"Highway Patrol" Deaf Mute (TV Episode 1958) Poster

(TV Series)

(1958)

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7/10
Good episode with historic locations
goggomobil-195725 October 2017
Lt. Matthews is on the case of a botched robbery. An innocent party is abducted in an effort to thwart the robbers' capture.

As usual, ZIV's modest production budget means we get to see southern California as it was in the mid 1950s. This episode captures the fabled Chavez Ravine as it was being bulldozed into history. Dodgers fans who are also history buffs might enjoy brief glimpses of things as they were before the slopes of these filmed pieces of the Chavez Ravine became a parking lot for Dodger Stadium.

Of interest to fans of TV's Gidget is the appearance of a young Lynette Winter who portrayed Larue, Gidget's friend.

Jean R. Maxey gave ZIV its money's worth with a good performance of a woman on the wrong side of the law. Jean R. Maxey was married to Paul Maxey, veteran character actor and star of the mid-50s TV show, 'The People's Choice'.

John Sebastian, veteran TV 'heavy', appears as the other half of the robber duo.

For Highway Patrol fans, this is a satisfying episode with interesting outdoor scenes and nostalgic snapshots of 1950s California.
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8/10
A good story for it's time
noplotholes20 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I must admit, I'm a pushover for this type of show, but I love the history and nostalgia of the era and geographical area that I grew up in.

This episode deals with a subject not often explored on this type of series, that of the relative helplessness of a child which cannot hear nor speak who is taken hostage by two small-time crooks, a husband and wife.

While Jean R Maxey is believable as a woman afoul of the law with concern for the child, John Sebastian turns in a hard-edged yet not quite evil performance as her impatient, petty criminal husband.

A young Lynette Winter (LaRue of Gidget fame and Henrietta Plout of Petticoat junction) is stellar as the deaf mute girl caught up in the robbery of her family's small market. Her portrayal is not underacted or overacted, but just right.

Linne Ahlstrand is also sharp and caring as the dispatcher. Broderick Crawford is his usual boorish self as is typical for the series, but he tones it down nicely when he questions the young girl after she is found alone by one of the HP officers.

The rugged terrain of the Chavez Ravine area as it was about a year prior to the groundbreaking for Dodger Stadium provides an adequate backdrop for the story. Despite a few well-documented mistakes, all-in-all a very satisfying episode and one of my favorites.
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1/10
This is the one.
cartjos17 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This is the episode where I say goodbye to this series. I watched mostly for the cars. Being retired from police work it was funny to see all the police cars in this show being 2-doors. I like seeing something I haven't seen in years, that is the driver entering and exiting from the passenger side. This is because there are no consoles, bucket seats, or shifters. Really, what is the need for any of that in an automatic?

What bothered me about this show was that the bad guy was shot and killed. He hadn't killed anybody and never fired at the officers before being gunned down. In an episode or two before this, two women robbers had killed two people and fired at the officers and were taken alive without a shot fired. The Crawford character was shown to be angry at the couple in this episode for kidnapping the child, so in the writers sick mind it was OK to kill the man.
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