Frank Cannon, a husky ex-cop and culinary enthusiast, solves tough cases as a private investigator.Frank Cannon, a husky ex-cop and culinary enthusiast, solves tough cases as a private investigator.Frank Cannon, a husky ex-cop and culinary enthusiast, solves tough cases as a private investigator.
- Nominated for 3 Primetime Emmys
- 2 wins & 7 nominations total
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Storyline
Did you know
- Trivia476- 3359 was one of Cannon's personal phone numbers.
- GoofsCannon frequently uses his mobile phone in his car but exterior shots of the car never shows the necessary antenna.
- Quotes
[repeated line]
Frank Cannon: My name's Frank Cannon, I'm a private investigator.
- Crazy creditsIn all five seasons, the credits are shown in capital and lower case letters.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 25th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1973)
Featured review
Once upon a time you weren't a real TV detetctive unless you had a gimmick; Banacek was Polish, Barnaby Jones was old, Pepper Anderson was a "Police Woman," Ironside was in a wheelchair, Longstreet was blind, McCloud was a cowboy, Kojak was bald, Starsky and Hutch were "cool" (I HATE that word!), Columbo was polite and persistent...
Cannon, who left the force after his wife and child were killed (a plot thread tied up in one of the later episodes), was fat. And like Sammo on "Martial Law" nearly thirty years later, he didn't let his excess avoirdupois hinder his getting results. Unlike Sammo, however, he was hopeless when it came to the rough stuff - watching him get physical is embarrassing, and you suspect he and everyone else involved knew it, which is why hand-to-hand fight scenes were kept to a minimum throughout. (Scenes of him scuba-diving were also kept to a minimum of one episode of the entire run - William Conrad in a wetsuit is not something you want to see.)
The series was more reliant on stories than gimmicks, however, and it was William Conrad's show. No sidekicks, no best buddies, no revolving-door love interests, no down-at-heel stuff for him; he was good value, and so was the series.
Cannon, who left the force after his wife and child were killed (a plot thread tied up in one of the later episodes), was fat. And like Sammo on "Martial Law" nearly thirty years later, he didn't let his excess avoirdupois hinder his getting results. Unlike Sammo, however, he was hopeless when it came to the rough stuff - watching him get physical is embarrassing, and you suspect he and everyone else involved knew it, which is why hand-to-hand fight scenes were kept to a minimum throughout. (Scenes of him scuba-diving were also kept to a minimum of one episode of the entire run - William Conrad in a wetsuit is not something you want to see.)
The series was more reliant on stories than gimmicks, however, and it was William Conrad's show. No sidekicks, no best buddies, no revolving-door love interests, no down-at-heel stuff for him; he was good value, and so was the series.
- Victor Field
- Jul 19, 2002
- Permalink
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- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Кеннон
- Filming locations
- Sunset Tower Hotel - 8358 Sunset Blvd, West Hollywood, California, USA(Cannon's apartment)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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