L'investigatore privato Frank Marker, cinico, cupo e stanco del mondo, è spesso l'inconsapevole tirapiedi di grandi dimensioni criminali nei suoi tentativi di guadagnarsi da vivere nella per... Leggi tuttoL'investigatore privato Frank Marker, cinico, cupo e stanco del mondo, è spesso l'inconsapevole tirapiedi di grandi dimensioni criminali nei suoi tentativi di guadagnarsi da vivere nella periferia di Londra.L'investigatore privato Frank Marker, cinico, cupo e stanco del mondo, è spesso l'inconsapevole tirapiedi di grandi dimensioni criminali nei suoi tentativi di guadagnarsi da vivere nella periferia di Londra.
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I would thoroughly recommend this series to anyone who is tired of the trend in British TV for murder in middle England, conspiracy and terrorism stories and the excess of melodrama in the soaps.
Public Eye brings the viewer down to earth with a bump, no glamour, gentility or sensational plots here just the daily grind of trying to earn an honest crust. Frank Marker, marvellously portrayed by Alfred Burke, is a private enquiry agent who investigates the most routine cases imaginable. He may be checking on unfaithful husbands, looking at minor fraud or petty theft. Occasionally he is used by clients who have ulterior motives and he gets involved in cases he wishes he hadn't. The story lines are thoroughly believable so that viewers quickly identify with the situation. The characters are well developed, sympathetic and demand your attention, but it is Marker who always draws the viewers eye. A loner, he does not make friends easily (at all!) yet we find ourselves identifying with him and caring about him. Add to this Public Eye was made 35 years ago and it is fascinating to see how values and attitudes have changed in the intervening years.
The 1969 series concentrates more on Marker himself following his release from prison for a crime he did not commit. While the 1971 series sees him going about his normal enquiry business. My only regret is that most of the early series (1-3) are lost forever and of the other 4 series only the two mentioned above have so far been released on DVD.
Public Eye brings the viewer down to earth with a bump, no glamour, gentility or sensational plots here just the daily grind of trying to earn an honest crust. Frank Marker, marvellously portrayed by Alfred Burke, is a private enquiry agent who investigates the most routine cases imaginable. He may be checking on unfaithful husbands, looking at minor fraud or petty theft. Occasionally he is used by clients who have ulterior motives and he gets involved in cases he wishes he hadn't. The story lines are thoroughly believable so that viewers quickly identify with the situation. The characters are well developed, sympathetic and demand your attention, but it is Marker who always draws the viewers eye. A loner, he does not make friends easily (at all!) yet we find ourselves identifying with him and caring about him. Add to this Public Eye was made 35 years ago and it is fascinating to see how values and attitudes have changed in the intervening years.
The 1969 series concentrates more on Marker himself following his release from prison for a crime he did not commit. While the 1971 series sees him going about his normal enquiry business. My only regret is that most of the early series (1-3) are lost forever and of the other 4 series only the two mentioned above have so far been released on DVD.
They don't come any better than "Public Eye." It is one of the more realistic kinds of British television with a leading character who most viewers were rooting for. The series made the name of Alfred Burke, who easily made the character of Private Inquiry Agent Frank Marker his own. The tone and the style of the series never changed in the 10 years it was broadcast and that was the correct decision. It is a bit difficult in reviewing the episodes of "Public Eye" that were made from 1965 to 1968 as most of them are missing from the archives. Only about 4 exist. However, the episodes made from 1969 to 1975 all exist in their entirety. Amen to that! The very best of this series, are the episodes from 1969 til 1973. We are treated to some vintage television drama, the writing and the acting being of a high calibre. Frank Marker invariably finds himself on the receiving end of some decidedly dishonest and unlawful people in his line of work. It can be put down to an occupational hazard of a sort as he encounters dishonesty and corruption in almost of all his cases. There are times when Marker fails to be even paid for his troubles when his client is revealed to be less than genuine in many ways. It is a rather harsh and uncompromising world that he inhibits and this is magnified in that most of the police look down upon Marker. The moment he stumbles upon a case which perhaps includes something serious like murder or extortion, the police soon make themselves known to him. Frank Marker was based in different areas across England. To begin with, he set up a practice in Birmingham. Then after being sent to prison for something he hadn't done, he relocated to Brighton. The 1969 series covered his time there. For the 1971 series, Marker moved to Windsor. You would think that being based in such a prosperous area would mean he could make a respectable living. Not so as he is still struggling to make ends meet, financially speaking. For the rest of the series, he operated in the Surrey area. Alfred Burke is certainly playing the character as being downtrodden and someone who is usually lead up the proverbial garden path. For all of this, Marker still manages to maintain his own self-respect, honesty and integrity. Even so, he is quite a guarded person when it comes to trusting anyone and with good reason. The viewers never dispute why he doesn't take many people into his confidence. A rare exception to the rule was when Marker was living at the guest house in Brighton. His landlady was someone decent and honest but someone he could talk to. During the 1971 series, he befriended a local police officer. This character actually tolerated Marker more than most of his colleagues. This is a landmark television series, the kind of quality that is a thing of the past.
