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Cold Case is an American hour-long fictional television show about a police division that specializes in investigating unsolved crimes. The show is set in the city of Philadelphia and first aired in September 2003.
StyleCold Case is notable for double-casting: it will cast a young actor for the flashback sequences and an older actor for the shots in the present, and cut back and forth between the two, to show how the character has aged. The episode "One Night" managed to triple-cast one character, showing him in the present day, when he committed his murder and when he was a teenager.
Generally the majority of the victims are shown to be good people thus making the endings, in which the victims are seen one last time, rewarding for the victim's family and the viewer. There have been occasions where the victims were depicted as rather unlikable even despicable making the endings somewhat bittersweet. Such victims include a manipulative sexual predator in "Greed", a child molester in "The Plan", a thug in "The House", an abusive mother in "The Woods", mass shooters in "Rampage", and another child molester in "Blackout". Each episode, during the flashbacks, will feature a different style of direction, whether it be the colors, lighting, shading, or camera angles. Flashbacks from an era such as the 1950s have been shown in black and white, an episode with a case from 1939 featured sepia-toned flashbacks, one episode set in the '80s used a split-screen style. Some popular films have served as inspiration for several episodes such as "Disco Inferno" (Saturday Night Fever), "Yo, Adrian" (Rocky), "Creatures of the Night" (The Rocky Horror Picture Show), "Detention" (The Breakfast Club), "Dog Day Afternoons" (Dog Day Afternoon), "Greed" (Wall Street), "Saving Patrick Bubley (Saving Private Ryan), "Forever Blue" (Brokeback Mountain), "Knuckle Up" (Fight Club) "Blood on the Tracks" (The Big Chill), "Shuffle, Ball, Change" (Footloose), and "Stand Up And Holler" (Mean Girls). Additionally, the episode "Bad Night" heavily referenced the movie Halloween as having possibly inspired a murder. Two episodes featured flashbacks shown in widescreen format. Season 3's "Family" had flashbacks that were presented with a 1.85:1 aspect ratio while Season 4's "Blood on the Tracks" had flashbacks with a 2.35:1 aspect ratio. Music
One episode featured music from an era different than the one featured in the flashbacks. The episode "Blood on the Tracks", about former hippies turned yuppies, took place in 1981 but featured Bob Dylan's music from the 60s. The episode that was taken the farthest back in Cold Case was the story of a sufferagist who was murdered in 1919 and based on previews contains music of the era. Rarely is the same song ever heard twice on the show. The sole exception being the fourth season episode Forever Blue which replayed The Monkees song "Daydream Believer" first heard in the third season episode Debut. This was due to the fact that "Daydream Believer" was a last-minute replacement as the producers had originally intended to use "Happy Together" by The Turtles in Forever Blue. The song "Landslide" has been used at the end of two episodes, though not the same version: A cover by The Smashing Pumpkins was used in the episode "Detention" while the original version recorded by Fleetwood Mac was used at the end of the episode "Fireflies". In the 2006 season, the music aired on the show during some episodes has been sponsored by XM Satellite Radio, where music from the various years covered can be heard on XM's decade channels. CharactersFor detailed information on Cold Case characters see the main article: List of Cold Case characters
ControversyIn 1998, a similar Canadian series called Cold Squad debuted, several years before Cold Case. Fans of Cold Squad accuse the American series of copying the basic premise and characters of the Canadian version, and at one point the creators of Cold Squad launched legal action against the makers of Cold Case. Both shows air in Canada (and on the same network, CTV). Waking the Dead is a similar British TV series about a "Cold Case Squad", which first aired in 2000. ReviewsCritical reaction to Cold Case has been mostly favorable, citing its distinctive use of "flashback" scenes-within-scenes, period music, and uplifting storylines. A 2004 episode based on the "Boy in the Box" [1], a still-unsolved 1957 Philadelphia homicide, was criticized for giving viewers the false impression that the actual case had been solved. This was not the only episode to use real events as inspiration. Some other episodes include:
Episodes
A listing of episodes in chronological order can be found at: List of Cold Case episodes U.S. Television RatingsSeasonal rankings (based on average total viewers per episode) of Cold Case on CBS. Note: Each U.S. network television season starts in late September and ends in late May, which coincides with the completion of May sweeps.
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