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L'homme de fer

Titre original : Ironside
  • Série télévisée
  • 1967–1975
  • TV-PG
  • 1h
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
4,5 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
2 888
1 216
Raymond Burr and Barbara Sigel in L'homme de fer (1967)
Home Video Trailer from Shout! Factory
Lire trailer0:56
2 Videos
99+ photos
CriminalitéDrameMystèreDrame policierProcédure policière

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueParalyzed police veteran Robert T. Ironside becomes a special consultant to the force.Paralyzed police veteran Robert T. Ironside becomes a special consultant to the force.Paralyzed police veteran Robert T. Ironside becomes a special consultant to the force.

  • Création
    • Collier Young
  • Casting principal
    • Raymond Burr
    • Don Galloway
    • Don Mitchell
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    4,5 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    2 888
    1 216
    • Création
      • Collier Young
    • Casting principal
      • Raymond Burr
      • Don Galloway
      • Don Mitchell
    • 24avis d'utilisateurs
    • 12avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompensé par 2 Primetime Emmys
      • 2 victoires et 17 nominations au total

    Épisodes195

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés

    Vidéos2

    Ironside: Season Two - Volume One
    Trailer 0:56
    Ironside: Season Two - Volume One
    Ironside: The Complete First Season
    Trailer 1:03
    Ironside: The Complete First Season
    Ironside: The Complete First Season
    Trailer 1:03
    Ironside: The Complete First Season

    Photos764

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 756
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Raymond Burr
    Raymond Burr
    • Robert T. Ironside…
    • 1967–1975
    Don Galloway
    Don Galloway
    • Det. Sgt. Ed Brown…
    • 1967–1975
    Don Mitchell
    Don Mitchell
    • Mark Sanger…
    • 1967–1975
    Barbara Anderson
    Barbara Anderson
    • Officer Eve Whitfield
    • 1967–1971
    Elizabeth Baur
    Elizabeth Baur
    • Fran Belding…
    • 1971–1975
    Gene Lyons
    Gene Lyons
    • Commissioner Dennis Randall
    • 1967–1974
    Johnny Seven
    Johnny Seven
    • Lt. Carl Reese…
    • 1968–1975
    Lee Miller
    • Policeman…
    • 1967–1974
    Barry Cahill
    Barry Cahill
    • Sgt. Miller…
    • 1967–1974
    Joan Pringle
    Joan Pringle
    • Diana Sanger…
    • 1974–1975
    Lorraine Gary
    Lorraine Gary
    • Nurse Green…
    • 1968–1973
    George Murdock
    George Murdock
    • Capt. Walter Finch…
    • 1968–1974
    Dennis McCarthy
    Dennis McCarthy
    • Charlie King…
    • 1967–1974
    Dane Clark
    Dane Clark
    • Mr. Todd…
    • 1968–1974
    Michael Bell
    Michael Bell
    • Al Carter…
    • 1970–1974
    Don 'Red' Barry
    Don 'Red' Barry
    • Capt. Dennis Barnes…
    • 1969–1975
    Ann Doran
    Ann Doran
    • Dora Copeland…
    • 1970–1974
    Bill Quinn
    Bill Quinn
    • Medical Examiner…
    • 1968–1970
    • Création
      • Collier Young
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs24

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    Avis à la une

    Sargebri

    Detective on Wheels

    If Perry Mason was Raymond Burr's defining role, then this was his second most famous role. This show proved that you didn't need a lot of violence to be a great detective show. This was more cerebral than most of the shows that were around at the time. Also the supporting cast of Don Mitchell, Don Galloway, Barbara Anderson and, later Elizabeth Baur, were all great as Ed, Mark, Eve and Fran respectively. The most compelling character on the show though was Mark. We got to see him evolve from Ironside's body guard, to a police officer and, finally, becoming an attorney. Too bad they don't make shows like this anymore.
    sofiamusa2002

    It's an oldie, but, boy, is it a goodie!

