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  • When I was 16 this series meant a lot to me.

    Like other American fans, I became aware of it when it burst onto American TV in summer 1966. What a revelation it was to someone who'd grown up watching American TV! It was unpredictable: it mixed mystery, adventure, science fiction, and satire in always changing proportions. The mysteries were truly intriguing, the adventures truly exciting, the eerie situations truly frightening, the fantastic explanations truly ingenious, and the jokes truly funny. In later seasons the show formularized its conflicting elements, like every other show. But in the beginning you couldn't guess what might come next.

    And of course there was the sex and violence. It seems impossible now that there was once a time when there was too little sex or violence on TV, but what there was was dull and stodgy. The American network had omitted the most suggestive episodes, but left in a few lines of dialogue that startled at the time. The climactic fight scenes were much more exciting than those on American shows: dynamically staged and photographed, and with a satirical edge, which was lost in later seasons.

    The writing was very good too. To us in the States it seemed even better than it was because we hadn't then seen a lot of British TV. The scripts were solidly constructed, tightly packed, and full of clever dialogue. Patrick Macnee has claimed in interviews that "there was no clever dialogue" except what he and Diana Rigg rewrote, but the lines of the supporting characters belie that.

    The atmosphere of the show was new to me: a dark, bright, sharp, woozy, ordered, but unpredictable world where reality could be rolled like a die, figures of speech could become facts (a killing rain, an underground club), and you couldn't be sure that anybody was what he seemed. If I'd seen Alfred Hitchcock's early films at the time, I would have recognized this as an exaggeration of their milieu, to the verge of parody: those flower sellers and organ grinders seemingly hanging out on street corners but really doing spy business. The world of The Avengers extended beyond them to encompass killer robots and plants from outer space--but only a certain distance beyond. (The failure to observe that distance spoiled many of the later shows.)

    That atmosphere stayed with me for years. It carried me through dreary jobs by enabling me to imbue mundane surroundings in schools and industrial parks with fantastic and sinister possibilities. Other shows tried to imitate it, but never successfully. How could they, when The Avengers itself had lost it and never recaptured it again?

    The primary technical device for bringing about this atmosphere was the teaser. The Avengers made an art out of it. A man in a field is rained on, tries to escape, is rained into the ground. Superimpose title: "A Surfeit of H2O." The title is the punchline. A man breaks into a house and opens a door; a lion jumps out at him. Title: "The House That Jack Built." And so on.

    The puzzle posed by the opener often suggested philosophical or metaphysical possibilities, but they were never followed up on. The solution generally turned out to be slightly science-fictional, and the climax, rather than expanding on the potential implications of the story's premise, was just a comic fight. But it was remarkable in itself that the series could progress from one to the other with such deftness, beginning with a cosmic inversion and steadily narrowing it down to a trivial joke.

    The heroes were invincible (otherwise the stories would have been too horrifying), inexplicable (those of us who didn't know the show's origins had no idea why they were called Avengers), androgynous (Steed was the fancy dresser, Mrs. Peel did the manhandling), paradoxical (Mrs. Peel was widowed, yet somehow virginal), and timeless. (In subsequent seasons, they were turned into pop icons, but divested of most of the twists that had made them interesting.)

    What was considered by common consent the best episode of all, "The House That Jack Built," I didn't see originally (it was a choice between that and a screening of "The Music Box" with Laurel and Hardy). When I finally got to see it in syndication, five years later, it was like being taken back in time and watching the series for the first time. I was just as fascinated, just as mystified, just as amazed.

    I set aside my Wednesday nights especially to watch the series. Apparently not many other people did. But that was always how it was with everything that developed a cult. At the time I seemed to be almost the only one who took an interest in it. Only years afterward would people write about it as if it had been a universally shared generational experience.

    The following year the news came out that The Avengers would return. And so it did--sort of. But despite assiduous effort I gradually had to accede to an awareness that it was no longer very good. It had been dumbed down for Americans. It wasn't the same. It was gone.

