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1[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/The_Sweeney_TV_7060.jpg]]
2%%[[caption-width-right:250:some caption text]]
3
4->''"We're the Sweeney, son, and we haven't had any dinner. You've kept us waiting, so unless you want a kicking, you tell us where those photographs are!"''
5-->-- '''DI Jack Regan'''
6
7A classic British CopShow from the 1970s featuring CowboyCop Inspector Jack Regan (Creator/JohnThaw) and his sidekick Sergeant George Carter (Dennis Waterman) of the [[UsefulNotes/ScotlandYard Metropolitan Police]] Flying Squad (Rhyming slang: "Theatre/SweeneyTodd" = "Flying Squad", hence the title), an elite detective unit dealing with armed robbery.
8
9The characters were rough, hard-drinking and, by modern standards, highly sexist. Regan, while over forty, greying and divorced, was successful with women as part of his macho image (although his sex life became a plot point sometimes). Carter was married and a bit more stable and reliable than his "Guv'nor". In fact, Regan's "Guv'nor", Superintendent Haskins, felt Carter should be reassigned because Regan was a bad influence on him.
10
11British television cop shows had been undergoing a steady evolution from the light-hearted ''Series/DixonOfDockGreen'' to the relatively gritty ''Series/ZCars''. ''The Sweeney'' took this to the next level, with an unprecedented level of violence, cynicism, and bad language (albeit that it was still PG-rated; "bastard" was as bad as it got)[[note]] thery were allowed one "fucking", though. It was used to [[PrecisionFStrike effect]].[[/note]]. There was at least one car chase, fist fight or gunfight per episode. Unlike most British policemen, Regan and Carter were often armed -- TruthInTelevision, as the Flying Squad, which had to deal with armed robbers, was the only police unit where officers carried firearms more often than not -- but the squad frequently took down criminal gangs in [[GoodOldFisticuffs brutal hand-to-hand battles]] fought with [[ImprovisedWeapon pick-axe handles, iron bars]], fists and boots. Unlike the almost-contemporary ''Series/StarskyAndHutch'' the violent action did not have a ''Film/JamesBond''-movie feel to it, being instead down-and-dirty, and sometimes quite shocking. Gunfire was seldom [[OnlyAFleshWound non-lethal]] and people who got hurt stayed hurt. If a car [[EveryCarIsAPinto crashed and burned]], the people inside didn't climb out as in ''Series/TheATeam'', either!
12
13Detective work was mainly a matter of asking informants, many of whom lived in fear, or of following people, or simply "knowing the manor" so well that the heroes could just ''guess'' who was the most likely suspect. Not much Franchise/SherlockHolmes or Literature/HerculePoirot stuff happened, but it was often quite close to ''[[TruthInTelevision real]]'' police work.
14
15Blatantly parodied in ''ComicBook/TheInvisibles'', where Jack and George of Division X are Carter and Regan to the life. [[LampshadeHanging Explained]] by saying that the invisibles created their cover identities from old '70s cop shows. Their boss Mr Crowley is a {{shout out}} to George Cowley of ''Series/TheProfessionals'', another British police drama of the time. (Their fellow agent Mister Six, meanwhile, is a {{shout out}} to Jason King of ''Series/DepartmentS''.)
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17Gene Hunt of ''Series/{{Life on Mars|2006}}'' and ''Series/{{Ashes to Ashes|2008}}'' is a fairly obvious ShoutOut to Jack Regan and his ilk. (One is tempted to call him an AffectionateParody, but he'd call one a poof for saying so. He'd call one a poof for saying "one" instead of "him" anyway.) Gerry Standing, Dennis Waterman's character in ''Series/NewTricks'', is another AffectionateParody of what the characters from ''The Sweeney'' (George in particular) might look like thirty-odd years down the track.
18
19The show was recorded entirely with film, and the production had a heavy reliance on location shooting, both of which were very unusual features at the time. Although it was extremely popular, a combination of high production costs and creator burnout meant that it only lasted for four series. Nonetheless it was very influential, directly inspiring Creator/{{ITV}}'s successful ''Series/TheProfessionals'' and Creator/TheBBC's relatively unpopular ''Series/{{Target}}''.
