![The Avengers Series 5 [Blu-ray] [2015]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71Doae-Zu6L.jpg)


All 24 episodes from the fifth season of the cult 1960s action series starring Patrick MacNee as top-level secret agent John Steed and Diana Rigg as martial arts expert Mrs Emma Peel. Episodes are: 'The Fear Merchants', 'Escape in Time', 'The Bird Who Knew Too Much', 'From Venus With Love', The See-Through Man', 'The Winged Avenger', 'The Living Dead', 'The Hidden Tiger', 'The Correct Way to Kill', 'Never, Never Say Die', 'Epic', 'The Superlative Seven', 'A Funny Thing Happened On the Way to the Station', 'Something Nasty in the Nursery', 'The Joker', 'Who's Who???', Death's Door', 'Return of the Cybernauts', 'Dead Man's Treasure', 'The £50,000 Breakfast', 'You Have Just Been Murdered', 'Murdersville', 'The Positive-Negative Man' and 'Mission... Highly Improbable'. Review: The Avengers 5 - This wonderful fifth series of The Avengers is one of the best remembered simply because it took the now successful series into the world of glorious colour. After the success of series four of the Avengers in America and in Britain a fifth series in colour was certain to be a hit. And it was. All of the successful factors from the previous series were still there. But the colour gave the series a big lift. Everything looks fabulous. The producers made good use of the colour element by embracing all of the glorious colours of fashionable sixties culture. The episode plot lines are still a good mixture of adventure, humour and science fiction. The chemistry between Peel and Steed still continues. The leather look is replaced with smart jump suits that give the character a youthful and athletic appeal. And her fashion clothes are stylish in design. Peel has an avant-garde fashion that features bold accents and high-contrast geometric patterns emphasising her youthful, contemporary personality. She represented the modern England of the Sixties - just as Steed, with his vintage style and mannerisms, personified Edwardian era nostalgia. A prologue appears at the beginning of all the fourth series episodes. This involves Steed pouring two glasses of champagne. Mrs Peel and Steed come together and they clink glasses and the theme music begins with the opening credits. The American version had a different basis, which was designed to clarify who and what the Avengers were. In the opener, a waiter holding a champagne bottle falls dead with a dagger in his back onto a human-sized chessboard. Steed and Mrs. Peel walk up to the body as the voice over explains: "Extraordinary crimes against the people, and the state, have to be avenged by agents extraordinary. Two such people are John Steed, top professional, and his partner Emma Peel, talented amateur. Otherwise known as The Avengers." During this voice over, Steed pours two drinks from the wine bottle. They clink glasses and depart together. This fifth series of the Avengers was the best to that date. And still has the feel of quality nearly fifty years after its creation. Producers gave the character Emma Peel because they wanted a female character with "man appeal". This was shortened to "M appeal" or "M a ppeal" and therefore Emma Peel. She has the same self-assuredness of Cathy Gale, combined with superior fighting skills, intelligence, and a contemporary fashion sense. There are some good bonus features, The individual DVD cases fit far too tight into the outer box and there are no subtitles. Also the picture and sound are very good. There has been some criticism of these DVD releases in terms of picture, sound and cuts, but I found nothing that bad about these released to truly worry about. The series is in fabulous colour and these are some of the best episodes ever and this series is a treat. Review: The Avengers never looked better! - Wow! This is an amazing release. Superb series, arguably the peak Avengers series. The picture quality on this is absolutely sublime. For me it really enhances the sixtiesness of it all, the rich, sumptuous colours are beautiful and the costumes and sets just pop. Give it a go.
| Contributor | Billy Cornelius, Diana Rigg, Edwin Richfield, Frank Maher, Norman Chappell, Patrick MacNee, Patrick Newell, Philip Madoc, Romo Gorrara, Terence Plummer Contributor Billy Cornelius, Diana Rigg, Edwin Richfield, Frank Maher, Norman Chappell, Patrick MacNee, Patrick Newell, Philip Madoc, Romo Gorrara, Terence Plummer See more |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 700 Reviews |
| Format | Blu-ray, PAL |
| Genre | Action & Adventure, Romance |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 05055201827999 |
| Language | English |
| Number of discs | 7 |
| Publication date | 22 Jun. 2015 |
| Runtime | 16 hours |
| Season ID | 5th |
M**A
The Avengers 5
This wonderful fifth series of The Avengers is one of the best remembered simply because it took the now successful series into the world of glorious colour. After the success of series four of the Avengers in America and in Britain a fifth series in colour was certain to be a hit. And it was. All of the successful factors from the previous series were still there. But the colour gave the series a big lift. Everything looks fabulous. The producers made good use of the colour element by embracing all of the glorious colours of fashionable sixties culture. The episode plot lines are still a good mixture of adventure, humour and science fiction. The chemistry between Peel and Steed still continues. The leather look is replaced with smart jump suits that give the character a youthful and athletic appeal. And her fashion clothes are stylish in design. Peel has an avant-garde fashion that features bold accents and high-contrast geometric patterns emphasising her youthful, contemporary personality. She represented the modern England of the Sixties - just as Steed, with his vintage style and mannerisms, personified Edwardian era nostalgia. A prologue appears at the beginning of all the fourth series episodes. This involves Steed pouring two glasses of champagne. Mrs Peel and Steed come together and they clink glasses and the theme music begins with the opening credits. The American version had a different basis, which was designed to clarify who and what the Avengers were. In the opener, a waiter holding a champagne bottle falls dead with a dagger in his back onto a human-sized chessboard. Steed and Mrs. Peel walk up to the body as the voice over explains: "Extraordinary crimes against the people, and the state, have to be avenged by agents extraordinary. Two such people are John Steed, top professional, and his partner Emma Peel, talented amateur. Otherwise known as The Avengers." During this voice over, Steed pours two drinks from the wine bottle. They clink glasses and depart together. This fifth series of the Avengers was the best to that date. And still has the feel of quality nearly fifty years after its creation. Producers gave the character Emma Peel because they wanted a female character with "man appeal". This was shortened to "M appeal" or "M a ppeal" and therefore Emma Peel. She has the same self-assuredness of Cathy Gale, combined with superior fighting skills, intelligence, and a contemporary fashion sense. There are some good bonus features, The individual DVD cases fit far too tight into the outer box and there are no subtitles. Also the picture and sound are very good. There has been some criticism of these DVD releases in terms of picture, sound and cuts, but I found nothing that bad about these released to truly worry about. The series is in fabulous colour and these are some of the best episodes ever and this series is a treat.