    And now, looking back on it forty years later, I wonder (and can never know for certain): was it really so good as it seemed to me, in that one happy season of my youth? And can anything ever seem that good again?
  • There has never been and will probably never be another television series as archly funny and intelligently comedic as this. How can one imagine another duo to compare with the leather jump-suited Emma Peel and the Edwardian-tailored, bowler hatted John Steed? The subtle, never overtly stated sexual tension between them was only enhanced by their wry way of addressing each other as 'Steed' and 'Mrs. Peel'. The interaction between Macnee and Rigg was absolutely unique, comprising an amalgam of whimsy, sex, camaraderie, and winking humor. The scripts were loaded with literary, cultural, musical, and historical references and double-entendres that doubtless make the show appealing only to an audience capable of catching them. The totally off-the-wall plots and deliciously absurd technical devices only added to the fun. The closest thing to this series I can think of, even if animated, was "Rocky and Bullwinkle", which shared "The Avenger's" sense of intelligent lunacy.

    My favorite remembered line: "Her face was always so ... symmetrical. Not an eye out of place."

    Sorry, you young folks; 'Seinfeld' doesn't even come close.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The Avengers started life as a fairly ordinary mystery series, with the main character being Dr. Keel. However, with the introduction of Honor Blackman in series 2 the format changed somewhat, with the focus now on John Steed, and his relationships with his leading ladies. The series also began to become more adventurous, dealing increasingly with the weird and the surreal, particularly in the later years with Diana Rigg and Linda Thorson.

    Personal preference is that the Rigg years were the best the show ever produced, although I also enjoy the Linda Thorson shows. As a result, I have to own up and say that the first three seasons are not taken into consideration when giving this rating and review as my knowledge of them is insufficient.

    Overall, a great show that has really stood the test of time. Well worth a look.
  • gnb30 September 2004
    An absolute masterpiece in British television, The Avengers is a timeless, witty, fantastical series which is as, if not more, popular today than it was more than 40 years ago.

    This series has something for everybody - gangsters, diabolical masterminds, glamorous girls, car chases, fights and endless glasses of champagne.

    It is interesting to see how the series developed from its humble beginnings in 1961. Playing it straight in the early days it gradually became more and more way-out with wackier and wackier plots and characters. The Cathy Gale and Emma Peel eras are regarded by many to be the high point of the series although there are high spots in virtually every point in the show's history.

    Only one episode exists from Series 1 with the mysterious, shadowy Steed being a much more sinister character to Ian Hendry's open Doctor Keel. Then we have much verbal sparring and innuendo between Steed and the delicious Cathy Gale and her kinky boots. Film and eventually colour were introduced with the feline Emma Peel and her high kicks and the show closed the 60s in gaudy, cartoonish style with the naive Tara King and her snazzy Lotus Europa.

    This is British television at its best and a true legend in broadcasting. The 1970s version, The New Avengers, has it's own charm in a way but is best regarded as a totally separate entity as this original series was...well...original!
  • carflo13 October 2003
    After years of watching women scream to be rescued, Mrs. Peel never ever screamed. She rescued herself - and sometimes she rescued Steed. It was like breath of fresh air in a hot stuffy room. Of course, that is not all there was to The Avengers. It was stylish, witty and lots of fun. No matter how bad the situation, Steed, the professional, and Mrs. Peel, the talented amateur, never lost their cool. They were always calm and dryly self-confident. And best of all, Mrs. Peel never screamed.
  • The best in terms of plot.

    The best in terms of invention.

    The best in terms of style.

    The best in terms of acting.

    The best in terms of direction.

    The best in terms of documenting a classic era.

    The best in terms of showcasing all kinds of brilliant actors in early stages of their careers (Peter Bowles, John Wood, Donald Sutherland...ad infinitum...)

    The best in term of originality & freshness.

    Just the very best!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    'The Avengers' is one of the most successful television shows ever made in Britain, and stands up extremely well forty years later. It starred Ian Hendry originally as 'Dr.David Keel', a medic turned investigator after his fiancée is killed by the underworld. His partner 'John Steed' was played by Patrick Macnee. Initially, Steed was a trenchcoat-wearing spook no different from a thousand others, but as the series progressed he evolved into the suave, bowler-hatted, umbrella-carrying secret agent we all know and love, the quintessential gentleman spy. When Hendry dropped out, they replaced him with Honor Blackman as the karate-chopping 'Mrs.Cathy Gale'. The show took off.

    Honor left after two seasons to co-star in the Bond classic 'Goldfinger'. After a false start with Elisabeth Shepherd, the producers sensibly cast Diana Rigg as 'Mrs.Emma Peel'. Of all the actresses to have played his sexy sidekicks, she was the one who made the greatest impact. Her arrival coincided with a move onto film, and the plots got wilder!