20
21Two spin-off movies were produced during the show's run: ''Sweeney!'' in 1977 and ''Sweeney 2'' in 1978.
22
23A [[Film/TheSweeney movie adaptation of the show]] was released in 2012.
24
25----
26!!The TV series provides examples of:
27* SixIsNine: The "6 with a screw missing turns into a 9" gag is used in a scene where a very respectable family are eating dinner when armed policemen crash into their home, and are just as surprised as they are because they were expecting to meet armed criminals. After the mistake is cleared up, the officers leave with apologies and the family calmly return to their meal. Moments later, a crash is heard in the distance, and the father comments that it sounds as though they've found number 9.
28* ArmedBlag: Practically every other episode. TruthInTelevision, as the Flying Squad were actually the Metropolitan Police's specialist armed robbery taskforce.
29* ArsonMurderAndJaywalking: The pilot movie ''Regan'' ended with Regan beating a confession out of a suspect for the murder of an undercover police man...and then threatening to do him for not paying his car tax.
30* BackAlleyDoctor: "Stay Lucky Eh?" features a doctor who was struck off, presumably for his alcholism. Naturally, he's called in when a criminal is shot during a robbery.
31* BadgesAndDogtags: Haskins did National Service in the Signal Corps "in a minor intelligence role".
32* BankRobbery:
33** "Thou Shalt Not Kill" sees the Flying Squad deal with a robbery at the university branch of the National Mercian bank.
34** "The Bigger They Are" sees criminals break into a back to steal a safety deposit box containing incriminating evidence.
35* BarBrawl: Often! Once involved two police units who hadn't recognised each other.
36* {{Blackmail}}:
37** In "Money, Money, Money", a retired criminal friend of Regan and Carter is blackmailed and extorted by a criminal out of money he won on the pools in exchange for not revealing telling about a job he pulled years ago.
38** In "The Bigger They Are", a tycoon is being blackmailed by a criminal who has a photo of him present at a massacre of civilians in Malaya when he was in the Army twenty-five years earlier. Then the man he turns to for help does the same thing.
39* BlindedByTheLight: In "Nightmare", a couple of renegade ex-IRA have got hold of an experimental laser-sighted rifle. Regan and Carter tell them to PutDownYourGunAndStepAway which they do, but then one of them turns on the battery pack on his belt activating the laser which shines into Regan's eyes, temporarily blinding him.
40* CatapultNightmare: A variation in "Nightmare". Regan's girlfriend has a prophetic nightmare of Jack in danger that ends with her screaming in terror, MatchCut with her awake in the same position screaming as Jack sits up next to her in bed and tries to comfort her.
41* CatholicSchoolGirlsRule: DS Carter makes some lurid comments about the attractiveness of girls in school uniforms in "Taste of Fear". On another occasion Jack Regan is meeting an informant in the park when a couple of schoolgirls walk by and one of them bends over to pick something up. Seeing Regan's distraction, the informant quips: "I could be arrested for doing what you're thinking!"
42* CelebrityParadox:
43** "Supersnout" has Carter make a reference to ''Film/{{Get Carter|1971}}''. The episode features Rosemarie Dunham, who was in that film. Other actors from the film to appear in the series were Creator/IanHendry, George Sewell and Alun Armstrong.
44** In "Messenger of the Gods", Carter interviews a woman who gets distracted by a horror film she watched starring Creator/ChristopherLee. Perhaps she was talking about ''Film/ScarsOfDracula'', which starred Dennis Waterman.
45* CopKillerManhunt: The penultimate episode "Victims" deals with the Flying Squad on the trail of an informant who shot and killed a police officer. He's eventually tracked to his hideout at an abandoned warehouse. His girlfriend attempts to talk him down, but Regan is forced to shoot him in self-defence.
46* CowboyCop: The series starred a pair of misogynist, foul-mouthed London cops who were a brilliant example of this - but they often completely failed to catch their man, and fairly often got into real, serious trouble with their superiors.
47* DaChief: D.S. Haskins, and above him, "The Commander".
