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IMDbPro

Barney Miller

  • Série de TV
  • 1975–1982
  • TV-PG
  • 30 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
8,3/10
8 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
1.837
1.771
Barney Miller (1975)
Trailer for Barnry Miller: The Complete Series
Reproduzir trailer1:33
3 vídeos
99+ fotos
SitcomComédiaDrama

O Capità o da 12º Esquadra de NYPD e sua equipe lidam com os vários problemas e personagens locais que entram na sala de esquadrà o.O Capità o da 12º Esquadra de NYPD e sua equipe lidam com os vários problemas e personagens locais que entram na sala de esquadrà o.O Capità o da 12º Esquadra de NYPD e sua equipe lidam com os vários problemas e personagens locais que entram na sala de esquadrà o.

  • Criação
    • Danny Arnold
    • Theodore J. Flicker
  • Artistas
    • Hal Linden
    • Abe Vigoda
    • Max Gail
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    8,3/10
    8 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    1.837
    1.771
    • Criação
      • Danny Arnold
      • Theodore J. Flicker
    • Artistas
      • Hal Linden
      • Abe Vigoda
      • Max Gail
    • 40Avaliações de usuários
    • 21Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 3 Primetime Emmys
      • 9 vitórias e 43 indicações no total

    Episódios171

    Explorar episódios
    PrincipaisMais avaliados

    Vídeos3

    Barney Miller: The Complete Series
    Trailer 1:33
    Barney Miller: The Complete Series
    Barney Miller: Season 3
    Trailer 2:02
    Barney Miller: Season 3
    Barney Miller: Season 3
    Trailer 2:02
    Barney Miller: Season 3
    Christopher Meloni Knows How to Spot a Good Cop
    Video 2:34
    Christopher Meloni Knows How to Spot a Good Cop

    Fotos643

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    Editar
    Hal Linden
    Hal Linden
    • Barney Miller…
    • 1974–1982
    Abe Vigoda
    Abe Vigoda
    • Det. Phil Fish
    • 1974–1982
    Max Gail
    Max Gail
    • Det. Stan 'Wojo' Wojciehowicz
    • 1975–1982
    Steve Landesberg
    Steve Landesberg
    • Det. Sgt. Arthur Dietrich…
    • 1975–1982
    Ron Glass
    Ron Glass
    • Det. Ron Harris
    • 1975–1982
    Ron Carey
    Ron Carey
    • Officer Carl Levitt…
    • 1976–1982
    Jack Soo
    Jack Soo
    • Det. Sgt. Nick Yemana
    • 1975–1982
    James Gregory
    James Gregory
    • Inspector Frank Luger
    • 1975–1982
    Barbara Barrie
    Barbara Barrie
    • Elizabeth Miller
    • 1975–1978
    Gregory Sierra
    Gregory Sierra
    • Det. Sgt. Chano Amenguale
    • 1975–1982
    George Murdock
    George Murdock
    • Lt. Ben Scanlon…
    • 1976–1982
    John Dullaghan
    John Dullaghan
    • Ray Brewer…
    • 1976–1982
    Stanley Brock
    Stanley Brock
    • Bruno Bender…
    • 1975–1982
    Jack DeLeon
    Jack DeLeon
    • Marty Morrison
    • 1975–1982
    Alex Henteloff
    Alex Henteloff
    • Arnold Ripner…
    • 1975–1982
    J.J. Barry
    J.J. Barry
    • Arthur Duncan…
    • 1975–1982
    Don Calfa
    Don Calfa
    • Angelo Dodi…
    • 1977–1981
    Phil Leeds
    Phil Leeds
    • Arthur Bloom…
    • 1975–1981
    • Criação
      • Danny Arnold
      • Theodore J. Flicker
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários40

    8,38K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    Sargebri

    The Precursor to Night Court

    This show was one of the funniest in the history of television. The various characters that came in and out of the station made this show what it was. I really think the show was at its peak during the period when Abe Vigoda, Jack Soo and Steve Landesberg were all on the show together. However, once Vigoda and Soo were gone, the show seemed to shift to a more dramatic direction. This was especially evident in the memorial episode for Jack Soo. However, this was a highly influential show and if you look at Night Court, which was produced by pretty much the same team as this one, you will see some of the same qualities on that show that made this one great.
    10flapdoodle64

    Of Cops and Compassion

    Of the thousands of American TV sitcoms ever produced, only a small portion of them are genuinely enjoyable and funny 40 years after their production. Barney Miller is one of those shows. More interesting than this fact, however, is that this show has many features atypical of its genre and time period:

    1. Virtually all of the action (excepting a handful of scenes and the strange and mostly unenjoyable 'Wojo's Girl' 2-parter) takes place at a single location, the police station. In this way, the show is like a stage play, and of course, stunningly similar to the classic Kirk Douglas play & film 'Detective Story.'

