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Category:    Home > Reviews > Science Fiction > Existentialism > Action > British TV > Sapphire & Steel - The Complete Series (1978 - 1980/A&E U.S. DVD Edition/British Sci-Fi TV)

Sapphire & Steel - The Complete Series (1978 - 1980/A&E U.S. DVD Edition/British Sci-Fi TV)



Picture: C+ Sound: C+ Extras: B Episodes: A-



PLEASE NOTE: This version is out of print, but an updated DVD set was issued in the U.K. in 2007 and we have updated the review in mid-2020, with more updates to come.



One of the problems with recent Horror films and TV series are their need and desire to emulate Stanley Kubrick's The Shining (1980, now issued in an exceptional 4K edition), but with no place to go. We are referring to the part where mysterious sounds and voices emulate from hallways, though their sources are never revealed. You can always tell how bad such genre work is when they imitate and go no further. A year prior to Kubrick's masterwork, a British TV series surfaced that achieved cult classic status, but deserved much more. P. J. Hammond created Sapphire & Steel and it has to be the most innovative British TV series since The Avengers added Diana Rigg. It tries to explore that dimension most works in the genre, especially by current posers, feign.


The next logic step after Doctor Who and his time traveling (even figuring in the currently successful revival series), the title characters represent the elements of their name and are sent to resolve bizarre phenomenon that they have a responsibility to fix. That is because they are among a small elite that can. Only they have the power and knowledge. David McCallum, still best known for the TV Spy classic The Man From U.N.C.L.E. (reviewed on DVD elsewhere on this site), is Steel. He is a no-nonsense investigator using his sensory powers, telepathy and near-telekinesis, coming out of nowhere to the location of the irregularity. He is joined by Sapphire, played by Joanna Lumley. Though now best known for the international hit British TV comedy show Absolutely Fabulous, the long-time character actress had just come off of another Spy series, The New Avengers. That show (in two volumes, reviewed elsewhere on this site, expected on Blu-ray at some point) did not break any ground and was not the hit that was hoped for. The show had its moments, but tried to be too comical and too realistic, resulting in a backfiring effect despite al the great talent involved. Lumley was a great match for McCallum and both landed what remains the best series either of them ever made.


Over a decade before X-Files, these were not government agents of any kind, just (as the voiceover in the opening credits explain) skilled beings who had simply been 'assigned' to battle potential supernatural and existential evil. They are not played as comic like the far more 'regular' human existentialist detectives of I 'Heart' Huckabees, who had nothing supernatural to take on, but were better prepared than Darren McGavin's Carl Kolchak in the 1972 Night Stalker telefilm, its Night Strangler sequel (now out on exceptional Blu-ray discs, DVD reviewed elsewhere on the site as a great double feature DVD) and the 20-episode Kolchak: The Night Stalker series. Sapphire & Steel is at least a smart as the best X-Files and was far ahead of it in trying to be the next Kolchak. However, it is more than original enough to go a few rounds with any of those shows, not an easy achievement.


Like Dr. Who, each story is serialized in multiple half-hour time slotted shows, which are also marked with roman numerals on the cases, though we more recently found out these added titles where someone else's titles coming from a source even the creators have zero ideas on their origin. For the record and because they are on this U.S. DVD set, we'll keep them, but they are only supposed to be identified by 'Assignment' followed by a number, as follows:


  1. Escape Through A Crack In Time - The duo debut in a case where the parents of young children have disappeared. The answer lies in the history of the family's house, if they can figure it out before it is too late.


  1. The Railway Station - An old-fashioned investigator doing ghost detecting is ill equipped to find out what is haunting the abandoned title location, though it may not be as empty as it seems. A long one that really adds up.


  1. The Creature's Revenge - A set of time investigators beat the duo to a location where they are conducting their own scientific analysis of an alternate 1980 in the first world, i.e. Britain or America. As clever and brilliant as its predecessors.


  1. The Man Without A Face - Children disappear, a strange landlord who is not memorable, and photographs that trap human souls mix it up with the duo in this short-but-effective entry. I had to wonder if Russell Mulcahy used one of the visual devices here for his classic Music Video of Fleetwood Mac's hit Gypsy.


  1. Dr. McDee Must Die - A group of ten guests are gathered for a dinner circa 1930. Instead of one of the guests about to be murdered, someone dead and dearly missed turns up out of nowhere and the metallurgic duo disguise themselves as society people to find out how, before the guests start getting killed off for different reasons. Brilliant twist on the Mystery genre and another winner for the series. The great character actor Jeremy Child guest stars. If you liked Lumley in Peter Bogdanovich's The Cat's Meow (highly underrated and unseen, reviewed on this site), then you will enjoy this even more.

  2. The Trap - When the duo arrive for their latest assignment, it seems like they have been accidentally sent too late, then something else turns up no one is expecting. Edward De Souza guest stars in a fascinating end to the original series.



Producer/director Shaun O'Riordan (Brian Clemens' Thriller, Scorpion Tales) set the standard for the show, even if he could not be as involved and handed over directing duties for the fourth and final/sixth stories. This is a great moment in British TV history and its arrival on DVD is one of the best events the format will offer in 2005. With no pun intended, this is also a major gem in the A&E DVD catalog.


The full frame 1.33 X 1 image is stylishly shot on PAL videotape and except for an odd, slight ghosting that comes from the transfer for whatever reason, looks good and is color consistent. This is the kind of creative, clever use of video we hardly have seen yet with digital High Definition, including the credit sequences by Ivor Weir. The Dolby Digital 2.0 is stereo boosted from the original TV monophonic sound and benefits this show more than usual. Cyril Ornadel's scoring is exceptional too, which is what you would expect from someone with his genre music credentials. No, there are no Pro Logic surrounds, but there is a very smart use of sound throughout the series and that is all the clearer here.


We hope a Blu-ray with lossless sound and all the episodes restored and upscaled for 1080i video from the original PAL masters might turn up at some point like the Tom Baker Doctor Who episodes have been, the U.K. DVD set has the same menus, sound and picture, though it is slightly more color rich than the U.S. DVD set here. With more extras than the U.S. DVD, the 2007 U.K. DVD set will remain definitive until a Blu-ray rolls around.


Extras include audio commentaries by Hammond on the first show, O'Riordan on the first installment of the second show, and audio-only introduction by both on DVDs 3 - 6 that have wavy lines to look at. DVD 6 also has text biographies of the leads, O'Riordan's original voice over narration, and a still gallery on the show from Hammond's collection including his ITC brochure on the series. WARNING: the commentaries and introductions have spoilers and should be experienced AFTER you have watched the entire series.


Like Space: 1999, this series was ended earlier than need be by Lord Lew Grade's feature film risks that backfired. Unlike that series, reviewed elsewhere on this site, this one had not gone down hill due to inane and unnecessary changes. If anything, Sapphire & Steel was just getting warmed up and ended too soon. To date, there has been no revival, though McCallum did an U.N.C.L.E. telefilm reunion along with stealing the show NCIS in every scene he appears in and Lumley kept landing interesting roles and is now a huge icon. This is a must see show and is highly collectible in this great set. Be sure to catch it!



- Nicholas Sheffo


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