The Saint MegaSet (Full
Color Roger Moore Episodes)
Picture: B-
Sound: C+ Extras: D Episodes: B
Sir Roger Moore! Yes, the great Brit is finally getting
knighted. Many cannot believe it
finally is happening, with many feeling it is long overdue, but it will finally
happen. Coincidentally, after issuing
all his full color appearances as Simon Templar, A&E is issuing The
Saint MegaSet, featuring every single color show Moore ever logged form
1966 – 1969. The series had a long,
glorious run and its great to have all 47 color shows on DVD. The Saint is not a spy, but a crook with a
heart of gold who goes globe-trotting, getting involved in adventures for money
or personal reasons. He has a bad
reputation, yet also helps certain people in need when he wants to. He has several ways he gets around, but is
most famous for riding around in his ivory white Volvo P1800, a classic sports
model from the conservatively designed made.
The shows are as follows, with a # symbol next to the exceptional shows
that are either key highlights or outstanding examples of what the series was
capable of above their usually higher standards:
1966
The Queen’s Ransom
Interlude in Venice
The Russian Prisoner [#]
The Reluctant Revolution
The Helpful Pirate
The Convenient Monster
The Angel’s Eye
The Man Who Liked Lions
The Better Mousetrap
Little Girl Lost
Paper Chase
Locate and Destroy
Flight Plan [#]
Escape Route [#]
1967
The Persistent Patriots [#]
The Fast Women [#]
The Death Game [#]
The Art Collectors
To Kill A Saint [#]
The Counterfeit Countess
Simon and Delilah [#]
Island of Chance
The Gadget Lovers [#]
A Double in Diamonds [#]
The Power Artists
When Spring is Spring
1968
The Gadic Collection
The Best Laid Schemes
Invitation to Danger [#]
Legacy for the Saint
The Desperate Diplomat
The Organisation Man
The Double Take
The Time to Die
The Master Plan
The House on Dragon’s Rock
The Scales of Justice
The Fiction Makers (2 parts,
shown in feature film cut) [#]
The People Importers
Where the Money Is
1969
Vendetta for the Saint (2 parts,
credits cut off of part two’s opening)
The Ex-King of Diamonds
The Man who Gambled with Life
Portrait of Brenda
The World Beater
Each show opens with a voice-over
reflection by Templar, then the action kicks in. After a tussle, some other words are exchanged and as son as we
hear the words “Simon Templar”, the credits kick in. There are variations, but that is the formula. Of course, the show actually began in black
and white back in 1962, running four years before the shows in this set. Some very talented writers, directors and
stars made those shows too, but they were more laid-back than the later
era. After years in various movie
studio feature films, including work at M-G-M, Moore was finally an international
star. He was almost James Bond, but
Sean Connery got that role after a long search. Moore missed the role in 1968 because he was doing these
episodes, then went directly onto The Persuaders (A&E will do all
the DVDs of that show too), but became Bond by 1973.
The show was on two networks in
the U.S., plus syndication in its long run.
Edwin Astley’s theme song is well known, and Moore himself eventually
directed. After a series of B-movies at
RKO Studios, and some films in France based on the character, the TV show
finally managed to bring the long running and successful Leslie Charteris book
series (45 novels in all) to life.
The full screen image quality on
each episode varies, but the better ones have fine color, especially early on
when a more complex color system was being used. The show went to EastmanColor and gained in definition somewhat,
but at the expense of color richness.
That change is best explained in my review of Saint Set Five,
elsewhere on this site. At their
poorest, somewhat muddy second or third-generation prints were used that look
as bad as the notoriously bad rear projection many an ITC series is known for.
All shows have Dolby Digital 2.0
Mono, but at A&E/New Video’s higher 384 kilobits-per-second configuration throughout. Occasionally, there are sound flaws one
expects from prints of this age, but those are few. There are hardly any extras, except stills and TV trailers for
each show corresponding with the DVDs they appear on, and text information (A
History of The Saint and both biography & filmography information on Moore)
that are repeated to death. There are
no stills of any promo print material, tie-in merchandise or interviews with
anyone involved with the show. It is
something for A&E to consider if they ever issue the previous black and
white shows.
The fourteen alpha-pak cases are
in a nicely illustrated paperboard slidecase, very much in the mode of the
previous seven double sets issued of the show.
Either way, you are going to get high-quality packaging that looks good,
no matter what route you take. Moore is
underappreciated in what he does here in action, acting, and witty comedy. This is smart, fun work. There has never been a show like it before,
and will probably never be again. Moore
and the combination of talents created a believable (if sometimes
phony-looking) situation the viewer could buy into each week. Other incarnations of Templar have had to
find new approaches, because Moore has this one all to himself. That is why The Saint is an all-time
TV classic and a must for all serious collections.
- Nicholas Sheffo