
The
New Avengers - 1977
(Season Two/A&E DVD Set)
Picture:
C+ Sound: C+ Extras: D Episodes: B-
PLEASE
NOTE:
This
set of The
New Avengers
is long out of print, but StudioCanal U.K. has remastered and
reissued the series on DVD, Blu-ray and a deluxe 4K box set.
With
a very mixed reception its first year out, The
New Avengers
continued production, including more French locations (as co-funding
came from there) and new attempts to try to find a direction for the
series that worked. This included the only two-part show in the
history of the series and would be the final season of the series.
It was also the last time Gareth Hunt would play Mike Gambit and
Joanna Lumley would play Purdey, but it is especially poignant that
this would Patrick Macnee's last time playing John Steed. With the
old series, that's ten seasons.
Though
there was a good marketing push and even some nice memorabilia
(books, die-cats version of Purdey's Triumph TR7, Purdey action
figures in different countries, board games, etc.), it did not click
with an American audience and did not get the U.S. prime time
exposure its predecessor did. But Americans were not the only ones
still long in love with Diana Rigg's Emma Peel, as the overseas
success was choppy, yet it gained die-hard fans as the Honor
Blackman/Ms. Catherine Gale and Linda Thorson/Tara King shows before
them did.
Here
are the final 12 adventures/13 episodes, with the highlights getting
more cyber-ink than the rest, in order of title/writer/director:
Dead
Men Are Dangerous
(Brian Clemens/Sidney Hayers) - Another old figure from Steed's past
shows up rearing a murderous, jealous rage for him and all he loves,
including Purdey. This storyline has been done too many times and if
the intent was to give this season old school credibility, it does
not.
Angels
Of Death
(Terence Feely & Brian Clemens/Ernest Day) - Officials keep dying
of natural causes, but this seems far more than coincidence, as
Steed, Gambit & Purdey find out. By using a deadly combination
of drugs, a giant human trick maze and heavy disco partying, this is
one of the most unintentionally funny shows they ever made. Caroline
Munro, who appeared as the reporter in Adam Ant's classic Goody
Two Shoes
Music Video, Captain
Kronos,
several horror films and was the pilot of the machine-gun equipped
helicopter in the James Bond film The
Spy Who Loved Me
(1977), is a bad girl again as the nurse Tammy.
Medium
Rare
(Dennis Spooner/Ray Austin) - In one of the worst shows in the
series, a phony psychic can suddenly see the means of an
assassination attempt on Steed, as the episode tries its take on
Alfred Hitchcock's last film, Family
Plot.
Bad idea.
The
Lion & The Unicorn
(John Goldsmith/Ray Austin) - Another assassin is after Steed, which
makes us wonder why foreign agents do not see Purdey or Gambit as a
threat of equal importance. Shows like this ended the series earlier
than it should have, while this one has aged more due to its Cold War
themes.
Obsession
(Brian Clemens/Ernest Day) - In one of the best shows since the
original series, Martin Shaw (Doyle on The
Professionals CI-5,
now all restored on Blu-ray) is Purdey's ex-love Larry, whose father
was killed in an operation in the Middle East back in 1970. Seven
years later, Purdey has traded in ballet for bullets, unbeknownst to
Larry, now a major RAF pilot. He wants to re-attempt the revenge
assassination she foiled without knowing it then, but the history
that transpires this time will not be easy for anyone involved.
Trap
(Brian Clemens/Ray Austin) - In a really odd show, very non-Asian
looking Terry Wood plays a Chinese drug lord who wants to kill Steed,
Gambit & Purdey for destroying a $10 Million shipment in a show
that wants to be the Diana Rigg episode The
Superlative Seven,
which was far superior to this mess.
Hostage
(Brian Clemens/Sidney Hayers) - Steed alone knows that Purdey has
been abducted and will not let Gambit know it, as he sees him as a
hot head. When he steals top-secret documents top get Purdey freed,
Gambit is on his trail. The strange conflict suggested in this show
does not exits in any of the other shows and makes this an odd
one-off that does not go very far.
K
Is For Kill
(Brian Clemens/Yvon Marie Coulais) - This is a show in two-parts that
was never spliced together into an artificial feature film,
theatrical or TV. The
Tiger Awakens
and Tiger
By The Tail
are the two parts, but they do not add up as they should, especially
considering the ideas. Steed calls Mrs. Peel (Diana Rigg from
footage in 1967 shows, especially noticed by their better color
quality) about a case where young soldiers turn into old ones as soon
as they are killed. The Rigg/Peel thing is a tease that is insulting
and this should have been the time to invite Rigg back. It feels
second best from there. Purdey asks Steed if he called Mrs. Peel for
reinforcements. Too bad she was wrong.
