July 20, 2025, 2:48 pm | Read time: 16 minutes
In its early years, television portrayed police officers, detectives, and lawyers almost exclusively as always shining, yet one-dimensional heroes. Eventually, viewers grew tired of such flawlessness. By the time the U.S. series “Hill Street Blues” aired, screenwriters began focusing on more realistic characters with lives beyond their jobs. Characters with quirks, flaws, and imperfections. Men and women traumatized by the evil they faced weekly. Today, it’s rare to find a TV cop without some physical or emotional scars. This trend continues to captivate audiences, as seen in the success of shows like “True Detective” or “Dept. Q.” TECHBOOK presents ten of these damaged TV law enforcers.
Department Q (Dept. Q): DCI Carl Morck – Traumatized Jerk
“Department Q” (original title: “Dept. Q”), the British Netflix series based on Jussi Adler-Olsen’s novels, serves as a blueprint for a crime drama featuring a police officer who could charitably be described as behaviorally challenged. DCI Carl Morck (Matthew Goode), an Englishman working for the Edinburgh police, might objectively be considered a nuisance. To many of his colleagues, however, the TV cop is an unbearable jerk. A constant know-it-all, yet often correct in his analyses.
While the broad strokes of the literary source material (or the Danish film adaptation) remain the same, the creators of “Dept. Q” skillfully added their own touch to the plot and characters. The atmosphere is largely defined by the monochrome gray of wintery Edinburgh, making the charming Scottish capital feel like another main character. Yet, it’s the characters that lend “Dept. Q” its perceived authenticity.
As with other outstanding English crime dramas (“Broadchurch,” “Sherwood,” or “Happy Valley”), “Dept. Q” avoids literal stereotypes. While Hollywood productions sometimes struggle to make viewers forget the star behind the role, the actors in “Dept. Q” largely disappear into their characters. Viewers almost feel as if they’re dealing with real people of flesh and blood.
Der Fahnder: Hannes Faber – Unconventionality Light
“Der Fahnder” featured Hannes Faber (Klaus Wennemann), an undercover detective in a West German city in the early ’80s. It felt like a Ruhr area metropolis, but filming took place in Munich and its surroundings. Faber, often addressed by his last name, was the ‘unconventional cop’ type. He never strictly adhered to the rules and would sometimes go overboard if he thought it served the cause.
To avoid any misconceptions: Faber’s unconventionality was somewhat of a light version. The series aired in the early evening, obligating the commissioning ARD to maintain certain standards regarding sex and violence. Faber’s peppermint drops, which he always carried in a tin to offer to anyone, were almost the peak of extravagance. Nonetheless, the character exuded a youthful charm and flair that gave the series a unique appeal. This was largely thanks to its creator, Dominik Graf, who later gained acclaim for cop thrillers like “Die Katze” and “Die Sieger.” Graf, now one of Germany’s most distinguished film and TV directors and a ten-time Grimme Award winner, directed eleven episodes.
While “Der Fahnder” had a long run (the series aired from 1984 to 2005), Faber held the record with ten years and 91 episodes before the script had him move to Ireland. He was succeeded by three other incarnations of “Der Fahnder,” played by Jörg Schüttauf (as Thomas Becker), Michael Lesch (Martin Riemann), and Martin Lindow (as Thomas Wells). For many early fans, however, the “Highlander” dictum applied: “There can be only one” – Hannes Faber!
Sherlock: Sherlock Holmes – A “High-Functioning Sociopath”
In the countless film and TV adaptations of “Sherlock Holmes,” the famous detective created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was always portrayed as a clever, yet perfectly mannered English gentleman. In short, Sherlock Holmes seemed untouchable. To adapt the character for a modern audience, Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss relocated the original Victorian England setting to 21st-century London for the BBC series “Sherlock.” They also subjected the original’s mythos to a radical overhaul. This tour de force produced a TV cop who is as brilliant as the original but also exhibits some rather unappealing character flaws.
