Hardcastle and McCormick is an American action/drama television series that aired on ABC from September 18, 1983 through May 5, 1986. The series stars Brian Keith as Judge Milton C. Hardcastle and Daniel Hugh Kelly as ex-con and race car driver Mark "Skid" McCormick.
Video Hardcastle and McCormick
Premise
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Milton C. "Hardcase" Hardcastle, an eccentric judge notorious for being strict with the law in both his duties and towards defendants, is retiring. With file drawers filled with two hundred people who escaped conviction due to legal technicalities, the judge, inspired by his childhood hero the Lone Ranger, desires to make the criminals answer for their crimes. Mark McCormick is a smart-mouthed, streetwise car thief. He faces a long incarceration for his latest theft, a prototype sports car called the Coyote X, designed by his murdered best friend. Together, the judge and the car thief strike a deal: Hardcastle helps McCormick catch the murderer; McCormick agrees to work as the judge's agent. In addition, McCormick is allowed to keep the Coyote, which proves to be an excellent pursuit vehicle for their needs.
Maps Hardcastle and McCormick
Cast
- Brian Keith as Judge Milton C. "Hardcase" Hardcastle
- Daniel Hugh Kelly as "Skid" Mark McCormick
- Mary Jackson as Sarah Wicks (1983)
- John Hancock as Lt. Michael Delaney (1984-1985)
- Ed Bernard as Lt. Bill Giles (1984-1985)
- Joe Santos as Lt. Frank Harper (1985-1986)
Production
Development
The series premise was somewhat recycled from a previous Cannell series, Tenspeed and Brown Shoe. It was created by Patrick Hasburgh and Stephen J. Cannell, serving as the executive producers, and produced by Stephen J. Cannell Productions for ABC.
Music
The opening theme song during Season 1 was entitled "Drive". It was composed by Mike Post and Stephen Geyer and sung by David Morgan. For the first twelve episodes of Season 2 the theme song was "Back to Back", also composed by Post and Geyer but sung by Joey Scarbury (who also sang Post and Geyer's theme for The Greatest American Hero). Public demand, however, resulted in the "Drive" theme being reinstated in episode 13 and kept through Season 3. Post and Pete Carpenter scored the music for the series.
"Coyote X" or "Cody Coyote"
The car that McCormick drove, the Coyote X, was built from custom molds based on the McLaren M6GT. The original Coyote X was molded, modified and assembled by Mike Fennel. The nose, windshield doors and lower body (minus the ventral intakes) are faithful representations of the McLaren; the cut down rear deck, however, was a custom component that became a feature on many Manta Montage kits with damaged or removed rear windows. The most noticeable differences between the Coyotes and Mantas are the wheel wells, roll pan height and shape, and the fact that the Coyote has a one piece front clip that terminates about an inch before and surrounding the windshield.
Most of the cars made for the show were molded and assembled by either Mike Fennel or Unique Movie Cars. Like many kit cars of the time, the car uses a chassis from a Volkswagen Beetle and its engine from a Porsche 914. For the second and third seasons, producers used a different Coyote which was based on a De Lorean DMC-12, as Brian Keith had difficulty getting in and out of the original Coyote.
The Season 2 and Season 3 Coyote does not resemble the Manta, as the front is larger than the original, making the car resemble a front-engined car. The Season 1 "Hero" car that was used in the production of Hardcastle and McCormick is owned by a private owner in southern New Jersey. The stunt/skid car (used in all 3 seasons) was reconfigured for the Knight Rider 2000 television pilot, then consequently turned into Jay Ohrberg's show car "Taz-Mobile". In April 2011, the stunt/skid car was sold and shipped to Dallas Texas where it was re-bodied back to its former Coyote configuration, retaining as many of the original Coyote pieces as possible (in private collection). Note:there was only one Season One "Hero Car", One "Skid/Stunt" Car used in all three seasons and several (center seat mounted, dune buggy like, see title shot) "jump cars". A Season 2/3 (De Lorean body)car appeared briefly on the sixth episode of Season 5 of the sitcom Married... with Children.
Reception
Nielsen ratings
- 1983-84: #15 (18.71 rating)
- 1984-85: #39 (15.82 rating)
- 1985-86: #52 (13.90 rating)
DVD releases
Visual Entertainment has released all three seasons of Hardcastle and McCormick on DVD in Region 1 (Canada only). VEI also released Hardcastle & McCormick: The Complete Series on DVD on September 3, 2008. As of March 2016, the complete DVD set was available on Amazon.com.
References
External links
- Hardcastle and McCormick on IMDb
- Hardcastle and McCormick at TV.com
- TVTDB.com - Hardcastle & McCormick Transcripts at the Wayback Machine (archived July 25, 2010)
- The car-star of Hardcastle & McCormick at the Wayback Machine (archived November 15, 2010)
- "Hardcastle and McCormick: Virtual Season Four".
Source of the article : Wikipedia