    The pair would be called on to solve the most outrageous crimes imaginable, bringing them into contact with fiendishly clever diabolical masterminds.

    The new-look 'Avengers' was a smash hit in the U.S.A. precisely because it made no attempt to pander to American tastes. From the very moment the classy opening titles and marvellous Laurie Johnson theme tune burst onto the screen, it has a polish that positively dazzles.

    Where else would you get to see Ronnie Barker training cats to become assassins, a fight where the protagonists wear anti-gravity boots, bird seed spilling out of a dead man's chest, Clive Dunn killed by a 'Jack-In-The-Box', Paul Eddington regressing to childhood after touching a bouncy ball, John Cleese as a collector of eggs bearing the faces of clowns, a computer that writes romantic fiction, invisible spies, Venusian death-rays, rain-making machines, man-eating plants from space, amnesia-inducing milk, guns that destroy nothing except wood, British Rail ticket collectors out to take over the country, miniaturisation machines, underground cities, a village where for a price you can commit murder and the locals provide you with an alibi, and an assassination bureau masquerading as a dating agency. Nowhere except 'The Avengers'.

    If you've never seen an episode, give it a whirl. You'll like it.

    Rigg left in 1967 and the unknown Linda Thorson took her place as 'Tara King'. The Thorson series is in my view the highpoint of the show. But in America it was badly scheduled and ended after 32 episodes.

    'The Avengers' returned in 1976 as 'The New Avengers', teaming Steed with Gareth Hunt's 'Mike Gambit' and 'Joanna Lumley's 'Purdey'. Two seasons were made.

    The Rigg shows were repeated by Channel 4 in 1982 at the ungodly time of 12.55 a.m. on Sundays. However, it proved so popular it was eventually promoted to peak-time Sunday evening. Recent repeats have taken place on Sky's now-defunct Granada Plus, and B.B.C.-4.

    In 1998, 'The Avengers' was made into a movie starring Ralph Fiennes, Uma Thurman, and Sean Connery. Though not well received at the time, it has developed something of a cult following. A campaign is presently underway to secure a Director's Cut D.V.D. release.

    I loved 'The Avengers' as a boy, and love it still. It gets better the further away from the '60's we get.
  • Lejink23 July 2015
    Possibly the best-known and most successful of the escapist adventure series from the British ABC studios of the mid-late 60's, I remember "The Avengers" fondly from my childhood. I have all the Patrick McNee / Diana Rigg episodes on DVD and prompted by the recent passing of Mr McNee, I finally indulged myself by watching a random episode (the first of the 1967 colourised series), but it could have been any one from that era and I'd have been just as well entertained, I know.

    I never saw any of the Honor Blackman series and do recall that McNee and the post-Rigg Linda Thorson just didn't have the same chemistry, plus the writing and plotting was becoming too far-fetched (all that "Mother" nonsense, for example) when compared to its golden era of 1965-1967.

    McNee is splendid as the debonair and uber-cool John Steed substituting a sharp-edged umbrella in place of guns and the pre-Grand Dame Diana Rigg smoulders as the enigmatic, karate-chopping Mrs Peel. Much was made of her one-piece jump-suits of the time, no doubt helpful in protecting her modesty as she dispatched yet another set of baddies with her martial arts moves, even if today said costumes look more functional than sexy. The plots are invariably flight-of-fancy fantasy, often pitting the dynamic duo against some world-threatening individual or organisation but were usually laced with subtle and occasionally sexy interplay between the two leads, top-and-tailed in every episode with a mute opening "We're needed" sequence and similarly light-hearted epilogue with just a hint of romantic frisson between them.

    The best episodes tended to be written by the also recently departed Brian Clemens and the cream of British TV character actors usually made guest appearances from episode to episode.

    Utterly charming and entertaining, and with a distinctive title sequence and theme tune, "The Avengers", is still well-remembered today as the epitome of style and class. The McNee / Rigg axis definitely saw the show at its best helped no doubt by its identification with the swinging 60's appeal of anything British at the time.

