"The Rockford Files" Deadlock in Parma (TV Episode 1980) Poster

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9/10
Man of the People
safenoe6 November 2020
This is the very final episode of The Rockford Files series, where Jim (none of the other regular characters appear) is a proxy for a local councilman in Parma. It just happens over a decade later James Garner Councilman Jim Doyle (another Jim!) in the underrated and short-lived series Man of the People.

Even though this wasn't intended to the series finale (the series was cut short because of Garner's chronic back problems), it has a nice finale ring to it, with Jim riding off into the sunset after sorting out crime in Parma.

It's a shame I cannot buy online the eight Rockford Files telemovies that were broadcast in the 90s.
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7/10
Last episode? Didn't realize...
patricktrny28 June 2021
Typical Big City in a remote town episode. Wish Becker (Joe Santos) or Angel (Stuart Margolin) and the Trailer would have appeared one last time but seeing Joseph Sirola is always a treat.

The series finale brought some things full circle not withstanding:car trouble, fun car chases,snappy dialogue and most of all Garner's Rockford fishing with his hat. That was more prominent in the series first few episodes (especially the ones with Lindsey Wagner!)
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Farewell, Jim
stones7829 November 2010
This was the final episode to be aired, but not filmed, and it revolves around Jim doing some fishing in a small town called Parma. While fishing, a man in a backpack stumbles unto Jim and basically falls prey to an illness and Jim gets him to a hospital. It turns out that this guy has an important vote in the little town, and needs Jim to do a vote by proxy for legal gambling. Shortly after checking into a local motel, a mob guy from Newark(naturally)tries to force Jim to vote one way, and the town locals warn Jim to leave town and not to vote. It turns out that every time he tries to leave, either his car is stolen or he's subdued at the bus stop. The state police come in and save the day before the final vote takes place, and the man who set up Jim as a fall guy, winds up murdered. I wouldn't highly recommend this episode, even though it's the final one aired in 1980, mainly because none of the regulars like Dennis, Rocky, Chapman, or Angel are involved at all. There's a nosy reporter who follows Jim around and eventually they make things right in the corrupt town, as Jim ends up in jail and she gets the state police involved.

The last shot at least has Jim in his Firebird, so the show ends on a good note, even though the mechanic who ended up fixing Jim's supposed stolen car messes something up, as the car sputters until the screen does the usual freeze when the show is finished. It's too bad we couldn't see Jim's trailer and the beach one more time, but it wasn't meant to be.
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6/10
Alone in the wilderness
oneklt4 June 2023
According to Ed Robertson's book 'Thirty Years of The Rockford Files' THIS was the final episode of the series to be filmed, not 'The Hawaiian Headache.' 'Deadlock in Parma' was shot the third week of November, 1979. Everyone took the following week off for Thanksgiving, and plans were in place for cast and crew to return in January and resume filming the remaining ten episodes to complete the sixth season. Unfortunately, James Garner was hospitalized in San Diego from injuries and exhaustion shortly after filming wrapped, and it was uncertain when he could return to work. On-going tensions between Garner and Universal subsequently reached critical mass, and production never resumed. I love 'The Rockford Files.' The writing was brilliant, and Garner was tops. This episode actually reminded me of an earlier, and much better, episode from season four entitled 'The Competitive Edge' but lacks that show's snap, crackle, and pop, not to mention Jim having some real skin in the game. 'Parma' is probably my least favorite episode of the entire series, and I still give it a passing grade. But no LA, no familiar supporting players, even the Firebird doesn't show up until the very end. Just Jim as a pawn, a patsy, a pigeon. Whether it was intentional or not, it sure looked and felt like the end.
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6/10
Sad way to end the series.
mm-397 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Deadlock in Parma is an Okay episode. There is an interesting city counsel vote on some sorta land deal and Jim get's suckered into another con. Jim gets involved with a city counsel vote with the back East mob, and the corrupted sheriff. The mob wants Jim to stay in the hotel and vote while the crooked sheriff drives Jim out of town. Their is a good looking female report and a mystery. The Rockford series was getting a bit formulated in the final episode. Jim gets pulled into a con mystery, and must use the con/sting style wits to resolve the problem. There is the cliches of the heavy bad guys from the east Coast mob and dirty sheriff. Of course their is always the pretty girl. The gal is either a victim, lawyer, or reporter. A car chase and fights are added to the mix. As the 70's bleeds into the 80's we see a 70's classic fade with a whimper! Sad for a classic 70's series, which defined 70's television. Many 80's show copied Rockford's style with a different flair. Maybe with the law suit and injuries to James their could of been Jim training a protege and some sort of different spin for the series to end on a better way. Regrettable, Deadlock in Parma is the season final. No big budget, with memorable story. Okay episode but no finale. 6 stars.
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5/10
As slick a con as Angel ever pulled
bkoganbing31 March 2015
Jim Rockford solves no more cases and gets in no more jackpots after this episode. We would not see Rockford again until some made for TV movies in the Nineties made their debut. A sad goodbye to one of the most inventive series ever done on television in terms of writing and character creation.

There's a nest full of characters in this last episode in the sleepy mountain town of Parma, California where James Garner has gone to do a little trout fishing. While enjoying a little of the catch over a campfire with Michael Cavanaugh whom he met on the trail Cavanaugh doubles over and says he has stomach pains. As it turns out he's one of 6 town council-members and he gives this total stranger his proxy for an upcoming vote in the town.

All I can say is that this was as slick a con job that even Angel Martin would be proud of. Garner is now involved in a city proposition fight to bring casino gambling to the sleepy town with all kinds of shady people on both sides. Cavanaugh himself winds up dead and then his body is hidden.

Two of the shadiest are these innocent country hicks Jerry Hardin who is town pharmacist as well as mayor and Henry Beckmann just a simple country sheriff, but nothing like Andy Griffith.

I could never quite believe that Garner could let himself get slickered so easily. Still these characters are quite up to the Rockford Files standard.
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Not really a finale, but not a bad final episode
aramis-112-8048809 March 2023
Rockford's just fishing. But this odd fellow turns up and suddenly has appendicitis and gives Rockford his proxy vote on a city council deadlock. And Rockford finds himself caught between corrupt government officials and the mob.

Back then we had a few precedents for series endings; but, by and large, a series just went on until it got canceled. Hogan's Heroes never got out of the POW camp. The castaways never got off the island until the reunion movies. And James Garner was a fussy, litigious man. So the Rockfod Files ended.

It ended on a fairly routine episode. The episode itself isn't special, it doesn't tie anything up; but it's tense and funny and altogether not bad. But it doesn't have Angel in it.
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