Quiller (TV Series 1975– ) Poster

(1975– )

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8/10
The Man Who Officially Does Not Exist
ShadeGrenade4 July 2006
Warning: Spoilers
In 1965, Adam Hall ( Elleston Trevor ) wrote 'The Quiller Memorandum', in which a British secret agent goes to Berlin to investigate the death of Kenneth Lindsay Jones, who had uncovered a Nazi revivalist group known as 'Phonix'. This highly acclaimed book was filmed a year later by Michael Anderson, with George Segal as 'Quiller', Alec Guinness as his superior 'Pol', Senta Berger as 'Inga', and Max Von Sydow as 'Oktober'. The screenplay was by Harold Pinter, and it remains one of the more intelligent and well-acted spy thrillers of that era.

Nearly a decade later, the B. B. C. Bought the rights to the character, and assigned as producer Peter Graham Scott, producer of 'The Troubleshooters'. 'Quiller' had all the makings of a hit. Starring the talented Michael Jayston in the title role, with Moray Watson as his boss 'Angus', it was to have boasted exotic locations, guest stars ( including Richard Johnson, Julian Glover, Nigel Stock and Gemma Jones ) scripts by leading writers such as Anthony Read, Michael J. Bird ( Hall himself wrote an episode based on one of his books - 'Tango Briefing' ), beautiful girls such as Prunella Gee and Sinead Cusick, and a catchy Denton & Cook signature tune. But, alas, something went wrong.

Interviewed for 'Shatter' magazine in 1976, Brian Clemens said budgetary cutbacks at the B. B. C. Resulted in 'Quiller' looking a bit shabby. He wrote an episode set in South America, but without his knowledge it was filmed in Hastings. "Had I known they'd film in Hastings, I'd have set it in Hastings.", he said, bitterly.

Quiller himself came across as colourless. Earlier spy shows such as 'Danger Man' and 'Mission: Impossible' also featured ciphers as heroes, but 'Quiller' was made in the mid-'70's when, in the wake of 'Callan', audiences wanted their spies a bit more human. A second season might have corrected the first's flaws, but it was not to get one. To date, the show has not had a D. V. D. Release. On the plus side, there were some good episodes such as Moris Fahri's 'Objective Caribbean' which features voodoo. Unlike the Bond film 'Live And Let Die', here the voodoo threat is real!
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5/10
"I'm going to find out whether that bomb was meant for me"
hwg1957-102-26570415 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Deriving from the 'Quiller' series of novels by the pseudonymous Adam Hall this series doesn't capture the flavour of the books. Set in the large space between John Le Carre on one side and Ian Fleming on the other the books are written in the first person, so in the books we know Quiller on the inside but in the series we see him from the outside. The series pales against the fascinating narrative of Quiller's own continuous thought processes in the books. Michael Jayston is a fine actor but the scripts and the filming let the series down. Quiller was used to exotic locales in the books, not poodling around the Home Counties. (Budget constraints I presume) Where episodes are set abroad this is mainly conveyed by stock footage. What is good to see is the good acting talent scattered throughout the series, some making an impression even if only on the screen briefly, who always enhanced 1970's television series.

Needless to say all the 'Quiller' novels are well worth reading.
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