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Sandbaggers Collection Set 1

Sandbaggers Collection Set 1

List Price: $59.98
Your Price: $53.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Buy it. Buy it NOW
Review: As mentioned by many before my, this show concentrates on the realities of coldwar espionage rather than the fantasies. To some extent, it has been used by the CIA to educate wannabe James Bonds, and show them what the situation was really like.
The first episode is a little heavy on expositions and meetings, but don't let that turn you off.
"Can I buy you a drink?"
"I have nothing to celebrate."
"Nontheless, I would still like to buy you a drink."
"Herr Torvick, if I had a glass in my hand right now, I'd shove it down your throat."

"Shall we walk"
"I'd rather be carried"

The paranoia over the Soviet Union seems sad, pathetic, and dated now, but captures the genuine flavor of the era.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best spy series ever on TV.
Review: Better than any other espionage series (and better than most espionage movies), "The Sandbaggers" focuses on the ongoing tension between bureaucratic administration of covert operations and the desperate life and death struggle of those carrying out these operations. Magnificent scripts--heavy on careful expository dialog and wry character development.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best in Captivating, Thought-Provoking Suspense Drama!
Review: I have no hesitation in saying that this is one of the best dramatic series I've ever seen. Certainly, so far as intelligently-written, intellectually-satisfying British dramas are concerned, it is second-to-none.

The series stars Roy Marsden as Neil Burnside, the Director of Operations for the SIS (Britain's Secret Service) and head of the Sandbaggers (a special unit of highly-trained operatives within the SIS). Burnside is a multi-faceted individual, and like the system of which he is a part, he is not without flaws. A former Sandbagger himself, Burnside will move heaven and earth for his operatives--a devotion which is commendable. But he is also ambitious and capable of being ruthlessly manipulative. While he cares deeply about his operatives, it is in those rare instances when the needs of an individual collide with his or her job as a Sandbagger that we see a surprising--indeed startling--side to Neil Burnside.

Roy Marsden (who will be familiar to many as Adam Dalgliesh of the P.D. James' dramatisations) is simply splendid in portraying the nuances in Burnside's personality as well as in evoking often conflicting emotions on the part of the viewer. In fact, it's hard to imagine anyone else in the role.

The portrayal of the policies, priorities, and hypocrisies within the SIS, the Ministry of Justice, and indeed the government in general is thought-provoking not to mention disturbing. If you've enjoyed the humourous (albeit highly accurate) depiction of government in the Yes Minister and Yes Prime Minister series, you will certainly enjoy this series. The approach is a serious one (although punctuated with comic relief in the form of witty remarks), but the insights into the running of (and indeed corruption of) government remain the same.

The DVD boxed set contains all seven 50-minute episodes from the first series (there are three in all), each of which is absolutely first-rate with very tight, fast-paced plots. There is suspense, but it is not long and drawn out. There are twists and surprises galore, but all are intricately connected to the storyline; none have been inserted gratuitously merely for the sake of thrills.

Whether or not you like the spy genre in particular, so long as you enjoy intelligent, impeccably-written and consummately-acted suspense drama, you will enjoy this superb series, which is as much a drama about people and human nature as it is about spies and government corruption. Quite frankly, I simply cannot recommend it highly enough. It's nothing short of outstanding!


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sandbaggers the best written drama on tv
Review: I never thought that I would see the day The Sandbaggers would be released on DVD. This was the most intriguing and the best written series that I have ever seen on television. This is just too good to miss.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sandbaggers the best written drama on tv
Review: I never thought that I would see the day The Sandbaggers would be released on DVD. This was the most intriguing and the best written series that I have ever seen on television. This is just too good to miss.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Superb drama series...
Review: In the very first episode, Operations Director Neil Burnside (Roy Marsden) tells a neophyte in the spy game ... if you want James Bond, go to your library. That's pretty much the show's mission statement.

Instead of over-the-top, high-tech adventures, The Sandbaggers offers a real-world view of the espionage world. There are no Q-gadgets here. Instead, Burnside has to fight numerous budgetary restraints -- like justifying why his agents need to fly into the field well-rested on a good quality flight. Every action has to be planned, cleared, etc.

The heart of the series is not in adventures, but in mission planning, characters, and the moral ambiguity.

