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Un shérif à New York

Original title: McCloud
  • TV Series
  • 1970–1977
  • 12
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
4.1K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,550
2,119
Dennis Weaver in Un shérif à New York (1970)
Watch McCloud Trailer - Season 1
Play trailer0:18
1 Video
99+ Photos
Contemporary WesternActionCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

A New Mexico deputy marshal gets assigned to Manhattan's 27th Precinct.A New Mexico deputy marshal gets assigned to Manhattan's 27th Precinct.A New Mexico deputy marshal gets assigned to Manhattan's 27th Precinct.

  • Creator
    • Herman Miller
  • Stars
    • Dennis Weaver
    • J.D. Cannon
    • Terry Carter
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    4.1K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,550
    2,119
    • Creator
      • Herman Miller
    • Stars
      • Dennis Weaver
      • J.D. Cannon
      • Terry Carter
    • 16User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 6 Primetime Emmys
      • 1 win & 10 nominations total

    Episodes47

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    Videos1

    McCloud Trailer - Season 1
    Trailer 0:18
    McCloud Trailer - Season 1

    Photos910

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Dennis Weaver
    Dennis Weaver
    • Sam McCloud
    • 1970–1977
    J.D. Cannon
    J.D. Cannon
    • Peter B. Clifford…
    • 1970–1977
    Terry Carter
    Terry Carter
    • Sgt. Joe Broadhurst…
    • 1970–1977
    Ken Lynch
    Ken Lynch
    • Grover…
    • 1972–1977
    Diana Muldaur
    Diana Muldaur
    • Chris Coughlin…
    • 1970–1977
    Sidney Clute
    Sidney Clute
    • Simms…
    • 1972–1977
    Ken Scott
    Ken Scott
    • Polk…
    • 1970–1977
    John Finnegan
    John Finnegan
    • 1st Desk Sergeant…
    • 1972–1977
    Teri Garr
    Teri Garr
    • Sgt. Phyllis Norton…
    • 1970–1975
    Tracy Reed
    Tracy Reed
    • Carol Broadhurst…
    • 1973–1977
    Robert Weaver
    Robert Weaver
    • Marty Foreman…
    • 1972–1976
    Rick Weaver
    Rick Weaver
    • 2nd Gang Member…
    • 1972–1976
    Coleen Gray
    Coleen Gray
    • Mrs. Clifford…
    • 1974–1977
    Gino Ardito
    • O'Hara…
    • 1974–1977
    William Bryant
    William Bryant
    • Courier…
    • 1970–1973
    Ben Frommer
    • Bum…
    • 1970–1977
    Neville Brand
    Neville Brand
    • Burl Connors…
    • 1972–1975
    Lonny Chapman
    Lonny Chapman
    • Gabe Lester…
    • 1972–1975
    • Creator
      • Herman Miller
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    6.94K
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    Featured reviews

    9midnight_raider2001

    Kudos for all the comments!

    I love this website and all the comments on it! McCloud was my favorite TV series and still is way up there. I would love to trade with anyone who has the 90-minute episodes on home video. I have the 2-hour shows from A&E and some of the 90-minute shows from the CBS Late Movie, but fairly often I have only opening and closing credits for episodes (particularly from the poor second season, and the going-downhill seventh).

    One correction: "Return to the Alamo," the best episode of the series, was directed by Walter Doniger. E.W. Swackhamer directed the next "Alamo" episode, "The Day New York Turned Blue," which is still my favorite. The first "This Must Be The Alamo" was directed by Bruce Kessler (who does an excellent job), and Dennis Weaver himself directed the last (and least available) "Alamo" episode, "'Twas The Fight Before Christmas," which among other things features "Dallas" star Linda Gray in her first major role. On re-watching this episode last Christmas, I think it may be the best in the whole series.

    In my opinion, the show took a while to find its stride. The 60-minute first-season episodes, which were combined into 90-minute or 2-hour TV movies later on, are fair but a little too countrified for my taste. The second season is generally quite bad, due to writing by Peter Allan Fields (five of the seven episodes). When Glen A. Larson got back from "Alias Smith and Jones" and took over the reins in the third season, the writing got noticeably better (he scripted five of the best episodes -- the first three "Alamos," "The New Mexican Connection" and "Butch Cassidy Rides Again," as well as two of the worst -- "The Barefoot Stewardess Caper" and "Night of the Shark"). Michael Gleason was nearly as good a writer (with the fourth season's "The Colorado Cattle Caper" making the top five). Lou Shaw wasn't in their class, but turned in several good scripts ("The Man With the Golden Hat" was probably his best).

    The show had more changes in theme music than any other series I know. David Shire contributed a pretty poor twangy theme song for the first two years. In year three, they had four themes in five episodes! (Two of them are "chase music" from the episodes themselves.") The show hit the mark with the fourth-season theme, which was re-arranged each season to lead off with the hard-driving music as McCloud and the horse pounded the pavement. It's my favorite theme of all time (the arrangement for season six is the best). In the seventh season, among many disappointments, the theme was cut down in the opening and used only three times over the opening credits. The 1989 "Return of Sam McCloud" reunion-film theme was forgettable and had no relation to the others. When will people learn that a good theme song and opening sequence is vital to a show's success????

    The series really Jumped The Shark when Michael Sloan came on as producer and head writer during the final season. His debut, "Bonnie and McCloud," was pinned by Variety as "perhaps the sappiest episode in the entire series," and his next episode, "The Great Taxicab Stampede," is just plain idiotic. Surprisingly, his other two scripts ("'Twas The Fight Before Christmas" and "London Bridges") are pretty good; I suspect he had uncredited help and a lot of it.

