Brock's Last Case (TV Movie 1973) Poster

(1973 TV Movie)

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7/10
Cast and Crew while Filming
tlandrum-792-87635511 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
"Spoiler Warning!" This movie was filmed in the City of Coachella and the Coachella Police Department was used as back prop. Les O'Neil was COP, and I was one of the escorting officers during the making of the movie and can say that Mr. Widmark was total professional during the entire time. I enjoyed watching him work, along with Henry Darrow and Mike Burns, who showed quite a bit of interest in the operations of the police department. During the making of the movie, I took approximately 100-150 pictures and it does bring back memories. One of the best was the court room with Dub Taylor and Beth Brickell, when she shot the arrow into the picture of Dub Taylor over the entrance into the court. My wife and I sat in the courtroom when that was done. I had that picture up until a couple of years ago, when it finally came apart and I had to throw it away. All the cast and crew members were fun to work with and were professionals.
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5/10
Okay...nothing more.
planktonrules11 January 2016
In the early 1970s, TV wanted Richard Widmark and "Brock's Last Case" was a made for TV movie that might have become a TV series. However, it wasn't received so well by the powers that be and instead they gave the green light to a different Widmark show, a TV version of "Madigan". I have never seen the TV version of "Madigan" but movie-wise, the original "Madigan" is much better than "Brock's Last Case"...so I can see why they made the choice they made.

When the film begins, Brock (Widmark) is working on his final case for the NYPD. He's had enough and is retiring to an orange ranch he bought some time ago. However, apparently Brock is a total moron and never visited the place and just assumed it was peachy...which it wasn't. Instead it's a dump and Brock knows nothing about orange growing. However, soon his focus is on a murder--and the local police would love to have Brock's help...and so would Brock's supervisor at the ranch, as he's the accused killer.

The film is just okay. Part of the problem was using arrows to kill people--it just seems silly. The rest is that the killer was some fat old guy who was about as scary as the Pillsbury Doughboy. Not brilliant but passable entertainment only.
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6/10
widmark at his best as a New York cop
malcolmgsw20 January 2006
This film was recently aired on Channel 5.It is at its best when it is based in New York.Although there is the usual fun when a city dweller goes to the country it starts to run rapidly downhill at this time.The action sequences are to my mind tedious and seem to go on for eternity without really reaching any climax.By the time this film reaches its finale one simply does not care about who is the culprit and his motives.The one thing that shines out of this film is Widmarks professionalism and sheer durability.He was always a favourite of mine.It is a shame that he is now retired and so we have no more Richard Widmark films to look forward to.
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Busted pilot
bwaynef19 May 1999
One of those NBC-TV "World Premiere" movies that also served as the pilot for a series. Richard Widmark plays Brock, a weary N.Y.C. detective who retires to a farm in California where he hopes to grow oranges, but, wouldn't you know it?, he finds crime there, too. Widmark is good, as always, as is Henry Darrow, whom the tough former cop assists when he is framed for murder, but the best moments are at the beginning when Widmark is still on the Manhattan beat, finding the average law-abiding citizen as disagreeable as the criminals. It's little wonder that when Widmark did enter the TV series sweepstakes, it was as "Madigan," the N.Y.C. detective he had memorably played several years earlier in a Universal theatrical film.
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6/10
Cosy and likable 70's TV movie
Red-Barracuda28 November 2015
I first saw this one back in the early 90's when it showed up on midweek daytime TV here in the UK. I remembered it being an enjoyable enough, if unremarkable, effort. Having just seen it again I do have to say that that original assessment still holds. Brock is a burnt-out NYC cop who retires from life in the firing line of the Big Apple and retires to a ranch in the Californian countryside. On arrival, his Native American ranch hand is arrested for the murder of the local sheriff. The situation appears fishy though and before long Brock is recruited to investigate.

This is one of a very specific type of TV movie which was a pilot for a series that never was. I can see why they thought they might have a workable idea to be honest, as detective dramas were ten-a-penny back in the 70's, while the whole fish-out-of-water idea is one in which many plot-lines can sprout from. Yet it remained a one-off film and was not picked up. Truthfully, they could have worked out a better story-line I reckon, as the central mystery is not especially interesting. Nevertheless, it's still a decent enough film which benefits from its TV movie charm and, in Richard Widmark, it had a good main star.
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5/10
His law enforcement training
bkoganbing3 July 2015
Richard Widmark stars as a New York City detective who is not happy with the new trends in law enforcement, things like Miranda you know. Also citizens aren't showing the same kind of respect for police as they used to. This last arrest he swears will be Brock's Last Case as he retires to an orange grove in southern California that he put money down on.

