Английская Википедия:Game, Set and Match
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Game, Set and Match is a 1988 television serial directed by Ken Grieve and Patrick Lau and written by John Howlett. It is based on the books Berlin Game (1983), Mexico Set (1984), and London Match (1985) by Len Deighton. The two directors worked separately on different episodes.[1] Filmed on location in Berlin and Mexico, the project included a large international cast with 3,000 extras and a budget of $8 million. While critically acclaimed, the ratings for the series were a disaster.[2] Ian Holm was nominated for a BAFTA award for his portrayal of Bernard Samson.
It was aired in 1989 in the United States as part of the PBS show Mystery![3]
Plot synopsis
The series focuses on Bernard Samson (Ian Holm), beginning with his search for the "mole" that threatens the Brahms Network in East Germany. Samson is sent to Berlin to bring out a Brahms agent. He is then sent to Mexico to try to persuade a KGB major (Gottfried John) to defect, using his childhood friend Werner Volkmann's wife Zena as bait. After it appears another traitor is working at London Central, Samson himself becomes one of the prime suspects.
Cast
- Ian Holm as Bernard Samson
- Mel Martin as Fiona Samson
- Michael Culver as Dicky Cruyer
- Michael Degen as Werner Volkmann
- Gottfried John as Eric Stinnes
- Anthony Bate as Bret Renssalaer
- Frederick Treves as Frank Harrington
- Amanda Donohoe as Gloria Kent
- Hugh Fraser as Giles Trent
- Gail Harrison as Tessa Kozinski
- Gary Whelan as George Kozinski
- Brigitte Karner as Zena Volkmann
- Alan MacNaughtan as Sir Henry Clevemore DG
- Michael Aldridge as Silas Gaunt
- Peter Vaughan as David Kimber-Hutchinson
- Eva Ebner as Frau Lisl Hennig
- Jeremy Child as Henry Tiptree
Episodes
Reception
Clifford Terry, writing for the Chicago Tribune, called the series "a crackling cloak-and-dagger thriller". He noted that "the sharp direction by Kenneth Grieve and Patrick Lau and the provocative script by Howlett... comes up a winner through an assemblage of superb performances."[4] In TV Week, a supplement to The Philadelphia Inquirer, Lee Winfrey praised the production, calling it a "mind-bender", and singling out Gottfried John as a "mesmerizing menace", and cited Holm as "[holding] things together."[5] Conversely, in his review for The New York Times, John O'Connor wrote "Costly and ambitious, the 13-hour production of Game, Set and Match... is a mess." He cited Ian Holm as being miscast.[1]
Soundtrack
The soundtrack by Richard Harvey for Game, Set and Match was released on LP in 1988. Some of the music ("Game, Set and Match", "Goodbye Codes" and "The Cloisters of San Jacinto") was reissued in 2016 on Shroud for a Nightingale: The Television Drama Music of Richard Harvey. "The Bridge" and "The End Game" are available on Shroud for a Nightingale: The Screen Music of Richard Harvey.[6][7]
Track list
All songs by Richard Harvey.
- "Game, Set and Match"
- "Wrong Side of Charlie"
- "Tante Lisl - The Wings of Remembrance"
- "Unter Den Linden"
- "Goodbye Codes"
- "Coming Home"
- "The Bridge"
- "Tianguis"
- "Domingo's Path"
- "Snakes & Ladders"
- "The Cloisters of San Jacinto"
- "The Hurricane Season"
- "A Christmas Spy"
- "A Rough Crossing"
- "The Oxford Joker"
- " Pulling Strings"
- "The End Game"
References
External links
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- Английская Википедия
- 1988 British television series debuts
- 1988 British television series endings
- 1980s British drama television series
- ITV television dramas
- Espionage television series
- Television series about the Cold War
- Television shows based on British novels
- Television shows based on works by Len Deighton
- Television series by ITV Studios
- Television shows produced by Granada Television
- British English-language television shows
- MI6 in fiction
- British spy television series
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