    Great job, fans!
    blanche-2

    I miss these old shows

    I miss the NBC Mystery Movie, which gave us Columbo, McMillan and Wife, McCloud, and several shows that didn't make it. McCloud deservedly was a show that lasted. It starred Dennis Weaver who, after his big success as Chester on "Gunsmoke" proved that he wasn't one to be typecast. He was terrific as McCloud, a westerner assigned to work in New York City under Chief Clifford (the ever-irate J.D. Cannon). Though his ways were often criticized, McCloud always got the job done. "You said yourself I'm funky," he once told Clifford. Terry Carter provided able support.

    Diana Muldaur was McCloud's sophisticated Manhattan girlfriend, and you could really see how she'd fall for him - it's obvious she saw him as a real man in a world of dull types.

    At the time of this writing, Dennis Weaver is 81 and still working occasionally, though not enough for his many fans. He has given us some wonderful characters over the years. McCloud is one, a funky cowboy riding the Manhattan streets.
    VetteRanger

    One of my lifelong favorites

    Sam McCloud is one of the more entertaining characters ever created for television, and possibly the most natural "fish out of water" creation.

    In the pilot, McCloud escorts a witness in an important murder case to New York, and winds up solving a complicated case virtually single-handedly. The premise then becomes that he is "assigned" by the Taos, NM Sheriff's Office to stay in New York as learn their police techniques and procedures.

    Each episode becomes a study of how McCloud's stubborn, but common sense, demeanor trumps his big city colleagues to find the truth where more common methods fail.

    While the cases presented are serious -- most often murders -- the series has a comical edge the will cause you to chuckle out loud at least a few times per episode.

    The only failing is that some of the plots have a few holes in them, and today, it's hard to not only find the episodes, but to find uncut versions that don't leave out important scenes.

    Dennis Weaver is brilliant in the show.

    "There ya go."
    Victor Field

    A long way from Clint Eastwood...

    In "Coogan's Bluff," the movie that led to "McCloud," Clint Eastwood's Coogan came to New York to capture a villain, did so, and went back to New Mexico. Obviously this wasn't going to do for the series, so Sam McCloud was sent to New York to study how they did things in the Big Apple... and then proceeded to ignore them and do things his way.

    Like practically every cop in the history of television, his boss didn't like his methods and would have loved to be rid of him (McCloud actually did grant his wish in one episode when he resigned, but needless to say he came back), but our horse-riding hero got results. Of course, it didn't hurt that his sort-of girlfriend was the Commissioner's cousin... it's what you know and who you know that counts.

    So it went for seven years, first as part of "Four-in-One" (an hour-long revolving series with four instalments) then as part of the "NBC Mystery Movie" until its demise; the series had plenty of comedy (McCloud, trying to land a plane: "The big hand is on 3, the little hand is on 4!" Clifford: "You're looking at the clock, McCloud!") but it wisely took its central premise seriously, never going out of its way to be quirky a la "due South" - McCloud going horse riding down the streets notwithstanding. Dennis Weaver's had other series after this, but we're not going to remember him for "Stone" (and certainly not for the snooze-inducing "Buck James"); it'll be for "Gunsmoke," "Gentle Ben," and for (relatively) younger audiences Deputy Marshal Sam McCloud.

    "There you go..."
    8bkoganbing

    "There Ya Go"

    Although I think that the original inspiration for the McCloud series came from Clint Eastwood's film Coogan's Bluff which involved a New Mexico sheriff in New York, Dennis Weaver certainly made Marshal Sam McCloud his own character and certainly was a lot less stiff than Eastwood's Joe Coogan.

    The premise had Sam McCloud of Taos, New Mexico in New York to take some training in new law enforcement techniques. But it seemed that in every show he was teaching those New York City slickers a thing or two about criminal apprehension.

    He was the bane of the existence of Chief Clifford who was played by J.D. Cannon. Cannon looked like he was about to let an ulcer get the better of him in each show. A bit more patient was the NYPD babysitter Terry Carter who played Sergeant Joe Broadhurst. Weaver even got a little romance going with reporter Diana Muldaur. Weaver was good for scoops at least.

    And there was McCloud's eternal catchphrase. Whenever the New Yorkers finally got whatever he was doing it was always "There Ya Go". Weaver was always springing country aphorisms which he had to translate.

    Weaver really made this show click. He hated playing Chester in Gunsmoke, always thought he should have been the marshal.

    I'd say he proved it with McCloud.

    More like this

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    7.2
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    6.8
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    6.2
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    Kojak
    7.1
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    Baretta
    6.7
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    Love, American Style
    6.8
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    Banacek
    7.6
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    Quincy
    7.3
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    Opération danger
    7.6
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    L'homme de fer
    6.9
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    Sergent Anderson
    6.6
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    Hawaii police d'état
    7.4
    Hawaii police d'état

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This show was a television adaptation of the Clint Eastwood movie, Coogan's Bluff (1968).
    • Goofs
      McCloud's accent is totally wrong for someone supposedly from Taos New Mexico. Taos is located in northern New Mexico, and Anglos there do not speak in that sort of accent, but rather more or less a general American accent.
    • Quotes

      [repeated line]

      Sam McCloud: *There* yuh go!

    • Alternate versions
      Only the first season featured hour long episodes (47 minutes plus commercials). The pilot and subsequent seasons were 90 minutes or longer. For repeats, the six episodes of season one were edited together in pairs of two to form three 90 minutes installments. These were given the new titles 'Man from Taos'; 'Manhattan Manhunt'; and 'Murder Arena'. Some additional voice-overs by the main cast was added to imply connections between the story lines where originally there had been none.
    • Connections
      Edited from Four-In-One (1970)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 4, 1976 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • McCloud
    • Filming locations
      • Grand Hotel, Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico
    • Production companies
      • Glen A. Larson Productions
      • Universal Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h(120 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 4:3

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