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Die Abenteuer von Sam Cade, Sheriff des ländlichen Madrider Bezirks.Die Abenteuer von Sam Cade, Sheriff des ländlichen Madrider Bezirks.Die Abenteuer von Sam Cade, Sheriff des ländlichen Madrider Bezirks.
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I find it astounding that "Cade's County" was on the air for only one season. (When re-run I believe it was called "Sheriff of Madrid", Madrid being the county seat of Cade's county.) Although it was never specified in which state the county existed, everything pointed to Arizona or New Mexico. Ford provided a mature, compassionate hero who was correctly unbending on matters of right and wrong but willing to help people: the ideal lawman. Edgar Buchanan, an actor whom I personally found irritating in most roles, was a fine foil for Ford. As Ford was in his forties there was no hint of Buchana as old mentor so the dynamics were a bit unusual, as though Marshall Dillon's deputy Chester had been twenty years Dillon's senior. Ford's Jeep ripping through the desert landscape was a treat. In one standout episode Bobby Darrin demonstrated acting powers even beyond what he demonstrated in the motion picture "Captian Newman, M.D." The theme song was and is superb.
Cade's County was one of two television series that Glenn Ford tried after his time as a big movie name was up and he knew it. The man was smart and transitioned gracefully into middle age. Westerns are a great medium for older stars to transition in. And Ford had appeared in some of the best westerns ever made.
The show was set in fictional Madrid County in Arizona. If Sam Cade and his deputies seem to cover a large bit of territory, take a good look at a map of Arizona with the county lines printed. There are about a dozen counties and some of them are larger than many of our New England states. The show had no big metropolitan areas like Phoenix, Tucson, or Yuma in it, it was strictly a rural affair.
The show lasted only one season despite good critical reception, not great and decent ratings. CBS pulled the plug on it because right at that time it was going on an anti-violence kick along with the other two networks.
I think one of the things that could have saved it was if they had developed more of the personal lives of the sheriff's office of Madrid County. The show had the potential to be like In The Heat Of The Night set in the Southwest. Ford and his deputies which included, Victor Mohica, Taylor Lacher, Edgar Buchanan, and his son Peter Ford were never really seen too much as three dimensional characters. We knew Ford's father had also served as Madrid County Sheriff and was killed in the line of duty and Edgar Buchanan had served with him. That's all I can remember.
Ford and Edgar Buchanan had a long standing friendship from their first film together, Texas back in 1941. It was only fitting that Ford find a place for Buchanan who had recently left the canceled Petticoat Junction when CBS went on an anti-rural kick. Ford and Buchanan were in about a dozen films together.
Cade's County should have been given a much better chance to succeed from CBS.
The show was set in fictional Madrid County in Arizona. If Sam Cade and his deputies seem to cover a large bit of territory, take a good look at a map of Arizona with the county lines printed. There are about a dozen counties and some of them are larger than many of our New England states. The show had no big metropolitan areas like Phoenix, Tucson, or Yuma in it, it was strictly a rural affair.
The show lasted only one season despite good critical reception, not great and decent ratings. CBS pulled the plug on it because right at that time it was going on an anti-violence kick along with the other two networks.
I think one of the things that could have saved it was if they had developed more of the personal lives of the sheriff's office of Madrid County. The show had the potential to be like In The Heat Of The Night set in the Southwest. Ford and his deputies which included, Victor Mohica, Taylor Lacher, Edgar Buchanan, and his son Peter Ford were never really seen too much as three dimensional characters. We knew Ford's father had also served as Madrid County Sheriff and was killed in the line of duty and Edgar Buchanan had served with him. That's all I can remember.
Ford and Edgar Buchanan had a long standing friendship from their first film together, Texas back in 1941. It was only fitting that Ford find a place for Buchanan who had recently left the canceled Petticoat Junction when CBS went on an anti-rural kick. Ford and Buchanan were in about a dozen films together.
Cade's County should have been given a much better chance to succeed from CBS.
Television was usually the springboard for many an illustrious movie career. Clint Eastwood, (Rawhide), Steve McQueen (Wanted Dead or Alive) and James Garner (Maverick), are three Hollywood heavyweights that got their start on the small screen. However, it was also a place where aging movie stars tended to retreat to when their box office clout had begun to fade. Rock Hudson, (McMillan and Wife), Ronald Reagan/Robert Taylor, (Death Valley Days), Buddy Ebsen, (The Beverley Hillbillies/Barnaby Jones. In fact, Ebsen made the transition so successfully, that today he is best remembered as a TV star than as a movie song and dance man.
Well in 1971, Glenn Ford joined that list of illustrious names, with his contemporary Western/Cop show Cade's County. Although always a bankable safe lead in many movies from the 1940's through to the 1960's, it's fair to say that Ford was never really a MEGAstar on the scale of Cable, Grant, Cooper or Astaire, but he did have one quality that no one could deny, he was always likeable on screen and his audiences would, most of the time, leave the theatre satisfied with the finished product.
By the end of the 1960's with censorship all but abolished and a new style of grittier, realistic filmmakers at the Hollywood tiller-pin steering the world of movie making towards a darker landscape that had never really been frequented by people like Glenn Ford, actors of his 'vintage' needed a place to go. Some were lucky enough to make that change to this new seedier style of film. Ford's own best friend William Holden for instance had just made The Wild Bunch, probably the most violent western ever made at that point in time.