    The Avengers to today's youth undoubtedly conjures up Marvel's comic-book team, but to me it'll always recall the classic team of Steed and Peel saving the world weekly and sleekly from some misguided criminal mastermind.
  • John Steed, with his bowler and umbrella, reminded me of great deal of Raymond Barry in "Bat Masterson," with his cane and bowler. Both men were debonair, intelligent and dangerous when pushed. Unfortunately, Bat didn't have a Cathy, Emma or a Tara to assist him. Patrick Macnee' John Steed was the epitome of 'British cool' during the Swinging sixties. Emma Peel (Dame Dianna Riggs) was priceless as Steed's karate- savvy companion. I watched this classic television program back in the Sixties and to a boy growing up in rural Wisconsin there seemed no more of a mod-magical world than the city along the Thames. The avengers was "Batman," "James Bond" and The Beatles all rolled into one.
  • In spite of how "The Avengers" series is best known, the opening season was a completely different kettle of fish.

    The season from 1961 - mainly missing sadly - was more of a conventional police thriller. None of the programme's quirky humour was displayed, there was no female leading character and John Steed was technically the second lead behind Ian Hendry as Dr. David Keel. The general synopsis was usually as follows: Keel would be approached by Steed who would seek the good Drs help in the fight against the latest villains of the show. Dr. Keel was most reticent about becoming involved in Steeds assignments but invariably was.

    Only 3 episodes from 1961 exist and including the first 15 minutes of the opening episode.

    Judging by the existing 3, the more gritty and realistic style works very well. Ian Hendry and the only John Steed - Patrick Macnee - compliment each other.

    After Ian Hendry decided to focus on a film career, Patrick Macnee was made the show's leasing character. In addition, he would be the actor who would appear in more episodes than anyone else.

    The series seemed to struggle in finding it's form/style. The characters of Dr. Martin King and that of the pop star Venus Smith, aren't all that interesting but one or two episodes they are in are quite good.

    When Honor Blackman joined the series in 1962 for its second season, everything changed for the better. The series became ground-breaking in having a regular female character who was just as tough, brave, resilient and intelligent as John Steed.

    The second and third seasons feature some marvellous episodes - too many to list them here. The series was firmly established as a huge success with Britain and the two leading actors became very popular with the viewers.

    With Honor Blackman leaving in 1964 to appear in "Goldfinger" opposite Sean Connery, major changes were about to occur for "The Avengers" series.

    Having been shot on video and in whole takes as though filmed live, now the show would be filmed on film and eventually in colour. In particular though, the most popular female character of them all would help tremendously in pushing the series to its peak of popularity - Diana Rigg as Emma Peel.

    The on-screen chemistry between the characters of John Steed and Emma Peel was both natural and highly effective. The episodes were better than ever - several masterpieces are included and eventually, America became interested in securing the rights in broadcasting "The Avengers."

    It came as a bit of a shock when Diana Rigg announced she was leaving the series. She had made the Emma Peel character her own.

    For my money, the series declined in overall quality. The rather eccentric humour from the Emma Peel era worked for those episodes. Now with Linda Thorson was cast as Tara King, the stories became a bit too silly and I find many of the last season's episodes rather irksome.

    The other problem I find with the last episodes, is that Linda Thorson has neither the acting ability nor the kind of personality that Diana Rigg brought to "The Avengers." 1969 was the right time to bring the series to a close. It had lasted over 180 episodes since 1961 and has earnt its place in British television history.
  • rmax30482324 August 2008
    Warning: Spoilers
    I can only comment on the episodes using Patrick MacNee and Diana Rigg between 1965 and 1968.

    What a diverting show it was. MacNee is John Steed, the proper gentleman in bowler hat, wielding his deadly brolly. His character and appearance are perfect for a vehicle like this. It isn't so much that he was never nonplussed, so much as that he was always plussed. Rigg is Emma Peel in her jump suits, zippered up front, with that tantalizing, over-sized ring dangling from the zipper just below her sternoclavicular notch. Diana Rigg has a curious beauty. She sports a pair of wide-set eyes, elevated cheekbones, a perfunctory nose and tiny lips, like a Hentai cartoon. She's a good actress too. Did a fine job as one of the bad daughters in Lawrence Olivier's TV production of "King Lear." She was so popular at the time she left this series that she was whisked off to Broadway for "Abelard and Heloise," which included a topless scene. I understand the theater was jammed, but then the story has always been immensely popular with the masses. There are Abelard and Heloise fan clubs in every dusty little town in the world.