    I didn't know much about Ironside, apart from my mum, explaining to me what Raymond Burr did apart from Perry Mason. So, in 1999, the BBC started to do re-runs of it, and i watched a few, and I liked it alot. Channel five showed the 1967 TV Movie, and the Priest Killer (1971, scary and a bit controversial) and it was the best i've ever seen. It blows all the other cop shows out of the water, and quincy jones's score, is addictive. the support cast, proved their worth, especially Ed and Mark, and Eve's razor sharp wit. It shows that people (the characters) who are from different backgrounds Mark, a young black ex-con, Eve's upper class background, to Ed's (i'm assuming working class catholic boy, who lost his way when his fiance died) can gel quite well, but, that was what San Francisco was like from 1967 onwards, a melting pot, of people from different backgrounds.It is worthy of a big screen remake, but they have to it justice and not go for the starsky and hutch spoof hollywood have managed to botch together. It needs a director who is a fan, rather than somebody who sees this as another remake of an old show, it's more than that. and what i can't get, is that what actually happened to the actors from Ironside, Galloway has appeared on Perry Mason a couple of times, looking 10 years older than his real age! but in comparison to him in Ironside galloway aged 30 was a catch.

    enough of my female observations. It's a great programme, but i think it needs to be brought to attention of a new audience, i'm 22 years old, and i think that the programmes of today are trash!!
    Cue-ball

    More proof of Raymond Burr's genius

    There are precious few actors who can create two successful television characters. More recent examples include Mary Tyler Moore (Mary Richards and Laura Petrie) and Bob Newhart (Bob Hartley and Dick Loudon). In 1966, Burr completed a nine-year run as the most recognizable attorney on television. In 1967, returning to television, his challenge was to create a new character that wouldn't stand in Perry Mason's shadow. The result was Ironside -- a rough, former chief of the San Francisco police forced to retire when an attempted assassination leaves him paralyzed. (The theme music is reprised in "Kill Bill Vol. 1", whenever the Bride flashes back on her paralyzing injuries.) Bob Ironside had none of Perry Mason's polish, frequently spoke without thinking, and enjoyed fast cars as much as he relished good police work. He was given a special task force that included a regular joe beat-cop, Ed Brown (even in the sixties, a more vanilla name was never given a character); a highbrow, educated female detective (Eve Whitfield); and a troubled black youth, Mark Sanger, who was to Ironside what Charlie Young is to President Bartlet on "The West Wing". Instead of the Los Angeles setting of Perry Mason, Ironside was in San Francisco. In addition, while Perry Mason kept the lights on at CBS for nearly a decade, Ironside was a steady performer for NBC for almost as long. The show was an instant critical and commercial success.

    I think the reason Ironside is not as popular in reruns now as it was in the late 70s and early 80s is it will always be in the shadow of Mason, and that's a shame. The two shows are not the same, and there are many memorable episodes of Ironside. One in particular features Ironside isolated in his apartment, being stalked by a killer, that always reminded me of the climactic scene in "Rear Window" -- in which the killer was played by Raymond Burr! One of my favorite lines of dialogue, from the pilot, was his ribbing of his female detective: "By all means, ask Detective Whitfield. She's had the benefit of a classical education." That line -- which would never have passed Perry Mason's lips -- is a good sample of Ironside's tone through the series.
    7AlsExGal

    Raymond Burr brings another great TV role to life

    Hardly any actor so credibly reinvented himself as many times as Raymond Burr. In the late 40's into the mid 50's he often played the villain, usually in westerns and noirs, and once he even had a minor but crucial role as the villain in Hitchcock's "Rear Window". Then there were all those years playing unbeatable defense attorney Perry Mason that I figured he'd be typecast forever after that series ended. However, he did such a credible job playing the wheelchair-bound Ironside that the staff at restaurants were surprised when he would show up for reservations walking in on his own two legs. The show had camera-work that was ground-breaking without being annoying, there was a feeling of family and camaraderie among the cast that oddly enough reminds me of Joss Whedon's "Angel" in that regard, it had much better plots than the other ensemble cop shows of that era, and it even had lots of counter-culture material that worked out pretty well without being cheesy or preachy considering the age of its main star, Burr, who was 50 when the show premiered.