The Sherlock Holmes played excellently by Benedict Cumberbatch is anything but a sympathetic character. Cumberbatch’s TV cop is an arrogant jerk who makes no secret of his belief that the police officers he assists are hopelessly overwhelmed, if not incompetent. He tends to use people for his purposes and sometimes treats even his few friends, like Dr. Watson, harshly and condescendingly. It’s almost no wonder that Holmes refers to himself as a “high-functioning sociopath.” His nicotine addiction and apparent use of harder drugs complete the picture of a ruthless, emotionally detached individual.
Incidentally, since 2017, the end of the fourth season, fans of the series have hoped that “Sherlock” might once again take on the fight against evil. Moffat, for one, would be on board immediately. “I’d do it tomorrow,” the writer said in an interview some time ago. “I mean, Arthur Conan Doyle wrote 60 novels. It’s not a format that wears out, and I’m ready.” But he added, “You need the two big stars. And that’s the problem.” Indeed, the willingness of Cumberbatch and Freeman seems questionable. Whether it’s scheduling conflicts or perhaps other, more personal reasons, only they can answer why “Sherlock” remains on hiatus.
Columbo: Inspector Columbo – Quirky TV Cop with a Guarantee of Success
A whodunit, where the viewer guesses who the perpetrator is, was never part of “Columbo.” What made “Columbo” unique was that the viewer knew the perpetrator from the start. Right at the beginning, the audience was, so to speak, ‘live’ as the crime occurred. “Columbo” became a major series success, largely due to the seemingly parodic character of Inspector Columbo (Peter Falk). Columbo, who wasn’t even given a first name in the script, appeared literally rumpled. In his shabby trench coat and with his disheveled hair, he always looked as if he’d just rolled out of a cot at a homeless shelter.
Logically, perpetrators often underestimated this peculiar policeman, feeling superior to him, as the crimes were usually sophisticated, meticulously planned by a mastermind. Columbo’s apparent handicap was his greatest strength. He was consistently underestimated, partly because he sometimes seemed clumsy. He also became a real nuisance during investigations. His “Just one more thing…” as he was almost out the door became a running gag, driving his counterpart to the brink of despair.
The role of the villain was always played by former Hollywood luminaries, giving each episode a special charm. Stars like Janet Leigh (Hitchcock’s “Psycho”), Ida Lupino, one of the few women in Hollywood to have a career both in front of and behind the camera, Leonard Nimoy, better known as “Mr. Spock,” or horror film legend Vincent Price, all took turns in the series.
For Peter Falk, “Columbo” was the role of a lifetime. His performance was a typical case where actor and character seemed completely identical. When one thinks of Falk, a highly talented actor from the New Hollywood movement, one inevitably thinks of “Columbo.”
Für alle Fälle Fitz (Cracker): Dr. Edward Fitzgerald – Self-Destructive Tendencies
Today, eight or nine out of ten TV cops might be heroes with significant flaws. But when “Für alle Fälle Fitz” aired in 1993, featuring the unconventional and often unlikable criminal psychologist Dr. Edward “Fitz” Fitzgerald (Robbie Coltrane), such an anti-hero was almost unique in TV programming.
The heavily overweight chain smoker drinks like a fish and is also a gambling addict, making self-destructive tendencies a fair description. He’s also an adulterer, a cynic, and sometimes even a true misanthrope. Yet, Fitz is a brilliant mind. A powerful profiler who repeatedly dives deep into the psyche of the perpetrator, providing the police with crucial insights. Here, it’s mostly about the “why,” while the “who,” similar to “Columbo,” is already known to the viewer. In English police jargon, such a man is called a “cracker,” someone who “cracks” the culprit, revealing their motivation. Fitz consistently demonstrates great empathy, which, ironically, is extended to murderers, racists, and child molesters, while he keeps his own family emotionally distant.
Besides the main character’s ambivalence, it’s this intellectual approach and the almost physically painful depiction of the most heinous crimes that set “Für alle Fälle Fitz” apart from other crime dramas of the time. From today’s perspective, one might even say that “Für alle Fälle Fitz” paved the way for “Sherlock” (Holmes), which appeared 20 years later. Like Holmes, Fitz assists a police force that seems lost without help. And like Holmes, Fitz, who could use a psychologist himself, is haunted by his own demons.
