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07 Come In

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07 Come In
Title card
GenreAction, police procedural
Based onEwa wzywa 07
Written byKrzysztof Szmagier
Directed by
  • Krzysztof Szmagier
  • Kazimierz Tarnas
  • Michal Dudziewicz
Starring
ComposerWłodzimierz Korcz
Country of originPoland
Original languagePolish
No. of seasons5
No. of episodes21
Production
Cinematography
  • Wieslaw Rutowicz
  • Jan Hesse
EditorAnna Maria Czolnik
Running time60 minutes
Production companyStudio Filmowe Kadr
Original release
Release25 November 1976 (1976-11-25) –
25 May 1989 (1989-05-25)

07 Come In (Polish: 07 zgłoś się) is a Polish criminal television series broadcast on TVP from 25 November 1976 to 25 May 1989.[1] The series consists of 21 episodes, divided into five seasons, filmed in 1976, 1978, 1981, 1984, and 1987, respectively. It combines elements of action and police procedural genres.

Background

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Directed by Krzysztof Szmagier and scored by Wlodzimierz Korcz, the series centers on the investigations of Police Lieutenant Sławomir Borewicz (played by Bronisław Cieślak), who solves a different case in each episode.[2][3] The show was loosely based on the novel series Ewa wzywa 07 (Ewa calls 07).[2] The title of both the novels and the TV series refers to "zero-seven", a police radio call-sign used by Borewicz. The show shared a number of similarities, and one complete storyline, with the comic book series Kapitan Żbik.[citation needed]

Despite being widely considered a work of propaganda aimed at warming the image of the "Citizen's Militia", the series proved highly popular in Poland and even gained a cult following. Critics called it "one of the biggest achievements of Polish crime drama",[4] a "raw and realistic response to James Bond",[5] and "the most popular Polish police series ever".[6]

References

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  1. ^ Marek Hendrykowski: Porucznik Borewicz jako idol popkultury ("Lieutenamt Borewicz: A Popular Culture Idol"), "Images" 2005, vol. 3, nr 5–6, s. 70–78.
  2. ^ a b 07 zgłoś się at the Telewizja Polska website
  3. ^ Krzysztof Szmagier, Komisarz Borewicz. 07 zgłasza się... po latach, 2009, ISBN 978-83-61159-05-6.
  4. ^ Sylwia Kucharska; Karol Jachymek. Wrocław i film [Wrocław and Cinema] (in Polish). Wrocław: Sylwia Kucharska. p. 27. ISBN 9788362443321.
  5. ^ Anna Żarnowska (2000). Andrzej Szwarc (ed.). Kobieta i kultura czasu wolnego [Woman and the Culture of Spare Time]. Kobieta i kultura czasu wolnego (in Polish). Vol. 7. DiG. pp. 555, 506. ISBN 83-7181-199-3.
  6. ^ Ewa Mazierska (2007). Polish Postcommunist Cinema: From Pavement Level. New Studies in European Cinema. Vol. 4. Peter Lang. pp. 299, 44. ISBN 978-3-03910-529-8.
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