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Le Retour de l'Homme de fer

Original title: The Return of Ironside
  • TV Movie
  • 1993
  • TV-PG
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
263
YOUR RATING
Raymond Burr, Don Galloway, and Don Mitchell in Le Retour de l'Homme de fer (1993)
CrimeDrama

Chief Ironside has just retired and is looking forward to running his vineyard with his wife. But his retirement is interrupted when his old friend and colleague Ed Brown, who is now working... Read allChief Ironside has just retired and is looking forward to running his vineyard with his wife. But his retirement is interrupted when his old friend and colleague Ed Brown, who is now working for the Denver police department comes to him and asks him to fill in the vacancy left by... Read allChief Ironside has just retired and is looking forward to running his vineyard with his wife. But his retirement is interrupted when his old friend and colleague Ed Brown, who is now working for the Denver police department comes to him and asks him to fill in the vacancy left by the untimely death of the Chief. Ironside does so but with condition that it will only be... Read all

  • Director
    • Gary Nelson
  • Writers
    • Collier Young
    • Rob Hedden
    • William Read Woodfield
  • Stars
    • Raymond Burr
    • Don Galloway
    • Barbara Anderson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    263
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gary Nelson
    • Writers
      • Collier Young
      • Rob Hedden
      • William Read Woodfield
    • Stars
      • Raymond Burr
      • Don Galloway
      • Barbara Anderson
    • 7User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast31

    Edit
    Raymond Burr
    Raymond Burr
    • Robert Ironside
    Don Galloway
    Don Galloway
    • Ed Brown
    Barbara Anderson
    Barbara Anderson
    • Eve Whitfield
    Elizabeth Baur
    Elizabeth Baur
    • Fran Belding
    Don Mitchell
    Don Mitchell
    • Mark Sanger
    Dana Wynter
    Dana Wynter
    • Katherine Ironside
    Perrey Reeves
    Perrey Reeves
    • Suzanne Dwyer
    Eddie Jones
    Eddie Jones
    • Commissioner Fisette
    Jeff Kaake
    Jeff Kaake
    • Mike Quinn
    Derek Webster
    Derek Webster
    • Jerry
    Cliff Gorman
    Cliff Gorman
    • Joe McManus
    Robin Sachs
    Robin Sachs
    • Nicholas Metzinger
    Scott Patterson
    Scott Patterson
    • Gillette
    Ed Lauter
    Ed Lauter
    • Chief Bell
    Chuck Booms
    Darlene Vogel
    Darlene Vogel
    • Judy Bernardo
    Billie McBride
    • Marianne Bell
    Don Barshay
    • Dr. Billman
    • Director
      • Gary Nelson
    • Writers
      • Collier Young
      • Rob Hedden
      • William Read Woodfield
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    7.1263
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    Featured reviews

    10pattifred

    Loved this Movie

    I so loved watching this movie. I loved that they were able to get Barbara Anderson (Eve), Elizabeth Baur (Fran), Don Galloway (Ed), and Don Mitchell (Mark) all together for this movie. The gang was all there, and I could not be happier. It was so great also to see that the character of Mark has done so well wow I remember him from the first episode of Ironside and how he acted, and here he is a Court Judge loves it when he flips out his badge and says that he is a Judge, so impressive. I also love seeing Raymond Burr, yes, he is in Denver where Perry Mason was also filmed but it does not matter, just loved seeing him in a movie. Loved seeing this movie just wish there was more than one.
    7krorie

    "I was watching Ironsides (sic) on TV"

    "Ironside" was an institution in the late 1960's and early 1970's. Almost everyone watched it. That was before satellite dish television provided zillions of channels with "Gilligan's Island" reruns on half of them. Even basic cable was just that in those days. Most of the local cable companies across the nation provided the three network channels, the new educational channel, and time and weather channels with commercials crossing the screen at the bottom. One of the popular balladeers of the day Tom T. Hall had a hit record "Old Dogs, Children, And Watermelon Wine" that begins with the singer watching "Ironside" on a hotel TV in Miami. Many fans of "Ironside" had also been fans of the long running "Perry Mason" series. Raymond Burr starred in both. Most of his early movies had Burr playing heavies, sometimes sadistic thugs. Then he played a lawyer with a flair for drama in "A Place In The Sun" and his fate was sealed.

    It is indeed a pleasure to see the return of the handicapped policeman along with the rest of the cast of the TV series, a fitting swan song for the talented actor who was dying of cancer when making "The Return of Ironside," not unlike another gifted actor's last hurrah, John Wayne's magnificent "The Shootist." Both are tributes to noble individuals who never forgot their many fans.

