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Manhunt

  • Fernsehserie
  • 1970
  • 1 Std.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
190
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Peter Barkworth, Robert Hardy, Cyd Hayman, and Alfred Lynch in Manhunt (1970)
DramaHistoryWar

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuIn 1942, British pilot Jimmy Briggs crashes his aeroplane in occupied France and immediately finds himself on the run from the Nazis.In 1942, British pilot Jimmy Briggs crashes his aeroplane in occupied France and immediately finds himself on the run from the Nazis.In 1942, British pilot Jimmy Briggs crashes his aeroplane in occupied France and immediately finds himself on the run from the Nazis.

  • Stoffentwicklung
    • Rex Firkin
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Alfred Lynch
    • Cyd Hayman
    • Peter Barkworth
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    190
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Rex Firkin
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Alfred Lynch
      • Cyd Hayman
      • Peter Barkworth
    • 13Benutzerrezensionen
    • 2Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Episoden26

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    HöchsteAm besten bewertet1 Jahreszeit1970

    Fotos147

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    Topbesetzung99+

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    Alfred Lynch
    Alfred Lynch
    • Squadron Leader Jimmy Briggs
    • 1970
    Cyd Hayman
    Cyd Hayman
    • Nina
    • 1970
    Peter Barkworth
    Peter Barkworth
    • Vincent
    • 1970
    Philip Madoc
    Philip Madoc
    • Lutzig
    • 1970
    Robert Hardy
    Robert Hardy
    • Abwehr Sergeant Gratz
    • 1970
    Maggie Fitzgibbon
    • Adelaide
    • 1970
    Leslie Schofield
    Leslie Schofield
    • Schneibel
    • 1970
    George Sewell
    George Sewell
    • Allard
    • 1970
    Jack Watson
    Jack Watson
    • Zander
    • 1970
    Mark Dignam
    Mark Dignam
    • Reichwein
    • 1970
    Brian Cox
    Brian Cox
    • Anton
    • 1970
    John Savident
    John Savident
    • Raoul
    • 1970
    Christian Rodska
    Christian Rodska
    • Stefan
    • 1970
    Alvar Liddell
    • B.B.C. Announcer…
    • 1970
    Ian McCulloch
    Ian McCulloch
    • David Mainwaring
    • 1970
    Tony Beckley
    Tony Beckley
    • Hochler
    • 1970
    Nerys Hughes
    Nerys Hughes
    • Francine
    • 1970
    John Phillips
    John Phillips
    • Klintzch
    • 1970
    • Stoffentwicklung
      • Rex Firkin
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen13

    7,2190
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    2malcolmgsw

    Woeful

    TPTV brought us a great BBC wartime series in Secret Army,so I hoped that this would be just as good. Sadly I was very disappointed. It is unbelievably bad. Every aspect of this series is below par. The writing is truly abysmal. The characters are all stereotypes. Phillip Madoc as the AS officer is almost identical to his naval officer in Dad's Army .

    Each week they seem to be running almost aimlessly across fields. Most of the episodes contain a lot of talk with a small amount of action at the end. The series seems to be underfunded as there are barely a handful of German soldiers in evidence at any given time.
    kmoh-1

    Got more stunning as it developed

    An extraordinary series, in turn intriguing, gripping, shocking and sometimes downright mad.

    It begins as a piece of superior thick ear, with an odd trio - repressed Victor, extrovert Jimmy, and traumatised Jew Nina - trapped in occupied France, trying to get back to Britain with the information in Nina's head. The series involved a series of writers, whose different strengths led to a great deal of variety among the episodes - a technique used by excellent dramas of the time including The Gold Robbers and The Guardians. One wonders whether the writers competed amongst themselves to outdo each other - most of the episodes included scenes with dialogue of great tension which could make the hairs on one's neck stand on end. Various experiments were tried - one episode in virtual silence, others being practically two-handed plays. There was a lot of violence, and a high death rate, but typically the gunfire only punctuated the complex interactions of the various people trapped in the wartime situation.