Der Chef (Ironside): Robert T. Ironside – TV Cop in a Wheelchair
Police officer Robert T. Ironside (Raymond Burr) is shot in an attack and is paralyzed from the waist down. Nevertheless, Ironside wants to continue working for the police and offers his services as a freelance consultant to the San Francisco Police Department. He assembles a small team and, from his wheelchair, makes life hell for criminals.
When “Der Chef” aired in the late 1960s, a hero with a handicap was an absolute exception in the uniformity of TV series. Only the two Western series “Tate” and “The Man Without a Name” had previously attempted heroes with disabilities (loss of an arm here, memory loss there), but without success. One might have assumed that a TV cop in a wheelchair would have little chance of success among the many virile crime heroes. The opposite was true: “Ironside” ran in the U.S. for over eight years, producing eight seasons with 199 episodes.
The popularity of “Der Chef” was further evidenced by toy car manufacturer Corgi Toys. Under the name “Ironside Truck,” Corgi released a miniature version of the van used as “Der Chef’s” mobile office. This practice—creating a toy car for a TV series or movie—was reserved for the biggest box office or ratings successes, such as “Batman,” “James Bond,” “Kojak,” or “Starsky & Hutch.”
Monk: Adrian Monk – Obsessions by the Dozen
Adrian Monk (Tony Shalhoub), the titular character of the comedy-crime series “Monk,” could be seen as a successor to Inspector Columbo and “Der Chef” with a bit of imagination.
Like Robert T. Ironside, Monk is a former San Francisco Police Department officer who had to leave the force. However, not due to a physical injury, but because of severe trauma caused by the murder of his wife, Trudy. For three years, Monk didn’t leave his apartment, developing a dozen compulsions and phobias. Gradually, he tries to reintegrate into everyday life and offers his services—another parallel to “Der Chef”—to his former colleagues as a consultant on particularly challenging cases where conventional police work reaches its limits.
The cops may sometimes laugh at his compulsions—Monk has a cleanliness obsession, among others—but they appreciate his excellent memory and brilliant perception. His unconventional methods often lead to solving a case. Monk’s former boss, Captain Leland Francis Stottlemeyer (Ted Levine), holds Monk’s approach in high regard, even if he doesn’t always understand it. The captain overlooks the fact that Monk isn’t always a likable character. His counterparts must endure Monk’s occasional ruthlessness and lack of empathy.
Like Columbo, Monk is considered a unique oddball by those around him. This often leads to him being underestimated, just like Columbo. A man who needs to wash his hands every few minutes isn’t taken seriously and might even be mocked. But in the end, it’s always Monk who gets the last laugh and can momentarily forget his self-imposed compulsions. What sets “Monk” apart from all the other series mentioned here is its humor. While Monk’s fate and illness are to be taken seriously, the occasional situational comedy adds a certain lightness. Perhaps Monk could be seen as a “sad clown” in this context—though that’s just the author’s subjective opinion.
Shalhoub won three Emmys, the most prestigious TV award in the U.S., for “Monk.” An even greater success, however, is that the term “Monk” has entered common parlance. In 2024, the “RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland” defined what one’s “inner Monk” means. “It refers to the part of you that you must restrain from removing a lint from your boss’s jacket without being asked, the part that makes you park 70 times at the supermarket until the car is perfectly parallel to the parking lines, and the part that compels you to straighten pictures in a museum despite a potential alarm. The part that only rests when everything is perfectly structured and sorted.”
True Detective: Rust Cohle – TV Cop as Sisyphus in Purgatory
First things first: The first season of the crime anthology “True Detective” is among the best that television has produced. Without a doubt, this first season is one of the most powerful, intense series experiences ever. This tour de force demands a lot from the viewer, partly because the narrative spans three timelines.
Police officer Rust Cohle (Matthew McConaughey), who lost his daughter in an accident, is a man without any hope. He knows he will never win the war against evil permanently. One can imagine him as Sisyphus in purgatory, with his sharp reflections on the morally decayed state of the world having an almost philosophical character. His rough-and-tumble partner Marty Hart, on the other hand, tries to take what the world still offers someone like him. He cheats on his wife and sometimes resorts to bitter sarcasm in response to Cohle’s musings.