The first episode that truly grabbed me was "Special Relationship" with its very disturbing ending.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The finest television you will ever see!
Review: Simply put, this is the finest television show in the history of the medium. For realism, it goes all the way. Sure, TV shows today are more 'violent', meaning that there is guns and blood shown, but even the hardest core show that I can think of, 'Oz', comes off like sentimental hogwash by comparison. If you doubt me, watch episodes 'Is Your Journey Really Necessary?' (Set 1) 'A Special Relationship,' (Set 1)or 'At All Costs' (Set 2) and tell me if I'm not right. I won't describe what happens, which would spoil the enjoyment, but suffice to say that many hard decisions are made and many sacrifices are necessary. This is a hard-edged, realistic look at a secret service. The writing and acting is Incredible across the board. Roy Marsden is superb as the thin, cold leader, Neil Burnside. The inner-office politics are great fun to watch, as Burnside and his immediate superior, SIS deputy Chief, Matthew Peele vie for power and control. Just a great production from beginning to end.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The finest television you will ever see!
Review: Simply put, this is the finest television show in the history of the medium. For realism, it goes all the way. Sure, TV shows today are more �violent�, meaning that there is guns and blood shown, but even the hardest core show that I can think of, �Oz�, comes off like sentimental hogwash by comparison. If you doubt me, watch episodes �Is Your Journey Really Necessary?� (Set 1) �A Special Relationship,� (Set 1)or �At All Costs� (Set 2) and tell me if I�m not right. I won�t describe what happens, which would spoil the enjoyment, but suffice to say that many hard decisions are made and many sacrifices are necessary. This is a hard-edged, realistic look at a secret service. The writing and acting is Incredible across the board. Roy Marsden is superb as the thin, cold leader, Neil Burnside. The inner-office politics are great fun to watch, as Burnside and his immediate superior, SIS deputy Chief, Matthew Peele vie for power and control. Just a great production from beginning to end.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: "If you want James Bond, go to a library."
Review: So speaks Neil Burnside (Roy Marsden, "Inspector Dalglish"), the steely D-Ops of THE SANDBAGGERS, a covert three-man team of spies operating at the height of the Cold War. It's an appropriate comment to describe the entire series. Created and Written by former British Intelligence officer Ian MacKintosh, any given episode is more likely to spend time discussing a mission than showing the mission itself... it's several episodes in before a Sandbagger is even armed. Emphasis is on the politics and pressures of a life lived in shadows, trading gunfights and explosions for cracking dialogue and fascinating characters. It's an approach that fans of HOMICIDE: LIFE ON THE STREET will more than appreciate. But it's Marsden who carries the series. As Neil Burnside, he is a man whose job has consumed every aspect of his life. He smoothly alternates between tart humor and devious ambition, able to hurl abuse at anyone who irritates him (which is everyone at some point or another) one moment, fight to prevent sending his men on a foolhardy mission behind the Iron Curtain the next, and plan an unsanctioned Assassination the next. Even at his most cold-blooded, Marsden's deft performance never lets us fully hate Burnside... but rather, pity him. It's more than likely you'll never find a more accurate account of the Intelligence community outside a documentary - it's rumored to be a favorite inside the CIA. A Sandbagger may spend most of his time "shuffling paper from in-tray to out-tray," but once in the field on assignment it often proves to be an ugly - and ultimately deadly - job. Gritty and compelling to the end, THE SANDBAGGERS is sophisticated entertainment, not for everyone. But those who invest their time and minds in this oft-forgotten series will not regret it... or forget it. This first set is low on Extras, and even begins with a written warning about the quality of the DVD image. However, it does beat third-generation VHS copies taped off PBS back in the 80's (the "traditional" SANDBAGGERS medium for years), and is more than adequate for the material. The package includes both a glossary of the omnipresent governmental abbreviations which even long-time fans will find useful, and the pivotal seventh episode "Special Relationship," inexplicably left out of the BFS's two VHS collections. The three-disk set includes the first seven episodes; 1. First Principles 2. A Proper Function of Government 3. Is Your Journey Really Necessary? 4. The Most Suitable Person 5. Always Glad to Help 6. A Feasible Solution 7. Special Relationship and Bonus: A Guide to Sandbaggers Abbreviations

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Battles of wits with the Whitehall wallahs
Review: The excellence of the BBC's THE SANDBAGGERS overcomes any quaintness of plotting that pits Her Majesty's Secret Intelligence Service against the machinations of the Evil Empire's KGB and its minions. Considering the menace of today's shadowy terrorist groups unaligned with any particular nation state, a return to the Cold War seems almost like the Good Old Days.

The "hero" of this television miniseries that aired in 1978 and 1980 is Neil Burnside (Roy Marsden), the wily, lonely, ruthless, testy, and driven Director of Operations, who works out of MI6's London headquarters in Century House. More specifically, Burnside oversees the "Sandbaggers", a trio of special agents available for covert operations against foreign enemies in the world's hotspots.

If you're expecting to see feats of derring-do reminiscent of 007, or even the Avengers, look elsewhere. Indeed, it's when the camera occasionally follows Neil's agents on their oversees exploits that the action gets clunky and amateurish. The essence of each episode's script lies back in London as we watch Burnside match wits with his immediate boss, SIS Deputy Chief Peele (Jerome Willis), and the agency's Director General (Richard Vernon), otherwise known as "C", both of whom Neil scornfully regards as bumbling incompetents, as well as with the meddling political wallahs in the Ministry of Defense and the Foreign Office. Who needs enemies with friends like these? And there's Neil's awkward relationship with Sir Geoffrey Wellingham (Alan MacNaughton), the urbane Permanent Undersecretary of State and the father of Burnside's estranged wife.

Perhaps the best episode in Set 1 is number 7, "Special Relationship", in which Neil dispatches Sandbagger Laura Dickens (Diane Keen) to East Berlin to retrieve some photographic intelligence from an agent-in-place. The mission turns into a personal disaster for Burnside in which the viewer first sees a human side to the Director.

THE SANDBAGGERS series nowhere approaches the superb BBC's productions of John Le Carre's TINKER, TAILOR, SOLDIER, SPY and SMILEY'S PEOPLE, both starring Alec Guinness. But, THE SANBAGGERS is an intriguing and intelligent depiction of the politics and backstage maneuvering of spycraft.


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