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Parkin's Patch (TV)
R2 - United Kingdom - Network Review written by and copyright: Paul Lewis (22nd April 2012). |
The Show
![]() Parkin’s Patch (Yorkshire, 1969-70) ![]() Produced in the era between idealised televisual depictions of police work and the more cynical examinations of police corruption and Jack Regan-style coppers who bent the rules that came to define the 1970s (Target, BBC 1977-8; G F Newman’s Law & Order, BBC 1978), Parkin’s Patch offers a representation of police work in a rural community that, by the later standards of the subgenre, is tempered and sedate. Most of the episodes are structured as strict procedurals, with Moss Parkin (John Flanagan) and his detective associate and friend Radley (Gareth Thomas) investigating a range of crimes. Many of these crimes seem designed to highlight issues within rural communities at the time of the series’ production: for example, the first episode (‘Hoof Nor Horn’) focuses on a case of rustling. Throughout these episodes, Parkin himself is shown to be the archetypal dedicated copper, thoroughly invested in his ‘patch’. In the first episode, it is revealed that Parkin has been out all night, patrolling his patch – much to the consternation of his wife Beth (Heather Page). ![]() In contrast with the nostalgic Heartbeat, Parkin’s Patch offers a far from idealised representation of the rural community in which it is set. In the second episode (‘Lock, Stock and…’), whilst making his rounds at night, Parkin discovers that the door to a tobacconists has been forced open. There’s a palpable sense of threat as Parkin investigates the empty premises, and at the end of the episode the perpetrator is revealed to be a member of the community – unlike Heartbeat, in which the perpetrators of the crimes investigated by the community policemen were usually revealed to be outsiders. Likewise, ‘Dead? Or Alive?’ opens with a scenario in which it seems that the rural community will be faced with an outside threat – two bikers who ride into the local cricket club and cause havoc – but when one of the bikers turns himself in, believing himself to have murdered a young woman, it’s revealed that he has been framed by the girl and her associate. Meanwhile, the biker (played by Keith Buckley) has to face the prejudices of both the community and the upstanding Moss Parkin. The episode offers a subtle and clever inversion of the conservative narrative that the opening sequence seems to establish – a story about a peaceful rural community that is threatened by outsiders, recalling both American Western films and roughly contemporaneous moral panics surrounding mods and rockers, with the iconography of the bikers alluding to Marlon Brando’s rebellious screen persona in The Wild One (Laslo Benedek, 1953). Thwarting these expectations, the episode develops into a study of the rural community’s prejudices towards outsiders, and an almost film noir-tinged narrative about the trap set by the girl, whose ensnaring of the biker marks her as a femme fatale. ![]() 1. ‘Hoof Nor Horn’ (24:32) 2. ‘Lock, Stock and…’ (25:23) 3. ‘Dead? Or Alive?’ (24:33) 4. ‘Fame of a Kind’ (23:36) 5. ‘Bonus’ (25:37) 6. ‘The Good Listener’ Disc Two: 7. ‘The Deserter’ (25:47) 8. ‘The Way Home’ (26:13) 9. ‘Boys’ (24:59) 10. ‘A Pair of Good Shoes’ (25:16) 11. ‘The Birmingham Con’ (25:39) 12. ‘Nothing Personal’ (25:02) 13. ‘Everybody Knew But Me’ (24:28) Disc Three: 14. ‘No Friendship for Coppers’ (24:45) 15. ‘The Manchester Passenger’ (24:46) 16. ‘The Journey’ (25:03) 17. ‘Regulation 17’ (24:55) 18. ‘Vickory’ (23:53) 19. ‘Fox Among the Chickens’ (24:51) Disc Four: 20. ‘Wise Men’ (23:19) 21. ‘This Little Piggy…’ (24:31) 22. ‘Low Noon’ (25:39) 23. ‘The Spider’s Web’ (24:08) 24. ‘It’s Got to Be Local’ (24:26) 25. ‘The Link’ (23:33) 26. ‘The Gentleman Standing’ (23:43)
Video
The episodes were filmed in studio on (colour) videotape, with some location footage shot on what appears to be 16mm film. The episodes don’t look great: there’s some noticeable evidence of tape damage and general wear and tear. However, they are watchable. Three episodes (‘The Deserter’, ‘The Way Home’ and ‘Boys’) are presented via off-air telerecordings and are in black-and white. The original break bumpers are intact. ![]() ![]()
Audio
Audio is presented via a two-channel mono track. This is muddy sometimes, but it’s mostly clear. Sadly, there are no subtitles.
Extras
None.
Overall
![]() This release contains an acceptable presentation of the episodes – as to be expected, they show some damage here and there. References: Leishman, Frank & Mason, Paul, 2001: Policing and the Media: Facts, Fictions and Factions. London: Willan Publishing Rolinson, David, 2011: ‘From “The Blue Lamp” to “The Black and Blue Lamp”: The Police in TV Drama’. [Online.] http://www.britishtelevisiondrama.org.uk/?p=1429 For more information, please visit Network’s homepage. This review has been kindly sponsored by ![]()
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