"The Avengers" They Keep Killing Steed (TV Episode 1968) Poster

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7/10
Tara ends up seeing double!
canndyman7 July 2019
The plot for this episode is quite simple - Tara and Steed are to act as official observers at a peace conference - but enemy agent Arcos plans to infiltrate it with a fake Steed, using his ingenious 'instant plastic surgery' invention to create a convincing double. With the real Steed kidnapped by Arcos's henchmen, it's left to Tara (with the help of the dashing Baron Von Curt) to scupper the plan - but will they make it in time?

This is an enjoyable and fun story that has all the ingredients that make a good Tara episode - a crazed villain, some good location work and a well-choreographed battle between protagonists and antagonists at the finale - not to mention yet another ingenious secret hideout for Mother and Rhonda.

A nicely-paced story from the final season that keeps the viewer guessing throughout, and hoping that Tara can save the day. Highly recommended!
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7/10
Too many Steeds!
Tweekums3 April 2015
Warning: Spoilers
In the run up to a peace conference foreign agents have come up with a dastardly plan to sabotage the event; they will create a duplicate Steed. There first attempts, working from photographs, aren't quite good enough so they kidnap the real Steed. While in captivity they explain to him, and the viewer, how they will create their new Steed… a process he dubs 'instant plastic surgery'. While Steed is held captive Tara is busy looking for him along with Baron Von Curt; a man she met when he asked her to pretend to be his wife in order to shake off a couple of woman he'd mistakenly arranged to meet at the same time. Steed briefly escapes his captors and messes with their plans… he may not be able to prevent them making a new Steed so he arranges it so they create several and they all turn up at the conference at about the same time!

This was a fairly typical Avengers episode; a devious and far-fetched plot to undermine an important conference and plenty of humorous moments. The idea of instant plastic surgery is of course science fiction but the sight of numerous Steeds was entertaining; especially when they spoke and sounded nothing like our Steed. Tara's pairing with Baron Von Curt a bit of a weak point although even this provided some laughs; the best being when Tara got out of his car and jumped into a lake to visit Mother's underwater office leaving the Baron wondering where she had vanished to… the show's creators were certainly inventive when picking locations for Mother's various offices! This inventiveness also provided a good base for the bad guys; a large underground lair accessed through an apparently abandoned car in a quarry. Overall this was a fun if rather light instalment.
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7/10
A little step towards the New Avengers.
searchanddestroy-11 March 2022
In this episode the main peculiarity is not the double scheme, already talked about in the Diana Rigg's season - WHO'S WHO - but the fact that both are helped in their actions by an outsider, the same kind of what Gambit character will bring in NEW AVENGERS series. It is also surprising that no one knows what happens to this gentle outsider in the end of the episode. He just disappears.
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7/10
Pretty good.
Sleepin_Dragon7 September 2022
An important Peace conference is set to take place, but enemy Agent Arcos, has perfected a plan, a plan to infiltrate and destroy it, blaming Steed in the process.

Quite a good episode, very strong visuals, it is well paced, and very well directed.

Visually, this looks more like an episode from an earlier series, there's nothing outlandish or whacky, it's just a straight up village setting, which looks awesome.

The story however, it's a bit more routine, like a rehash from several earlier storylines, but on the whole there's not a huge amount to grumble over, it is a pretty good one.

Well acted, it's one of those where Steed's presence is enough to elevate the whole episode.

7/10.
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9/10
One Steed Too Many!
ShadeGrenade18 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
A peace conference is due to take place in a country house somewhere in England. Enemy agents Arcos ( Ray McAnally ) and Zerson ( Norman Jones ) want to sabotage it by creating a double of John Steed, who is there - along with Tara King - as an 'observer'.

Unhappy with the initial result, Arcos orders that the real Steed be kidnapped and brought to him at once. This is then done. But Steed manages to throw a spanner in the works - and suddenly the conference is awash with lookalikes of himself ( does not say much for the security there, does it? ) who murder each other. Tara is confused, especially as a dead man with Steed's features was found in a hotel room. She joins forces with Baron von Curt ( Ian Ogilvy ), a dashing Teutonic aristocrat with a fondness for the ladies and sword-fencing...

Originally to have been filmed on location in Spain ( under the title 'Too Many Oles'! ), this is a sprightly little adventure, benefiting from a great performance by Ray McAnally ( a fabulous actor who died well before his time ) as the villain, and a blonde Ian Ogilvy - a decade before inheriting Roger Moore's halo - as 'von Curt'. One has to wonder whether the character was in any way inspired by 'Adam Adamant', the Victorian adventurer portrayed on B.B.C.-1 a few years earlier by Gerald Harper ( and for whose series Brian Clemens had written ).

A running gag in the Thorson series was 'Mother' ( Patrick Newell ), the head of Steed's department, forever turning up in unusual locations, such as a swimming pool or the top of a double decker bus. Here he is in an underwater office! Not to be outdone, the villains have an unusual base of their own - beneath an abandoned car in a quarry. Patrick Macnee gets the chance to have some fun playing evil duplicates of his character.

The explosion at the end was stock footage - and looks it. I wonder which picture it came from.
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5/10
Ian Ogilvy joins Tara King
kevinolzak2 May 2011
"They Keep Killing Steed" is the last story involving a double of Steed, and by far the weakest, despite director Robert Fuest's constant attention to detail, which keeps things interesting no matter what transpires. Ray McAnally ("The Positive Negative Man") is the lead villain Arcos, who kidnaps the real Steed to hold hostage while an imposter replaces him at an important peace conference, created by a serum that changes molecular structure, dubbed "instant plastic surgery" (THE OUTER LIMITS used the same serum in 1963's "The Hundred Days of the Dragon"). Steed manages to foil the sabotage plot by instigating multiple duplicates (we actually see a total of 7!), which, amazingly, all get through security, one after the other! None of it makes for a great episode, but Ian Ogilvy proves why he would be a fine replacement for Roger Moore a decade later in RETURN OF THE SAINT. Bernard Horsfall ("The Cybernauts" and "The Fear Merchants") appears as Captain Smythe, who orders all Steeds to be shot on sight, but one sneeze and you might miss the microscopic cameo from delicately lovely redhead Angharad Rees, star of Hammer's 1971 "Hands of the Ripper."
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