अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंAfter WWII, ex-Gestapo officer Kessler flees as a war criminal, escaping with wealth to Paraguay to start anew as a businessman. He dreams of fascism's return while former Lifeline members h... सभी पढ़ेंAfter WWII, ex-Gestapo officer Kessler flees as a war criminal, escaping with wealth to Paraguay to start anew as a businessman. He dreams of fascism's return while former Lifeline members hunt him.After WWII, ex-Gestapo officer Kessler flees as a war criminal, escaping with wealth to Paraguay to start anew as a businessman. He dreams of fascism's return while former Lifeline members hunt him.
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TalkingPicturesTV in the UK have aired the Secret Army series are now following with Kessler. When shown originally I missed much of both series due to work and family commitments. I am really pleased to be watching them - first The secret Army and now half way though Kessler.
Both have been a joy to watch with top-notch casting, scripts and filming that make we realise why I am so disappointed, with one or two exceptions, of most of the offers from modern film, streaming and TV. More so, to see some of the cast in their skilled and attractive youth I wonder why we haven't seen more of them over the years.
Both have been a joy to watch with top-notch casting, scripts and filming that make we realise why I am so disappointed, with one or two exceptions, of most of the offers from modern film, streaming and TV. More so, to see some of the cast in their skilled and attractive youth I wonder why we haven't seen more of them over the years.
I remember watching this when it was first shown on the BBC. It takes the story on, post-war, of what becomes of Gestapo chief Kessler. Hopefully UK Drama will show this - as they are now showing Secret Army.
All the superlatives about Secret Army apply equally to this. It may be a cliche, but drama like this makes the BBC license fee worthwhile!
All the superlatives about Secret Army apply equally to this. It may be a cliche, but drama like this makes the BBC license fee worthwhile!
"Kessler" reminded me of a TV adaptation of a Jack Higgins novel. (This might be seen as damning with faint praise.) Three members of "Lifeline" (the Belgian group that helped downed Allied flyers), appear only in the first episode, then the series shows an underwhelming West German security agent and an Israeli girl (played by a future Playboy model) tracking Kessler to South America where he meets other Nazis - the Kameradenwerk. At the inevitable confrontation, there's a prolonged debate about Kessler's philosophy and actions, during which the agent exclaims "words, just words; people are sick and tired of them", which prompted me to agree, so drawn out was the discussion.
With a cast comprising mainly C list actors, it's not difficult for Clifford Rose's performance to stand out. For nearly all the time he wears large-framed spectacles that obscure much of his face, and on the odd occasion when he removes them his face does not appear to have aged as much as the series' timeline might call for, but his movements are convincingly those of an old man. (He himself was then in his very early fifties.) He portrays a wide range of emotions: love for his dead wife (Madeleine) and his daughter, revulsion for the human experiments carried out by some of the Kameradenwerk, nostalgia for the Third Reich and dreams of a Fourth Reich.
With a cast comprising mainly C list actors, it's not difficult for Clifford Rose's performance to stand out. For nearly all the time he wears large-framed spectacles that obscure much of his face, and on the odd occasion when he removes them his face does not appear to have aged as much as the series' timeline might call for, but his movements are convincingly those of an old man. (He himself was then in his very early fifties.) He portrays a wide range of emotions: love for his dead wife (Madeleine) and his daughter, revulsion for the human experiments carried out by some of the Kameradenwerk, nostalgia for the Third Reich and dreams of a Fourth Reich.
However, would he have really made a fresh start in Germany rather than flee to South America?
As the follow-on from Secret Army, Kessler lacks everything Secret Army had, tension, drama, good storylines and plotting and well-drawn characters. Alan Dobie's role as Richard Bauer is poorly developed and you never manage to find out why exactly he is pursuing Kessler or why. Nitza Saul's role, as the young Israeli chasing Kessler and helping Bauer, lacks any definition at all. Alison Glennie, as Kessler's daughter Ingrid, is little more than a cardboard cutout pretend Nazi. Not one of Gerald Glaister's better efforts
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe serial incorporates several elements of What Did You Do in the War, Daddy? (1979), the never aired final episode of Secret Army (1977) which was also written by John Brason: Kessler married his Belgian mistress Madeleine Duclos, who has since died, and has established himself as a major industrialist in West Germany under the pseudonym Manfred Dorf, Monique has a son in his twenties and returns to Brussels for the first time since the end of the war, Albert still owns the Candide in addition to six other restaurants and the surviving members of Lifeline reunite for the purposes of a documentary series entitled "In Our Time" which attempts to expose Kessler as a Nazi war criminal.
- क्रेज़ी क्रेडिटThe opening titles start by displaying the letters SS which change to the name Kessler.
- कनेक्शनFollows Secret Army (1977)
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- How many seasons does Kessler have?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
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