Whilst sadly only lasting one Season, Cade's County certainly played to Ford's strengths by amalgamating the two main genres that he had excelled in over his long career, Westerns and Crime. TV was a logical step for Ford. At 55, he was getting too long in the tooth ti be convincing as a romantic lead and TV at that time was still the bastion of family values and to his audiences,, Ford had always epitomised the all American good guy, (with only a few noticeable exceptions over the years), and his name at the top of the credits of a TV show was bound to be ratings winner.....wasn't it? Well, no.
For some reason Cade's County wasn't the smash hit that people were expecting and I think I can understand why. Although totally enjoyable, The show wasn't anything overly special that audiences couldn't already get from other cop shows of the time. The script's were formulaic, the stories too fleeting to garner any real sympathy with one off characters that weren't part of the nucleus of the main core cast.
What makes Cade's County great is Glenn Ford and Ford alone, but Ford's star quality as good as it always was, was never enough to carry a TV show. He was one cog in the machine, an essential one certainly, but still useless without the cogs that make the machine complete.
Ford is joined by long time friend and frequent collaborator Edgar Buchanan, Ford's own son Peter appears in numerous episodes as a junior deputy and the fantastic plethora of guest stars make it a joy to watch too. Some had been working on and off with Ford for decades such as Edmond O'Brien, Russ Tamblyn, Broderick Crawford. Others were just those great characters you loved to see on your screen such as John Payne, Bobby Darin, William Shatner. No expense seemed to have been spared to make Cade's County a hit, but sadly it never was, but even after over 50 years, it's still worth checking out. I'm not aware of any official release of the series on Video or DVD, but there are episodes dotted about on YouTube if you care to find them, and I highly recommend you do.
Enjoy!
Well in 1971, Glenn Ford joined that list of illustrious names, with his contemporary Western/Cop show Cade's County. Although always a bankable safe lead in many movies from the 1940's through to the 1960's, it's fair to say that Ford was never really a MEGAstar on the scale of Cable, Grant, Cooper or Astaire, but he did have one quality that no one could deny, he was always likeable on screen and his audiences would, most of the time, leave the theatre satisfied with the finished product.
By the end of the 1960's with censorship all but abolished and a new style of grittier, realistic filmmakers at the Hollywood tiller-pin steering the world of movie making towards a darker landscape that had never really been frequented by people like Glenn Ford, actors of his 'vintage' needed a place to go. Some were lucky enough to make that change to this new seedier style of film. Ford's own best friend William Holden for instance had just made The Wild Bunch, probably the most violent western ever made at that point in time.
Whilst sadly only lasting one Season, Cade's County certainly played to Ford's strengths by amalgamating the two main genres that he had excelled in over his long career, Westerns and Crime. TV was a logical step for Ford. At 55, he was getting too long in the tooth ti be convincing as a romantic lead and TV at that time was still the bastion of family values and to his audiences,, Ford had always epitomised the all American good guy, (with only a few noticeable exceptions over the years), and his name at the top of the credits of a TV show was bound to be ratings winner.....wasn't it? Well, no.
For some reason Cade's County wasn't the smash hit that people were expecting and I think I can understand why. Although totally enjoyable, The show wasn't anything overly special that audiences couldn't already get from other cop shows of the time. The script's were formulaic, the stories too fleeting to garner any real sympathy with one off characters that weren't part of the nucleus of the main core cast.
What makes Cade's County great is Glenn Ford and Ford alone, but Ford's star quality as good as it always was, was never enough to carry a TV show. He was one cog in the machine, an essential one certainly, but still useless without the cogs that make the machine complete.
Ford is joined by long time friend and frequent collaborator Edgar Buchanan, Ford's own son Peter appears in numerous episodes as a junior deputy and the fantastic plethora of guest stars make it a joy to watch too. Some had been working on and off with Ford for decades such as Edmond O'Brien, Russ Tamblyn, Broderick Crawford. Others were just those great characters you loved to see on your screen such as John Payne, Bobby Darin, William Shatner. No expense seemed to have been spared to make Cade's County a hit, but sadly it never was, but even after over 50 years, it's still worth checking out. I'm not aware of any official release of the series on Video or DVD, but there are episodes dotted about on YouTube if you care to find them, and I highly recommend you do.
Enjoy!
This was how the series was called in Portugal when it aired around 1975. How do I add this info?
This series has a strong cast & good production. What happened that it ran so short a time? CBS was a big piece of the problem. This series was on the network which had given itself a black eye with the over hyped western dud Lancer. After such a terrible entry, folks ignored this entry because they were afraid it would be just as bad.
Then, CBS put it on late Sunday evenings. This time slot back in the three network days was a kiss of death for almost any program. As a matter of fact, Johnny Carson's quip concerning this show in a monologue on The Tonight Show then: "According to the latest Nielson ratings it dismayed CBS to find out that more than 90 percent of households tuned to Cades County on Sunday nights are using the program as a night light." Carsons pot shot at the show is a little cruel, but the program was canceled in one season.
Then, CBS put it on late Sunday evenings. This time slot back in the three network days was a kiss of death for almost any program. As a matter of fact, Johnny Carson's quip concerning this show in a monologue on The Tonight Show then: "According to the latest Nielson ratings it dismayed CBS to find out that more than 90 percent of households tuned to Cades County on Sunday nights are using the program as a night light." Carsons pot shot at the show is a little cruel, but the program was canceled in one season.
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- Alternative VersionenTwo episodes released to television as film entitled "Marshal From Madrid."
- VerbindungenFeatured in O.J. Simpson: Juice on the Loose (1974)
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde
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