48* DarkReprise: The opening theme is upbeat and heroic, while the closing theme is the same themes but slower and in a minor key, reflecting Regan's incomplete success and his regrets for the compromises necessary to achieve even that.
49* DarkerAndEdgier: The series was much tougher and grittier than most cop shows at the time.
50* ADayInTheLimelight: The main episodes focusing on DCI Haskins are "Golden Fleece", in which he is set up to be the victim of a corruption enquiry, and "Victims", in which his wife suffers a mental breakdown, owing to her memories of a miscarriage.
51* DirtyCop: "Bad Apple" sees Regan take on a pair of crooked officers who take bribes from villains to let them go and are running a protection racket.
52* DisguisedInDrag: In "Big Spender", a character played by Creator/WarrenMitchell (better known for ''Series/TillDeathUsDoPart'') escapes from villains by dressing up in his girlfriend's clothes and a wig. Regan and Carter turn up. "Ooh Mr Wardle, you do look nice!"
53* DownerEnding: [[spoiler:The final episode, "Jack or Knave", had an ambiguous ending where Regan is temporarily locked up after being implicated in a corruption scandal, then finally gets exonerated. He then announces that he's had it with the Squad, and the series ends with him resigning in disgust, but it's left open as to whether he would be persuaded to change his mind]].
54* DrowningMySorrows: In "Hit and Run", Regan helps Carter cope with his wife's death by bringing him a bottle of booze.
55* EndingTheme: The series used a slower and mellower version of its opening theme on the end credits, accompanying images of Carter and Regan packing up their stuff and going home for the night.
56* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: The second episode, "Jackpot", has a captured bank robber interrogated for the whereabouts of a missing take. [[spoiler:He pulled the heist to fund a kidney transplant for his daughter abroad, and the villains aren't keen to honour his share after his arrest and imprisonment.]]
57* EndingTheme: A slower and mellower version of the opening theme was used on the end credits, accompanying images of Carter and Regan packing up their stuff and going home for the night.
58* EveryoneHasStandards: Regan bends the rules, but he's unwilling to cheat for personal gain: he delivers a sharp put-down to a corrupt copper in "Bad Apple", and refuses to take a bribe in "Golden Fleece".
59* EvolvingCredits: For the fourth season, new opening and closing title sequences were introduced using live footage in kaleidoscope style rather than the tinted stills used in the first three seasons. The show's logo font and color were also changed, but the commercial break bumpers, remained the same and retained the style of the first three seasons' titles and logo.
60* FlareGun: In "Hard Men", a Glasgow gangster punishes another gangster who tried to kidnap his daughter by shooting him in the back with a flare gun; he goes up in flames, screaming, and burns to death. Another gangster who witnesses the incident tells a policeman, "Dud ye see that? Dud ye see whut they dud? That was DIABOLICAL!"
61* FromCamouflageToCriminal:
62** "Stay Lucky Eh?" features a crook who did twelve years in the army and kicks the plot off by robbing a pair of criminals right after they've pulled a job.
63** "Taste of Fear" features a gang of ex-soldiers carrying out armed robberies.
64* GetIntoJailFree: In "One of Your Own", Carter is placed undercover in prison to try and find out information about stolen jewels from a crook in his cell.
65* GilliganCut: In "Messenger of the Gods", Regan and Carter catch up with their suspect surrounded by four thugs. The villains reckon they can take them, as there's only two of them. Cut to our heroes kicking the crap out of them.
66* GoodCopBadCop: Degenerating into Bad Cop, Worse Cop and even Bad Cop, Rabid Cop.
67* TheGreatBritishCopperCapture: Inspector Regan's classic line. He deliberately punches the suspect full in the face, breaking his nose, scowls at him, and concludes the arrest thusly while pulling the perp up by his lapels:
68--> ''You're fucking nicked!''
69* HostageSituation: In "Thou Shalt Not Kill", a bank robbery leads to two gang members taking the manager and two women hostage. Haskins' hesitance in ordering the police to open fire causes Regan to chew him out.
