-movie The Belarus File (originally Kojak: The Belarus File). Adapted from John Loftus' best-selling spy novel The Belarus Secret, the film teams Kojak with federal agent Dana Sutton (Suzanne Pleshette). Following a labrynthine trail of evidence, the two investigators uncover a conspiracy that dates back to the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in the early 1940s. Max Von Sydow and Herbert Berghof guest star. Though Kojak himself is largely superfluous to the proceedings, the producers hoped that The Belarus File (premiere date: February 16, 1985) would serve as the launching pad for a weekly Kojak revival. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1985
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Seven years after the cancellation of the CBS TV series Kojak, the network attempted to revive the property with this adaptation of John Loftus' novel The Bellarus Secret. Telly Savalas returns to the role of lollipop-sucking New York police detective Lt. Theo Kojak, with George Savalas, Vince Conti, and Mark B. Russell likewise reprising their Kojak characters of Stavros, Rizzo, and Saperstein (conspicuous by his absence was Kevin Dobson as Bobby Crocker, who had by this time signed on as a regular on Knot's Landing). This time around, Kojak tried to solve the murders of three elderly Russians, who may or may not have been Nazi war criminals. The answer to the mystery lay in "The Belarus File," a top-secret document in the possession of the State Department. At first stymied by the government's lack of cooperation, Kojak receives unexpected assistance from compassionate bureaucrat Dana Sutton (Suzanne Pleshette). Originally telecast February 16, 1985, Kojak: The Belarus File (aka The Return of Kojak) did not immediately spark a wholesale Kojak revival, though the property did return to TV on an irregular basis as a component of the ABC "Mystery Movie" in 1989. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1984
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Advertised as a "return" to the spirit of the old Spencer Tracy/Katharine Hepburn films (not all of which were that spirited--try watching Keeper of the Flame sometime), the made-for-TV Good Sport is essentially a reworking of 1941's Woman of the Year. Ralph Waite plays a gritty sports columnist who enters reluctantly into the world of "haute courte" fashions to do a story on an ex-athlete turned clothes designer. He meets Lee Remick, an elegant fashion designer, and it's oil-and-water time for the next twenty minutes or so. Waite and Remick become friends, vowing to keep things strictly platonic. It doesn't take a PhD to ascertain what will happen next. For another slant on the premise of A Good Sport, catch the superior 1957 Gregory Peck/Lauren Bacall vehicle Designing Woman. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1981
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Freed from a Japanese POW camp and safely returned to Walton's Mountain, Ben intends to enter the postwar working world as a professional engineer. His dad John (Ralph Waite), however, wants Ben to give up his plans and become a full partner at the family lumber mill. The situation changes dramatically for both father and son when word comes that Olivia Walton's health has taken a turn for the worse. This episode marks the final series appearance of Ralph Waite. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1977
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The fifth and final season of Kojak (the original version, that is) begins with a typically brutal entry, "The Queen of Hearts Is Wild," in which smooth, cynical New York police detective Lt. Theo Kojak (Telly Savalas) tries convince the girlfriend of one of his old enemies to provide eyewitness testimony concerning a cop killing. In subsequent episodes, Kojak goes after a psycho who believes himself to be under the influence of a bombastic talk show host (yes, they had those back in 1977 too!); Theo's loyal assistant Lt. Crocker (Kevin Dobson) falls in love with the daughter of a murdered mobster, and in a later episode is taken hostage by a prisoner he is escorting back to New York; Kojak impersonates a murdered private eye to solve the dead man's murder; the sister of Kojak's boss, Captain McNeill (Dan Frazer), is victimized by gamblers; and in the two-part "The Summer of '69," Kojak unearths evidence that the serial killer whom he thought he eliminated eight years earlier is still at large -- and that he might have shot down the wrong man. Appearing as guest stars in Kojak's terminal CBS season are such well-known performers as Armand Assante, Antoinette Bower, Danny Thomas, Priscilla Barnes, Sam Jaffe, and former ABC news anchorman Alex Dreier. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Telly Savalas, Dan Frazer, (more)