    The story is not so bad either, an above average murder mystery for a made-for-television flick. You won't be disappointed.
    6midnight_raider2001

    Not bad but quite different from the original series

    It's somewhat odd for fans of the original series to sit and watch this reunion movie. The entire original cast (including Barbara Anderson, who had quit the show after its fourth season) returns and their performances are the best thing about the film (along with Dana Wynter, written in as Chief Robert Ironside's wife). The show itself is not from the original production company, though -- it's from the team that brought you The Equalizer and the revival of Kojak. The producers' unfamiliarity with the series shows throughout. Ironside's permanent lower-half paralysis, which was emphasized in virtually every episode (sometimes in long sermons) is almost completely glossed over. The San Francisco setting, so important to the original, is mentioned only at the very beginning when Ironside finally retires. (Since the filming of this one was shoehorned between two Perry Mason movies in the winter of 2003, and those films were being done out of Denver to save money, the producers simply created a rather awkward Denver setting -- although the final fight aboard a snowbound train is a nice touch). Even Quincy Jones' celebrated theme song has been dropped from the opening and closing credits. Fortunately, the heavy-handedness of the series (there were so many human "moral" stories done on that show that even fans yearned for a regular crime drama once in a while) is also absent, although most viewers would have to watch the show several times to figure out what's going on.
    estabansmythe

    This isn't for chowderheads

    Raymond Burr was a great actor. He could say more with a glance, an exhale or a wry smile than most actors could with an entire soliloquy and some who have been given entire one-person plays.

    To see him reprise his second greatest role, as Chief Robert T. Ironside was most enjoyable. It was also bittersweet as it's obvious that he's thinner here than the recent Perry Mason films he made. He had cancer and he knew he didn't have a lot of time, so he brought his friends from the TV show together one last time.

    The plot is rather contrived, but that really doesn't matter a whole lot. There's a definite comfort in seeing the old gang together one more time. It's like when the surviving Beatles got back together in the mid-'90s. You knew they weren't going to create the type of revolutionary music they were making in the mid-60s. There would be no Revolver or Sgt. Pepper, but no one really cared. It was just so damn nice seeing and hearing them playing together one more time, although Free As A Bird and Real Love were very nice records, indeed. The same can be said of this TV movie.

    What adds to the enjoyment is that they've all aged so very nicely. Barbara Anderson looks better than she did in the series, and I'd kill to see Liz Bauer on the tube on a regular basis again. There was just something special about her that I liked very much. And she's also an incredible beauty - she was in the 70s and she was in the 90s. Don Galloway and Don Mitchell provide solid co-star support, as usual. A longtime fave, Dana Wynter adds an elegant mature presence as the chief's wife.

    But it's Raymond Burr who is the show. I miss his wise, knowing presence on the small screen a great deal. But I am delighted that he was able to reprise this beloved role at least one final time.
    grand_duke_bjg

    Not Casablanca, but not Clambake either

    While growing up, IRONSIDE was one of my all-time favorite TV series'; it remains my all-time favorite TV cop show. Not because it was better or more original or even more true-to-life. At the time it originally aired it was the first TV show in history whose lead character was physically disabled (Longstreet, about a blind detective, was number 2). It remains one of the very, very few. To a man who spent the first ten years of life in a wheelchair and still needs a cane occasionally, that's more important than plots or even originality.

    The plot of "The Return of Ironside" serves as a justification for getting all the old characters from the TV series together to solve a mystery again. As police procedural, it's better than competent; as a murder mystery, the solution is translucent, like a window in a bathroom, but it's still a puzzle. But for those few of us who loved the original Ironside character, just seeing him work again is a kick.

    Raymond Burr holds the distinction of starring in not one but two of the best written, best produced and best acted mystery dramas TV ever produced; Perry Mason was the first; Ironside was the second. Just as no one will ever play Perry Mason again, no one will ever play Robert T. Ironside again. Burr made a whole slew of Perry Mason movies before he died; Return of Ironside might also have been the first of many had he not died of cancer shortly after filming.

    All I can say is I've watched the movie half a dozen times and I still lik e it. It's not one of the greatest movies ever made; it's not even one of the greatest TV movies ever made. But just as the TV series Ironside was better than most other cop shows, the movie is a lot better than most other cop movies made for TV in the last decade or two. If you don't like Burr, you won't like it; if, however, like a lot us born before JFK got shot, you like Raymond Burr, it serves as a great ending for one of TV's best actors.

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    Related interests

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    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Though Barbara Anderson and Elizabeth Baur both worked on the series L'homme de fer (1967), they never appeared together since Elizabeth Baur replaced Barbara Anderson. This situation is unique in TV reunion movies since the original series cast is usually used in lieu of replacement actors who join later in the series.
    • Goofs
      In the beginning of this movie, Ironside is given the gift of a fancy new wheelchair at his retirement dinner. He declines to accept it, however, and states that he would instead like to donate it to St. Catherine's Hospital, where, 26 years ago on his discharge after being crippled by a rifle shot, the sisters there gave him the wheelchair he currently still uses and wants to keep. This is not 100% accurate: In the original 1967 series pilot, which begins with the shooting, the sisters and staff of the hospital do present Ironside with a wheelchair on his departure, but it's St. Mary's Hospital, not St. Catherine's.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 13, 1996 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Return of Ironside
    • Filming locations
      • Denver, Colorado, USA
    • Production companies
      • R.B. Productions
      • Riven Rock Productions
      • Windy City Productions Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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