As it turns out though Widmark's professional expertise is needed because the sheriff was murdered and the man looking good for it is Henry Darrow the American Indian who has been looking after Widmark's orange grove and not too successfully I might add. The acting sheriff is young Michael Burns and he needs all the help he can get.

In this sleepy town in which folks like Will Geer and John Anderson are trying to get a real estate boom started Darrow and his tribe aren't very popular. A lot of people would see it most convenient if he was guilty. Darrow looks good because the sheriff and two more people are killed during the course of the film with his arrows.

Brock's Last Case might have been a good television series, but it was never picked up. With the cast list I wonder how it could not have been. I did like Beth Brickell who was a neighboring rancher and an attorney who has ACLU instincts. She would have been law and order cop Widmark's romantic interest and professional rival.

Widmark did do a series based on Madigan one of his best films, but the series wasn't a patch on the Don Siegel classic.

Brock's Last Case though is not in Madigan the movie's league, but still pleasant viewing.
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4/10
Orange you glad you left the big apple?
mark.waltz16 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Not much there in this obvious movie pilot for a TV series that fortunately never came to fruition, starring film noir veteran Richard Widmark looking tired as he prepares to leave the NYPD and move to California to start an orange ranch that he purchased years before. He gets there right after the local sheriff has been killed and finds himself reluctantly involved in the case.

Not very interesting with cliched characters and a silly musical score that seems straight out of "The Beverly Hillbillies". One interesting element is the presence of the pretty Beth Brickell, a charming and talented young actress I had never heard of before, playing Widmark's neighbor. The plot is barely enough to sustain a 90-minute TV movie let alone an actual series, although Will Geer does provide some amusing moments.
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Something So Cozy About It !
elshikh419 April 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Is it the old times? Is it your certainty that there'll be no nudity, profanity or violence? Is it the uncomplicated nature of the whole thing where the end must be happy, and the good guys must win? Is it (Richard Widmark) as a memory from the good old 1950s, or as a symbol of the noble lead who just doesn't do nudity, profanity or violence?! Or is it just (Widmark)'s good face? Is it the nostalgia for a safer place in time, where shows like this you have watched several times as a kid in your bed before sleep without much worries? I think it's a combination of all of the above.

The writers (Martin Donaldson) and (Alex Gordongood) created a lovely formula: the private eye meets the western. Their script is a bit nice. I loved the idea of turning the retirement of that old investigator, who wants to be a farmer, into unbroken investigations and a tormenting farming. The characters around him were interesting whether as suspects for the whodunit plot, or as parts for the world of the never-made series that this was a pilot for. Loved (Pat Morita)'s as Japanese restaurant's owner who can't make Japanese dishes, and serves nothing but Japanese canned foods. The scene of the cell, where the Indian assistant was kept, was so serene; its detailing caught me. The way the heroine proved her point in the court is unforgettable. And the last scene is a delight, with the lead looking to the sun by the house; which was being built by his new neighbors / friends / family.

On the other hand, the direction was slack. The action scenes were almost terrible; recall the fight between the killer and the young cop. And the rest didn't impress me at all. I hated the moment in which the Indian knew about the murder of his love, director (David Lowell Rich) didn't do a thing there, not even a sad harmonica in the background! Despite how brisk (Widmark) seems for a 59 year old man, he wasn't at his finest hour. I believe the negative reception for that, as a pilot, came from the totally indifference performance that he gave as Brock. Look at the scene of viewing the house for the first time, he should be shocked in a comic way, however he gave one unchangeable cold reaction. The thing was that he paused that reaction till the end of the movie. So his supposedly funny moments went wrong with that dry dealing; for big instance, the one-liner about lawyers, after catching the killer near the lake. He didn't change it unless when he smiled, for the one and only time; in the car before the last scene!

At any case, it does leave me hungry for more. Along side the formula, this movie had potential to launch a comic cop drama; which could have had some singularity among the many crime-solvers shows back in the 1970s. But I was wondering about the title? Why every episode has to be Brock's Last Case?! Bad title and omen!

It's a feel good movie from the American TV in a time that maybe all of its products were of the same kind. Its feel of coziness is unmistakable; by its end, I was as comfortable as Brock in the finale. I miss that feel. So I search for these movies all over the channels every night, to meet one rarely every year, and always aired before the dawn. My only consolation is that no commercials to interrupt whatsoever. The sponsors think these are old news. Great news for me though!
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