    We had the leading trio - Peter Barkworth, of dual nationality, who tries to overcome his sensitivity and compassion with cold professionalism, Cyd Hayman, who begins as a beautiful victim and sex object but finds untrained and unmanageable powers of self- protection, resistance and revenge, and Alfred Lynch as the Brylcreem Boy who finds that his cavalier attitude to danger and discipline are not enough to get him through the nightmare - but also the duplicity of the Resistance, and the collaborators, and the fatal rivalry between the brutish SS, the supine French police and the Abwehr, schooled in more military virtues.

    As the series becomes more profound and serious, three more characters are dropped into the mix - Lutzig, too subtle for his SS masters but still a thug, Adelaide, of ambiguous loyalties, and the extraordinary Gratz. There is no scene too small for Robert Hardy to steal, in an incredible performance. The three original protagonists are split up, and so in the second half you could never predict which of the six would appear in any given episode. In the extremity of their situation they become so obsessed with each other that passions emerge, love and abuse co-exist, and - as the codeword introduced later in the show has it, 'war is love'.

    The show is not perfect. Some of the psychology stretches credibility, and one wonders what languages they all speak. But still, it's a stunning drama which builds up to a giant and profound climax.

    The theme, built around the opening motif of Beethoven's Fifth, became instantly associated with the series at the time of broadcast. This was a particularly brilliant idea, as the series was broadcast only 26 years after the end of the war, and many viewers would have memories of the motif being used in allied broadcasts. Why that motif? Because the rhythm, ...-, signifies the letter V (for victory) in Morse Code.
    Adrian Sweeney

    Flawed, but the best bits may be the best TV ever

    Other reviews describe the series in more detail; this is just to add it to my list for the sake of people who haven't heard of it. To say it ought to be more widely known is an understatement - there appears not to be even a HTML fansite devoted to it, and it's a cultural artefact we really ought to have sent into space to impress the hell out of aliens.

    That's an exaggeration and it isn't. Considered as a whole the series is very good but flawed, and other shows surpass it in this way or that. But individual episodes really, really might be, in my opinion are, the best television dramas ever made.

    If you're a classic TV fan you do need to watch it. If you're a functioning human you ought to watch it. But you'll need a certain amount of patience with it. At the start of the second episode something so jaw-droppingly callous happens you'll probably want to hate the main characters and may want to give up already. Keep going. In a later episode something unbelievably mad and silly happens. Go along with it, or pretend it isn't canon. Worst of all, when the first of the best episodes ends on a cliffhanger and seems to change everything forever, leaving you wondering what the hell's going to happen next - well, you never really find out what happened next, and you're going to wonder if you skipped an episode by mistake, because the next one reverts to the status quo ante with no adequate explanation.

    Never mind. You'll get over it. The rest of it is either rather good, very good or great, and there are at least three more best episodes to come.

    The best episodes are written by Vincent Tilsley and star Robert Hardy as the tormenting and tormented Abwehr intelligence man Gratz. They are in my opinion the best-written, best-acted, most compelling and most powerfully affecting hours of drama ever on TV; nor have I seen better in film or on the stage. If you haven't seen Manhunt you may only think of Hardy as a solid and fairly charismatic character actor. No. He was a witch. Tilsley had enjoyed a distinguished 15-year career in scriptwriting including episodes of The Prisoner. He appears to have retired a couple of years after this at the age of about 40 and, as far as I can tell, written nothing at all for the next forty years of his life apart from one philosophical novel. Perhaps he decided he would never surpass or equal the work he did here. My symptoms included ice down the neck, not daring to breath, swearing, repeating 'Oh no, oh no' or 'Oh my God' over and over, tears starting, and finding my hands were held up in front of me as if to ward off or defend myself from what was going on on the screen. School textbook passages about ineluctable tragedy and purgation and catharsis and act-or blather about communion with the audience suddenly made sense.