- 1976
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Beginning with its fourth season, Kojak was largely filmed on location in New York City, moving production out of its previous Hollywood confines. Telly Savalas is of course back as bald, sarcastic, lollipop-loving police detective Lt. Theo Kojak, as are Dan Frazer as Theo's boss (and former partner), Frank McNeill, Kevin Dobson as Lt. Crocker, and George Savalas (the star's brother) as Detective Stavros. Season four wastes no time getting down to business: the season opener finds Kojak's niece being kidnapped in the middle of her own birthday party. This tense episode features a guest-star turn by a young Richard Gere, one of several familiar faces showing up in the fourth season. Other prominent guest performers include future Jeffersons co-star Roxie Roker, versatile character actor Hector Elizondo, TV commercial diva Virginia Christine (aka "Mrs. Olsen"), and Geraldine Page, Danny Aiello, F. Murray Abraham, Judith Light, Jeffrey Jones, and, in one of her last TV appearances, Gloria Grahame. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Telly Savalas, Dan Frazer, (more)

- 1975
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Question: "Who loves ya, baby?" Answer: "The whole world." By the time the gritty detective drama Kojak entered its third season in the fall of 1975, the series had been exported to dozens of countries outside the U.S., and star Telly Savalas had become an international celebrity. Savalas' portrayal of cynical, hard-boiled, lollipop-loving Lt. Theo Kojak was no longer just another TV job: he had become an icon. Likewise beloved the world over were the series' supporting characters, including Chief of Detectives Frank McNeil (Dan Frazer), Lt. Crocker (Kevin Dobson), and Detective Stavros (played by Telly Savalas' brother George Savalas, who beginning in season three is billed under his own name rather than his nom de screen, "Demosthenes"). Like the previous season, season three opens with a two-part drama, "A Question of Answers." And as in years past, a number of fascinating guest stars appear this season, beginning with a pre-Rocky Sylvester Stallone as a guilt-ridden cop who accidentally shoots a young boy in the line of duty. In later episodes, future Soap star Robert Mandan plays a vicious drug dealer; Eileen Brennan is seen in the story of a highly suspect religious-revival organization; John Larroquette shows up in the season's Christmas episode, "How Cruel the Frost, How Bright the Stars"; former football star Rosey Grier appears in the later installment "Bad Dude"; and the season finale features the brilliant actress Diana Hyland, two years removed from her tragic early death. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Telly Savalas, Dan Frazer, (more)

- 1974
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Bald, cynical, lollipop-sucking New York police detective Lt. Theo Kojak returns in the person of Telly Savalas for a second season of thrill-packed episodes. Likewise returning to the fold are supporting characters Chief Frank McNeil (Dan Frazer), Lt. Crocker (Kevin Dobson), and Detective Stavros (played by "Demosthenes," aka Telly Savalas' brother George Savalas). New recipients of Kojak's trademarks jibes and insults include Detective Rizzo (Vince Conti) and Detective Saperstein (Mark Russell). Season two of Kojak opens with the two-part "The Chinatown Murders," which has since been syndicated as a separate TV movie. In later episodes, Kojak butts heads with the feds while trying to solve a cop killing; matches wits with a deadly stock manipulator; protects a terrified bookkeeper from an insane criminal; endeavors to prove that a judge's suicide was murder (and, incidentally, contemplates allowing a killer to walk in order to crack the case); crosses swords with a clever woman who uses her husband's "accidental" death to cover up a diamond heist; and ducks and dodges a "curse" placed upon him by a vengeful gypsy woman. Season two's lineup of Kojak guest stars includes Ray Sharkey, Martin Balsam, Paul Anka, Leslie Nielsen, Erik Estrada, Robert Loggia, and Ruth Gordon. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Telly Savalas, Dan Frazer, (more)

