Johnny Staccato: Television's Jazz Detective
S**R
Great B&W Jazz Detective show
Oh they really don't make 'em like this anymore-this has got to be the coolest detective show i have ever seen-never heard of it b4-it was shown on NBC & ABC in 1959 & 1960-not sure if it was ever shown in the UK-filmed in New York City it stars John Cassavetes as jazz pianist Staccato who is also a PI. Each episode is like a mini film noir,a lot of the action takes place in the jazz club 'Waldos'in Greenwich Village-27 episodes full of violence,guns,cheap broads,booze,jazz,smoking-what more do u want to relax to? -great quality prints.
A**S
So good to see these again.
Naked City and Johnny Staccato were my two favourite series in the late 50s and early 60s, and were an important part of my love for the city of New York and Jazz. I've was so pleased when I stumbled across the collection of all 27 episodes of Johnny Staccato featuring the great actor John Cassavetes and so many future-to-be well-known movie actors.The stories hold up, are well produced and directed, and, being black-and-white, show off beat generation NYC to its nourish best. Lots of good on-the-street footage and great music. Highly recommended.
J**R
It was cool in 1960 but corny in 2014.
Rather dated with obvious sound stage sets.
P**Y
Great film noir
This series was one of the best detective series of the time,and for those who have never seen it you are in for a surprise.Good storylines.and a host of great guest stars in various episodes.Pity it only ran for one series.Great print also
L**Y
Stylish and edgy but it runs out of steam about half way through
I used to be a great fan of John Cassavetes, but now that I'm older I find his acting a bit mannered, although he's still very watchable, and, oh, the guy was cool! These episodes were enjoyable enough at first, but the whole thing eventually became rather set bound, with less and less action on the streets. The stories also became more predictable, very much like other US TV series of the late Fifties and early Sixties. That said, the jazz music is great, as is the moody offbeat atmosphere at the club where Staccato plays the piano. Cassavetes' Chandleresque narration is also sharp and cynically witty. Watching out for guests stars is fun though, which is why I buy these things. My favourite was the episode where Cassavetes meets a lovely, intelligent blonde on a plane, played by his real-life wife, Gena Rowlands. Great prints, no subtitles. If the current prices hold, (check out the various buying options), it's terrific value for 27 twenty-five minute episodes, and a pleasant trip down memory lane.
J**E
Five Stars
Excellent item and seller.Recommended.
J**D
I loved these!
These were ahead of their time when they first appeared - film noire for television. Is there anyone out there who can tell me when this excellent collection will be available for Region 2?
T**N
Classic jazz is the icing on the cake!
I remembered this show as a kid on Australian TV around 1960-61 and along with PETER GUNN I guess it was my first introduction to jazz - Henry Mancini on the latter and on JOHNNY STACCATO music by Elmer Bernstein (themes) in jazz mode, and what was basically Shelley Manne and His Men, with John (then Johnny) Williams on piano in the scenes at Waldo's, where Johnny S. plays a little piano and takes his calls for his rather odd PI jobs. Over 50 years later, JOHNNY STACCATO looks and sounds great - with each episode containing almost wall-to-wall music for its 25 minute running time, a very noirish feel to its settings and shootings and the plus of quite a lot of on location shooting (clearly done on the run and without permits) which gives us a great look at NYC and Greenwich Village - when it was really cool. Cassavettes is terrific, and directed a few episodes himself. The Timeless transfers are actually pretty good overall. That we have this available to us at all is something of a wonder. Grab it while it's still available, it's a must for fans of 60s US crime TV and especially the jazz of the period.