70* IHaveYourWife:
71** "Soppo Driver" sees a Flying Squad driver blackmailed into being a getaway driver for a gang when they kidnap his new wife.
72** In "Abduction", a gang kidnaps Regan's daughter in order to blackmail him so they can carry out a robbery.
73** In "Feet of Clay", an ex-informer turned businessman's son is kidnapped. It turns out to be a scam.
74* TheInformant: Several one-off characters whose portrayals ranged from "contemptible but necessary" to actually fairly sympathetic. Of course, one of the show's central themes was that the cops and the cons weren't so different.
75* KnightInSourArmor: Years of policing has left Regan an embittered, cynical man. He has no delusions about being a hero, he's just doing a job that needs doing, even if it's taken everything out of him.
76* LaserSight: "Nightmares" features a couple of renegade ex-IRA trying to get hold of some experimental laser-sighted rifles stolen from a factory in Utah (a reference to the AM-180, though they're AR-10's on screen).
77* LeadPoliceDetective: Although he's a bit more rough around the edges than is typical for this trope, Detective Inspector Jack Regan still counts.
78* LondonGangster: Several of the villains.
79* MacGuffin: In "The Bigger They Are", the MacGuffin, which leads to a burglary, a bank raid, two blackmail attempts, and a suicide, is revealed right at the start of the programme: a photo of a prominent politician, holding a bloody machete, standing on a pile of chopped-off human heads, proof of his participation in an atrocity committed during the Malayan Emergency of 1948-52.
80* MagicalSecurityCam: One hand-held 8mm camera gave two different views of the same armoured car robbery.
81* MookChivalry: Strictly [[AvertedTrope averted]]; nobody fought fair on this show!
82* MurderByMistake: In "Hit and Run", Carter's wife is run down and killed because she was wearing a coat belonging to her co-worker, who was the intended target.
83* NotSoFakePropWeapon: "Loving Arms" concerns a criminal who sells toy guns to criminals that turn out to be real. Things get serious when one of them accidentally kills a police officer.
84* {{Oireland}}: A young Lindy Brill played the daughter of an Irish terrorist involved in UsefulNotes/TheTroubles in "Nightmares". Her Oirish accent would make a real Irish teenage girl cringe.
85* OldFashionedCopper: The cops are pretty much the archetypal characters who represent this trope, although they aren't old-fashioned themselves since the values represented were alive and well in TheSeventies.
86-->'''Regan''': Get your trousers on. You're nicked.
87-->'''Carter''' ''(to the perp's girlfriend)'': Have a lie in, luv.
88* TheOner: "Night Out" has a scene where we're introduced to a woman in a hand-held shot which lasts three minutes and forty seconds with no cuts, during which time the camera shows her at her dressing-table, follows her around the room as she puts her stockings away, and then follows her back to a shot of her and Regan and their reflections in the dressing-table mirror, moving effortlessly from one-shot to two-shot to long-shot to over-the-shoulder and back to one-shot - all in a single take
89* OopNorth: Regan is originally from Manchester and has been in London for several years, so his accent has modified, but traces of his northern origins are still evident. He also refers to his northern roots every now and again (his poor upbringing, his father's work on the Manchester Ship Canal), which brings banter from Carter, a Londoner, such as humming "The Red Flag".
90* PapaWolf: The first season finale "Abduction" sees Regan's daughter getting kidnapped. Near the end of the episode, he's alone with one of the kidnappers...
91* PerpSweating: Lots of sweating, along with plenty of punching, kicking, and banging against walls.
92* PleasePutSomeClothesOn: In "Night Out", the following exchange takes place between Regan and Iris Long (a "working girl") while awaiting the arrival of an armed gang:
93-->'''Regan''': Get dressed.
94-->'''Iris''': All right. What do you think I should wear? Something inexpensive cos of the bullet holes? Or something dark so it doesn't show the blood?
95-->'''Regan''': That's not funny!
96-->'''Iris''': There's no need to get hysterical.
97-->'''Regan''': I am not being hysterical, I AM TERRIFIED!
98* PoliceLineup: "In From the Cold" has a scene where a wheelchair-bound officer has to identify the criminal who shot and paralysed him. The lineup takes place outdoors in the police station car park.
