Les aventures du légendaire bandit de grand chemin anglais du XVIIIe siècle.Les aventures du légendaire bandit de grand chemin anglais du XVIIIe siècle.Les aventures du légendaire bandit de grand chemin anglais du XVIIIe siècle.
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I must admit that I like this show of very sentimental reasons. I was only five and loved this show really much. For a month ago i bought the DVD containing series 1. I forgot that the episodes lasted 25 minutes. Seeing it again tells how good the production value is of this series. It is really fast paced and contains a lot of humor. Qua ambiance you can compare this with the "Sharpe" series). OK, you have to love period drama's and you have to like swashbuckling adventures! If you are in to that stuff,than you will enjoy this series. This show is far better than most shows they make now. Go rent if possible or buy it. You won't regret it.
I used to watch this series on TV back in the day when I was a kid, sometime during the 1980s. And I do actually remember it as being a good series and entertaining, especially for a young boy. And thus, as I had the opportunity to revisit the series here in 2024, of course I did so without a second thought.
The storyline told over the four seasons is a well-written and entertaining one. It is a storyline of highway robbery and swashbuckling, mixed with a light sense of comedy and some interesting characters. I have to say that I was genuinely entertained throughout the course of the four seasons. One thing about the seasons did puzzle me though, why the series started out with 13 episodes in season one, then was drastically reduced to 7, 5 and 6 episodes in seasons 2, 3 and 4 respectively. Nevertheless, the episodes proved entertaining as the story progressed.
Richard O'Sullivan did a great job in portraying the highway man Dick Turpin, as did Michael Deeks as Swiftnick. There are some good performances and a couple of familiar faces on the cast list as well, with the likes of David Daker, Mary Crosby, Patrick Macnee and Donald Pleasance.
If you enjoy period dramas and swashbuckling, then "Dick Turpin" is definitely a series well-worth sitting down and watching. And for a series that ran from 1979 to 1982, I have to say that the show actually still holds up today, which is a great testimony to the production value and the effort put into creating the series back then.
There is a good amount of fencing in the series, and it was performed quite nicely on the screen. And also a fair amount of gunfights, so the series definitely has some action elements to it as well.
It was definitely worth the effort of sitting down and revisiting it here in 2024. However, it would have been nice if they had at least ensured a proper ending to the series, and not leave the audience hanging - no pun intended.
My rating of "Dick Turpin" lands on a well-deserved six out of ten stars.
The storyline told over the four seasons is a well-written and entertaining one. It is a storyline of highway robbery and swashbuckling, mixed with a light sense of comedy and some interesting characters. I have to say that I was genuinely entertained throughout the course of the four seasons. One thing about the seasons did puzzle me though, why the series started out with 13 episodes in season one, then was drastically reduced to 7, 5 and 6 episodes in seasons 2, 3 and 4 respectively. Nevertheless, the episodes proved entertaining as the story progressed.
Richard O'Sullivan did a great job in portraying the highway man Dick Turpin, as did Michael Deeks as Swiftnick. There are some good performances and a couple of familiar faces on the cast list as well, with the likes of David Daker, Mary Crosby, Patrick Macnee and Donald Pleasance.
If you enjoy period dramas and swashbuckling, then "Dick Turpin" is definitely a series well-worth sitting down and watching. And for a series that ran from 1979 to 1982, I have to say that the show actually still holds up today, which is a great testimony to the production value and the effort put into creating the series back then.
There is a good amount of fencing in the series, and it was performed quite nicely on the screen. And also a fair amount of gunfights, so the series definitely has some action elements to it as well.
It was definitely worth the effort of sitting down and revisiting it here in 2024. However, it would have been nice if they had at least ensured a proper ending to the series, and not leave the audience hanging - no pun intended.
My rating of "Dick Turpin" lands on a well-deserved six out of ten stars.
Fantastic production design. Finely crafted stories. Inspired casting.
I watched it when I was a kid. I remember counting the days between the weekly airings. Heck, for me he was almost bigger than Robin Hood. So all in all I am probably a bit biased, but I recently bought the box set and found myself binge watching it and being genuinely entertained.
I watched it when I was a kid. I remember counting the days between the weekly airings. Heck, for me he was almost bigger than Robin Hood. So all in all I am probably a bit biased, but I recently bought the box set and found myself binge watching it and being genuinely entertained.
I loved this series when it was first transmitted and recently reacquainted myself with the series on DVD. Is it still worth watching?
First of all, this Dick Turpin is presented as an adventurer, friend of the poor, chivalrous to women, the voice of wisdom to his young sidekick Swiftnick.
Impeccably cast, Richard O'Sullivan has a whale of a time as the highwayman, and is hugely entertaining to watch. Michael Deeks (whatever happened to him?) is endearingly dumb as Swiftnick, while Christopher Benjamin is the blustering baddie, although more of a Lestrade than a Moriarty to O'Sullivan's Holmes!
The prints currently available on DVD really are awful though for a series which is less than thirty years old; this aside, if you are in the mood for some boy's own adventure, this is the series to watch. Enjoy.
First of all, this Dick Turpin is presented as an adventurer, friend of the poor, chivalrous to women, the voice of wisdom to his young sidekick Swiftnick.
Impeccably cast, Richard O'Sullivan has a whale of a time as the highwayman, and is hugely entertaining to watch. Michael Deeks (whatever happened to him?) is endearingly dumb as Swiftnick, while Christopher Benjamin is the blustering baddie, although more of a Lestrade than a Moriarty to O'Sullivan's Holmes!
The prints currently available on DVD really are awful though for a series which is less than thirty years old; this aside, if you are in the mood for some boy's own adventure, this is the series to watch. Enjoy.
So simple. Napoleon's blockade in the early 1800s. British smuggler swashbuckling in Normandy and Kent. English officers are the baddies (I don't remember seeing any French baddies).
All episodes are the same: escape from the British police, save the idiotic young sidekick, get the girl aka barmaid, kick the captain's butt, the captain is humiliated by the commander, kick the captain and the commander's butts. end.
So... what was so great ? ha ha ha the music of course ! The theme is completely amazing. It's been 20 years and the only reason why I remember this crappiest of all piece of ol'rubbish British TV from the late seventies is the music.
The French counterpart of this series is called Schulmeister, l'espion de l'Empereur, and it takes place during the same period of history with a former smuggler from Alsace, a fat version of Asterix, turned into an Imperial Commissioner (wow) and enforcing Napoleon's way all over Europe. Much more fun. Jacques Fabri is Schulmeister and Roger Carel is Hamel the sidekick.
But the music sucked. Big time.
All episodes are the same: escape from the British police, save the idiotic young sidekick, get the girl aka barmaid, kick the captain's butt, the captain is humiliated by the commander, kick the captain and the commander's butts. end.
So... what was so great ? ha ha ha the music of course ! The theme is completely amazing. It's been 20 years and the only reason why I remember this crappiest of all piece of ol'rubbish British TV from the late seventies is the music.
The French counterpart of this series is called Schulmeister, l'espion de l'Empereur, and it takes place during the same period of history with a former smuggler from Alsace, a fat version of Asterix, turned into an Imperial Commissioner (wow) and enforcing Napoleon's way all over Europe. Much more fun. Jacques Fabri is Schulmeister and Roger Carel is Hamel the sidekick.
But the music sucked. Big time.
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- AnecdotesThe pilot was originally intended for cinema release in the UK.
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Story of the Costume Drama: The Greatest Stories Ever Told (2008)
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- How many seasons does Dick Turpin have?Alimenté par Alexa
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By what name was Dick Le Rebelle (1979) officially released in India in English?
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