A Harvard-educated, big-city lawyer moves to a small Arizona town to set up practice. His first case is defending a beautiful socialite accused of murdering her husband.A Harvard-educated, big-city lawyer moves to a small Arizona town to set up practice. His first case is defending a beautiful socialite accused of murdering her husband.A Harvard-educated, big-city lawyer moves to a small Arizona town to set up practice. His first case is defending a beautiful socialite accused of murdering her husband.
Rick Hurst
- Bart Kenedisis
- (as Richard D. Hurst)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAnthony Petrocelli, himself, said in this movie (which inspired the 44 episode television series Petrocelli) he has five sisters. The viewer also discovers he attended Harvard University, and he was originally from New York. He also states that he is building a house in the Arizona desert twelve bricks a day, his father was a bricklayer, and he and his wife are expecting a child, which unfortunately ends in a miscarriage.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Petrocelli (1974)
Featured review
Although I grew up in the mid-1960s, I rarely ever watched detective shows...although they were very popular through the 60s and 70s. I just was too young to appreciate them...and recently I've made up for this by binging various cop and detective shows...most of which I love (such as "Hawaii Five-O", "Mannix" and "Columbo"). A few I wasn't impressed by ("McCloud") but for the most part, I think these shows are far better than most stuff you see today. So, when I saw that YouTube had the pilot episode of "Petrocelli" I was excited to see it.
I noticed in the pilot that the show was not quite like the "Perry Mason" TV series in that the leading man (Barry Newman) is a lawyer but he occasionally dabbles into investigating a bit outside the courtroom. I am not sure if this will be the case in the rest of the shows...but it was so in the pilot.
Tony Petrocelli is an enigma...and in many ways the opposite of McCloud...a Marshall who came from New Mexico to inexplicably work in New York City. Here, Petrocelli is a Harvard-educated lawyer who surprisingly moves to Arizona to practice criminal law. Today this might be seen as usual, but back in the 1970s, Arizona was a far more rural state...a place filled with deserts, cowboys and little else. So his moving there is definitely NOT the norm!
The case he's working on in the pilot involves the murder of a man and his pretty wife (Stephanie Powers) is accused of the killing. However, Petrocelli works hard to use the same evidence to present a far different motive and far different killer. Will this work? And, will he live to see this case through (well, considering it's the pilot...I think it's not a spoiler to say he does)?
The acting and writing were quite good here. What I also appreciated was the vagueness of the ending. His client probably was innocent...then, possibly she wasn't. It's a vagueness that I think made the show more interesting and it definitely left me wanting more.
I noticed in the pilot that the show was not quite like the "Perry Mason" TV series in that the leading man (Barry Newman) is a lawyer but he occasionally dabbles into investigating a bit outside the courtroom. I am not sure if this will be the case in the rest of the shows...but it was so in the pilot.
Tony Petrocelli is an enigma...and in many ways the opposite of McCloud...a Marshall who came from New Mexico to inexplicably work in New York City. Here, Petrocelli is a Harvard-educated lawyer who surprisingly moves to Arizona to practice criminal law. Today this might be seen as usual, but back in the 1970s, Arizona was a far more rural state...a place filled with deserts, cowboys and little else. So his moving there is definitely NOT the norm!
The case he's working on in the pilot involves the murder of a man and his pretty wife (Stephanie Powers) is accused of the killing. However, Petrocelli works hard to use the same evidence to present a far different motive and far different killer. Will this work? And, will he live to see this case through (well, considering it's the pilot...I think it's not a spoiler to say he does)?
The acting and writing were quite good here. What I also appreciated was the vagueness of the ending. His client probably was innocent...then, possibly she wasn't. It's a vagueness that I think made the show more interesting and it definitely left me wanting more.
- planktonrules
- Feb 20, 2020
- Permalink
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