10vonnoosh
No sensationalism, no mindless action, no mediocre plot twists for shock value, no condescending preaching, no axes to grind and no ham fisted attempts to push political agendas. This show is a revelation for us mired in this loathesome modern world.
The show conveys more reality to what life is really like than reality television ever did which is not so ironic given how phony and jaded reality tv is. Television during the era of Public Eye was theatrical and this show, shot almost entirely on video instead of the then standard, video in studio/film on location is no different.
Alfred Burke is an actor I barely saw in other shows. He makes Frank Marker all his own and he seems to have had no trouble doing it. Frank Marker is a likable but seedy inquiry agent, a title he prefers instead of private detective. It's the work that makes him seedy. Unglamorous realistic plot lines. Sometimes Marker gets more trouble than he expects but alot of the trouble you would not expect to see other fictional private eyes to get into in old movies or novels. Marker's character is fully fleshed out as well as the many characters that come and go over the course of the series. Edward Woodward once noted that television during this era was written in a way where you get a complete picture of all the characters in each show because they are fully realized in the writing. They aren't ciphers for the actors to fill in the blank based on their lines. That detail in writing is lost in 95% of today's television which is a shame.
The show moves about and has some interesting locations. The Thames series began in 1969 with Marker in Brighton, then Windsor, Walton and later Chertsey. During the ABC years, it was London and Birmingham.
The '69 season has a story arch for the Marker character instead of being focused mostly on a case per episode like the rest of the series. Much of the focus before '69 went to the supporting characters since the details of each case unfolds through their time on screen. The series returns to this format for all of the remaining episodes from '71 to '75. The cases are believable and the endings are often unique and surprising. There is one episode where Marker is hired to discover who is blackmailing a woman. She is threatened to have some secret about herself revealed to her husband who travels alot for his work and is not around. Much of the episode, we as the viewer try to guess what could be her secret since the woman isn't sure herself. We also follow Marker playing a cat and mouse game with the people he suspects are behind it all. It turns out her husband was an excon and the blackmailer knew him from prison, saw he had done well financially since his release and decided to pretend to have something on his wife to get some money out of them. Marker and the husband learn this after setting up a payoff and staking out the dropoff to see who picks up the money. The husband, feeling the anticipated anger also feels conflicted given that the wouldbe blackmailer is a fellow excon who clearly was not doing well since being released. An unexpected act of kindness occurs instead of an expected act of violence. Conflicted sums up how many of these episodes end. Like life, not much is cut and dry. These stories are no different.
The Thames television episodes are out of print on DVD but are probably still in rerun and on streaming sites somewhere but the ABC series during the first 4 years are almost entirely gone. That is roughly 40 episodes which were on tapes that were wiped as per the policy in those days for much of British television and unlike Doctor Who or the Avengers, I think it unlikely these missing episodes will turn up in some dusty film cans in an abandoned TV studio in Bangladesh or Tanzania. Appreciating what still exists from this series isn't difficult. As I said, entertainment is not of this quality anymore. So much focus is centered on everything EXCEPT what's most important, the quality of the story.
The show conveys more reality to what life is really like than reality television ever did which is not so ironic given how phony and jaded reality tv is. Television during the era of Public Eye was theatrical and this show, shot almost entirely on video instead of the then standard, video in studio/film on location is no different.
Alfred Burke is an actor I barely saw in other shows. He makes Frank Marker all his own and he seems to have had no trouble doing it. Frank Marker is a likable but seedy inquiry agent, a title he prefers instead of private detective. It's the work that makes him seedy. Unglamorous realistic plot lines. Sometimes Marker gets more trouble than he expects but alot of the trouble you would not expect to see other fictional private eyes to get into in old movies or novels. Marker's character is fully fleshed out as well as the many characters that come and go over the course of the series. Edward Woodward once noted that television during this era was written in a way where you get a complete picture of all the characters in each show because they are fully realized in the writing. They aren't ciphers for the actors to fill in the blank based on their lines. That detail in writing is lost in 95% of today's television which is a shame.
