Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA beautiful policewoman goes undercover to break up a drug ring.A beautiful policewoman goes undercover to break up a drug ring.A beautiful policewoman goes undercover to break up a drug ring.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Debbie Dozier
- Amy
- (as Deborah Dozier)
Darlene Conley
- Virginia
- (as Darleen Conley)
Rick Hurst
- Sgt. Tom Farrell
- (as Richard Hurst)
Recensioni in evidenza
I recently watched Get Christie Love! (1974) on Prime. This TV movie, which later launched a television series by the same name, follows a charismatic police detective in search of her next big break. She believes she's found it when she uncovers clues leading to a drug lord. Can she bring down the drug lord and finally gain recognition for her work?
Directed by William A. Graham (Return to the Blue Lagoon), the film stars Teresa Graves (That Man Bolt), Harry Guardino (The Enforcer), Louise Sorel (Days of Our Lives), and Darlene Conley (The Bold and the Beautiful),
Set in the heart of the blaxploitation era, alongside the peaks of icons like Pamela Grier and the Cleopatra Jones pictures, "Get Christie Love!" aligns with the content of its time. Graves, though strikingly beautiful, delivers an inconsistent performance, and her fight scenes lack authenticity, failing to resonate, especially when facing male opponents. In comparison to Grier, she falls short. Additionally, the film lacks compelling car chases and shootouts, with a notably poorly executed "fall" scene adding to its flaws.
In conclusion, Get Christie Love! Boasts a beautiful lead actress but little else. I would rate it a 4/10 and recommend it solely to dedicated blaxploitation enthusiasts.
Directed by William A. Graham (Return to the Blue Lagoon), the film stars Teresa Graves (That Man Bolt), Harry Guardino (The Enforcer), Louise Sorel (Days of Our Lives), and Darlene Conley (The Bold and the Beautiful),
Set in the heart of the blaxploitation era, alongside the peaks of icons like Pamela Grier and the Cleopatra Jones pictures, "Get Christie Love!" aligns with the content of its time. Graves, though strikingly beautiful, delivers an inconsistent performance, and her fight scenes lack authenticity, failing to resonate, especially when facing male opponents. In comparison to Grier, she falls short. Additionally, the film lacks compelling car chases and shootouts, with a notably poorly executed "fall" scene adding to its flaws.
In conclusion, Get Christie Love! Boasts a beautiful lead actress but little else. I would rate it a 4/10 and recommend it solely to dedicated blaxploitation enthusiasts.
5tavm
Based on the book, "The Ledger", Get Christie Love was the first time a black female portrayed a detective on network TV. Teresa Graves is adequately compelling as the cop with some attitude whose superior, Captain Reardon (Harry Guardino), has a major open flirtation with her that she seems to occasionally encourage. The main plot concerns the search of a drug dealer's ledger through the interrogation of the wife in order to bring him down. Despite some fight scenes and car chases that attract some attention, the pace seemed mostly dreary and I almost fell asleep before the end. The most interesting discovery for me, however, was the appearance of Ron Rifkin as a serial killer of prostitutes named Normand whom Christie catches in the beginning when she dresses as one. Rifkin would, nearly three decades later, play Sloane on one of the most exciting action series ever-Alias. Compared to that show, this TV movie that later became a series doesn't have as exciting fight scenes but I guess network censorship was more stricter then. Worth a look for historical purposes.
"Get Christie Love!" is included in many DVD packages along with "TNT Jackson", and the two films do have a lot of things in common: most importantly, they both have black female action leads who have the right attitude for their roles down pat, but their actual fight scenes leave a lot to be desired. "Get Christie Love" doesn't have nearly as much action as "TNT Jackson", but Teresa Graves is a better actress than Jeanne Bell, and (in my opinion at least) prettier as well. However, this film is hurt by the flat direction, a dreary pace and an uninteresting plot that wastes far too much time with an investigation about an adopted kid. And I have to agree with a previous reviewer, the DVD transfer is pretty bad. You turn the volume almost all the way up and you still can't listen to the dialogue clearly. (**)
When Captain Casey Reardon (played by Harry Guardino) learns that notorious gangster boss Enzo Cortino (Paul Stevens) possesses a secret ledger which could potentially be used to bring him to justice and said ledger is supposedly within the possession of his girlfriend Helena Varga (Louise Sorel), Reardon sends a brash but known for getting results, spirited and spunky young black female detective named Christie Love (Teresa Graves) on undercover assignment hoping she will be able to get to the heart of what makes Helena Varga tick so Ms. Varga will be convinced to co-operate and with her aid and possibly that of Cortino's "ledger", the police will finally be able to bring down Enzo Cortino once and for all.