99* PoliticallyIncorrectHero: Regan and Carter refer to suspects (or otherwise) as birds, tarts, slags, micks, jocks, poofs, micks and other terms.
100* PunctuatedForEmphasis: In the episode "Thin Ice": "That's. Not. My. Dog!"
101* PutDownYourGunAndStepAway: In "Nightmare", a couple of renegade ex-IRA have got hold of an experimental laser sighted rifle. Regan and Carter tell them to put down the rifle slowly which they do, making sure it's pointed in their direction. Then they turn on the battery pack activating the laser which shines into Regan's eyes, temporarily blinding him.
102* RabidCop: Regan on a bad day.
103* ReadingYourRights: Regan's reading of the rights generally summed to four words, usually accompanied by one last punch, kick or headbutt.
104* RedOniBlueOni: Regan is red (cynical, agressive and world-weary) and Carter is blue (enthusiastic, ambitious and jovial).
105* ScaryFlashlightFace: In "Nightmare" Regan's GirlOfTheWeek has a prophetic nightmare of him in danger, ending with a red-coloured light shining in his face as Regan screams right before she wakes up. It's all supposed to foreshadow him being (temporarily) blinded by a laser beam by the villains.
106* SequelEpisode:
107** Season two's "Golden Fleece" and "Trojan Bus" featured a pair of Australian villains, Colin [=MacGruder=] and Ray Stackpole.
108** Season three's "Taste of Fear" and "On the Run" feature career criminal Tim Cook.
109* ShownTheirWork: Many of the famous catchphrases used by Regan and Carter (for example, "Get your trousers on, you're nicked" and "We're the Sweeney, son, and we haven't had our dinner yet") were the result of the program's researchers studying the way real members of the Flying Squad ("The Sweeney") talked when off-duty in pubs near New Scotland Yard.
110* SmokingIsCool: Both of the main characters, just so you know they're double-hard bastards.
111* SolemnEndingTheme: The show has a fast-paced opening theme as befits an action-packed cop show, but the closing titles use a surprisingly low-key arrangement of the same theme.
112* SpecialGuest: Most notably Creator/MorecambeAndWise in "Hearts and Minds". (John Thaw and Dennis Waterman found it hard to keep a straight face around them; they also did a spoof of ''The Sweeney'' on their sketch programme.)
113** Amongst those who made guest appearances were Creator/BrianBlessed, Creator/WarrenClarke, Creator/JohnRhysDavies, Creator/JulianGlover, Creator/IanHendry, Creator/JohnHurt, Creator/MichaelSheard, Creator/PatrickTroughton, Creator/PeterVaughan, Creator/TonyJay and Creator/RichardWilson.
114* SpiritualSuccessor: To the lesser-known series ''Special Branch'', which was the first series made by Euston Films. Both series were shot on film and went for a more gritty and realistic look, although ''Special Branch'' lacked the rough-and-tumble approach. In fact, Dennis Waterman even appeared in one episode.
115* TakeThisJobAndShoveIt: In the final episode, "Jack or Knave", Regan faces prosecution for conspiracy to pervert the cause of justice. He's acquitted, but is so disgusted by the experience that he resigns.
116-->I am utterly and abjectly pissed-off with this little lot. I've given the best years of my life to the job. I've got eighteen bloody commendations, if you include the one I ''didn't'' get yesterday. And how does this "wonderful" police force show its gratitude for all my years of unstinting effort? It bangs me up in a crummy little cell like some cheap little villain - all because a toerag called Hutchinson's got a few bottles twitching on the Fifth Floor. Now, because that poor little bastard had the guts to get off his arse, I'm going to have to be reinstated. And what do you bunch of bleeding double-dyed hypocrites want now? You want me to crawl back to work and be terribly grateful that I didn't get nicked for something I didn't do. Well you can stuff it!
117* TheTeaser: Each episode opened with a three-minute intro that established the plot.