    The two of them work off each other very well, whether popping the cork of a champagne bottle or fending off evildoers. Their, um, relationship is never fully explained. They both work for some ultra-secret British government organization apparently. Each show opens with Mrs. Peel uncovering a message from Steed, coyly hidden in a box of chocolate or under some peeling wallpaper -- "Mrs. Peel. We're needed." The forces they battle are absurd. Some fantastic organization is breeding a horde of robotic soldiers in a vast, excavated place under a cemetery, and they plan to emerge and take over the British Isles. Or another cabal -- P.U.R.R. -- has invented a device that turns ordinary pussy cats into demonic, homicidal beasts that will be used to eliminate the world's leaders so that P.U.R.R. can take over. Somebody is always trying to take over the world. And Steed and Mrs. Peel are always there to thwart their plans.

    It isn't broad comedy. A viewer is more likely to smile than laugh out loud. But the scripts are quietly witty and suggestive. The episode about felines -- "The Hidden Tiger" -- has an uncountable number of references and puns on the subject. P.U.R.R. is run by a Mr. Cheshire. (Cheshire cat, get it? "Alice in Wonderland"?) The manager's name is Mr. Manx. Too many puns on pussies and cats to enumerate, but the last word spoken in the episode is "cat-astrophe." The fashion is that of Britain in the period of the early Beatles, and Carnaby Street, and the general sense conveyed is that of a loose-limbed freedom from earlier conventions. Nothing is taken seriously. If a man drops dead in front of Steed and Mrs. Peel, they kneel down, check his pulse, and look at each other with a slight, quizzical frown.

    The plots are convoluted, and it's easy to lose track of what's going on. At times, one's mind drifts. A series like this must walk a tightrope. "Whimsy" can too easily slip into "cute" or, worse, the abyssal "silly." But the plot is never very important anyway.

    Everything is handled with style and panache. Bowler-hatted or coiffed auburn, these episodes are heads and shoulders above most of the junk that fill the TV screens today.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    'The Avengers' was a tale of three magnificent women and one lucky guy. When Cathy Gale enters the show explodes. Not a very big budget then and it was performed like a play with every scene being shot from start to finish in one take which makes Cathy Gale's fight scenes even more impressive because she did not have a stunt double. Cathy Gale was TV's first butt kicking woman.

    While Cathy Gale's relationship with Steed could be tense his relationship with Mrs. Peel was flirty and agreeable. ABC had pumped a lot a money into the show and they could actually afford better locales, stunt people, editing, costumes and Sci-fi villains. In the B & W year Mrs. Peel's costumes were amazing, very daring for the time. In the colour year it was just her famous cat suit. Her departure was painful and her missing husband turned out to be a clone of Steed, dapper and proper (Patrick Macnee's suits were famous). For being a splendid example of girl power they could at least paid Diana Rigg. Then came Tara King, wide hips, blue-blue eyes and really young. When people have their faces that close together and aren't kissing or head butting each other there's a confront level there and Mother became a player in the show, Familiar faces popped up: Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing and young Charlotte Rampling among others.

    'The Avngers' had snappy dialogue, quick British wit even more brutal than American TV, '...I haven't killed anyone all week, You can ask Mrs. Peel.' The Bowler and the Tantalising Three (they had interesting episode titles) was a fun show and had great music by John Dankworth and Laurie Johnson.
  • I just watched all the series 7/Linda Thorson episodes on dvd.

    My god what a trip,there are about 6 decent episodes,4 are really good but most in this series are awful.

    Why are they awful? Because the people in charge got rid of a tested team and got in people who were not up to the task.

    The Avengers was always light weight and full of humour but in this series half the plots should have been rejected at an early stage.

    The series never came back after this.
  • reymunpadilla10 January 2024
    I watched very puzzled, trying to figure out why people would rate this so highly. Other than looking at Diana Rigg, there's nothing to recommend in the series.

    The male lead looks old enough to be her father and doesn't have a tenth of the charm of any of the men who played James Bond. The plots were slow, the villains dull. I struggled to get past a few episodes and gave up. The humor that was supposed to be there is buried in slow moving stories.

