Investigators with offbeat
gimmicks were a staple of mystery fiction long before television came along,
but by the ’70s, Hollywood had perfected the art of repackaging the same old
whodunit storylines by featuring unusual protagonists. Columbo hid his wit
behind a façade of simple-mindedness, McCloud was a cowpoke in the big city,
Ironside was confined to a wheelchair, Kolchak solved paranormal mysteries, and
so on. Yet some of these gimmicks were so threadbare as to be almost laughable.
The most notable attribute of private investigator Frank Cannon, who fought
crime during five seasons spanning 1971 to 1976 and returned for a 1980
telefilm, is girth. Yep, he’s big. Corpulent, fat, morbidly obese, rotund—take
your pick. The character has other traits, but his size is a point of
conversation from his first appearance forward. Thanks to smart scripting and a
winning performance by star William Conrad, Cannon spends the enjoyable pilot
movie that preceded his weekly series coming across as clever and dogged and
resourceful. He even gets into brawls and foot chases. Characters remark on his
weight, as does Cannon himself, but mostly he gets down to the tricky business
of solving a murder and untangling a conspiracy. Particularly because this
pilot has such a fine supporting cast of versatile character actors, it’s
unsurprising the movie connected well enough with audiences to trigger a
series. But, still, the sheer laziness of the whole enterprise—this one’s
different, see, because he’s fat!
There’s a reason they used to call TV a vast wasteland.
One day, ex-cop Cannon
gets a letter from Diana Langston (Vera Miles), the widow of an old friend.
Traveling to the small desert town where she runs a motel, Cannon investigates
the man’s death and gets stonewalled by local cops including Lt. Redfield (J.D.
Cannon) and Deputy Magruder (Earl Holliman). Turns out the whole small town is
under the thumb of crime boss Virgil Holley (Murray Hamilton), and things get
even more complicated once Cannon discovers that Lt. Redfield’s sexy wife,
Christie (Lynda Day George), has dangerous romantic ties outside her marriage.
Despite several attempts on his life as well as threats of incarceration,
Cannon helps Diana learn how and why her husband died, cleaning up Diana’s town
in the process. Written by series creator Edward Hume, the Cannon pilot has the same qualities as other series from Quinn
Martin Productions (The Fugitive, The Streets of San Francisco, etc.),
notably crisp characterizations and strong visual interest, so even when the
story gets garbled—a common trap for mystery shows—the action, locations, and
performances command attention. (Also featured in the cast are Norman Alden,
John Fiedler, Lawrence Pressman, Barry Sullivan, and Keenan Wynn.) Is the story
about anything? No. And excepting a few twists, is the story genuinely fresh or
surprising? No again. But detective shows are comfort food, and in that regard,
Cannon is a hearty meal, suitable for
the appetite of its protagonist.
Cannon:
GROOVY
This may be a simple case of rediscovering an old gimmick. Long ago Dashiell Hammett, master writer of detective thrillers and crime drama, gave Hollywood "The Thin Man," which led to five sequels. Taking a cue from that hit formula, as well as Hammett's established character The Continental Op, someone hit on a radial serial called "The Fat Man," featuring heavy detective Brad Runyon. This even led to a "Fat Man" movie. Notice also that much later in his career, Conrad would play the notoriously heavy sleuth Nero Wolfe, then star in a series literally named "Jake and the Fat Man." Some things old are new again.
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