    2. There is almost no slapstick, no catchphrases, and no toilet humor.

    3. Unlike the most popular sitcoms of the mid-1970's, such as 'All In the Family', 'Good Times', etc. none of the recurring cast play their characters broadly. None of them are shouting tyrants, cartoonish buffoons, dingy housewives, etc. Most of the regular cast played their characters toward the deadpan end of the comedic spectrum. (The recurring Inspector Luger, played by the great James Gregory, is gently buffoonish, but nothing like Ted Baxter or George Jefferson.) One episode is an exception to this rule, 'The Brownies,' which is one of the 10 funniest sitcom episodes ever produced. If you have seen this episode, you know why the characters were played differently this time around, and you know that the essence of the story is seeing the characters behaving different than usual.

    4. With the exception of Barbara Barrie as the intermittent presence of the titular character's wife in the early episodes, there are no recurring female characters. (Just an observation, not saying this is a good thing for every sitcom.)

    These facts argue in favor of the theory that artists who seek to create something of quality and durability should not always try to imitate. Doing something different can be good.

    The writing and the performances are the essence of why this show is good. But also there is the faded paint and rumpled clothes, and the varying degrees of world-weariness in faces of Yamana, Fish, Capt. Miller, and Inspector Luger, which evoke the gritty, working class realities of old New York before a series of quasi-fascist mayors tried to reboot the city as a kind of fantasyland for rich people and tourists.

    A final point of interest to which I will draw your attention is gentle and matter-of-fact way in which the cops interact with both 'criminals' and 'victims.' You won't see them trying to intimidate or torture criminals into confessions. There is an implicit message of compassion in this, along with the related notion that when the total circumstances of life are taken into account, the moral differences between people don't seem all that huge.
    Surfer-23

    A quality series and a real lesson in TV writing

    "Barney Miller" was a show that changed dramatically during the course of its run, despite the fact that its plot, setting, and basic cast remained the same.

    The show dealt with a detective squad at a precinct house in New York City and the often strange people from the community who went in and out their door. At the beginning of the series, the pace was fast and the comedy a bit "loud," and the emphasis was on one-liners and quirkiness rather than on real characters. Barney was the captain of the precinct, very put-upon and overworked, but nevertheless always wise and friendly. Wojo was the well-meaning detective who was a bit lacking in smarts. Harris was funny, fashion-conscious, and cool, while Yemana was much more introverted, though he would also provide the occasional witty commentary. Fish was the old man on the verge of retirement who had more ailments than you could imagine. Chano was perhaps the most "normal" of the bunch after Barney, and always tried to have a positive outlook despite being constantly exposed to the less inspiring side of life.

    The detectives were racially mixed, which, at the show's inception, would occasionally provide for some comedy, though ethnic humor was largely dispensed with after the first season. Other detectives came and went after an episode or two, especially during the very early years.

    By the end of the run, the pace of the show had slowed down somewhat. The precinct house was now very leisurely for a police station in Manhattan. Conversations became more relaxed as well, and you got the idea that the directors were trying to show human interaction as it often was, with people thinking before they spoke. The dialog became wittier and the characterization much more subtle. Barney was now more of a real person, the pressures of life seemingly affecting him more, and he would even get a bit frustrated with his immediate underlings. Harris, with whom Barney now clashed from time to time, had become successful financially and was becoming more attuned to the cultural side of things. He had developed into something of a snob, and was also less and less interested in police work as the series went on. Chano had moved on early, Fish retired (and had briefly had his own show), and the actor who played Yemana died, inspiring a half-hour tribute to actor Jack Soo by the rest of the cast. Dietrich was Fish's replacement, and was the intellectual of the group (one Monday morning he chit-chatted about how he had gone to the Goethe Festival over the weekend). His (often in-depth) knowledge on every conceivable subject was an extreme nuisance to Harris, but proved helpful to Barney in official matters. Wojo, by the end of the run, was no longer the loud, sex-driven brute he had been before, but rather a soulful and sensitive person, prompting Harris, in one of the show's great inside jokes, to proclaim in the final episode: "He is so MUCH improved!"