D**C
The Avengers never looked better!
Wow! This is an amazing release. Superb series, arguably the peak Avengers series. The picture quality on this is absolutely sublime. For me it really enhances the sixtiesness of it all, the rich, sumptuous colours are beautiful and the costumes and sets just pop. Give it a go.
M**F
The Avengers - in colour ! - BLU-RAY par excellence !!!!
It seems to me canal has hit the jackpot with their new blu-ray in its avengers range. The blu- ray discs feature all episodes from the Macnee/Rigg 1966/1967 coloured episodes and being struck from the original negatives are as stunning to look at as the monochrome triumphs of the previous boxset, in terms of crystal clear clarity. This pivotal season is a true snapshot of a halcyon time with bold purples and oranges, clashing stylishly to bring the viewer a slice of psychedelic witchery. This season pulls out all the stops in its sheer uniqueness for a spy series blending a Britishness now seldom seen, with espionage, scientific misdeamenours coupled with borderline surreality ensures we are constantly reminded we are waltzing through avengerland. The prints are eye popping, the colours are the best we have seen. The felt on the bowler hat, the cracks in Emma Peels gaudily chic leather jackets, the weaves on the sassy Emma Peelers and even steam whirling it's way from a coffee cup are a joy to behold and so sharp. We are plunged into a day glo whirlpool of the old etonian and the trendy, hip bubble of swinging london. The show stands up well by being old school but never a relic and is deserved to receive the 'cult' status it duly deserves. The storylines vary but all contain a little something magical and when it is at it's most glib can wow us back with some stunning visuals. We can see now that we are at the peak of The Avengers tenure in the way visually and aurally it seems so cinematic. With the enhanced quality these , as the monochrome, are mini-movies in their own right. We can now revel in sheer HD glory. I know this is a pricey blu-ray collection but those wowed by the monochrome epics from season 4 will be in for a premium treat . certain episodes look so different this seems at times like you're watching something for the first time due to it's freshness. Another highlight is the clarity of the music and this really does bring forth Laurie johnsons incidental music and makes you realise how important it is to the going ons when our intrepid duo progress with their bizarre caseloads. The perfect release for affonciados or those wanting to be thrilled by a bastion of a retro cult series - this immaculate collection is the ultimate for how any show of such wit, haughtiness, style that celebrates the sheer 60's zeitgist of swinging london should be viewed. Let's paint London paisley and shimmer under a kaleidoscopic moon - ahhh - we must be in avenger land !
M**T
WORTH THE MONEY
I HAVE ALWAYS ENJOYED THE AVENGERS ON TV. THIS IS A VERY GOOD SET OF DVDS.
G**E
The Avengers - Series 5 (in colour)
Simply class TV from the mid-60s. It’s about as inventive and sophisticated as TV can be and Peel and Steed own the screens for each episode. They don’t make ‘em like that any more has never been truer. Great stuff.
M**N
Dvds
Great set of DVDs thanks
C**G
Corrected disks were received, Jan. 2013
In case people were holding off buying due to the numerous complaints about the defective disks, I wanted to let you know I ordered my set in Jan. 2013 and it arrived with the corrected, "V3" disks. For those not used to listening to material filmed at 24fps played at PAL's 25fps, it takes a little getting used to the slight speed-up in the audio. At first I was concerned I'd gotten a bad set after hearing Steed, but I checked the disk codes and they read "V3." Also, Mrs. Peel's voice sounds fine, definitely not like Minnie Mouse. If you're an American, like me, and don't know what PAL is and why you need a special DVD player, then don't buy these disks. I have a region-free DVD player, so I knew I'd have no problem watching the disks, which was lucky because Amazon.co.uk did not warn me about the disks being incompatible with my region. The Avengers DVDs are out-of-print in the U.S., so you have to buy them at inflated prices off the web. I couldn't rate Series 5 at 5 stars because the "Mrs. Peel, We're Needed," gags are just too cute. Also, I'm saving the fifth star for Series 4, which should arrive in a couple of weeks.
A**R
Blu ray thee Avengers
Very enjoyable good clear picture, thank you
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منذ أسبوعين
منذ أسبوعين