Product Details
Harry's Game The Complete Series [1983] [DVD]

Harry's Game The Complete Series [1983] [DVD]
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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6168 in DVD
  • Released on: 2005-08-22
  • Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Format: PAL
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 150 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
Captain Harry Brown is called in to track down and assassinate a member of the Provisional IRA who has recently gunned down a Cabinet Minister in London. Brown must kill his man on his own turf and send out a clear signal to the terrorist organisation...


Customer Reviews

"I don't fancy your chances Harry...4
...not when the provos come to get you.". I'm delighted to see this is making an appearence on DVD as the video title has been deleted for some time. "Harry's Game" was a 1983 Yorkshire television 3-part mini series about Harry Brown, a British agent sent to infiltrate the IRA in Belfast and find and kill the assassin of a cabinet minister.

I remember being deeply moved by it at the time, especially by the rather shocking ending. Its treatment of "the troubles" in Northern Ireland was perhaps the most sophisticated and even-handed that had been seen in a drama at that time, though it may have dated a little now.

The theme tune was by Clannad and its success sparked off their international success.

A great series finally on DVD5
Harry's Game made a huge impact when first shown in 1983 and at last it is realeased in its original format [unlike its video release]. Rarely for a thriller, the television adation is reasonably faithful to the source novel. The thriller is set mainly in Northern Ireland where an English undercover operations soldier, Harry Brown, is set deep into 'Provo-land' to track and hunt down the murderer of a British Minister believed to be in Belfast.

Without wanting to tell the whole story, the thriller sets up a blinding climax with one of the best final twists ever seen in a TV thriller. The series is well-acted with bravura performances by the leads Ray Lonnen and Derek Thompson who are well supported by Geoffrey Chater and Benjamin Whitrow. The DVD has one [unexpected] extra - an interview with Ray Lonnen which lasts around 20 minutes who has gives an interesting insight into the makling of the show.

An excellent series is a must-buy for those who have a serious interest in classic TV drama and who can forget the haunting theme tune provided by Clannad?

"Into the heart of Provoland" ...5
Gerald Seymour was for many years a reporter for Independent Television News, his assignments covering the Vietnam War, the Indo-Pakistan conflict, the Aden crisis, the Northern Ireland troubles, the Yom Kippur War, and the abduction and murder of Prime-Minister Aldo Moro in Italy. He has written several highly-regarded novels, based on both actual events and first-hand knowledge, such as THE GLORY BOYS (televised as a two-part serial), Kingfisher, RED FOX (televised as a three-part serial), Condition Black, At Close Quarters, The Journeyman Tailor and the contentious The Heart Of Danger (1995), in which both the UN's limitations and legal ineptitude, and several governments' politically-embarrassing shenanigans are exposed as an attempt is made by 'private enterprise' to abduct from Bosnia and bring to a war crimes trial a murderous Bosnian-Serb paramilitary enforcer - an act of 'justice' perhaps, but unfortunately also certain to scupper then-ongoing peace negotiations. The theme of all of these novels is a sad inevitability of troubled but courageous individuals, powerless and marginalized by the merciless grind of 'the bigger picture' going on facelessly around them.

Seymour's first novel was HARRY'S GAME, sombre, melancholy and tragic. The IRA send a man to London to assassinate the Secretary of State for Social Services, Henry Danby, M.P. ... on his own doorstep in Belgrave Square, in front of his wife and children. This is viewed as a 'direct attack' on Her Majesty's Government, and the PM - with clenched fists - instructs 'maximum effort' from his cautious RUC Chief Constable and the sceptical GOC Northern Ireland, no stone to be left unturned in the pursuit of this killer. When they have left the Cabinet Office briefing-room, the PM authorizes an undercover operation without the RUC and British Army in Northern Ireland being informed. From an easy posting with Berlin Brigade, enter Captain Harry James Brown (Ray Lonnen) who is to be "put into the heart of Provoland, into the Falls, in Belfast [...] with the express and only job of listening for any word of the man who shot the minister, Danby, three days ago."

As Harry McEvoy, merchant seaman, who has been away for over ten years, Brown's unfamiliarity with the Falls, Andersonstown and the Ardoyne is partly excused as he settles into his covert and highly perilous mission. But Ireland has a gift: its charm, perhaps even a magic, has absorbed all invaders and newcomers, from the Norwegian Vikings and Normans of yesteryear down to today's holidaymakers - one easily becomes part of the place. Harry becomes too involved, and this cruel irony is revealed in the final frames ...

It still being 1982, and with the wave of hunger-strikes (Bobby Sands, et al) putting Northern Ireland on the headlines of foreign newspapers as well, the outdoor scenes were shot in England, mostly in the run-down estates of Leeds. This was a very good and accurate-to-the-original television adaptation of a thoughtful novel (the later RED FOX was neither as good nor as accurate) that will now seem quite dated - fortunately thanks to the ongoing peace accord efforts. Today it is best remembered thanks to Maíre Brennan's haunting vocals: Irish group Clannad's signature tune 'Theme from Harry's Game' was the first Celtic-vocals song to reach No. 1 in the British pop charts.

HARRY'S GAME contains loose parallels with the real-life events of both Grenadier Guards/SAS Captain Robert Nairac, GC's undercover operation (and his brutal murder by the IRA on 15 May, 1977), and the 1979 assassination in the Houses of Parliament underground carpark of Shadow Northern Ireland Secretary Airey Neave, MP. Several of the characters who first appeared in HARRY'S GAME, principally Howard Rennie of the RUC, featured again later in Field Of Blood.

There have been several more film and TV dramas set against The Troubles in Northern Ireland: CAL, CHILDREN OF THE NORTH, THE CRYING GAME and PATRIOT GAMES, but I'd say HARRY'S GAME is the best. Because in it people die, hope is smashed, and ... nobody wins.

Perhaps the tragedy of The Troubles in Northern Ireland can be felt in the rare beauty and heartfelt simplicity of a twelve-year-old girl's poem. Catholic magistrate William Staunton had just dropped his two daughters at their convent school and was watching them from his car when two IRA motor-cyclists came up and shot him. Staunton lingered for three months before dying. One of the newspapers published the girl's poem:

'Don't cry,' Mummy said
'They're not real.'
But Daddy was
And he's not here.

'Don't be bitter,' Mummy said
'They've hurt themselves much more.'
But they can walk and run -
Daddy can't.

'Forgive them and forget,' Mummy said
But can Daddy know I do?
'Smile for Daddy, kiss him well,' Mummy said,
But can I ever?