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On Universal's Brilliant But Cancelled: Crime Dramas, whodunit fans
get a chance to relive classic episodes of four critically acclaimed but
short-lived series: Johnny Staccato, Delvecchio, Gideon
Oliver, and Touching Evil. Spanning decades of television, the
DVD's highlight is Johnny Staccato. Starring John Cassavetes in
the title role, the episode (ca. 1959) stands up surprisingly well in modern
times. Cassavetes is so suave and cool that no one would doubt his ability
to play a jazz musician who happens to solve crimes at night. Each of the
episodes has its own merits--Judd Hirsch is appropriately intense in Steven
Bochco's Delvecchio, Louis Gossett Jr. is charmingly brilliant as
an anthropology professor/sleuth in Gideon Oliver, and the elite
crime fighters in Touching Evil could give anyone on Law &
Order a run for their money. But the problem with this concept is that
aside from the crime-solving element, the shows don't flow well from one
to the next and ultimately leaves the viewer wanting to see more than just
one episode from each show. |
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