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  • This was quite an event for a fifteen year old boy in 1967! Hammer Fillm fans tuned in and we weren't disappointed, with Lee as a dapper scientist, Frank N. Stone, who just happens to be involved with creating robot duplicates that are indistinguishable from the real thing. This one has thrilling scenes of Lee lumbering about the countryside, stalking people who are using radio-controlled toys, drawn to the frequency and bringing a fistful of violence with him. Great fun, Emma is lovely and spunky as ever, Steed polished and urbane, and if it's not the best episode, nor even in the top ten, it's still essential viewing for any fan of horror cinema or this wonderful show from TV's golden age.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It isn't usual for Steed and Mrs Peel to be called in to investigate a fatal traffic accident… but the accident at the opening of this episode isn't usual; the man who was certified dead by a doctor gets up and walks out of the hospital! This doesn't just happen once either; the man is run over again and later a soldier empties his submachinegun into him without harming him. There is another thing odd about him; he seems to be affected by certain radio frequencies. Clues lead them to a research establishment run by one Professor Frank N.Stone… who looks exactly like the man who couldn't die. It turns out he has developed a way to make robots that look just like a person and can have that person's memories implanted. He says this will enable the greatest minds to be kept alive forever however the real plan is far more sinister.

    This is a fine episode of 'The Avengers' both because of the good story and due to the appearance of horror maestro Christopher Lee's appearance as the appropriately named Frank N.Stone. He puts in a fine performance both as the robot effected by radio broadcasts and as the apparently human professor. The rest of the guest cast were also pretty good; most notably Jeremy Young and Patricia English who play the professor's assistant Dr Penrose and local doctor Dr. Betty James respectively. There is also a non-speaking appearance from Dad's Army's Private Godfrey; Arnold Ridley as an elderly gentleman using a radio controlled boat. As well as a good story with great antagonists there is the usual humour.
  • "Never, Never Say Die" features the series debut of Sir Christopher Lee, who would be back for a Tara King classic, "The Interrogators." Boyhood chums with Patrick Macnee, it's a real thrill to see the two friends oppose each other on screen, though not the equal of Lee and Peter Cushing. Cast as Professor Frank N. Stone (a nod to Lee's unforgettable Creature in Hammer's 1957 "The Curse of Frankenstein"), we first see him walking in front of a car driven by the understandably confused Whittle (Christopher Benjamin, "How to Succeed....at Murder" and "Split!"), who has the extreme misfortune of running into the same unstoppable pedestrian twice in a matter of hours, only for him to walk away each time. After a one sided battle with Stone, Steed later discovers him to be the leader of a top secret installation that bans transistor radios because a certain frequency wreaks havoc on their mission. Also appearing are Jeremy Young ("A Taste of Brimstone" and "The Forget-Me-Knot"), David Kernan ("Quick-Quick Slow Death"), John Junkin ("Dressed to Kill"), and Patricia English, a memorable guest performer in both "Mission to Montreal" and "The Secrets Broker."
  • When a man is hit buy a car and deemed dead, Stead and Mrs Peel are called in when he gets up off the slab.

    Seeing Mrs Peel watching snippets from The Cybernauts gave me goosebumps, and I did wonder if there was going to be a link, having watched it, I still can't conclusively say if there is or isn't some sort of link, or maybe just a similar storyline.

    The episode itself, very good, back to the horror vibe, the pacing, music and tone all have that slightly darker element, it really does work. The whole creepy vibe just works.

    The best element for me, definitely Christopher Lee, who doesn't even need to say much, just his physical presence is enough, you can see why he was cast, his physical presence was incredible, playing the undead certainly was in his realm.

    Christopher Benjamin is wonderfully funny once again, such a lovely actor, he adds a comic tone to what's quite a horror themed episode.

    8/10.
  • John Steed and Emma Peel are called in to investigate when Christopher Lee walks out of the hospital after he is pronounced dead after being struck by a car. I had never seen an episode of The Avengers before, or if I had I was too young to remember it, but this was a fun viewing experience.
  • robert375017 June 2023
    Warning: Spoilers
    Once again, the willingness of the series to go into full on science fiction startles me. Christopher Lee guest stars as Dr. Frank N. Stone (hint hint), the stereotypical mad scientist who invents very lifelike robots. He's taken things a step further and figured out how to copy human memories and consciousness into them, with the goal of replacing the originals. The robot storyline is foreshadowed at the very beginning, when Peel is watching The Cybernauts from the fourth season. Lots of whimsy, as well as menace. Steed and Peel get roughed up a lot by the robots. It's funny to see them comment on robot duplicates of themselves.
  • A driver accidentally hits a man on the road with his vehicle. In the local hospital they verify that he is dead but suddenly he gets up and escapes. Emma and Steed decide to investigate the strange event and the clues lead them to a mysterious Neoteric Research Center. Here we have a great episode starring Christopher Lee where the robot theme that had gone so well in the previous season with The Cybernauts is repeated. Lee's walk through the woods in search of victims is frightening, the music and the climate of this story are excellent.
  • When a man hit by a car suddenly comes alive again, Steed ad Mrs Peel investigate the government Neoteric Research Unit, which is harboring a deadly secret.

    Never, Never Say Die proves that the Avengers must have been a hot property in 1967 because Christopher Lee is the guest star. He doesn't get much to do except lumber around and look menacing, but his presence adds to the episode.

