recommended
... View Morejust watch it!
... View MoreHow wonderful it is to see this fine actress carry a film and carry it so beautifully.
... View MoreOne of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
... View MoreAdam Adamant Lives! was created by Richard Harris and Donald Cotton. Dr Who producer Verity Lambert also produced this series.Edwardian adventurer Adam Adamant(Gerald Harper)is frozen in 1902 by his arch enemy. In 1960's London, he is found by workmen and revived.Aided by Georgina Jones (Juliet Harmer), Adam continues to fight criminals and tries to adjust to a much changed world. I love the scenes in the first episode where Adam ventures out into 1960's London, he is disorientated and overwhelmed, Harper and the camera and sound capture that so well.Harper is superb as Adamant, in this character and his performance you can find traces of John Steed and Simon Templar. He is so suave and classy, he can defend himself very well and you certainly don't want to get into a fight with him.I love the relationship between him and Georgina, scenes between them are my favourites in the series.I'm not really a fan of remakes, but I think a new series of this set today would work very well if done right.
... View MoreGerald Harper reprises the role of earlier hero 'Captain Moonlight' as back-from-the-dead Adam Adamant.The Edwardian gentleman-hero is seduced by a femme-fatale and defeated by his arch enemy. Quite why this enemy plunges him into suspended animation instead of just drowning him in the Thames is one of those riddles that have dogged master criminals for decades. He is discovered in a block of ice during demolition work, and revived in the swinging sixties. Oh Lucky Man.During his recovery phase he falls in with a typical dolly-bird of the decade, and a reluctant (on his part) companionship develops. The decade may be swinging, but he's still a gentleman, so there's no hanky-panky takes place - bit like 'Dr Who' and his nubile assistants.Whereas Cpt Moonlight drove a BMW Isetta bubblecar and was targeted at a kids audience, Adamant drove a Mini Cooper and was aimed at adults. Both had capes and swordsticks, both sorted out the scumbags of their time.It was a fun idea that - like so much British TV - was so badly funded it creaked. Harper was good in his role, though a tad uncharismatic. We didn't discover much about his personality during the programs. The series descended into what all series do if they go on for long enough. Just 10 episodes would have left it as a stand-alone minor classic.Ain't seen it since the original screening, though I believe it's out on DVD. Don't expect too much and you may enjoy it.
... View MoreI'm pleased to report that Adam Adamant remains largely as entertaining to its fans who remember it as when first viewed 40 years back. Adamant is the gracious man of action propelled through the marvels of suspended animation by a devious foe, Samurai Jack-like, to the future - an enigmatic event revisited in brief flash back by the programme most weeks. And best of all at the start of each episode, the larger than life mood is set splendidly by a memorable Goldfinger-like ballad, sung by a full throated Kathy Kirby.The first episode sets up the key situation, and all the others I have seen thereafter take place in the 60's, with the now 99 year-old, but still youthful, adventurer taking on a different bunch of foes each week - often at the unoffficial behest of the British Government, who value his peculiar, off beat talent for sniffing out dire deeds.Aiding Adamant in his efforts is a vaguely camp, risqué limerick loving, manservant Simms - permanently installed in his discreet flat hidden above a London car park - and Miss Jones (Juliet Harmer), a young, impulsive, typically swinging sixties bird, who inevitably gets into scrapes and precipitates the main crisis each week as she gets captured. Adamant himself is amusingly disdainful of modern mores and fashions - although he does allow himself the pleasure of driving a mini one notices. He also remains impeccably dressed in the style of a 1880's gentleman, complete with spats, waist coat and a sword stick (making up an odd if dashing, figure, never made an object of derision, even by his fiercest enemies).Those who enjoy the tongue in cheek qualities which hallmarked The Avengers will find some similarities here, not just in the dashing, Steed-like turn out of the central character (and indeed it shares at least one of that programme's writers, Brian Clemens, at times) although it has to be admitted the better known show deserves its