DVD Review: Cannon: Season Two - Volume Two

With the release of Cannon: Season Two - Volume Two, our friend Frank Cannon is back. The three-disc DVD set features the final 12 episodes of the second season of the program, which originally aired from December 1972 to March 1973. It was a very different era, as the clothing, hairstyles and vehicles all attest to. The attitudes were all very politically incorrect also, as the cover blurb announces in no uncertain terms: “LA’s Biggest Crime Fighter Returns!”

It is a little surprising to hear all of the fat jokes in this day and age. I guess I never really noticed them before. You have to wonder what William Conrad (who starred as Cannon) thought of it though. Half of the jokes are told by him, at his own expense. I wonder if he ever complained.

Cannon is a vintage Quinn Martin production, who also produced great action shows such as The Fugitive, The Streets Of San Francisco, and Barnaby Jones (which was a Cannon spin-off).  A trademark of QM productions is that they are full of car chases, lots of action, and generally pretty good storylines. The first one on this set is a good example. “Nobody Beats The House” features a very young Tom Skerritt in one of his first big roles, as a degenerate gambler. The man he owes $200,000 to is out to make an example of him, and it is up to Cannon to save the day. Toward the end of the episode, when Cannon has sorted things out, there is even mention of Gamblers Anonymous, which was a surprising reference in 1972, considering the fact that AA itself was barely acknowledged on television at the time.

There were any number of bad guys hanging around Los Angeles in the early '70s, and Cannon ran into a fair amount of them. He has run-ins with diamond smugglers, drug smugglers, literary cons, kidnappers, even a serial killer.

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Article Author: Greg Barbrick

Greg Barbrick is a Seattle native who was first published in 1988, in his hometown music magazine, The Rocket. Since then his work has appeared in print and online for numerous sources. He Googles himself so often that his mother told him it would make him go blind.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Victor Lana

    Mar 20, 2010 at 9:34 am

    I fondly remember watching this as a kid with my aunt who was in love with Conrad. I think I watched to see that big car and Conrad slapping around bad guys. Thanks for jolting the old memroy banks.

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