    Overall, the plot is a bit of a rehash of The Cybernauts, but involving robot duplicates. Christopher Benjamin has a small role as a motorist who keeps running Lee's "Professor Frank N. Stone" over.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    NEVER, NEVER SAY DIE is a fun episode of the fifth season of THE AVENGERS, featuring Steed and Peel going up against none other than guest star Christopher Lee, whose imposing frame and gaunt physique is put to great use. The Hammer star plays a robotic creature who wanders around country lanes, causing car accidents and smashing property to boot, and there's a frisson of excitement in these scenes which deliberately recall his glory days in THE CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN.

    Otherwise, this self-contained episode is typically cheap and cheerful, featuring scientific experiments, a small conspiracy, some cheesy action scenes, and a mysterious organisation. The whole thing feels very camp and '60s in style, with the robotic theme later a mainstay of DR WHO and British science fiction as a whole. There's plenty of action and incident to keep it moving and both Macnee and Rigg give likable performances. Lee gets to play multiple parts and there's even a small cameo from DAD'S ARMY star Arnold Ridley. Overall, I give it a thumbs-up.
  • Although I have long been aware of this classic British TV series – not least due to the championing of that medium's particular period by a former colleague of mine – and have occasionally caught snippets of it in the mid-1990s on the "Bravo" channel, this is the very first episode I have watched in its entirety; Unfortunately, I have had to choose between the lesser evil of a severely cropped print and a corrected but fogged one from "You Tube" for now! This fact becomes even stranger still when I confess here to having actually paid money to watch the much-maligned 1998 film version in a theatre upon its original release!

    As with my immediately recent forays into TV land, this particular viewing arose following the death of one of its participants, Christopher Lee – in the first of two appearances he put in the show; the second one, in an episode entitled THE INTERROGATORS (1969), will follow presently. For the record, I had previously only watched an 1976 episode – called THE EAGLE'S NEST – from the series' first reboot, THE NEW AVENGERS (1976-77) featuring, unsurprisingly enough, Lee's frequent celluloid sparring partner Peter Cushing as the guest star de rigueur. While this fanciful espionage series may initially seem to have been conceived in the wake of the James Bond worldwide phenomenon, the truth is that THE AVENGERS (1961-69) actually preceded it by a year and was possibly the first in a long line of similar shows; in fact, like its equally long-running contemporaries THE SAINT (1962-69) and THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E. (1964-68; from the other side of the pond), the series originally started out in monochrome before switching to colour for subsequent seasons.

    Anyway, the episode under review – the tenth in the fifth season – is an intriguing hybrid of FRANKENSTEIN (one should not forget that the role of The Creature was what brought him fame precisely a decade earlier) and INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS featuring a grey-haired Christopher Lee (who was only 42 at the time) as Dr. Frank N. Stone (get the connection?) who is enigmatically engulfed in a series of experiments, ostensibly for the Ministry of Technology, intent on creating a race of invincible duplicates. One of the prototypes (a dead-ringer for its creator) breaks out of the laboratory but is run over by a car in the very opening sequence. However, to the baffled consternation of one and sundry – including the driver, the village doctor and, eventually, the heroic titular duo (Patrick Macnee and Diana Rigg) – the apparently lifeless corpse keeps coming back to life, attack transistor radios for no apparent reason and get mown down again by motor vehicles! To be sure, the episode has quite a busy narrative that I will not go into her but, ultimately, both Avengers get inside the laboratory and uncover a typically megalomaniacal plot (albeit with a far-fetched twist – more on that later) to populate the world with duplicates of important people.

    On the whole, it proved to be an enjoyable introduction to the show for me, with likable leads and a suitably versatile performance from Lee (in view of the fact that he portrays multiple versions of Dr. Stone). While I found the inherent assimilation between Lee's mindless duplicates and TV viewers in the closing sequence to be very prescient (Macnee and Rigg cannot agree on which channel to watch before settling on a political discussion!), unfortunately I had some real issues with the script which I found to be barely credible at times, namely:

    • Given the sheer ambition of the villains' plan for world domination, it was indeed very careless of them to let the runway duplicate quit the top secret facility so often to wreak havoc in full view of the public • Why would a simple village doctor call The Avengers, ostensibly secret agents (with the emphasis on secret) into action from the outset?; one would have thought she would go to the local police first to report the strange events she had been witness to • I can fully understand the need for the villains to duplicate government officials and the titular duo…but a village doctor?! • I found the duplication method – Lee's assistant apparently had a photographic memory! – very far-fetched to say the least, especially since the victims will eventually need to be abducted and disposed of if they are to be successfully replaced • Once they are abducted, Lee's victims are all thrown into the same cell inside the laboratory; however, it takes Peel the longest time to be curious about two cellmates whose bodies are always covered with sheets (and whose identity, ultimately, turns the plot virtually on its head)!

    Despite my reservations, I look forward to catching up with more episodes from this series in the long run. For the record, Lee had already worked with director Day in the superior Boris Karloff vehicle CORRIDORS OF BLOOD (1958) and Hammer Films' remake of SHE (1965); Lee and Macnee (reportedly childhood friends) would much later both feature respectively in the abysmal HOWLING II…YOUR SISTER IS A WEREWOLF (1985) and Joe Dante's surprisingly underwhelming 1980 original – incidentally, footage from this very episode where later incorporated into another AVENGERS entry, HOMICIDE AND OLD LACE (1969) which was directed by John Hough, who later himself helmed the fourth entry in the lychanthrope saga!; besides, both actors – along with Rigg – will all appear in official James Bond extravaganzas.