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Capitaine Furillo

Titre original : Hill Street Blues
  • Série télévisée
  • 1981–1987
  • TV-14
  • 1h
NOTE IMDb
8,2/10
11 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
2 032
460
Robert Clohessy, Michael Warren, and Bruce Weitz in Capitaine Furillo (1981)
Trailer 1
Lire trailer0:59
5 Videos
99+ photos
Cop DramaPolice ProceduralCrimeDramaMystery

Les vies et le travail du personnel d'un commissariat de police de quartiers pauvres.Les vies et le travail du personnel d'un commissariat de police de quartiers pauvres.Les vies et le travail du personnel d'un commissariat de police de quartiers pauvres.

  • Création
    • Steven Bochco
    • Michael Kozoll
  • Casting principal
    • Daniel J. Travanti
    • Michael Warren
    • Bruce Weitz
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    8,2/10
    11 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    2 032
    460
    • Création
      • Steven Bochco
      • Michael Kozoll
    • Casting principal
      • Daniel J. Travanti
      • Michael Warren
      • Bruce Weitz
    • 76avis d'utilisateurs
    • 17avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompensé par 26 Primetime Emmys
      • 60 victoires et 109 nominations au total

    Épisodes144

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés

    Vidéos5

    Hill Street Blues: The Complete Series
    Clip 0:49
    Hill Street Blues: The Complete Series
    Hill Street Blues: The Complete Series
    Clip 0:30
    Hill Street Blues: The Complete Series
    Hill Street Blues: The Complete Series
    Clip 0:30
    Hill Street Blues: The Complete Series
    Hill Street Blues
    Trailer 0:59
    Hill Street Blues
    Hill Street Blues: James B. Sikking
    Trailer 1:16
    Hill Street Blues: James B. Sikking
    Hill Street Blues: Bruce Weitz
    Trailer 1:26
    Hill Street Blues: Bruce Weitz

    Photos870

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    + 864
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Daniel J. Travanti
    Daniel J. Travanti
    • Capt. Frank Furillo
    • 1981–1987
    Michael Warren
    Michael Warren
    • Officer Bobby Hill
    • 1981–1987
    Bruce Weitz
    Bruce Weitz
    • Sgt. Mick Belker
    • 1981–1987
    James Sikking
    James Sikking
    • Lt. Howard Hunter…
    • 1981–1987
    Joe Spano
    Joe Spano
    • Lt. Henry Goldblume…
    • 1981–1987
    Taurean Blacque
    Taurean Blacque
    • Det. Neal Washington
    • 1981–1987
    Kiel Martin
    Kiel Martin
    • Detective J.D. LaRue…
    • 1981–1987
    Betty Thomas
    Betty Thomas
    • Officer Lucy Bates…
    • 1981–1987
    Charles Haid
    Charles Haid
    • Officer Andrew Renko…
    • 1981–1987
    Veronica Hamel
    Veronica Hamel
    • Joyce Davenport
    • 1981–1987
    René Enríquez
    René Enríquez
    • Lt. Ray Calletano…
    • 1981–1987
    Ed Marinaro
    Ed Marinaro
    • Officer Joe Coffey
    • 1981–1986
    Barbara Bosson
    Barbara Bosson
    • Fay Furillo
    • 1981–1986
    Robert Hirschfeld
    • Leo Schnitz…
    • 1981–1985
    Michael Conrad
    Michael Conrad
    • Sgt. Phil Esterhaus
    • 1981–1984
    Jon Cypher
    Jon Cypher
    • Chief Fletcher Daniels
    • 1981–1987
    George Wyner
    George Wyner
    • Irwin Bernstein…
    • 1982–1987
    Robert Prosky
    Robert Prosky
    • Sgt. Stan Jablonski
    • 1984–1987
    • Création
      • Steven Bochco
      • Michael Kozoll
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs76

    8,211.3K
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    Avis à la une

    niara

    More than just a ground-breaking show

    This TV series is a testament to Brandon Tartikoff, who was then head of Entertainment at NBC, who championed this show and stayed with it because he knew that this was a groundbreaking show.