The show moves about and has some interesting locations. The Thames series began in 1969 with Marker in Brighton, then Windsor, Walton and later Chertsey. During the ABC years, it was London and Birmingham.
The '69 season has a story arch for the Marker character instead of being focused mostly on a case per episode like the rest of the series. Much of the focus before '69 went to the supporting characters since the details of each case unfolds through their time on screen. The series returns to this format for all of the remaining episodes from '71 to '75. The cases are believable and the endings are often unique and surprising. There is one episode where Marker is hired to discover who is blackmailing a woman. She is threatened to have some secret about herself revealed to her husband who travels alot for his work and is not around. Much of the episode, we as the viewer try to guess what could be her secret since the woman isn't sure herself. We also follow Marker playing a cat and mouse game with the people he suspects are behind it all. It turns out her husband was an excon and the blackmailer knew him from prison, saw he had done well financially since his release and decided to pretend to have something on his wife to get some money out of them. Marker and the husband learn this after setting up a payoff and staking out the dropoff to see who picks up the money. The husband, feeling the anticipated anger also feels conflicted given that the wouldbe blackmailer is a fellow excon who clearly was not doing well since being released. An unexpected act of kindness occurs instead of an expected act of violence. Conflicted sums up how many of these episodes end. Like life, not much is cut and dry. These stories are no different.
The Thames television episodes are out of print on DVD but are probably still in rerun and on streaming sites somewhere but the ABC series during the first 4 years are almost entirely gone. That is roughly 40 episodes which were on tapes that were wiped as per the policy in those days for much of British television and unlike Doctor Who or the Avengers, I think it unlikely these missing episodes will turn up in some dusty film cans in an abandoned TV studio in Bangladesh or Tanzania. Appreciating what still exists from this series isn't difficult. As I said, entertainment is not of this quality anymore. So much focus is centered on everything EXCEPT what's most important, the quality of the story.
Public Eye was a fine series and deserves a place in the British TV Hall of Fame. Luckily, it's available on DVD, and the British channel Talking Pictures TV shows it regularly.
It was part of Alfred Burke's brilliance in the part that Frank Marker was a character with no real character traits. We knew nothing about his background, a mystery which was never solved for us by the writers. Originally, the character of Marker was going to be a tough, Lee Marvin figure, but casting Burke was an inspired move on the part of the producers. With his lined, seen-it-all face and his sensitive, laconic manner, Burke rooted the concept firmly in reality. Marker dealt with the dark, petty underbelly of the world, and was only ever a few pounds short of bankruptcy. It seemed only natural that one day he would be arrested (framed for handling stolen goods) and go to prison (ending the original ABC TV series). When he emerged some time later (Thames TV taking over production), Marker has quit Birmingham for seedy Brighton for a masterly 1969 series entirely penned by Roger Marshall. Here, Marker is dealing as much with the repercussions of his own lonely, solitary character as he is with the shadow of prison. Later (with the advent of colour TV), the character moved from there to the more upmarket locale of Windsor, where for a time he became partners with the sharp, ambitious alpha-male Ron Gash.
Marker always eschewed the term "detective" in his dealings with clients, preferring the term that real British private eyes use, "enquiry agent"; at a stroke, this narrative move cut Public Eye off from all other detective series and encouraged a more downbeat approach. In this, it followed its source: Anthony Marriott was a real-life enquiry agent whose techniques and experiences were the basis of the show. A movie made from the material might have been a British classic.
One other point: the haunting bluesy theme for some reason is rarely mentioned, was never released on record, and is not credited on IMDb.com. It is by veteran TV bandleader Bob Sharples (under the pseudonym Robert Earley).
It was part of Alfred Burke's brilliance in the part that Frank Marker was a character with no real character traits. We knew nothing about his background, a mystery which was never solved for us by the writers. Originally, the character of Marker was going to be a tough, Lee Marvin figure, but casting Burke was an inspired move on the part of the producers. With his lined, seen-it-all face and his sensitive, laconic manner, Burke rooted the concept firmly in reality. Marker dealt with the dark, petty underbelly of the world, and was only ever a few pounds short of bankruptcy. It seemed only natural that one day he would be arrested (framed for handling stolen goods) and go to prison (ending the original ABC TV series). When he emerged some time later (Thames TV taking over production), Marker has quit Birmingham for seedy Brighton for a masterly 1969 series entirely penned by Roger Marshall. Here, Marker is dealing as much with the repercussions of his own lonely, solitary character as he is with the shadow of prison. Later (with the advent of colour TV), the character moved from there to the more upmarket locale of Windsor, where for a time he became partners with the sharp, ambitious alpha-male Ron Gash.
