Crime drama based on Scottish author Frederic Lindsay's thriller novel of the same name set in Glasgow. A student (John Hannah) witnesses Brond, the leader of the Scottish Liberation Army (S... Read allCrime drama based on Scottish author Frederic Lindsay's thriller novel of the same name set in Glasgow. A student (John Hannah) witnesses Brond, the leader of the Scottish Liberation Army (Stratford Johns), murdering a young boy on a bridge before he's drawn into a series of dang... Read allCrime drama based on Scottish author Frederic Lindsay's thriller novel of the same name set in Glasgow. A student (John Hannah) witnesses Brond, the leader of the Scottish Liberation Army (Stratford Johns), murdering a young boy on a bridge before he's drawn into a series of dangerous events.
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By Scala featuring Bill Nelson and Daryl Runswick. The additional track was
"Wiping a Tear from the All seeing Eye". The disc was issued on Cocteau Records Ltd .Vocals were by a Mary King and the Electronic Pheonix. The final episodes closing track was replaced by Andy Stewart singing "a Scottish Soldier" and the closing scene during the credits was centred on a monument to fallen Scots soldiers in the grounds of Kelvingrove Art Gallery in Glasgow .
I don't believe Brond has ever been issued on Video or DVD which is rather unfortunate.
But the way the story unfolds is ludicrous - Brond must be clinically mad to do some of the things he does so there is no plot progression or rational explanation for the various incidents - nasty things happen without making any sense. Primo (played by James Cosmo) as Brond's side-kick and protective man-mountain keeps cropping up in John Hannah's life for no reason or purpose, and both Brond and Cosmo keep involving him in processes which would have been much simpler to resolve by themselves. Various minor characters surface within the main plot for no obvious reason, do something confusing, and then disappear. And the major scene near the end when Brond takes Hannah to a posh brothel is supposedly pivotal but crams too many plot threads together into a contrived resolution which becomes a nonsensical mess.
Filmed In Glasgow's West End (in and around the University campus) and South Side, plus a brief sequence in episode 3 at Harthill services on the M8 between Glagow and Edinburgh. The Bill Nelson/La Scala theme music is excellent (main theme easily found now on youtube).
So my recommendation is that it's not worth the effort of trying to find a copy now - it deserves its current forgotten obscurity.
I remember this being shown on Channel 4 in 1987 . It starts off with a young student played by a then unknown John Hannah jogging through the streets of Glasgow to the accompaniment of a wonderful pseudo operatic sound track . Stopping at a bridge the student witnesses the murder of a child by the mysterious Brond . As the story progresses the student finds himself used as a pawn by Brond to trap a Scottish nationalist terrorist cell and a top IRA terrorist
***** END SPOILERS ******
BROND is a political thriller you'll either love or hate . It was similar to several serials at the time like THE ONE GAME or WIPEOUT where you could easily find yourself confused as to what's happening as the plot unravels . You could also find Michael Caton Jones directorial style very pretentious and irritating but I loved it . I especially loved the haunting operatic sound track and feel slightly sad that no one has updated this page as to who composed the music for the show . And watch out for the appearance of a Special Branch officer who is played by Christopher Ellison . It's very easy to see why he was cast as Frank Burnside on THE BILL
I can't wait to see this again . Any chance of a repeat Channel 4 ?
Update Oct 2005: Thank you very much for the info about the title music
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