    Apparently the one thing the internet can agree on is Rigg in a bondage outfit for one episode. My advice is to seek out the stills of her and ignore the series itself.
  • PART ONE: THE EARLY YEARS (61-64)

    When most people think of THE AVENGERS, they often think of the Emma Peel episodes and tend to ignore the magic that the entire series is. What began as a cheap weekly live-broadcast B&W thriller managed to become a major color series with quite high production values and also the first British TV show ever to be exported to the US.

    THE AVENGERS began in 1961, as an attempt to cash in ABC's previous medical thriller POLICE SURGEON. The former stared Ian Hendry who became one of the biggest TV stars of the time. The show failed to be a hit however. So Hendry and his co-star Ingrid Hafner were called in to do a replacement called THE AVENGERS. The weekly show would pair up the widowed Dr. Keel (Hendry) with charming secret agent John Steed (Patrick McNee) as they hunted down criminals and diabolical masterminds while walking on the noir-like soaked London streets wearing raincoats. Hafner starred in some episodes as nurse Carol. Only two of these episodes are known to exist, and they have been rarely seen. After many videotaped episodes, the show became a hit and Hendry decided it was a perfect time to start a movie career. He quit the show and so did Hafner. This left co-star McNee all by himself.

    The second season started in 1962 and McNee was paired up with Dr. King (Jon Rollason), a temporary replacement. After shooting left-over season one scripts, King was dropped and Julie Stevens as jazz singer Venus Smith was brought in to be Steed's new female partner. A bad one by the way. Not only was Stevens a young unexperienced actress, but the character itself was a manipulative innocent teenager that would always become the damsel in distress and have to be saved during the climax. Weak material here. However, the writers decided to pair Steed up with a different kind of female partner. One that would be written as a male character on the script, and play it like a man. And so was born television's first true independent woman: Mrs. Catherine Gale. Played to perfection by Honor Blackman, the high-tempered Cathy would always have "battle of the sexes" arguments with Steed, hit him with outrageous answers and punchlines, ("Good morning Cathy, what's for breakfast?" "Cook it and see!") and always try to erase his sexist side. Also notable were Cathy's leather catsuits that launched an entire fashion in England, as well as her weekly judo fights with male thugs. The many Cathy Gale episodes have remained in obscurity during the years for the fact that they were videotaped on low production values and transfered into poor prints with lackluster sound. This makes them almost unwatchable. And the bad guest acting and all the technical bloopers that were never fixed during editing didn't help. But all the purists who try to avoid these episodes are actually missing a great load of fun. If you overlook all the negative elements, you are left with entertaining stories that always surprise you with all the wit, poison, and humor from McNee and Blackman. You would also be surprised at how superior the material is since back then the show took itself seriously.

    Some episodes speak for themselves: MANDRAKE is a slow-paced but well done suspense with a great fight scene with Blackman and wrestler Jack Parlo. THE LITTLE WONDERS is a funny episode featuring Lois Maxwell (a.k.a Miss Moneypenny) as a wicked machine-gun shooting evil nun. DRESSED TO KILL is a well done variation of Agatha Christie's Ten Little Indians. THE MAN WITH TWO SHADOWS was one of the first spy stories to use the look-alike element. And THE CHARMERS is perhaps one of the best episodes ever.

    It is true that these shows don't even come close to the wonderful filmed seasons that would start in 1965 and they do not hold up to today's standards when compared to other shows of the time. But the biggest reason you should go back to watch these episodes is Cathy Gale herself. A wonderful actress (Blackman) and a wonderful character, Gale is one of the most important female characters of all time. She is for sure my favorite out of all of Steed's partners. Long live Cathy Gale!
  • There were many spy series on the boob tube in the swingin' 60s. "I Spy". "Mission:Impossible". "The Man From U.N.C.L.E." I liked them all. But I adored "The Avengers".

    One day at school, Brad Barner was talking wildly about a TV show. I made my mind to check it out, if I could.

    At this time I had four brothers and four sisters. Use of the TV was by majority rule, so I plead my case for "The Avengers".

    That first episode was "The Winged Avenger": the eponymous comic book character had apparently come to life and was killing off upper middle-management types.

    Enter John Steed and Mrs. Emma Peel, who dispatch the villains with a wit and style I had never seen. The effect of Mrs. Peel's jumpsuits (Barbara called them Emma's "fighting clothes") on my teenage libido was a bonus. I would have watched if I was nine years old.

    The Avengers were cool.