superior reputation. The Adamant script formula is fairly rigid by comparison, with the same set ups each week - including the prompt and slightly ludicrous appearance of Miss Jones as employee in every establishment which finds itself under suspicion - and it lacks the implicit sexual magneticism, larger budget, and surreal sophistication of the other show. Despite the best charms of Miss Jones, Adamant is above real flirtation (although he is a ladies' man in his own, genteel way) an element of his character which somewhat weakens a potentially interesting relationship.More often than not Adam confronts each week a conspiracy of some sort against the general public or public finances, whether it originates from a bunch of crooked embalmers, religious fanatics, frock designers, casino operators, record companies and soap manufacturers - or even from those who, in one episode, plan to devastate Blackpool's golden mile, with exploding light bulbs no less.The best moments of the series are usually in the weird Adamant household, with some low level bitching usually going on between frosty, ever loyal manservant and Miss Jones. Some episodes rise to very entertaining heights, notably the one set within a fashion house this while, as Adamant kills the odd henchman with his sword stick or exposes the workings of an evil escort agency, one is reminded that not all viewers would have been youngsters. But over all, its very atmospheric fun, marvelously preserved, very much of its period if you care for the time capsule experience.The set includes a whimsical, but ultimately not very informative, commentary on one or two shows by the now elderly Adamant (Gerald Harper) and associates, as well as a documentary and stills from the missing episodes. No less a talent than Ridley Scott worked on one episode - very much a journeyman effort - of which not all exist. Those which do are largely from the first of two seasons. Fortunately each one stands alone, enjoyable in their own right.
... View MoreI regret to say that I never saw 'Adam Adamant Lives!' at the time. My first encounter proper was in the early 1990's when the first two episodes came out on video. I was hooked! Sadly there were no further releases. I got in touch with someone who had copies of the surviving episodes ( many of appalling picture and sound quality ) and could see that here was another innovative and inventive series from the creative mind of Sydney Newman ( his others include 'The Avengers' and 'Dr.Who' ). Placed in suspended animation by his arch-enemy 'The Face', the dashing Edwardian hero Adam Adamant ( Gerald Harper ) was found and revived in 1966, where he, aided and abetted by his sidekicks - the wide-eyed Mod Georgina Jones and 'Jeeves'-like butler William Simms, battled evil in the modern world. In 'The Sweet Smell Of Disaster', for instance, Kinthley ( Charles Tingwell ) tries to get the country hooked on the scent of a new kind of soap powder. 'The Doomsday Plan' has Dr.Mort ( Peter Vaughan ) out to fake a nuclear attack on London. 'Sing A Song Of Murder' involves pop music turning teenagers into criminals. It was surprisingly violent at times; Adam never failed to run someone through with his sword if he thought they deserved it, and in one episode a man was impaled on a steering wheel.Verity Lambert produced, the scripts were by amongst others Brian Clemens and Tony Williamson. Ridley Scott directed several episodes. Being a video-taped B.B.C. production, it stood no chance of competing with the more expensive filmed shows made by I.T.C., but worked well on its own terms.Gerald Harper cut a dash as the caped Adamant, sword stick forever at the ready. There was humour in his attempts to adjust to the modern world. Kathy Kirby sang the Bond-like theme song, and Bernard Lodge's titles blended Victoriana and '60's chic. So popular was 'Adam' that he followed 'The Avengers' into the pages of 'T.V. Comic'! The first season outperformed 'The Man From U.N.C.L.E.' in the ratings in Britain. In the second year, Peter Ducrow was reintroduced as 'The Face'. Many episodes no longer exist, alas, but those that do are entertaining and amusing. B.B.C.-4 ran a documentary - 'The Cult Of Adam Adamant' - a while back, and the series has been issued on D.V.D.( To the unnamed author of the comment entitled 'First Episode', I see you have chosen to submit a hostile review when, by your own admission, you watched only half of the first episode. You do not seem to have grasped the fact that it was a fantasy adventure, and as such was not intended to be taken seriously. )
... View More