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De puissantes voitures de patrouille, des motos rapides et des radios bidirectionnelles se combinent pour lutter contre le crime sur les routes rurales des grands espaces américains.De puissantes voitures de patrouille, des motos rapides et des radios bidirectionnelles se combinent pour lutter contre le crime sur les routes rurales des grands espaces américains.De puissantes voitures de patrouille, des motos rapides et des radios bidirectionnelles se combinent pour lutter contre le crime sur les routes rurales des grands espaces américains.
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This show was my very favorite as a boy, and had such an influence on me, that I grew up to become a Pennsylvania State Trooper. I recently retired from the force after a rewarding career. The stories and action of the Highway Patrol always showed the good guys, the police, prevailing over the bad guys. I also enjoyed the open highway atmosphere in which these stories took place. I would very dearly love to get tapes of this show for old times sake, but have not been able to do so.
I remember watching this series with great fascination as a youngster in Montevideo, Uruguay in 1962. We didn't have a TV set yet, but we looked at shop windows displaying TV sets. In Spanish it was called "Patrulla de Caminos". Although I can't give a current evaluation of its quality, I do remember liking this show much more than others. It's a great shame that America, who gave us so much quality TV doesn't appreciate it enough to show it to new generations. How else can vintage TV and films be "preserved" except by showing the stuff? There's too much fascination with new, with color and high resolution than with QUALITY. But even regardless of quality, exposure to "old stuff" has its own charm. Show the darned show, will you! And show "Mama" and "The Goldbergs" and "Our Miss Brooks" and all the golden oldies that I missed. I started watching TV on a regular basis at age 23!!! I need to catch up with the old shows I missed, and which are so much better than the recent ones.
This series did for the California Highway Patrol what "Dragnet" did for the LAPD; i.e. established a mythology and a standard of professional conduct. I knew two retired CHP officers (both retired in the late 1960s) who loved this series. It is no small joke that in the Dan Aykroyd movie comedy Dragnet, Harry Morgan is watching "Highway Patrol" on TV when Aykroyd's character calls him on the phone. I, too, wish the old tapes had been saved for posterity.
The music. Do you remember the starting theme? It defined action, and a warning. Too bad the series isn't run more often. Very hard to find anywhere. It used to be on a local private station KOFY-TV 20 out of San Francisco, but our local service provider didn't want to use channel 20 anymore, so we lost out. I remember watching the series as a child in Seattle, and never missed a show. I now live next door to a CHP Officer and it's strange. A very nice family man, couldn't ask for better neighbors. My 2 nephews are now enrolled in the CHP Cadet Explorer program and I help them study the 10 codes. I'll never forget that opening music to "Highway Patrol". Those of you who have heard it, know what I mean.
I was a viewer of this show when it originally aired. Now it's one of the few shows I record to view on Time Warner Cable.
It shows small town 50's USA with it's shops, businesses, cafes, motels and back roads in CA.
I am amused by the "machine gun fire" speaking by Broderick Crawford even when giving orders to subordinates, I have never heard one of them ask of him "Would you repeat that, and speak a little slower and a bit more succinctly?" It also is an amazing look into the social fiber of America at that time, it showed an angry Korean Veteran that couldn't find a job using his faked knowledge of bazookas to help do robberies, innocent vacationing honeymooners being kidnapped as well as interesting dialogue.
Do you wonder if American TV today is showing a positive or repulsive, ugly America to the rest of the world? Should it matter?
It shows small town 50's USA with it's shops, businesses, cafes, motels and back roads in CA.
I am amused by the "machine gun fire" speaking by Broderick Crawford even when giving orders to subordinates, I have never heard one of them ask of him "Would you repeat that, and speak a little slower and a bit more succinctly?" It also is an amazing look into the social fiber of America at that time, it showed an angry Korean Veteran that couldn't find a job using his faked knowledge of bazookas to help do robberies, innocent vacationing honeymooners being kidnapped as well as interesting dialogue.
Do you wonder if American TV today is showing a positive or repulsive, ugly America to the rest of the world? Should it matter?
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBroderick Crawford played himself on CHiPs season 1 episode called Hustle (1977), being pulled over for running a stop sign and explaining to Officer Jon Baker (Larry Wilcox), "You know, I was making those Highway Patrol shows long before you were born." Baker responded with, "Yeah, they don't make television programs like that anymore."
- GaffesContrary to the opening narration, no US state police agency is called "the militia."
- Citations
[Repeated line]
Chief Dan Mathews: Ten-four!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Dragnet (1987)
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- How many seasons does Highway Patrol have?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée30 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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