    Each week I would watch the pair defeat all sorts of threats to the British Empire. I enjoyed the science fictional plots the best, but I was hooked.
  • Barring The Prisoner, Star Trek (with Kirk and Spock) and Thunderbirds, The Avengers is the best 1960s TV series going - you can have hours of fun pretending to be John Steed by bellowing "MRS PEEL" at everybody in your life knowing that few of them will know what you mean - but will laugh anyway. Note the opening credits of the Emma Peel Colour series (1967), where Steed (Patrick Macnee)wobbles while standing on one leg proferring his furled umbrella. Some of the stories here have not been screened in the UK since 2001 - and then only on Granada Plus where they were edited down from original run times of 50 minutes to 46 to accommodate ever longer advert and trailer breaks; and in the case of the final episodes of the Tara King series (1968-9) this amounted to the removal of the tag scene which closed every episode. Thusly, volumes 7 & 8 of the Tara King series have been known to achieve ridiculously high prices in Ebay auctions - these being the episodes most rarely screened in their entirety - Channel 4 ran them in full in late summer 1997 in an early Friday evening slot. Some may choose to source their Avengers fix by buying the much better priced Dutch DVD releases (re-titled "Der Wrekers") but with the confusion that they sequenced their discs with a different running order to the UK issues. Oddly, even these do not follow the exact order in which the stories were originally transmitted or filmed (Dave Rogers' exquisite books The Avengers (1983) and The Ultimate Avengers (1995)tell you everything you need to know about this) Let's hope the whole set from Ian Hendry's one remaining 1961 videotaped episode ("The Frighteners") to Joanna Lumley's miniskirt marvel "Emily" from 1977 are all given re-releases on DVD at prices lower than you'd expect to pay for an thoroughbred Ferrari or an undiscovered Titian – which happily they now have. But what price would be paid to that enterprising and either exceptionally wealthy or well connected (pun intended) person who owns original video recordings of those 1961 episodes that ITV hadn't got room for in their apparently tiny vaults? Dream again - and dream harder,sweet cousins.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Started loving the show as a kid in the 1990s, teenager when the show was on the A&E(Arts & Entertainment) Network. As it had people like Honor Blackman(Cathy Gale aka Pussy Galore in "Diamonds Are Forever"), Diana Rigg(Who would go onto bigger things, but remains ever beautiful and great as Emma Peel when the show would take off), and Linda Thorson(Tara King). But really who was the star was Patrick MacNee as handsome, witty, debonair John Steed, UK secret agent. He was the only constant that remained in a show that had cast changes it seems like every 2-4 years. But without Steed, there would be No Avengers. The show had wit, charm, action, some romance, and chemistry. Especially with Diana Rigg and Patrick MacNee. Great writing and great acting put together! Wished there were more shows like that. Sadly, that is what TV is lacking these days!
  • Tweetienator1 March 2022
    Diana Rigg is a true goddess and Patrick Macnee a true British gentleman to the bone. What we get is a spy show with lots of humor, fun, action, many unique ideas and the heart at the right place. Without doubt, still an excellent show. Like Get Smart (Don Adams and Barbara Feldon), one of my absolute favorite shows of the 60s, and they show, like the Bond movie of the 60s and 70s, that you can make fantastic stories in the world of espionage and crime.
  • The James Bond movies owe a great deal to The Avengers. First, Bond stole THREE actresses from the show to portray Bond women: Lois Maxwell, Honor Blackman, and of course, Dame Diana Rigg. Second, many of the spy tropes that are credited to Bond films were lifted from or inspired by The Avengers. Obviously, most of the credit for Bond is due to Ian Fleming, a spy himself, and one would assume The Avengers writers had read his books. So perhaps it's all a big happy virtuous cycle.

    But The Avengers was also special enough that it became the very first British television show exported to the US, and became part of the British Invasion, a part and parcel of the style and sensibility of the mid-sixties here.

    Do not underestimate this series. Immensely enjoyable!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Although not nearly as popular as I assumed it to be at the time, The second series of 'The Avengers' was - for me - a must-see programme.

    The earlier series starred Honor Blackman and never seemed to quite find its focus, but when Emma Peel appeared; the programme gelled into something quite wonderful.