- 1973
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Call to Danger was a title that had already been applied to two unsold pilot films before this TV movie made its first appearance in February of 1973. Like the previous 1968 Call to Danger, the 1973 film stars Peter Graves as a federal agent who enlists "ordinary" people to solve crimes. Headquartered in Washington DC (where most of this film was shot), Graves selects his erstwhile agents by means of a computer. The case at hand is the retrieval of an underworld informer who has been kidnapped. Peter Graves appeared in Call to Danger even while his series Mission: Impossible was in production; there was talk that Mission: Impossible would soon be cancelled, and Graves wanted a pilot film to fall back on. Come September of 1973, there was neither hide nor hair of Mission: Impossible, Call to Danger or Peter Graves on any network. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1973
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The character of tough, sarcastic, lollipop-sucking New York City police detective Theo Kojak was introduced in The Marcus-Nelson Murders, a 1973 TV movie based on the novel by Selwyn Raab, which in turn was inspired by the real-life Wylie-Hoffert murder case of 1963 that ultimately led to the Supreme Court's Miranda decision in 1966. Telly Savalas, a busy, baldheaded character actor who had only occasionally received above-the-title billing in his long career, became an international superstar in the role of Kojak, which he carried over into a long-running CBS cop show. Debuting October 24, 1973, Kojak was set in Manhattan (though not filmed there until its fourth season), where hard-boiled, thoroughly incorruptible Lt. Theo Kojak took his marching orders from his former partner and longtime friend, 13th precinct Captain Frank McNeill (Dan Frazer). Although Kojak had a habit of bending the rules to suit his needs, he was much valued by McNeill and the force because he invariably got results. Kojak's associates and assistants included plainclothes detective Lt. Bobby Crocker (Kevin Dobson), Detective Stavros (played by the star's brother George Savalas, who during the series' first two seasons billed himself as "Demosthenes"), and detectives Rizzo and Saperstein (Vince Conti, Mark Russell).
Extremely popular with both civilians and law enforcement personnel -- and a veritable cornucopia of such quotable lines as "Who loves ya, baby?" -- Kojak lasted five seasons and 118 hour-long episodes before it was canceled by CBS and ended its run on April 15, 1978. Seven years later, Telly Savalas revived the character for the TV movie Kojak: The Belarus File, which was followed two years later by another feature-length endeavor, Kojak: The Price of Justice. And from November 4, 1989, through June 30, 1990, five two-hour Kojak episodes -- in which the title character had been promoted to inspector -- were telecast as part of the crime-anthology series The ABC Mystery Movie. This time around, Telly Savalas' co-stars included Andre Braugher as Detective Winston Blake, Charles Cioffi as Chief George "Fitz" Morris, Kario Salem as Detective Paco Montana, and the star's daughter Candace Savalas as Kojak's secretary Pamela. Kojak was revived for a third weekly series run in 2005, with Ving Rhames starring in the title role created by the late Telly Savalas. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Telly Savalas, Dan Frazer, (more)

- 1973
-
- Add Kojak: Season 01 to Queue
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Having scored big with the public when he was introduced in the 1973 TV movie The Marcus-Nelson Murders, crafty, cynical, lollipop-sucking New York city police detective Theo Kojak is given his own weekly, one-hour series as Kojak launches its first season. As before, Telly Savalas essays the title role, though none of the Marcus-Nelson Murders supporting actors appear in the series proper. Reporting for duty, Kojak is pleased that his new boss is his former partner Frank McNeil (Dan Frazer), now chief of detectives. Friendship notwithstanding, McNeil intends to run a tight ship, and to see to it that Kojak plays by the rules -- just as Kojak is fully prepared to do things his way no matter what McNeil says! Also introduced in season one are Kojak's subordinates, plainclothes detective Lt. Bobby Crocker (Kevin Dobson) and Detective Stavros (played by Telly Savalas' brother George Savalas, here billed under his middle name "Demosthenes") In the opener, Kojak must defuse a tense hostage situation after a botched armored-car robbery (the chief heavy is played by none other than Harvey Keitel). Subsequently, Kojak reluctantly builds a case against a fellow cop who has murdered his wife's lover; tracks down a serial killer who seems to have returned to New York after a lengthy absence; races against time to clear the name of a deceased comrade-in-arms; holds up an urban development project in order to collar a perp; attempts to save his niece from being murdered on her wedding day by one of his old enemies; goes to elaborate lengths to convince others that he's "on the take" in order to flush out a dope dealer; matches wits with a brilliant criminal-justice student who believes he can commit the perfect crime; and grimly follows a trail of corpses to break up a smuggling ring. In addition to the aforementioned Harvey Keitel, the first-season guest-star lineup on Kojak includes such luminaries as Hector Elizondo, Yvonne Craig, Jackie Cooper, Tina Louise, Paul Michael Glaser, and John Ritter. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Telly Savalas, Dan Frazer, (more)