Marker always eschewed the term "detective" in his dealings with clients, preferring the term that real British private eyes use, "enquiry agent"; at a stroke, this narrative move cut Public Eye off from all other detective series and encouraged a more downbeat approach. In this, it followed its source: Anthony Marriott was a real-life enquiry agent whose techniques and experiences were the basis of the show. A movie made from the material might have been a British classic.
One other point: the haunting bluesy theme for some reason is rarely mentioned, was never released on record, and is not credited on IMDb.com. It is by veteran TV bandleader Bob Sharples (under the pseudonym Robert Earley).
This is a quite exceptional, but sadly neglected, British series. There have been many detective series, most located squarely in a world of glamour or serious crime. "Public Eye" was exceptional in breaking this cliche. The programme centred upon private enquiry agent Frank Marker. Marker was a middle-aged man,of modest appearance, operating out of the most modest of offices. His cases were undertaken for minimal fees and usually centred upon mundane matters - missing persons, character checks, divorce, chasing debts. If crime was involved it was usually of a petty, often seedy, nature - no high-profile murder enquiries. The mundane nature of the investigations and the settings might make one think that this would be a very prosaic affair. Quite the opposite. It was refreshing to see stories set in the real world, with realistic people facing realistic problems. Superb acting, characterisation and clever story-telling made this a marvellously engaging series. The best example of this was the role of Marker, brilliantly played by Alfred Burke.
Marker was a thoroughly decent man, struggling to earn a crust, regularly disillusioned by the tales of misery, dirt and deception he engaged in. Like many detectives he was a loner but not in the confrontational sense of many others. He did not allow closeness, but was not aggressive. He was sharp and socially skilled but did not have unblemished success. He could make mistakes. The best example of this was in "The Man Who Said Sorry". In this extraordinary episode, which is almost entirely a two-hander, Marker has a frustrating dialogue with a man (Paul Rogers) who threatens both suicide and the murder of his estranged sons. The man, dogged by self-pity and indecision, does not convince Marker who gives him little sympathy. Later Marker has doubts and hears the sirens that confirm his error - the man has thrown himself under a train. Unlike many other detectives Marker is sometimes the victim, including taking a terrible beating from some gangsters in "Nobody Wants To Know". His painful, self-pitying recovery is superbly documented. Despite this he doesn't shirk a case. The show ended in 1975. As a video series it is unlikely to be repeated, certainly on terrestrial television. However it won new admirers when broadcast on "UK Gold" some years ago and just possibly it may return again.
Marker was a thoroughly decent man, struggling to earn a crust, regularly disillusioned by the tales of misery, dirt and deception he engaged in. Like many detectives he was a loner but not in the confrontational sense of many others. He did not allow closeness, but was not aggressive. He was sharp and socially skilled but did not have unblemished success. He could make mistakes. The best example of this was in "The Man Who Said Sorry". In this extraordinary episode, which is almost entirely a two-hander, Marker has a frustrating dialogue with a man (Paul Rogers) who threatens both suicide and the murder of his estranged sons. The man, dogged by self-pity and indecision, does not convince Marker who gives him little sympathy. Later Marker has doubts and hears the sirens that confirm his error - the man has thrown himself under a train. Unlike many other detectives Marker is sometimes the victim, including taking a terrible beating from some gangsters in "Nobody Wants To Know". His painful, self-pitying recovery is superbly documented. Despite this he doesn't shirk a case. The show ended in 1975. As a video series it is unlikely to be repeated, certainly on terrestrial television. However it won new admirers when broadcast on "UK Gold" some years ago and just possibly it may return again.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizMost of the ABC Television episodes (seasons one through three) are lost, while the Thames Television episodes survive intact. The only ABC episodes to survive are Nobody Kills Santa Claus (1965), The Morning Wasn't So Hot (1965), Don't Forget You're Mine (1966), Works with Chess, Not with Life (1966), and The Bromsgrove Venus (1968)
- BlooperThe Golden Flower Chinese restaurant is visible through the kitchen window of Frank's Eton High Street office - but as seen in location work for editions such as Come Into the Garden, Rose (1971), the eaterie is actually found two doors down from Marker's premises on the same side of the street. The Thames production team designed the studio backdrop like this as they felt what actually faced the office was visually uninteresting.
- ConnessioniReferenced in Remembering Douglas Camfield (2013)
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By what name was Public Eye (1965) officially released in Canada in English?
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