The Sweeney
1 9 7 5 - 1 9 7 8
(UK)
53 x 50 minute episodes
2 x 90 minute movies
The
Sweeney was the top-rated British police series of the 1970s,
bringing a new level of toughness and action to the genre, and
displaying police officers bending the rules to beat crime. The series
was created by Ian Kennedy-Martin, made by Euston Films, and went out
mid-week on ITV.
Think big clumpy shoes pressing down on the
accelerator pedal of a brown Ford Grenada and you're halfway to
remembering The Sweeney. Like a nastier, alcoholic version of
The Bill, the hard-faced coppers from the Flying Squad collared
villains in a time of power cuts and phones that rang with a bell.
Debuting
on Thursday January 2nd, 1975, The Sweeney, focused on the
exploits of Jack Regan, a hard-working, hard-drinking and impatient
Detective Inspector attached to the Flying Squad, the Metropolitan
police's elite armed-robbery unit (and the arm of the force that was
supposed not to beat about the bush in catching criminals). The
character of Regan was perfectly portrayed by John Thaw, a young actor
with a lived-in face, already known from Redcap. In the first
series each episode was completed in only ten days and on a budget of
around £40,000. Today it would cost at least ten times that much.
The program, which derived its title from
"Sweeney Todd" the Cockney rhyming slang for "Flying Squad" - was a
spin-off from the successful 1974 TV film, Regan, that had
first introduced the protagonist, and also established his
professional relationships with his cockney assistant, Detective
Sergeant George Carter (Dennis Waterman) and his "governor", Detective
Chief Inspector Haskins (Garfield Morgan).
Each episode in the series adopted the same basic
narrative format - a three-act structure (with acts separated by
adverts) preceded by a prologue that triggered the crime
narrative. The first two acts were devoted to obtaining intelligence
about a forthcoming robbery, often through tip-offs from informers or
surveillance, and the third, was devoted to the capture of the robbery
gang, characteristically involving adrenalin-pumping action with
car-chases, screaming tires, spectacular smashes and hand to hand
fighting.
The
narrative was often further complicated through the addition of an
anti-authority thread as Regan challenged Haskins' "rule-book"
approach and/or through the introduction of casual sex relationships,
as one of the detectives became involved with an available woman. The
program's realism was considerable, and few other crime series have
achieved so authentic an impression of the policing of London's
underworld. The series relied on detailed inside knowledge of the
actual circumstances in which the Flying Squad operated and of the
sometimes rather dubious means used to secure prosecutions.
Regan and Carter are shown inhabiting the same
sleazy world as the criminals, mixing with low-life to obtain their
leads, and adopting the same vernacular. Both law-enforcers and
law-breakers indulge in womanising and heavy drinking, and use
physical violence to achieve their objectives.
The extent to which Regan is prepared to bend and
break the rules to nick villains was well established in the pilot
film when he threatens a suspect with a longer sentence if he does not
co-operate: "My sergeant is going to hit me, but I am going to say
it's you".
Unsurprisingly the series provoked fierce
controversy, chiefly because of its potential to influence the public
image of the police at a time of considerable social
upheaval. However, the dark moral world that the series represented
was difficult to fault on purely realist grounds as, at the time of
transmission, a prominent officer in the Squad was under investigation
and was eventually imprisoned for corruption.
Harry South's memorable theme tune can still
trigger pavlovian anticipation of impending violence.
"Get yer trousers on - you're
nicked!"
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