118* TemporarySubstitute: Haskins was largely absent from season four, as Garfield Morgan had theatre commitments. As a result, several commanding officers appeared to fill his role. "Hard Men, "Drag Act", "Hearts and Minds" and "Latin Lady" feature Det. Chief Supt. Braithwaite, "Bait" features DCI Roan, "The Bigger They Are" features Creator/RichardWilson as DCI Anderson and "Feet of Clay" features Commander Watson. In "The Bigger They Are", Carter even {{lampshades}} this by saving, "Come back, Haskins, all is forgiven".
119** Haskins is also absent from season two's "Supersnout", with Creator/BillMaynard's Det. Chief Insp. Stephen Quirk filling his role.
120* ViolentGlaswegian: In "Hard Men", one Glasgow gangster kills another (who had, admittedly, kidnapped the first man's daughter) by shooting him with A VEREY (Flare) PISTOL; the victim goes up in a ball of flame and dies horribly, screaming; causing the dead man's friend to tell a policeman, "Did ye see that? Did ye? That was DIABOLICAL!"
121* WhamEpisode: "Hit and Run" sees Carter's wife nurdered in a hit and run incident that was ultimately down to mistaken identity.
122* WorkingClassHero: Regan came from a working-class background in Manchester, his father being a dockworker.
123* WunzaPlot: He's a tough, no-nonsense, bends-the-rules older cop who's quick-witted and with an eye for drink and the ladies! He's a younger, more inexperienced cop who wants to follow the rulebook yet respects his older partner! They fight crime!
124* YouDoNotHaveToSayAnything: Regan's take on this was inevitably "You're fucking ''nicked!''"
125* YoungerThanTheyLook: John Thaw would have been between 33 and 37 when he played [[http://www.aveleyman.com/ActorCredit.aspx?ActorID=17011 Jack Regan]], but looks well into his forties- partly reinforced by the way he acts as well. Thaw himself apparently said "I was born looking 50".
126
127----
128!!The 1977 and 1978 movies provide examples of:
129* BigDamnMovie: The 1977 movie featured a complex blackmail conspiracy attempting to influence oil prices, with collateral murders the only reason the Sweeney are involved. However they seemed to realise this was silly, so in the second spinoff they went stuck to foiling ''particularly nasty'' bank robberies- this ended up DarkerAndEdgier with a higher body count than the whole TV run combined.
130* BloodSplatteredInnocents: Jack Regan suffers this in the 1978 movie when an armed robber evades capture by putting a sawn-off shotgun in his mouth. And it's not just blood either. Regan doesn't sell it until he reaches the bathroom, then frantically scrubs his face clean before venting his anger at the criminals escaping justice.
131* CrashingThroughTheHarem: In one of the movies, the Flying Squad takes a shortcut through a room, interrupting a couple having sex there. When the man threatens to put in a complaint, Regan shuts him up by asking whether the girl he's with is of legal age.
132* ItsPersonal: Regan at the climax of the first movie. After seeing the only witness of the killings [[spoiler:(who he'd shagged earlier)]] murdered, Regan is told by a government official the BigBad would be assassinated by his own hitmen upon being arrested. What does Regan do next?
133* PrecisionFStrike: Free from the constraints of television, the characters swear up a storm.
134-->'''Regan''': '''You're fucking NICKED, matey!"'''
135* SawedOffShotgun: In the second movie the criminals use gold-plated Purdey shotguns stolen from a rock star. There's a notable scene where the blagger sticks his sawn-off in a bank manager's face.
136-->"Hold it right there, squire. You are privileged to be looking down the barrels of a gold-plated Purdey shotgun. Now as a bank manager, you'll appreciate that any man capable of cutting a gun like that in half wouldn't think twice about cutting you in half."
137** [[spoiler: The only times the guns are [[ChekhovsGun used on people]], however, are [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness on wounded crew members]] and to escape the Sweeney [[DrivenToSuicide the only way out they could.]]]]
138* SequelGoesForeign: The second film sees Regan and Carter go from their London setting to Malta in order to track down a gang of armed robbers.
139* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: Garfield Morgan was asked to play Haskins again as he had done in the series, but rejected the project as he felt the role was too small. In the end, Haskins became Matthews and Bernard Kay was cast instead.

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