Well a blaxploitation television movie had to be something somewhat groundbreaking back in 1974. Obviously this couldn't deliver the same level of violent thrills and nudity as was frequently evidenced in blaxploitation films of the period since it originally aired on television and was subject to television limitations in terms of what could and could not be shown. This element made it necessary for the plot to be more detailed than most films in the blaxploitation action vein so the focus here remains more on the mystery as it relates to Ms. Helena Varga's rather elusive past which means we see Christie actually do a surprising amount of detective work in this story. One negative element that affects the overall impact this one has is it's the subject matter seems to be aimed more towards a white audience than a black one and plays more to common expectation of non-blaxploitation detective television series from the time and era.
Personally I feel Teresa Graves does a terrific job here and really manages to convey a lot of information in a relatively short amount of time, enough to make her character one we immediately come to like and root on. All in all, this proves successful both in terms of introducing us to a lead character and providing the basic underlying set-up necessary for a TV series to follow as well as most any other TV Pilot I've ever seen and they must have done something right because a TV Series followed shortly thereafter.
Well a blaxploitation television movie had to be something somewhat groundbreaking back in 1974. Obviously this couldn't deliver the same level of violent thrills and nudity as was frequently evidenced in blaxploitation films of the period since it originally aired on television and was subject to television limitations in terms of what could and could not be shown. This element made it necessary for the plot to be more detailed than most films in the blaxploitation action vein so the focus here remains more on the mystery as it relates to Ms. Helena Varga's rather elusive past which means we see Christie actually do a surprising amount of detective work in this story. One negative element that affects the overall impact this one has is it's the subject matter seems to be aimed more towards a white audience than a black one and plays more to common expectation of non-blaxploitation detective television series from the time and era.
Personally I feel Teresa Graves does a terrific job here and really manages to convey a lot of information in a relatively short amount of time, enough to make her character one we immediately come to like and root on. All in all, this proves successful both in terms of introducing us to a lead character and providing the basic underlying set-up necessary for a TV series to follow as well as most any other TV Pilot I've ever seen and they must have done something right because a TV Series followed shortly thereafter.
Taking an honored place among the black exploitation characters of the Seventies is Teresa Graves and the indelible character she created in Get Christie Love. When she walked away from the series and later from show business all together she certainly was never forgotten.
I do remember her as a regular on Rowan&Martin back in the day and she was a talented woman with the ability to take herself not too seriously. Until she decided to become a Jehovah Witness. That was taking in to the max.
Christie Love is a LAPD policewoman who's real handy both with weapon and with fighting skills. When we first meet her she's taking down a serial rapist all by herself because her backup didn't get there on time to be of assistance. But her supervisor has bigger plans for her.
Harry Guardino playing the supervisor wants Graves to go undercover to find a ledger that drug kingpin Paul Stevens is supposed to have. Since the days of Al Capone those things are kept under the tightest of hoodlum security. Stevens certainly has one tightly secured operation. In these days before computers nothing is down on paper. All that they can learn for a while is that Louise Sorel has something to do with the books.
Teresa Graves was not alone or unique in putting religion first. Dolores Hart left movies to become a nun in the 60s. Later on Kirk Cameron made the same kind of demands on the producers of Growing Pains when he got into fundamentalist Christianity. Only Kirk came back using his celebrity for evangelism. Both Graves and Hart took a more private and more respectful approach to religion.
This was a television pilot, nothing spectacular or great about it except for Teresa Graves. She was unforgettable, RIP Teresa Graves.
I do remember her as a regular on Rowan&Martin back in the day and she was a talented woman with the ability to take herself not too seriously. Until she decided to become a Jehovah Witness. That was taking in to the max.
Christie Love is a LAPD policewoman who's real handy both with weapon and with fighting skills. When we first meet her she's taking down a serial rapist all by herself because her backup didn't get there on time to be of assistance. But her supervisor has bigger plans for her.
Harry Guardino playing the supervisor wants Graves to go undercover to find a ledger that drug kingpin Paul Stevens is supposed to have. Since the days of Al Capone those things are kept under the tightest of hoodlum security. Stevens certainly has one tightly secured operation. In these days before computers nothing is down on paper. All that they can learn for a while is that Louise Sorel has something to do with the books.
Teresa Graves was not alone or unique in putting religion first. Dolores Hart left movies to become a nun in the 60s. Later on Kirk Cameron made the same kind of demands on the producers of Growing Pains when he got into fundamentalist Christianity. Only Kirk came back using his celebrity for evangelism. Both Graves and Hart took a more private and more respectful approach to religion.
This was a television pilot, nothing spectacular or great about it except for Teresa Graves. She was unforgettable, RIP Teresa Graves.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThis is technically not an episode of the series Get Christie Love, bur rather it's the TV movie on which the series was based. It originally aired in January of 1974, and the series did not debut until September of that year.
- BlooperBoom mike visible in lower left side of screen when Christie feeds her fish.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Spicebush (2005)
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- Celebre anche come
- Chamem Christie Love!
- Luoghi delle riprese
- MacArthur Park, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(Christie undercover as hooker, S corner)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
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