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Die Aufgaben einer Eliteeinheit des britischen Geheimdienstes für verdeckte Operationen.Die Aufgaben einer Eliteeinheit des britischen Geheimdienstes für verdeckte Operationen.Die Aufgaben einer Eliteeinheit des britischen Geheimdienstes für verdeckte Operationen.
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A previous commenter noted that the series seemed to end abruptly and wondered if our British friends were holding out on us. The reality is that the series was supposed to continue for at least another season, but there was one problem: the producer/writer of the series died at the end of the first season. This was one of those rare situations where the originator of the series also wrote all of the episodes. That intimacy with the characters and the ability to weave various plot lines over multiple episodes was one of the characteristics that made Sandbaggers so enjoyable. But it also made it vulnerable to disaster because only the producer/writer knew all the plot lines he had planned for the second season. Most of that was in his head. With few notes to go on, the production company staff found it impossible to figure out what to do with the series, so the second season was never produced. It's a tragedy because Sandbaggers was so wonderfully done. We can only guess whether Willie survived and how Burnside dealt with his ex-wife.
If you love this show, and there's no reason why you shouldn't, don't despair that only three seasons (about 18 episodes) were made. The Sandbaggers continues in more modern-day missions in the comic book "Queen and Country," by Greg Rucka. Now there's no Burnside or Willie, but it's pure Sandbaggers. Apparently Rucka was a huge fan of the show and wanted to continue the idea of a realistic special operations unit, where paper-pushing is more prevelant than gun fights and no one -- NO ONE -- is safe. I'm pretty sure you can find the books on Amazon.
I completely agree with the astute reader comments. This was a brilliant show. Good 'spy' drama without gun fights and fiery explosions.
Even the British portrayal of the American agent -- slovenly, incessantly eating and talking with his mouth full, crude -- nice one Brits!
I rate this English drama show right up there with I, Claudius and Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy.
Just proves what the Brits and Japanese know -- riveting drama doesn't require car chases and cleavage.
Thank you London and PBS!
Even the British portrayal of the American agent -- slovenly, incessantly eating and talking with his mouth full, crude -- nice one Brits!
I rate this English drama show right up there with I, Claudius and Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy.
Just proves what the Brits and Japanese know -- riveting drama doesn't require car chases and cleavage.
Thank you London and PBS!
I can't remember how I managed to stumble across this series a good many years ago now, but somehow - and I still haven't been able to work out just how - it managed to hook me almost instantly. There is so much subterfuge, nasty, backroom dealings and internal politics going on and plain intrigue that it hardly matters that there's almost no real action in this series. Virtually everything goes on in the offices of the Sandbagger unit and there's not even very much outdoor camera work, so I suspect this series was made on an incredibly cheap budget, but the scripts are good, the plots are believable, the acting is excellent when you consider that these guys are spies who are not meant to betray too much emotion, and the tension is constant. Good British psychological drama.
This is one of those series, you think you know and when you get to the end you realize, you missed something important.
This is a series which has many layers, in most cases something is missed and you feel you need to watch it again see how it was missed.
This is not a James Bond style series. It is centred around the head of the special ops of the British secret service. On the surface it appears to be about the politics of running a department. Even though it was filmed in the 70's, it holds up well. This is not to say it does not show. This could be a distraction for anybody wanting the slick production of present day.
It is well written, the acting does not get in the way of the stories, the characters are believable.
I watched the series again recently and it left me wanting more TV of this quality. I highly recommend this series.
This is a series which has many layers, in most cases something is missed and you feel you need to watch it again see how it was missed.
This is not a James Bond style series. It is centred around the head of the special ops of the British secret service. On the surface it appears to be about the politics of running a department. Even though it was filmed in the 70's, it holds up well. This is not to say it does not show. This could be a distraction for anybody wanting the slick production of present day.
It is well written, the acting does not get in the way of the stories, the characters are believable.
I watched the series again recently and it left me wanting more TV of this quality. I highly recommend this series.
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- WissenswertesCreator Ian MacKintosh was developing the next season of Sandbaggers at the time of his disappearance. According to actor Ray Lonnen, MacKintosh was considering having the character Willie Caine promoted to D-Ops, while Neil Burnside (played by Roy Marsden) would move up to "C" (head of S.I.S.). However, after MacKintosh's (apparent) death, the producers decided to end the series because they felt no one could write Sandbaggers as well as MacKintosh.
- SoundtracksThe Sandbaggers Theme
Written by Roy Budd
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