    I don't mean to denigrate the rest of the show even by comparison. I found it addictive even before Gratz came on the scene, everyone else is great, plenty of the other scripts are excellent, the ending will haunt me and other moments are unforgettable. All the other main characters are fascinating, especially Nina, an inadvertent femme fatale (played by Cyd Harman, one of the few actresses luminous enough to pull this off) and extremely reluctant heroine who just wants to be left in peace but may do ruthless things to attain it. Doubtless envisaged as a deliberate debunking of the glacially-cool SOE and Resistance heroines of 40s and 50s war films, she spends many episodes on the edge of hysteria or beyond it; may be the most put-upon and mentally-tormented character in TV history; can be selfish and, out of desperation, unreflectingly whorish; can also love and has or finds some kind of steel or integrity at bottom; is finally more consistent and real than any woman I've seen onscreen lately. I will duel anyone who does not have complete sympathy for her.

    But the Gratz-Tilsley-Hardy conjunction, a freakish alchemy of perfect character and perfect writer for perfect actor - this bizarre little clown-genius-b*st*rd, this passive-aggressive self-effacing pathologically-loquacious insubordinate Third Reich Columbo or Machiavellian Schweik, this brilliant jumped-up self-made runty provincial nothing with a chip on his shoulder and a semi-Brummie accent whose every word you hang on and who you can't take your eyes off and never know what he's going to do next, who at times comes to stand for or express the pain of... anyone who's ever loved or anyone who's been unloved, or anyone who's felt driven to do terrible things in the name of either, or the sane man in an insane world or the man whom life is driving insane or the divided man in a world of people who seem whole or... I don't know what but call it flawed and tragic humanity for short - this phenomenon simultaneously elevates the rest of the series and derails it. When they realised what they had on their hands the creators (the producer and deviser was Rex Firkin and the script editor Alfred Shaughnessy, both of original 'Upstairs Dowstairs' fame) must have changed their plans to accomodate it; the story changes trajectory somewhat and other strands of it end up neglected or underexplored. Even apart from that I think it would have been a sometimes uneasy mix of series and serial, with disparate (but usually individually good) scripts folded into an ongoing arc less smoothly than tends to be done nowadays; also I think there must have been the problem common to the era of scheduling difficulties, so that secondary actors drift in and out while their characters are replaced by similar ones for a while.

    Still you ought to watch it. Warning, you can get hold of the first series on its own but not the second, or the whole thing in one box-set; so if you try the first half and get hooked you'll have to shell out for the whole thing including that again. Chances are you will so just grab the complete series to start with.
    5dermotthussey

    Sadly Lacking....

    Never got to see this when first broadcast, so was keen to watch, when advertised on Talking Pictures TV (UK) Freeview Channel 82.

    Unfortunately you cannot blame the age of the broadcast, it is just not up to any standard.

    The three main characters the series is all about, should have shot them in the first episode, put us all out of our misery.

    I've seen more character development in Captain Pugwash (Google It)

    I am surprised it manage to make so many episodes, I am sadisticly working my way through them, hopefully they may get better, not very confident.

    Don't let me put you off, have a look, make your own mind up.
    7liamomeara-01298

    The Greeks are coming.

    This is a great example of what can be done on a small budget.

    A great cast, including a sleazy pre-Blakey Stephen Lewis are set adrift somewhere in France. Set work is minimal, with the three main protagonists usually running through what appears to be the same field.

    In one episode, there is a nod to Greek tragedies, in that the action is taking place outside, with only the actors narrative telling the cast and viewers what is happening.

    I remember parts of this series first time round and wanted to see how it panned out. Time fades the memories.

    Some may be shocked mainly by Jimmy's misogynistic attitude and Nina's acceptance of what he says.

    That noted, good to see a well written drama, with some great acting.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The series opens in September 1942, as Squadron Leader James Briggs' Spitfire crashes ten miles north of Bracieux in Occupied France. The series concludes six months later, according to dialogue in The Losers (1970).
    • Patzer
      Jimmy Briggs (Alfred Lynch) is shot down in his Spitfire and states he is a member of 44 Squadron. 44 Squadron was in fact a bomber squadron, flying first the Handley Page Hampden and then the Avro Lancaster.
    • Soundtracks
      Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67
      (uncredited)

      Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven

      [series theme tune]

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 2. Januar 1970 (Vereinigtes Königreich)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
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    Peter Barkworth, Robert Hardy, Cyd Hayman, and Alfred Lynch in Manhunt (1970)
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