As many writers have previously identified The Avengers takes place in a parallel Britain, a place that is composed of cliches, often referred to as Avengerland. It is populated by larger than life characters and our three heroes are vaguely sketched people who seem to get by on a combination of confidence, sparkle and innuendo. The action is more realistic car crashes, punch ups and lots of death whereas the storylines are fantastical and over the top, a mixture of James Bond, Doctor Who and Quatermass. They do love their professors and secret laboratories! The presentation is filmic, brilliantly directed and has that grainy look which marks it out as very Seventies.
It does have something of an identity crisis as it is never quite clear what sort of series it wants to be. A continuation of the classic Sixties original? A more modern espionage thriller? A fantasy series? A typical car chase driven adventure series? Different episodes have aspects of these and it doesn’t always work but when it does it’s very good indeed. There were two seasons first shown in 1976 and 1977. While the quality and tone of the show varied one thing doesn’t change- every episode has a what we now refer to as a cold open which freeze frames just as someone is falling and after the title credits resumes at that moment.
`The Eagle’s
Nest` kicks off the first
season in lively fashion with a sequence involving a man being pursued by thugs
using fishing rods as weapons. The remote island of Dorca where this takes
place turns out to be owned by a group of Nazis masquerading as monks and
seemingly keeping their Nazi uniforms underneath their habits. If you think
that sounds weird then their long term plan is to revive the cryogenically
frozen corpse of none other than Adolf H. Steed and co are investigating the
disappearance of an acquaintance called Stannard who turns out to be that man
at the start. The first thing you notice is how slick this show is. Edited with
precision it scores highly on the fight sequences- one is almost a blur- and
action with director Desmond Davis making every frame count and finding some
unusual ways to show what would otherwise be routine Seventies telly action.
The second thing you notice is the sharpness of the dialogue with some innuendo
and no wasted chit chat.
Despite a gap of seven years since the previous series of The Avengers ended there is no compensation for new viewers, no summary of exactly who the leading three characters are. They may trade mildly suggestive remarks and enjoy abstract dialogue but are presented out of any wider context. Luckily there’s plenty of natural charisma to overcome this potential hazard, each getting a fair chunk of the action. It’s a shame that the actual narrative is nowhere near as sharp.
Brian Clemens was an ideas man, you can imagine he
scribbled down a list of things he wanted in this episode and they are
presented as set pieces- the initial fishing rod chase, the kidnapping of
Professor Von Claus and subsequent pursuit, the rally where the villains
abandon their brown robes and so on. The story then has to stretch to encompass
these points but its an awkward fit at times and even if you are willing to go
with the Hitler idea the way the Avengers overcome the Nazis is not especially
believable even if the results are fun
to watch. The guest cast contains a lot of familiar Seventies television
stalwarts with Derek Farr squeezing every manic moment out of the cult’s leader
Father Tasker. Most surprising though is the presence of Peter Cushing as Von
Claus and its fair to say he enters into the spirit of things. Surprisingly for
a series unafraid to be silly we don’t get to see Hitler in repose though the
plot note where the monks have substituted the original patient the professor
worked on and not expected him to notice is unintentionally amusing. You do
wonder though why the monks waited all this time and surely Tasker should be
older?
`The Midas
Touch` spins the
classical story into an antagonist whose touch delivers every known viral disease
to a victim. Developed by a Professor Turner the weaponless assassin is the
subject of rival bids and by a coincidence that can only be described as one in
a million a former colleague of Steed’s called Freddie witnesses an incident
related to this case. The script rolls right over explaining just how someone
could be a carrier of all known diseases and still be immune to each of them by
not mentioning it! In truth its an episode too long for its plot hence a number
of extended scenes that are obviously filling in the time. Not that these are
necessarily bad as Robert Fuest directs with vigour. A lengthy car chase sweeps
around some of London’s least desirable streets, parties pursue each other
around some sort of factory that could be a gas works and in one sequence that
is very Seventies assorted guests groove around wearing masks and imbibing all
kinds of stuff. It all adds to the atmosphere but not the plot
The series’
trademark archness is in full effect none more so than when Purdey questions an
army officer accompanying him around an assault course without breaking sweat
while the soldiers around her seem to find it more of an effort! There’s also
plenty of scenery digestion going on; Turner’s ultimate aims remain swathed in
mystery as he prefers to talk about the “sensual” feeling of gold allowing
David Swift (sporting gold coloured clothes of course) full reign to play the
mad scientist. Philip Carson gets the more serious role of Freddie but his
character is placed mostly to further the plot and nobody seems especially
concerned when he drives off a cliff. This sort of response takes some getting
used to when viewed in a modern context. The episode does also feature an
English actor made up to look Chinese, a conceit which given the embarrassing
performance must have grated even in those less enlightened times.
The Brian
Clemens stable of series were hard as nails and seem to lack compassion or even
empathy. When the heroes are as ruthless as the villains it makes it more
difficult to root for them. Typical of this is an incident here when a suspect
Gambit is chasing gets killed, it being a trope after just two episodes that
either Gambit or Purdey or both pursue a suspect only for them to die in some
way or another. I suppose in the Seventies
nobody really bothered about this sort of thing (and Brian Clemens definitely didn’t!)
but I’m already finding myself wondering who are these three people. Any hint
of personal information is couched inside a gag, deflected with a look or a
raised eyebrow or clever talk. All that being said I do enjoy the outrageous
manner in which Clemens deploys ideas, just about managing to include a
fictionally plausible explanation even if in real life it is impossible.
The other thing
about the series is that its surreal trappings divert us from the fact it is
often a spy thriller and the third
episode `House of Cards` falls into that category. A Russian agent
called Perov re-activates a group of sleeper agents after a defector called
Professor Vasil is helped by Steed in a bizarre scene using screaming girls
pretending to run after a pop star (played by Mike Gambit!). Despite this
amusing opening the episode is actually a tad more serious than it seems with
Steed finding old friends being killed and even a lady friend about to
assassinate him. Perov himself- played as a typical 70s Russian by a robust
Peter Jeffery- fakes his own death to undertake this revenge attempt.
Events hinge on half playing cards with which the sleepers are `rewoken` to carry out the murder of whatever name is written on the back. Quite why they feel compelled after a long time to undertake these crimes is not addressed in an episode that isn’t as tightly written as it thinks. Matters reach a climax with a sequence that twice suggests characters don’t hear an approaching helicopter in a quiet country area. For a series that relies on its trademark action, some of these parts are awkwardly staged reflecting the script’s tardy attention to detail.
Long term fans however would have enjoyed
an amusing sequence where we see the framed photos of the previous Avengers
girls and the episode also offers some (jokey) background information including
that Purdey’s stepfather was a Bishop! This probably played better in 1976 when
secret Russian agents were familiar fodder for spy fiction while the playing
card motif seems only liable to draw suspicion when Perov could just as easily
write the victim’s names on a piece of paper. The main three have a ball while
the Russians are stereotypes we’ve all seen before and I’m sure that was just
as true in 1976.
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