    I remember watching the pilot for this show way back in high school. It was unlike anything I had ever seen on television. I remember the episode when the characters Renko and Bobby Hill were shot and lying in the hallway, and you had no idea if they were alive or dead. I remember gasping out loud. Stuff like that just wasn't on TV at the time.

    Ensemble casts, story lines that continued for weeks at a time, and truly compelling, realistic writing. Television was pretty much a wasteland back in 1981 -- and unfortunately, has gotten far, far worse -- and this show, which took a year to find a permanent spot on NBC's lineup and introduced the whole concept of the landmark Thursday night at 10 pm drama on NBC.

    Another testament to this show is that in one year every single Emmy nomination for the outstanding supporting actor in a drama series category was for a cast member from Hill Street Blues. That was, and still is, unprecedented stuff. I had the pleasure of taping the show as it came on late night on one of the local channels here in NYC several years ago. Brilliant, and still holds up well. What I would give for something similar to blanket the vapid horizon that is network television today.
    10epat

    This is TV??

    Bear with me on a bit of background: For a full decade as a penniless hippie, I didn't have a TV. None of my friends did either. To our minds, TV was a puerile waste of time, pablum for the masses, a substitute for life. Besides, we couldn't afford one. When I settled down tho & my son started going to school, his friends talked constantly about TV programs he knew nothing about. So he wouldn't feel culturally deprived, we decided to get him a little black & white set for his room. Thereafter, whenever I came home from work, I knew where to find my wife & son - both in his room glued to the tube.

    One evening I was leaning in the doorway waiting for a commercial so I could talk to them & I got caught up in what they were watching - some tough portly mustached detective had been captured by a lunatic with a shotgun & bound to a chair. Tense! When the commercial did come, I said, "Hey, this is a pretty good movie, what is it?" "That's not a movie", they told me, "it's Hill Street Blues, a TV series!" No way, I thought, they had to be pulling my leg. I couldn't believe TV had reached that level of sophistication. They'd taken your standard soap opera format, where no one character predominates & the interwoven stories carry over from episode to episode, & applied it to cops. Cops lead what has got to be hands-down the most bizarre lifestyle imaginable & the viewer's sense of involvement is certainly heightened by knowing that at any moment one of your favorite characters might be gunned down. The show was brilliant & I was hooked. From there on, I watched every episode of HSB I possibly could.

    Years later, suffering thru a near-suicidal post-divorce funk, coming home to the aching loneliness of an empty apartment with not even a dog anymore to wag his tail in greeting, too depressed even to look up old friends let alone make new ones, I found myself watching the show again. They were showing HSB reruns 5 nights a week just then, so I got to spend an hour each evening with all these familiar faces I'd come to know so well & care about, my own grief momentarily forgotten amidst their trials & tribulations. It's the only thing I can recall with any pleasure from that period & it's not much of an exaggeration to say HSB pulled me thru.

    So now that the series is finally being released on DVD, I'm pre-ordering it as fast as it comes out. Seeing it again now, I'm much more aware of its flaws - improbable scenes like the EATers shooting up that liquor shop in the very first episode & other contrived situations that strain to produce a few chuckles. Yet I like it all the more for that; it transcends such flaws so easily. Watching it now for maybe the 4th or 5th time, I'm still amazed at the depth & range of characterization, not to mention the added kick of spotting well-known actors like Danny Glover, Forest Whitaker & David Caruso who appeared on the show before they made it big. More sophisticated shows now like NYPD Blue, ER & Sopranos may make HSB seem quaint by comparison, but they could never have existed if HSB hadn't led the way. Not for nothing was it one of the longest-running dramas on TV.

