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Dragnet 1967
S1.E4
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IMDbPro

The Interrogation

  • Episode aired Feb 9, 1967
  • TV-14
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
8.4/10
257
YOUR RATING
Kent McCord in Dragnet 1967 (1967)
CrimeDramaMystery

Friday and Gannon question Officer Paul Culver, on the job only 114 days and currently working undercover out of the narcotics division, about the armed robbery of a liquor store in Hollywoo... Read allFriday and Gannon question Officer Paul Culver, on the job only 114 days and currently working undercover out of the narcotics division, about the armed robbery of a liquor store in Hollywood. Despite a positive identification in the line-up and thinking he failed the lie-detecto... Read allFriday and Gannon question Officer Paul Culver, on the job only 114 days and currently working undercover out of the narcotics division, about the armed robbery of a liquor store in Hollywood. Despite a positive identification in the line-up and thinking he failed the lie-detector tests, Culver swears he is innocent.

  • Director
    • Jack Webb
  • Writer
    • Preston Wood
  • Stars
    • Jack Webb
    • Harry Morgan
    • Kent McCord
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.4/10
    257
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jack Webb
    • Writer
      • Preston Wood
    • Stars
      • Jack Webb
      • Harry Morgan
      • Kent McCord
    • 13User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos12

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    Top Cast5

    Edit
    Jack Webb
    Jack Webb
    • Sgt. Joe Friday
    Harry Morgan
    Harry Morgan
    • Officer Bill Gannon
    Kent McCord
    Kent McCord
    • Officer Paul Culver
    George Fenneman
    George Fenneman
    • Main Title Announcer
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    John Stephenson
    John Stephenson
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jack Webb
    • Writer
      • Preston Wood
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    8.4257
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    Featured reviews

    9larrystout

    Every Citizen Should Hear This!

    In the day and age of action police dramas, the Dragnet series seems an anachronism. For the most part, all that happens are the detectives Sgt Joe Friday (played with the straightest of straight faces by Jack Webb) and his partner Office Bill Gannon (a slightly more expressive character played by Harry Morgan) interviewing suspects or witnesses. There are lots of scenes where it is just the two of them talking about mundane matters of life. But what resonates with this series is that it seems what cops actually do in real life. It is rarely high speed chases or big shoot-outs, but rather the everyday discipline of routine investigation and plain old hard work. This particular episode, "The Big Interrogation," is even more shorter in the dramatic department than others in the series as it consists almost totally of Friday and Gannon interrogating a young undercover cop accused of holding up a liquor store. Almost everything happens in an incredibly small internal affairs interview room that is so sparse, there is not even a place for poor Officer Gannon to sit down. But for its limited action and scenery, it more than makes up for it in one section toward the end of the episode. Joe Friday goes into a five minute monologue on the difficulties of being a policeman, but ends with the reward of doing the job because it needs done. I found myself nearly in tears by the time he finished. It was flawlessly delivered and spoken with total conviction. The next time someone complains about their local police force,they would do well to play this clip and think about it for awhile. I want to go shake the hand of the next policeman I meet!
    9imdb-25288

    A stellar performance by Kent McCord

    I'm knocking one star off because, by Dragnet standards, this sucks. Where's the colors? Where's the women? Where's the outside? Where's the cars? Where's the chases? Where's the bad guys?? This is no true Dragnet. At the very least they should have shown what happened pre-interrogation. Or spliced in flashbacks and made it a full hour. But darn if this episode doesn't suck after all. That performance by Kent McCord. Wow! Just when I thought he was just the pretty face in Adam-12... WOW! The guy could act! (Past tense, I don't think he still does.) But damn! What did he do besides 12? HE should have been a huge star! Did I say "wow!"?? I meant "WOW!!!!" Someone called him a "god" in a previous review. Come on, man! Let's not get carried away now: he is God's boss. The end.
    9ronnybee2112

    Kent McCord earned his spot on Adam 12 with his performance here!

    Kent McCord does a great job with his part in this episode. Here he portrays a new policeman,"Paul Culver" that has been accused of a liquor store robbery while on the job working undercover. He is put through the proverbial wringer by the always-tough Joe Friday and Friday's trusty partner Bill Gannon. New officer Culver is questioned over and over again until he starts to get confused,which only increases Joe Friday's suspicions. Accused officer Culver offers to take a polygraph test,and he does indeed take the test. The whole time officer Culver denies robbing the liquor store,and starts to become angry and disgusted that his word as an officer means no more than the word of a regular citizen. As a side plot Culver's girlfriend has recently left him over Culver's job as a policeman,which is also stressing the new officer. Kent McCord did a very good job with his part in this episode,I'm sure that his performance here helped greatly to earn him his later spot on Adam 12 with actor partner Martin Milner. Jack Webb was a generous and loyal friend to many people in Hollywood,it seems that if you made a good impression on him you were assured to be offered steady work on his many shows and productions. This was a strong 4th episode of Dragnet that held my interest throughout the entire episode. The final verdict on officer Paul Culver remains up in the air until the very end. 9/10 solid episode.
    10TtheK2

    Kent McCord Can Act

    Kent McCord is excellent in this episode and proves he can really act. He played a similar role in the "Adam 12" episode, "Log 33: It All Happened So Fast," in which Officer Jim Reed goes through the same kind of questioning after he kills a man in self-defense.

    I wish Jack Webb had allowed McCord more opportunities to actually act in "Adam 12." If not for these two episodes I would have gone on thinking McCord's acting range was no better than Martin Milner's, who had no personality. Milner always played the same type of character and could not act in my opinion.

    I don't know what became of McCord after "Adam 12."
    7planktonrules

    Not one of the best of the series, but well worth seeing for 'the speech'

    This episode is interesting in that it starts with a different introduction--without the usual "Dragnet" theme music and a kettle drum instead. You also will soon notice that the guest star for the episode is Kent McCord--who later became famous on Jack Webb's show "Adam-12". Webb tended to re-use actors and McCord plays a cop but not the same guy from "Adam-12"--confusing but typical for this show. In other words, Jack Webb often used a stock group of actors and they played multiple characters on the show--good guys, bad guys and regular citizens.

    This episode finds McCord playing an officer who is being held on the suspicion that he might have committed an armed robbery while on a stakeout! While this seems like a remote possibility, the facts keep stacking up against the young officer and it looks bad for him. As the Internal Affairs process proceeds (with Gannon and Friday playing IAD officers), the officer being investigated begins to crack under the strain and feels sorry for himself. Ultimately, this leads to one of the single best moments of the series, as Friday delivers an amazing monologue about how tough it is to be a cop. Surprisingly, it showed Jack Webb was an amazing actor. Perhaps it wasn't done in one take (though it appeared to be) it was a fine piece of acting and must be seen by fans of the series.

    Overall, an average episode despite the great speech. Worth seeing but not among the very best of the shows.

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    Mystery

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This episode convinced Jack Webb to hire Kent McCord as the second lead in his new series "Adam-12".
    • Goofs
      Just before the title card (Dragnet 1967), Friday says it was Wednesday, November 16th. In 1967, November 16th was a Thursday.
    • Quotes

      Friday: There are over five thousand men in this city who know that being a policeman is an endless, glamorless, thankless job that's gotta be done. I know it, too. And I'm damned glad to be one of them.

    • Crazy credits
      Instead of the famous Dragnet fanfare, the music playing over the credits consists of the slow beat of a single tympani drum--symbolic, perhaps, of an officer being "brought to the drumhead" to answer charges of wrongdoing while on duty.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 9, 1967 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Radio Retropolis
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Mark VII Ltd.
      • Dragnet Productions
      • Universal Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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