Both Cohle and Hart are (war) veterans, with Cohle’s outward transformation providing more than a hint that he seems to have given up on himself. Initially, he appears fit, always clean-shaven, wearing a suit, tie, and side part. But later, none of that remains. Cohle then sports an unkempt mustache and ties his greasy long hair into a ponytail. The chain smoker appears almost neglected, and it’s evident that he indulges in alcohol more than is good for him.
“True Detective” is a complete work of art, with Nic Pizzolatto’s script and Cary Joji Fukunaga’s direction being brilliant. McConaughey and Harrelson perform with an intensity as if their lives depended on it. But it’s McConaughey who delivers perhaps the most outstanding performance of his career. For the actor previously typecast in romantic comedies due to his good looks, “True Detective” marked his definitive breakthrough as a character actor. He had already shown his true potential with the AIDS drama “Dallas Buyers Club” and “The Wolf of Wall Street.”
Der junge Inspektor Morse (Endeavour): Endeavour Morse – A Hopelessly Damaged Man
It’s important to know that “Der junge Inspektor Morse” serves as a prequel to a British crime series that was very successful in England between 1987 and 2000. “Inspector Morse” told the story of the criminal cases solved by the aging Inspector Endeavour Morse (John Thaw) in Oxford over eight seasons. This Morse was a brilliant analyst but also a loner and introvert. But how did he become this man?
The answer came in 2012 with “Der junge Inspektor Morse,” a prequel set during the time when former Oxford graduate Endeavour Morse (Shaun Evans) joined the city’s police force. He gained his first experiences and rose from a simple Detective Constable to Sergeant and later Detective Inspector during the 1960s. Morse quickly proved to be unusually cultured and intellectual—knowledgeable about “La Traviata” as well as the Punic Wars—which initially made him an outsider. However, colleagues and superiors soon came to appreciate his quick wit and empathy, allowing him to understand the mindset of criminals.
In fact, Morse could be a kindred spirit to Rust Cohle. Like the “True Detective” character, the young Morse is a hopelessly damaged man. A man who, over the years, will abandon all hope. He realizes that he cannot eradicate horror from the world and that his sole task must be to bring justice to the victims. Evans himself once described his character: “I don’t see Morse as a hero. I see him as a man trying to make sense of a world he doesn’t really fit into.” This is indeed his dilemma, which threatens to break him. He begins to drink, becomes careless, and his few friends threaten to turn away from him. He repeatedly seeks salvation in love but always fails, sometimes tragically.

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Die Brücke – Transit in den Tod (Broen): Saga Norén – Promiscuous Autist
When a female body is found on the Øresund Bridge, which connects Danish Copenhagen with Swedish Malmö, Swedish detective Saga Norén (Sofia Helin) and Danish inspector Martin Rohde (Kim Bodnia) must work together to find the murderer. The body was not only placed exactly on the border between the two countries, but it also consists of two parts that don’t belong together. The upper body is from a city councilor from Malmö, while the lower body is from a prostitute from Copenhagen who was murdered 13 months earlier…
Similar to “Monk,” Saga Norén (Sofia Helin) is a police officer with a mental disorder. Saga is autistic and shows signs of Asperger’s syndrome. She struggles to form interpersonal relationships, partly due to her lack of empathy. This often leads to situations where Martin seems to despair. Saga’s indiscriminate one-night stands also struggle with the blunt directness of the promiscuous detective.
However, that’s the only vague parallel to “Monk.” Unlike the comedic character of the U.S. series, “Die Brücke – Transit in den Tod” is pure Nordic Noir. The images remain gray, if not dark, much like the weather. The once-praised social achievements of Scandinavian countries now show deep cracks. Saga’s own story, revealed during the first season, highlights this. Years ago, she couldn’t prevent her sister, with whom she had a deep bond, from committing suicide. After her father’s death, her mother, who also suffered from a mental disorder, took her own life. This was doubly devastating for Saga: besides the painful loss, she had to endure being initially suspected of her mother’s murder and spending a year in prison until her innocence was proven.