Matlock Police

Matlock Police
Starring Michael Pate
Grigor Taylor
Vic Gordon
Paul Cronin
Tom Richards
Peter Gwynne
Country of origin Australia
No. of seasons 6
No. of episodes 229
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Release
Original network The 0-10 Network
Original release 1971 – 1976

Matlock Police is an Australian television police drama series made by Crawford Productions for the 0-10 Network (now known as the Ten Network) between 1971 and 1976. The series focused on the police station and crime in the Victorian town of Matlock and the surrounding district, and the backgrounds and personal lives of the main policemen.

Background

The series was the 0-10 Network's attempt to come up with a police show to rival Homicide (shown by the Seven Network) and Division 4 (on the Nine Network). Matlock Police was different from its Melbourne-based predecessors by being set in a small country town, the fictional Matlock, Victoria (a real Matlock does exist in Victoria, but it is much smaller than the town depicted by this series, which is loosely based on Shepparton). These program's introduction featured an overhead shot of a town with a divided road, thought to be of Bairnsdale in Victoria. Series writers had a reference manual giving full details of the town’s geography, amenities, social structure, etc., as well as that of the surrounding area - neighbouring towns included Wilga, Chinaman's Creek, Possum's Creek and Burrabri, and there was an offshoot of the Great Dividing Range called the Candowies. The town's colourful history included the local Aboriginal tribe (the ‘Bangerang’), the town founder (George Matlock), a gold rush, a bushranger (‘Holy’ Joe Cooper - so called both for his theft of a shipment of holey dollars and because he was a preacher) and a town patriarchy (the Falconers). About the only landmark the Matlock district lacked for dramatic purposes was a beach.[1]

Broadcast history

The first episode was broadcast in Melbourne on 22 February 1971. Initially filmed in black and white, the series switched to colour in episode 162, "Loggerheads". Matlock Police was cancelled in 1975 after 229 episodes had been produced (while the final episode is numbered 228, an earlier episode had an A suffix, making a total of 229).

Cast

A notable guest star was George Lazenby who appeared in a 1974 episode "In the Name of the Queen"[6] (inspired by the case of Ronnie Biggs and the Great Train Robbery). Other noted Australian actors who made early appearances on the series include Andrew McFarlane, Jack Thompson, Robert McDarra, Judy Morris and Sigrid Thornton. After the sudden death of character actor Stewart Ginn in September 1971, Hector Crawford praised his performance in the episode titled "The Word is Progress" as one of the finest dramatic performances to come out of the Crawfords company.[7]

The other "stars" of the show were the HG Holden Monaro (base model), which featured until Crawford's contract with Chrysler Australia commenced, with a Holden Kingswood wagon also being featured as the station's general purpose vehicle. The Monaro and Kingswood were followed by VH and VJ Valiant Ranger models. A short wheelbase FJ40 Toyota Land-cruiser also featured. Gary Hogan rode a CB750 motorcycle for most of the series, which replaced a BMW R75 used in earlier episodes.

DVD release

Crawfords has begun releasing Matlock Police in 26-episode, 7-disc box sets as of 2015; this should result in a 9-volume collection for the full series.[8]

See also

References

  1. In episode 123, "Ski-Do", Maddern and Hogan are asked by the local police to investigate a disappearance on the slopes of "Mount Keira" (filmed at Fall's Creek).
  2. In accordance with Victoria Police Force changes, Detective Sergeant Maddern became Detective Senior Sergeant and Sergeant Kennedy became Senior Sergeant Kennedy.
  3. In a case of life imitating art, Victoria Police outfitted their motorbikes with radios.
  4. http://www.classicaustraliantv.com/matlock.htm
  5. Michael Pate had refused to extend his contract for a further three episodes to cover the gap before Peter Gwynne's arrival, so York was left on his own in C.I. Branch and Pate edited out of the opening credits. Ironically, Gwynne had previously appeared as a quirky Homicide detective alongside Pate in episode 155, "Nothing Man".
  6. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0643797/
  7. The Age, 23 September 1971
  8. Crawfords DVD - Matlock Police
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