Complex
(Dennis Spooner/Richard Gilbert) - The series moved to Canada at a
time when this was far from common in this variation on ''the woman
alone in the house'' theme that had been done with all the female
leads in the original series. In this case, the team is on the hunt
for a deadly agent, but run into a deadlier electronic menace. The
show takes elements from great Science Fiction of the time like
THX-1138,
Demon
Seed
and even Logan's
Run.
Cecil Linder, who plays Steed's friend Baker, was Felix Leiter in the
James Bond film Goldfinger
(1964). Oh, and dig that lemon-yellow Jaguar XJ-S and red Triumph
TR7 as a sort of reverse for Gambit and Purdey, retaining the colors
of their opposite makes in England.
The
Gladiators
(Brian Clemens/Claude Fournier) - Lame attempt to do a
Soviet/Siberian Superlative
Seven,
where the ones who can punch the best sound like Cybernauts, turns
into a missed opportunity. One of the most preposterous of the
series offers a deadly old enemy agent who has gone missing, even
pushing it for all those rumors of genetically engineered Soviet
soldiers, which this story is also not about.
Emily
(Dennis Spooner/Don Thompson) - A car with a name (the title of this
show) that is owned by a cleaning lady could be the key to
discovering the identity of the double agent known as The Fox, but it
has fingerprints and Steed's bowler gets stuck on it. This one just
gets too silly and pointless for its own good, but some may be
amused. This critic was not. Who's
Who
anyone?
Forward
Base
(Dennis Spooner/Don Thompson) - The team has to help the Canadians
stop a Soviet East Bloc plot to infiltrate their missile guidance
system, but not before more misguided gallivanting across Canada.
The show begins with a 1969 flashback, but that never pays off. Note
Purdey's great blue wetsuit/jumpsuit with the lion logo on her
T-shirt. It should also be noted that Gambit is missing in the silly
conclusion that does not end the series with any closure.
The
1.33 X 1, full screen, color picture was again processed in Rank
Color from the 35mm color negative shoot and again comes from late
PAL analog transfers of the show done a few years ago. This is
passable, but no match for the higher quality restorations on all the
color original Avengers
on Blu-ray and soon on 4K, though those films and more complex color
systems used on those shows, so some comparisons are limited. There
is the rare scratch and even a color-timing problem shows up on the
second part of K
Is For Kill.
Ernest Steward, B.S.C., handled most of this season's
cinematography, while Gilbert Sarthre covered some of the French-shot
shows and Henry Fiks lensed most of the Canadian shows. I am glad
the show went on different locations. The lossy Dolby Digital 2.0
Stereo remixes the TV mono, which is not bad, but has some of the
slight harshnesses here and there. Gladiators
has some warped sound. This is above average, but not optimal. The
only extras are a few stills for each show on the four DVDs they
appear on here.
So
The
New Avengers
was over. Those who like it more than the original show say they
like it better for being more realistic, but closer examination shows
it was far from that gritty. This second season also seemed to try
and find its own sort of fantasy niche to some extent. Now, the
entire series is finally out on DVD once and for all. There was that
really horrible, horrible missed opportunity of a theatrical film in
1998 that desecrated these shows, making this series look all that
much better. Lumley went on to an incredible career of her own and
Macnee still made his appearances here and there. As for this
franchise, the feature film hurt it greatly, but its memory and folly
will be erased as the original shows are rediscovered over and over
again. Whether we will see Steed again is less likely, as even an
award-winning actor like Ralph Fiennes would not do.
Unlike
all the actors who have so far played James Bond, Macnee made too
much of an impact as Steed and then you have the long line of his
partners. Most of the creative team of the series are also no longer
with us and its particular Britishness and wit have held up against
dozens of imitators. The Avengers will always be an all time classic
and like it or not, The
New Avengers
offers its concluding chapters. No other Spy show had it so good or
was ever so good. Centuries from now, people will still be watching
and talking about The
Avengers
and it will still be considered ahead of its time. This show will be
part of that legacy.
You
can read about the first season at the following link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/84/New+Avengers+1976+Set+One+(DVD
-
Nicholas Sheffo