    Popping in occasionally was Inspector Luger, Barney's immediate superior, a man who yearned for the old days of police work, when men were men (and died like men) and there wasn't all this "concern" for the suspect. Though Luger never changed, Barney's reaction to him did: where he once considered him as an amusing relic from the past of the city's police force, he later saw him as dangerously out of touch and a potential threat to police-civilian relations. And he turned out to be just that: at a protest by Hasidic Jews at the station house, Luger suggested that they all disperse, go home and "take a shave." The protest immediately turned into a riot.

    The obsequious Officer Carl Levitt became a regular after a few seasons, always trying to become a detective, but continually rejected, apparently because of his height. And every once in a while there was a visit from Lt. Scanlon of Internal Affairs, who delighted in the hunt and, especially, the smell of blood.

    Almost all the action during the run of the show took place in the squad room (which contained a single jail cell) and Barney's adjoining office. Despite the fact that the squad seemed very small considering its location (not to mention not very busy!), the viewer got the feeling that he was really in a run-down precinct house. The office was cramped, and the furniture old and in dire need of replacement. Papers and files lay around for so long that you actually got used to them being where they were, and the advertisement for boxing posted on the wall next to the stairs seems never to have been updated in seven years.

    "Barney Miller," during its run, became a literate, well-written show with interesting characters and story lines. In its later years it unfortunately suffered from "social-cause-of-the-week" syndrome, à la Lou Grant, but it also knew when it was taking itself just a little too seriously, and the episode would often allow a well-timed and witty remark by Dietrich to lighten the atmosphere a bit.

    "Barney Miller" is highly recommended, especially in daily reruns, where you can see its steady development into a fine television series.
    9DKosty123

    Quiet Start Yielded Impressive Results

    This is the most impressive of the sitcoms ever done about law enforcement. It is understated, intellectual, comical, & entertaining while dealing with the beat of a group of New York City Dectectives. The show draws its characters well, & defines & redefines them throughout the show.

    This show was a slow starter in the ratings, partly because of it's subtle humor, & partly because early on it would get distracted away from the police station with Barney's wife (played by Barbara Barrie). After the first couple of seasons, the show started concentrating more on it's knitting, the police station, & graduated into a more sophisticated comedy.

    The recent death of the late Ron Carey reminded me of just how well he played Officier Carl Levitt. His character always behaved like all the Detectives looked down on him, an underling. Carey played that attitude brilliantly.

    Hal Linden was always a consummate Captain Miller, always being put on the spot by his team & shooting from the hip at times. Steve Landesburg (Dietrich)was the most intellectual of the detectives always taking a simple conversation & making it complex.

    James Gregory as Inspector Luger was alway bugging Barney with stories of the old days he'd have to listen to from a superior. In some ways this was the veteran movie actors best role. Max Gail as Wojo was always being played as stupid but often got the last word in.

    Abe Vigoda was perfect as Fish, so good they spun him off from here to his own series. Jack Soo was brilliant as Yemana but sadly death cut his role short in this series, similar to Coach on CHEERS. Ron Glass as Detective Harris was very good as another mainstay on the show. This show had a diverse cast, even Linda Lavin who would go on to play ALICE got a good start on this show.

    The writers were brilliant in that they constantly kept developing the characters to the point that when the last show came along, they ended the show with a script where everybody finally got what they wanted in promotions for years, and ended with Barney closing the door on the squad room for the last time.

    As this show hits the DVD's, I bet it gets a slow start but once young folks get exposed to it, the sales will pick up speed. The shows are that good.
    jacksonc

    One of the all-time greats

    This is one of the absolute greatest shows on television - never fails to entertain. Too bad the "suits" didn't catch on and try to copy what so obviously worked. It ranks right there with M*A*S*H, Frasier, Cheers, and Married...With Children as examples of how good comedy can be...

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      During its broadcast run, amid the many cop shows on television at the time, many real-life police officers considered this the show that best depicted the realities of police life.
    • Erros de gravação
      Detective Fish has inconsistent years of service with the department. In the season one episode "The Arsonist " he mentions being on the force for 25 years. In the same seasons episode "Fish" he remarks that he went to the academy in 1937, making him a 38 year veteran.
    • Citações

      Yemana: Then Fish runs in the alley and he leaps over us like one of those, what do you call those things in Africa that run and leap in the air?

      Detective Ron Harris: Slaves.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      At different times in the production of the series Max Gail was credited as both Max Gail and Maxwell Gail.
    • Conexões
      Featured in The 28th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1976)

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    Perguntas frequentes18

    • How many seasons does Barney Miller have?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 22 de agosto de 1974 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • The Life and Times of Captain Barney Miller
    • Locações de filme
      • ABC Television Center - 4151 Prospect Avenue, Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA
    • Empresa de produção
      • Four D Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 30 min
    • Cor
      • Color

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