    I can think of no other show that has been so quintessentially British. Running through the mid-sixties, it embodied all of the fun, optimism and excitement of that swinging decade. Patrick McNee's John Steed set a benchmark for the modern interpretation of a gentleman. Impeccably dressed, dandily-mannered, genteel, urbane, mature, but still fit and intelligent, an educated man of action yet with a hint of eccentricity vouchsafed by such accessories as a steel bowler-hat and an altimeter in his Bentley. Ofsetting this modern take on tradition came Diana Rigg's Emma Peel. The fully emancipated action-woman 20 years ahead of her time. a Lara Croft who shopped in Beauchamp Place. Younger, lithe, and always ready for action, often turned-out in a figure-hugging leather cat-suit and a slick little Lotus 'Elan' sports car, more Tomboy than débutante.

    This dynamic duo complimented each other perfectly in a relationship that was never crude or vulgar, that always retained a platonic professionalism despite its lingering hint of romance.

    They were special government agents of some sort or other, and got into extremely bizarre scrapes. The 'Cybermen' had them contending with robot assassins. Another programme found them dealing with seeds from space that could grow into man-eating plants. Yet another programme entailed assassins able to charge-up like capacitors and electrocute their victims. Then there were domestic cats that could be turned into tigers, fountain pens that injected their victims hearts with poison, a house that was a trap that drove people insane, and so on. Today these themes don't seem quite so far-fetched.

    'The Avengers' held just the right cocktail of excitement, humour and imagination, buoyed-up by the winning personalities of its stars and their amazing chemistry. It never flagged.

    Diana Rigg made such an impact that she seemed to define the feminine Avenger, eclipsing Blackman and leaving an act that was impossible for Linda Thorsen - her replacement as the drippy 'Tara King' - to fill. Riggseemed to have been there a lot longer than the 2 years or so that she was.

    With her departure, the format was a busted flush. It later became a threesome and had a slightly harder edge as 'The New Avengers'. But the moment had passed, the joy and innocence were no more. It was the 1970's.
  • Gaslog4 June 2021
    I watched this on and off during it's original broadcast and had a positive memory of this show..especially the Diana Rigg episodes. Watching them now, many of the plots seem a little hard to believe...but still fun to watch. What i noticed now was the phony and quite ridiculous fight scenes,,,,,,not realistic at all..But as I say...still fun to watch. Who exactly did Steed work for...he didn't seem to have any contact with his office>>> even Maxwell Smart had backup LOL.
  • dtstacey2 January 2023
    One of my Favourite Series EVER!!.I loved this and still do. I don't really remember the Honor Blackman/Cathy Gale eps,(..but would watch em tomorrow,given the chance..),and had to 'make do'...ahem!..with Diana Rigg and the totally underated Linda Thorson,as they partnered the effortlessly urbane and stylish John Steed. Fabulously,inventive,imaginative and lovably goofy plots with lots of famous actors starting out in their careers,(...Great Fun spotting them in recent re-runs on ITV4...),plus established legends like Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. As a young child,some eps I found a bit scary as they ventured into sci/Fi,mild horror territory but that was my age,I guess. When I saw Jennifer Lawrence recently saying she was the first action-heroine,(...ridiculously..),I wish someone would give her some vids of these magnificent ass-kicking ladies and give her some much needed perspective. All in all,legendary TV series which I adore,to this Day.
  • StevenKeys21 March 2023
    They were beachhead in the mod British Invasion, paving the way for The-Beatles 64 landing at the newly renamed JFK (Idlewild) airport, signaling a cultural revolution. No Redcoats this time, colors black & white (TV) in wave of early 60s spy series, shows like The-Avengers (61-9), Danger-Man (60-2) and The-Saint (62-9). Better than the Bond movies for which they were template (Dr-No & Goldfinger exceptions), sex was not a selling point but a suggestion, and this time the Yanks loved the takeover, for as the English were steeping in style on their side of the Pond, Americans were, apart from Camelot (61-63), still wearing poodle-skirts and sporting crew-cuts (3.5/4).
  • This is a fine series for all viewers to watch. The storyline of this series could have been stronger but it was alright to watch. The crew did not put enough effort when they were creating this series. It needed more work. The cast selection was good enough. They did not fully connect to the storyline nor to their respective characters. The chemistry between the cast members was not even that strong. This series reveals to viewers what the true power of teamwork can do for everyone. I have never been part of a team. I have always been alone, bullied, depressed, and hated. My life will always remain stuck. This is an alright series for all viewers to watch.
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