J**N
AWESOME
AWESOME
A**M
All that Jazz
First of all, I have to compliment Timeless Media on the quality of the recordings in their complete Johnny Staccato Box Set. I'm pretty well used to the somewhat poorly aged prints that dominate TV reruns and public domain video. Somebody put a lot of work into making Johnny Staccato a great release. The video and sound are great even on my old analog set. It was a pleasure to see and listen to. While some would complain about the lack of extras, I can't really expect many extras when we're dealing with a 51 year old show that was cancelled mid-season and where the star has been dead for 20 years. I'm thankful they got the show out and in such a beautiful form.It can be tempting to write Johnny Staccato off as merely a ripoff of Peter Gunn. After all, both Staccato and Gunn are New York P.I.'s that hang around the jazz scene. The big difference with Staccato is that jazz isn't just something he hangs around for information, but he's truly a part of it as a musician. The scenes of Staccato on the piano are priceless. The music of the lates 50s pulses through Johnny Staccato.In addition, every episode of Peter Gunn seems to end with at least two, and usually four dead bodies. Staccato often ended the show with no dead bodies. Cassavettes influence made Johnny Stacatto much more a Detective Drama than it did Peter Gunn's shooting gallery.Also, another big difference between Peter Gunn and Johnny Staccato is that while "Mother" in Peter Gunn seemed to exist in the story primarily as a plot device and the owner of Peter Gunn's favorite hangout, Waldo (Eduardo Ciannelli) who owns Johnny's favorite spot is a far more fleshed out and there's an almost father-son dynamic of their relationship.As a Private Detective, while Craig Stevens who played Peter Gunn looked and sounded like he was out of central casting for a detective hero, Cassavettes didn't have the look of a great detective hero. Perhaps, it was because I first saw him playing the murderer in the Columbo movie, "Etude in Black", but it took me a while to buy him as a hero. However, Staccato after a while Staccato's looks became a plus.Staccato was a Korean War Veteran who rarely became involved in cases for the money. He rushed off to help his friends and solve cases with little concern for fees. He was the proverbial knight in tarnished armor.According to the first episode, Johnny abandonned full-time piano playing for the life of a private eye when he realized he didn't have the talent to make it big. In the first episode, Johnny states he had turned in his musician's union card years before, but still seemed to play part-time at Waldo's.Staccato's cases occassionally fell under the category of "typical PI fare" such as in, "House of the Four Winds," where Johnny deals with trouble in Chinatown and "Night of Jeopardy," where Johnny shoots a counterfeiter and now the mob is after him for the plates. In "Act of Terror," Johnny is hired by a hypnotist to find his missing wife but Johnny becomes suspicious that the man (and his dummy) may know more than they're letting on. In these sort of rough and tumble situations, Staccato handled himself as well as any detective on television.Other episodes had far deeper dramatic and even moral meaning. In "Evil," Johnny takes on a huckster who is using a mission to scam people out oof money. This episode took a few clever turns. In, "Tempted," Johnny has a chance to take a beautiful woman and $200,000 necklace. In the, "Return," Johnny has to stop a Korean War Veteran who escaped from a mental hospital from killing his wife. In, "Solomon," Johnny is asked to commit perjury by the city's greatest defemse attorney in order to acquit a client the lawyer believes to be innocent.Of the first 23 episodes, I'd say 22 are are among the best half hour detective shows of the era (the exception to this being, "Double Feature" which added nothing to the silly "everyone has a double" plots that many shows just have to try.) It was towards the end of the run that the show began to fade. Cassavettes wanted out, and it began to show on the screen starting with, "An Angry Young Man" in which the story was weak and had Johnny unbelievably moving rhythmically to the polka. The show bounced back a bit with "The Mask of Jason" which featured a young Mary Tyler Moore as a beauty queen scared of an ugly man, but by the end of the episode, the audience has to wonder where the real ugliness lay.The last two episodes were straight downhill. In "A Nice Little Town," the writers go literally out of their way to make a political point, sending Johnny out of New York to a small town where a former U.S. soldier who had defected to the North Korean side had been murdered by two men in absurd masks. We then get to watch unlikable townfolks attack Johnny for not having an American name and for being either a commie or stupid. The episode concludes without Johnny capturing the killers, so that Johnny can make a speech to the strawman anti-communist town. Whether Cassavettes was concerned with making a political point, trying to impress avante garde activist types, or pushing the storyline in hopes that it would help the show get cancelled due to public outcry and get him out of his contract, or some combination of the three, we don't know. However, no record exists suggests that the episode played any part in Staccato's exit.The last episode of Johnny Staccato was, "Swinging Long Hair." The episode had some great music, but was one of the shabbiest shows of the series in terms of its writing. It ends with Stacatto remarking that one of the bad guys still needed to be killed but as someone else would have to do it as, "I've had it." Thus star and character bid farewell together.While the show's quick decline was sad to watch, the quality and greatness of the first 23 episodes make this set well worth owning and I'm glad that I do. Johnny Stacatto was a great show and there may have been more episodes if John Cassavettes had agreed.
K**E
Great musician detective show!
Just received this set this evening and am watching it for the first time. Being a long time fan of the classic Noir show "Peter Gunn" this is extremely close to Peter Gun since both solve crimes and spend a lot of time in a Jazz Bar. This show is great and surprisingly never heard of it before. Lots of cameos from familiar actors, cool jazz background songs, and lots of action and plot twists.
K**N
Five Stars
Classic Cassavetes with the best ever score in a TV private dick show.
C**E
Enjoyed i
Love all the old tv shows
Trustpilot
Hace 3 días
Hace 1 mes