(TV Series)

(1974)

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9/10
I love how "Police Story" often highlighted some of the most obscure and unheralded police jobs!
planktonrules3 April 2017
"Police Story" was an excellent show for many reasons...the writing, the acting and the types of stories were NOT typical cop show stories. There were shows about cop burnout, cops on the take, cops who were dedicated and cops of all types. I particularly like that many types of policework are shown on the programs...stuff you'd never see in other police shows. With "Fingerprint" the main character, Sgt. Ryan (Earl Holliman) is a fingerprint man working for the Latent Prints department...and I doubt if any other police show ever highlighted one of these men.

Sgt. Ryan is feeling like he's in a rut. While he's good at his job, he's been doing it for eight years...and he's bored with the same old routine. So, he's been sending out feelers with other divisions...nothing definite but he wants to know his options. His boss isn't pleased to learn this and insists that Ryan stay, as he's invaluable. In other ways, Ryan's life seems a bit stagnant as well. He has a nice girlfriend and their relationship is very steady and consistent...but really, it's going no where.

At the same time, a seemingly separate story is taking place. An incredibly nice, religious and polite deliveryman (Tim Matheson) isn't so very nice after all, as he's suffocating older women for kicks. In fact, the expression on his face is one of almost sexual release...and he's obviously one sick puppy! How does this relate to Sgt. Ryan?

Overall, a very well done episode and one that ended very well. Good acting, excellent writing...see this one.
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10/10
Earl Holliman is GREAT
morrisonhimself12 February 2020
Earl Holliman has given some of the best performances of anyone in what is generically called "Hollywood." He stole the whole picture in the 1956 "The Rainmaker," with Katherine Hepburn and Burt Lancaster.

In too many pictures and shows, his part didn't require much, but in this "Police Story" episode, he was just perfect.

He was backed up by some other of the best, including that extraordinary James Gregory, the lovely and adorable Pat Crowley, and such superb players as MacDonald Carey, Mary Ann Mobley, and Martha Scott.

Nancy Walker has a touching part, and Tim Matheson has to be seen.

This episode is different in that the protagonist, played by Holliman, is not a detective or patrolman, but the latent fingerprints sergeant, and a man who feels bored by the seeming sameness of his job.

It's one of the best of an genuinely excellent series, one of the best series ever on television. Thank goodness YouTube has most of the series.
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Fingerprints
searchanddestroy-14 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
That's the first time I see Earl Holliman in a POLICE STORY episode in which he plays a detective and not a cop in uniform. He seems here very concerned with fingerprints, maybe more than in pure facts or testimonies of witnesses. That's here this episode is so particular. The other odd thing is that this detective lives with his mom, played by Martha Scott, whom I hardly recognized. You have here more an investigation than hard boiled action scenes and car chases. Only one short street scene where our lead detective gets awry aboard his own car. Or near the end, when he runs after the suspect. OK, that changes from the usual routine. But it remains police routine after all, only with more talk than you have to deal with in other episodes of this show dedicated to police force. Holliman is pretty good here in this however forgettable story. Not the best of the whole series for sure. Amusing ending when he forces a car driver to bring him to the police station with the arrested man.
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