The Spy Collection Megaset (The Prisoner / The Persuaders / The Champions / The Protectors)
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The Spy Collection gathers together four different series, with nearly 60 episodes on 14 discs--a total of more than 38 hours of viewing, plus extras. None of the four, all of which were produced in England in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, is actually a spy show, per se, but the elements are here: intrepid heroes jetting to exotic locations, beautiful women, fast cars, yachts, ascots, cocktails, and a certain international flavor abound, especially in The Persuaders! (which teams Roger Moore and Tony Curtis as a millionaire playboys thrown together to thwart various dastardly criminals) and The Protectors (with Robert Vaughn and his beautiful partner, a putative Italian contessa, traveling around Europe for essentially the same reason). But The Prisoner, the best known (and arguably best, period) of the lot, is really more like sci-fi/mystery, while The Champions has a comic book dimension, what with the three principals having been given some measure of superpowers. As it is, there’s plenty here to remind viewers of James Bond, but little to make us forget him; this is TV, after all, with its smaller budgets, faster production time, and limited capabilities when it comes to the kinds of gadgets (like primitive phone machines and computers) and other technical details so familiar to 007 fans. Nevertheless, if your taste runs to pure escapism, The Spy Collection fits the bill in spades. Various bonus features include commentary on selected episodes of The Persuaders! and The Protectors; cast bios; photo galleries; and, for The Prisoner, an alternate version of the episode entitled “The Chimes of Big Ben,” an interactive map, a trivia game, and more.
The Prisoner (two discs, four episodes): If a top-level spy decided he didn't want to be a spy anymore, could he just walk into HQ and hand in his resignation? With all that classified knowledge in his head, would he be allowed to become a civilian again, free to go about his life? The answer, according to the stylish, brilliantly conceived 1960s British TV series The Prisoner, is a resounding no. In fact, instead of receiving a gold watch for his years of faithful service, our hero (played by Patrick McGoohan) is followed home to his London flat and knocked unconscious. When he awakens, he finds himself in a picturesque village where everyone is known by a number. Where is it? Why was he brought here? And, most important, how does he leave? As we learn in Episode 1, Number 6 can't leave. The Village's "citizens" might dress colorfully and stroll around its manicured gardens while a band plays bouncy Strauss marches, but the place is actually a prison. Surveillance is near total, and if all else fails, there's always the large, mysterious white ball that subdues potential escapees by temporarily smothering them. Who runs the Village? An ever-changing Number 2, who wants to know why Number 6 resigned. If he'd only cooperate, he's told, life can be made very pleasant. "I've resigned," he fumes. "I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, or numbered. My life is my own." So sets the stage for the ultimate battle of wills: Number 6's struggle to retain his privacy, sanity, and individuality against the array of psychological and physical methods the Village uses to break him. So does he ever escape? And does he ever find out who Number 1 is? "Questions are a burden to others," the Village saying goes. "Answers, a prison for oneself." Within this complete 17-episode set (which contains the entire series), all is revealed. Or is it?
The Persuaders! (four discs, 13 episodes): Talk about an odd couple--Moore and Curtis are certainly that. The former’s Brett Sinclair is a titled Brit aristocrat, while Curtis’ Danny Wilde is a Brooklyn hustler who got rich through brains and guile. The pair are “like nitro and glycerine,” says the retired judge who pairs them up, very much against their will, to help track down criminals who somehow evaded the long arm of the law. “Mix them together and you have a potent combo.” The actors certainly seem to enjoy themselves, romping through the scripts like a couple of superannuated Peter Pans. Moore was about to begin his long run as James Bond, and his insouciance, smooth way with the ladies, and penchant for tossing out bons mots while beating the crud out of some hapless fool foreshadow his take on that famous role (he even drives an Aston Martin); as for Curtis, scenery was clearly on the menu, and he chews it with relish. The tone of the whole series is fairly frothy, and you can’t beat those crazy duds they wear. Ah, the ‘70s.
The Champions (four discs, 15 episodes): Based on the pilot episode, this 1968 offering could have been the most entertaining of the four shows. In the pilot, after our three heroes (played by Stuart Damon, Alexandra Bastedo, and William Gaunt) make a daring theft from a Communist Chinese stronghold, their escape plane is hit by gunfire and crashes in the Himalayas, where th ASIN: B001IB2ZA8 VSKU: DBV.B001IB2ZA8.N Condition: New Author/Artist:Various|Roger Moore|Robert Vaughan|Tony Curtis Binding: Dvd Note: Any images shown are stock photographs and product may differ from what is shown.
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