"The Avengers" Death Dispatch (TV Episode 1962) Poster

(TV Series)

(1962)

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8/10
The murder of a courier takes Steed and Cathy from Jamaica to South America
Tweekums29 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
When a courier taking a diplomatic pouch from Washington to Santiago is killed in Jamaica it is far from obvious why; there was nothing of obvious interest to a foreign power in the case. On the assumption that the attacker will have another go at acquiring the case Steed, who just happens to be in Jamaica, is given the task of taking the case to Santiago. He is assisted by Cathy Gale who flies in specially. As they head south attackers try to steal the case in Bogota. Then in Lima, Steed sets a trap for the villain but is surprised when he finds somebody else has killed the man who broken into his room and photographed the documents. They must continue to Santiago to discover who wanted the documents and why.

I rather enjoyed this story; the exotic settings gave it the feel of an early James Bond story… even if apart from some establishing library footage of each location it is clearly shot in studios. The idea of a group plotting a coup in Chile is plausible and when we learn just what the plotters were attempting to steal it makes sense. There are some laughs to be had; mostly as Steed torments a functionary who is trying to keep him in the consulate in Santiago. Patrick Macnee and Honor Blackman are on good form as Steed and Cathy; the latter stood out particularly not just because we see her wearing surprisingly little for a programme of this era… she also speaks in what sounded like decent Spanish, at least to somebody who doesn't speak that language! The rest of the cast are solid enough. Overall I'd say this might disappoint fans of the more surreal episodes but I really enjoyed the more realistic story.
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6/10
Couriers & Politics
profh-121 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Steed replaces a courier who was murdered when no one can figure out why. Shadowed by Cathy, they hop from country to country until they find out the information being carried included the travel itinerary of an American ambassador, whose assassination will cause chaos and allow a coup to take place.

This is NOT your normal AVENGERS episode by any means!

The murdered man, Alan Baxter (Hedger Wallace) reminded me, as someone who's actually read all of Ian Fleming's novels, of the James Bond of the books. So imagine Bond getting bumped off on a routine assignment; who will take his place? Who else by Patrick Macnee's John Steed, in full-on "George Sanders" mode. He's casual, he's cavalier, he seems more out to have fun than do his job, and at one point, he drives a wimpy embassy official (who has NO idea he's really a SPY!) up a wall.

Steed's recurring boss at the time, "One-Ten" (Douglas Muir) oddly is the one to call Catherine Gale into things, rather than Steed himself. One would get the impression this has been going on for some time... so imagine my surprise when, although this was Cathy's 9th story aired, it was her 1st filmed! Honor Blackman is so RELAXED for most of this episode, it feels more like a 3rd-season story than early-2nd. Perhaps this is why it was held back so far. In most of her early episodes, she seems very annoyed at Steed's behavior and attitude, yet here, they feel more like old friends.

The main villain, Miguel Rosas, is a very cool customer-- until his daughter finds out he's up to NO GOOD. I've seen actor Richard Warner in a 1954 SHERLOCK HOLMES episode ("The Shoeless Engineer"), as well as one of my favorite SAINT stories ("Interlude In Venice").

His murderous henchman, Monroe, looks like he would have made a good SPECTRE assassin. I've also seen actor David Cargill in 2 DANGER MANs, 2 SAINTs, and one of the nastiest UFOs.

Perhaps the main reason this story seems so unusual for this series is writer Leonard Fincham. Apart from it being his only AVENGERS (and the last thing listed on his resume), he was both writer & story editor on the earlier series INTERPOL CALLING (39 episodes from 1959-60), whose format involved a tough globe-hopping operator. This story could easily have been a leftover script from THAT series!

I recently found out they did a "remastered" DVD set in 2009, but only for Region 2. I'm still watching the 2006 set (before they were cleaned up), but was delighted that the SOUND on this one was EXCELLENT.
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6/10
Death Dispatch
Prismark1020 March 2019
The Avengers now comes across as an International action adventure series. There is plenty of stock location footage as the action shifts from Jamaica to Columbia, Peru and Chile.

There are shades of James Bond about this adventure, particularly Dr No.

Honor Blackman joins as Cathy Gale, an attractive widow who gives the show some glamour. We even see just with her bra on in one shot.

Steed has been ordered to find out why a courier was killed in Jamaica. He was tasked to take the diplomatic pouch from Washington to Santiago but the contents of the pouch were not stolen.

Steed is joined by Cathy Gale who has flown over to assist him. They come across a group of plotters who plan to stage a coup in Chile.

There is nice interplay between Steed and Gale as well as Steed and the amiable foreign office diplomat Travers played by Gerald Harper.
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5/10
Honor Blackman's debut as Catherine Gale
kevinolzak30 December 2010
June 1962, and "Death Dispatch," fourth episode shot for the second season of THE AVENGERS, features the debut of Honor Blackman as Mrs. Catherine Gale, here revealed as an anthropologist and, according to Steed himself, "attractive widow, blonde with blue eyes." Douglas Muir returns as Steed's most frequently seen superior One Ten, making an even ten appearances overall (five episodes each in seasons 1 and 2, last seen in "Immortal Clay"), who shows up in Jamaica to put Steed on the route of a murdered courier whose diplomatic pouch escaped theft, later joined by the exceptional Catherine Gale. We go from Jamaica to Bogota to Peru to Santiago, where the determined Miguel Rosas (Richard Warner) seeks to gain political power by assassinating an American envoy. The plot is barely serviceable, so the interaction between Steed and Cathy easily provides all the intrigue. We spy on Cathy in a bra and half-slip (shades of Janet Leigh in "Psycho!"), a glorious sight that US censors would never have allowed, and her phone conversation with Steed is only the beginning of their sparkling repartee. She does some spying on her own, disguised as a Spanish-speaking maid, only temporarily successful, her capture forcing a rescue by Steed, who must first escape temporary confinement from mild-mannered diplomat Travers (Gerald Harper, later seen in "The Hour That Never Was" and "Homicide and Old Lace"), a delightful comic encounter. Michael Forrest, as a bartender who gets roughed up, later did "The Hidden Tiger," while Geoff L'Cise, as a thug who accosts Steed at the Bogota airport, later did "The Gilded Cage." The first Blackman episode shot, but the ninth to be broadcast, featuring dull villains completely dominated by the two leads, a sign that better things lay ahead for the series.
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5/10
A below average episode.
Sleepin_Dragon19 December 2023
Steed and Cathy investigate the strange death of a courier, who was transporting documents from Jamaica to South America.

There are some decent moments, I liked the telephone booth scene for example, but overall, I thought this was a fairly poor episode.

I'm not sure I can answer how, or why, but it feels very raw, something about the production feels a little clunky, a little out of sorts.

Now, I've read comments about this feeling like a James Bond plot, not sure I can see that, it's just too dull, for me it felt more like an episode of The Champions, complete with Banana Republic.

The singing wasn't exactly pleasant, and Cathy's turn as a South American cleaner just didn't seem to sit right.

5/10.
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