    I still don't think much of TV, but Hill Street Blues will always hold a special place in my heart.
    Sargebri

    An Island in the Sea of Madness

    During an era of cop shows where the main characters were often portrayed as superheroes or as charicatures, this priceless classic was born. For the first time since the days of Jack Webb and Joseph Wambaugh, we finally had a show that showed police as real people with all the faults and failings that all people had. You had Furillo, who was a recovering alcoholic, Renko and Hill, who were dealing with their own fears, Hunter, the reactionary head of the S.W.A.T. team, Bates, who just wanted to prove that she was a good police officer as well as a woman, Belker, the maniacal undercover cop, and of course the fatherly Sgt. Phil Esterhaus, the father figure for the whole squad. This show definitely set the stage for shows like N.Y.P.D. Blue and the Law and Order franchise and will always be a classic.
    Me Grimlock

    Very Real and Authentic

    Hill Street Blues was an unconventional cop show for the '80s, and even today. Why? Because it was real. Well as real as you can get with a TV show, without taking some liberties ofcourse. Unlike Miami Vice, T.J. Hooker or Hunter, HSB had a lot of detail and accuracy.

    Sure Miami Vice was an entertaining show, but only for being stylish and hip for it's time. HSB didn't try to be cool, it tried to be accurate. Miami Vice and all the other cop shows and cop movies of the '80s, '90s and today are extremely fake in the way they present themselves, going more for a target demographic then bothering to portray how things operate in our world. In the real world, cops in America aren't wearing Armani suits and constantly trying to bust Columbian drug dealers and their shipment of cocaine while spitting out mile a minute obscure metaphors and similies that take us a few seconds to figure out. If you want to see the way REAL COPS in America speak, act and carry themselves through real crime cases, then watch HSB. You won't be dissapointed.
    JasonDanielBaker

    The Divine Dramedy

    Each episode of the critically acclaimed series begins with another morning at the office at the Chicago Police Department's Hill Street precinct.

    Overworked, underpaid, understaffed and under equipped the boys and girls in blue do their best to put on a decent show of fighting crime whilst under continual threat of violence from many of the craziest criminals on earth.

    The guy in charge of this circus is less of a ringmaster and more of a lion-tamer. His name is Captain Frank Furillo (Daniel J.Travanti). Soft-spoken and diplomatic he, at first, doesn't strike the viewer as having the intestinal fortitude to be a cop let alone one in charge of a precinct.

    Brow-beaten by public defender Joyce Davenport (Veronica Hamel) then by his crazy ex-wife Fay (Barbara Bosson) Furillo looks even less formidable and his very manhood is called into question by his psycho SWAT team commander Lt. Howard Hunter (James B.Sikking).

    After seeing him stare down the barrel of a gun during a hostage crisis then shield a couple of kids with his body so they don't get hit by machine gun fire we are able to formulate a more balanced assessment of Furillo. This is the most genuine kind of hero. He exemplifies the best qualities of the men and women who serve under his command and leads by example.

    It is evident that both cops and criminals coming through Hill Street precinct are there due to varying degrees of insanity. Furillo's own psychosis is perhaps the same as that of the public defender - he thinks that he is making a difference for the better. After what we have seen him do it is difficult to argue that he is wrong.

    This was a cop show unlike any other that people had seen before. Part comedy and part soap opera set against the back-drop of an environment viewers were used to seeing simplistic good vs evil narratives and dispassionate procedurals got something of greater complexity.

    With sombre strokes of piano keys the understated yet resilient tone of the title theme better matches the continuing narratives of this series than that of most other shows though the mixture of mellotron and orchestra may seem a tad pretentious.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The theme music, written by Mike Post, became a hit song on its own and won a Grammy. Post said that when he was writing the theme, he first wanted the music to match the gritty visuals he was shown. He then decided to do the opposite, to create a theme that was beautiful and serene, that "took you away" from what you were seeing.
    • Gaffes
      When the various characters speak into the radio microphone in their patrol cars, they seldom press the "transmit" switch, and Andy Renko is occasionally seen speaking into the back of the microphone.
    • Citations

      [repeated line]

      Sergeant Phil Esterhaus: [at end of roll call] All right, that's it, let's roll. And Hey!... let's be careful out there.

    • Crédits fous
      After the credits it shows the MTM kitten wearing a policeman's hat to match this show.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Roll Call: Looking Back on Hill Street Blues (2006)

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    FAQ20

    • How many seasons does Hill Street Blues have?Alimenté par Alexa
    • In which city did the show take place?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 8 décembre 1984 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Hill Street Blues
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Chicago, Illinois, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • MTM Enterprises
      • MTM Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 4:3

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