- 1972
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Comedian Jackie Mason made one of his many comeback attempts after the 1966 Ed Sullivan Show "flipping the finger" debacle with the low-budget The Stoolie. Mason plays a cheap crook who cops a plea with the law by offering to trap other thieves with bait money. But Mason can't leave well enough alone; he steals $7500 of the money himself and high-tails it to Miami Beach. Now he must continually look over his shoulder as both the police and the crooks try to catch up with him. Seedily effective at times (though not during the love scenes between Mason and leading lady Marcia Jean Kurtz), The Stoolie was produced in Florida and New Jersey by Jackie Mason himself; it received very limited release in 1972, then was given a second unsuccessful distribution in 1974. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1967
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World-renowned humanitarian Juliet Sinclair (Ruth Roman) has arrived in America to deliver a cute Chinese orphan girl named Linh (Cherylene Lee) to loving couple named Kenyon (Gene Hackman, Phyllis Love). What the general public doesn't know is that Juliet is also a Communist courier, and that her American contacts are none other than Mr. and Mrs. Kenyon. Unfortunately, Linh has learned the truth about her benefactor--and unless Inspector Erskine (Efrem Zimbalist Jr.) can act quickly, the Kenyons will follow orders and silence the girl permanently. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1967
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The beauty of classical music confronts the ugliness and treachery of war in this unusual drama. Lionel Evans (Charlton Heston) is the director of a well-respected symphony orchestra touring European concert halls in 1944. In the midst of one concert, the city where they are playing is attacked by German troops, and as Evans and his musicians try to escape, they are captured by Nazi soldiers led by Col. Arndt (Anton Diffring). Evans and the orchestra are taken to a castle where they are to bide their time before being executed; but it turns out that Arndt's superior, Gen. Schiller (Maximilian Schell), is a classical music buff. Schiller commands Evans and his symphony to prepare a special concert for the Nazis, but Evans realizes that the moment the concert is over, he and his musicians will be killed. The orchestra's performances, which include works by Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, Brahms, Wagner, and Schubert, were performed by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Charlton Heston, Maximilian Schell, (more)

- 1966
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Using the alias Stephen Fitzgerald, con artist Andrew Cook (James Daly) has married the widow of a bank owner, embezzled the bank funds, and murdered his wife--a pattern he has followed for years in several other cities. Now the homicidal Cook has targeted wealthy Amy Hunter (Margaret Leighton) as his next victim, with both Amy's life and a million-dollar "prize" at stake. Inspector Erskine (Efrem Zimbalist Jr.) must figure out the reason behind Fitzgerald's modus operandi in order to stop him before he can steal--and kill--again. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1966
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An intelligent, eccentric high school senior devotes his life to indulging the every whim of the beautiful girl he adores in this quirky, dark-humored comedy. Roddy McDowall plays Alan Musgrave, an odd duck who immediately falls for the school's new student, Barbara Ann Greene (Tuesday Weld). Using his quick wits, he helps her win acceptance amongst the popular girls and a cushy job in the principal's office. Never demanding anything in return, Alan doesn't even complain when she falls for an upper-class college boy, and he does everything he can to bring the two together. However, as time passes, this seemingly well-intentioned dedication spins out of control, with results that become increasingly bizarre and even potentially fatal. The irreverent attitude and erratic tone may be an acquired taste, but the film's audacious humor and idiosyncratic approach have won it a cult following. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Roddy McDowall, Tuesday Weld, (more)

- 1963
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John "The Cropper" Cropsey (Don Gordon) is fed up with doing the dirty work for bootlegger Jules Flack (Harold J. Stone), so he cooks up a plan to go into business for himself. Stealing 50,000 gallons of industrial alcohol, Cropsey sells it to Flack for a cool million bucks. What "The Cropper" doesn't know is that every move he makes is being closely monitored by Elliot Ness (Robert Stack). And there's another small detail: Cropsey is now in business with Belle Alpine (Jeanne Cooper), who hasn't forgotten that Cropsey and Flack were the men who orchestrated the murder of her husband. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1961
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The town of Mayberry is agog when a Hollywood producer and his entourage breeze into town. Captivated by the community's rustic charm, the producer decides to use Mayberry as the setting for his newest film. Almost immediately, the local merchants begins catering to the moviemakers' every whim-but Sheriff Andy draws the line when a town landmark is threatened with destruction, simply to make a "clearer picture." First shown on January 2, 1961, "Mayberry Goes Hollywood" was written by Benedict Freeman and John Fenton Murray. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1974
- R
"Batman and Robin" are the principal characters in the fact-based The Super Cops. Well, not the real Batman and Robin; these just happen to be the nicknames of two irrepressible New York City cops, Dave Greenberg (Ron Leibman) and Bob Hantz (David Selby). Flying in the face of departmental procedure and protocol, Greenberg and Hantz use bizarre (and often amusing) extreme methods to rid the streets of drug merchants. The two gonzo cops find an unexpected ally in the form of a prostitute named Sara (Sheila E. Frazer). Adapted by Lorenzo Semple Jr. (who coincidentally wrote the Batman TV pilot episode) from the best-selling book by L. H. Whitemore, The Super Cops features the genuine Dave Greenberg and Bob Hantz in minor roles...as cops, naturally. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ron Leibman, David Selby, (more)