    The premise of the show is that while vacationing in an isolated farmhouse, Robert Ironside is shot by an unseen assailant. The result of this wound is that he is paralyzed from the waist down. Accustomed to being Chief of Detectives, and not wanting to be put out to pasture, he turns to his old friend, the Commissioner of Police, who makes him his Special Consultant so that Ironside can go on working on cases rather than face living the life of a retiree on a disability pension. The supporting cast, and his team in solving crimes during the series, consists of rookie detective Ed Brown, policewoman Eve Whitfield, and somewhat reformed juvenile delinquent Mark Sanger. Up to this time, police detective shows had consisted of able-bodied young white men dressed in suits complete with hats, no matter what the occasion. This was one of the first TV shows of that genre - maybe the very first - to mix things up with an interracial cast, a policewoman who was an integral part of the team, a handicapped leader, and a member of "the establishment" in Ed Brown thrown in for good measure.

    If this formula sounds a lot like Mod Squad, that's because it is, except Mod Squad came out the following year on the coattails of Ironside's initial success. Ironside had its share of guest stars that made it big in later years. In this first season keep a lookout for a young Harrison Ford in "The Past is Prologue", for Ed Asner in "The Fourteenth Runner", and Susan St. James in "Girl in the Night".
    8bkoganbing

    Nothing fazes the Chief

    I mentioned this before on a review of a third series that Raymond Burr had after Perry Mason and Ironside, that most actors are lucky to have one successful series let alone two of them back to back. Burr did it with two very different kinds of characters.

    Perry Mason was cool and calculating until he sprung a trap in court that nailed the real murderer and/or the helpless prosecutor be it Hamilton Burger or someone else. But Robert Ironside had already faced his life crisis when that bullet severed his spinal cord. With that kind of baptism of fire nothing ever fazed the Chief. He was hostage a couple of times during the course of the show and he faced some unusual life threatening situations that were more stressful because of his paralysis, but he always kept a cool head.

    I loved the position he was in as the head of that special squad. He had a picked team in Don Galloway, Barbara Anderson, and Don Mitchell. He worked only the most important cases or something that interested him. I worked for NYS Crime Victims Board and believe me I always looked for interesting cases where people filed claims. So much is dull and routine. Burr had the dull and routine out of his life.

    Barbara Anderson did not go the full run of the series, but Elizabeth Baur came in and moved seamlessly into the team Ironside.

    Beneath all the gruffness and the demands on his people that work be finished yesterday, the Chief had a good heart and was an inspiration to all around him. I suspect to many viewers as well.

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      As the show progressed, Mark went from being Ironside's bodyguard to a full fledged police officer, and eventually became an attorney in the final season. In "The Return of Ironside" (1993), he had become a judge.
    • Gaffes
      Ironside's office/apartment was on the fourth floor of the Old San Francisco Hall of Justice. Stock footage of the building appeared on many episodes for the entire series run (1967-1974). The building itself was abandoned in 1961 and demolished in 1968.
    • Citations

      Robert T. Ironside: I... LIKE... burned toast.

    • Crédits fous
      Gene Lyons plays San Francisco Police Commissioner Dennis Randall. However, on some closing credits, Lyons is listed as "The Commissioner".
    • Connexions
      Featured in The 23rd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1971)

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    FAQ

    • How many seasons does Ironside have?
      Alimenté par Alexa
    • Whatever happened to the van?
    • What is the building often seen in each episode that is both home and office of Chief Robert T. Ironside?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 24 novembre 1969 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Raymond Burr Show
    • Lieux de tournage
      • San Francisco, Californie, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • Harbour Productions Unlimited
      • Universal Television
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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    Raymond Burr and Barbara Sigel in L'homme de fer (1967)
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