- 1971
- PG13
- Add Bananas to Queue
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One of Woody Allen's earlier, more slapstick-oriented efforts, Bananas tells the story of Fielding Mellish (Allen), a neurotic New Yorker who follows the object of his affections, Nancy (Louise Lasser), to the fictional Central American country of San Marcos, where she is involved in a revolution. Nancy wants nothing to do with Fielding, but he soon becomes a guest of the country's dictator (Carlos Montalban), before accidentally becoming the leader of San Marcos himself. Fielding is eventually shipped back to the US and tried as a subversive, but being that this is a comedy, and an especially light one at that, everything works out in the end. A far cry from Allen's later, more somber films, Bananas still works as an often hilarious amalgam of sight gags, one-liners, and bizarre asides. ~ Don Kaye, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Woody Allen, Louise Lasser, (more)

- 1973
- PG
- Add Cleopatra Jones to Queue
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Tamara Dobson stars as Cleopatra Jones in Jack Starrett's blaxploitation programmer that, in its own way, deals effectively with the ravages of drugs in inner-city black communities. Cleopatra Jones is a jive female James Bond, a special drug agent for the United States government who wears sleek and hip clothes, drives a fancy car with a submachine-gun compartment in the front door, and travels all over the world to stomp out drugs at their source. Cleopatra has a loving relationship with Ruben (Bernie Casey), the well-meaning head of a drug rehabilitation clinic in Los Angeles. When Cleopatra travels to Turkey to oversee the destruction of poppy fields owned by Mommy (Shelley Winters) -- a lesbian drug dealer -- Mommy becomes upset. She exacts her revenge on Cleopatra by having the police close down Ruben's drug clinic. Nevertheless, Cleopatra continues to wreak havoc upon Mommy's drug business, and Mommy continues to try to do Cleopatra in, until finally there is a major confrontation between Cleopatra and Mommy and her minions. ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Tamara Dobson, Bernie Casey, (more)

- 1972
- PG
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Fuzz treads the line between raucous comedy and gut-churning melodrama. Based on an "87th Precinct" novel by Ed McBain (aka Evan Hunter), the film stars Burt Reynolds and Jack Weston as, respectively, detectives Steve Carella and Meyer Meyer. Their current assignment is to bring in Deaf Man (Yul Brynner), a mad bomber who has been targeting politicians. A subplot concerning a couple of punks who get their kicks by setting fire to sleeping winos is dramatically justified by the main storyline, but it was this element that caused a lot of trouble for the producers of Fuzz when a pair of real-life teenagers decided to imitate the film. On a lighter note, Raquel Welch co-stars as Detective Eileen McHenry, who is obliged to go undercover -- and under covers -- with fellow officer Bert Kling (Tom Skerritt). And as a bonus, viewers are treated to Burt Reynolds' first "drag" scene. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Burt Reynolds, Jack Weston, (more)

- 1969
- PG
- Add Take the Money and Run to Queue
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When Woody Allen's fans refer to his "earlier, funnier" pictures, they often cite his directorial debut as a shining example. Co-written by Allen and Mickey Rose, this side-splitting takeoff of crime documentaries stars Allen as Virgil Starkwell, a sweetly inept career criminal. The film's most celebrated sequence involves Virgil's inability to write coherent holdup notes ("I have a gub"), but others include Virgil's losing battle with a recalcitrant coke machine and his misguided effort to emulate John Dillinger by carving a gun out of a bar of soap (his weapon disintegrates in a heavy rain). As was often the case in Allen's early films, not all the gags work, but for the most part, Take the Money and Run is a delight, enhanced by the on-target supporting performances of Janet Margolin, Marcel Hillaire, and (uncredited) Louise Lasser, as well as the energetic musical score of Marvin Hamlisch. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Woody Allen, Janet Margolin, (more)