"It Takes a Thief" The Packager (TV Episode 1968) Poster

(TV Series)

(1968)

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7/10
"Since when do thieves know how to write shorthand?"
bensonmum224 October 2019
Mundy is blackmailed by a wealthy man into stealing nuclear fuel capsules from a secure facility in Florida. Mundy faces a variety of roadblocks, including: getting into the walk-in safe where the capsules are stored, taking the capsules through the front gate without setting off the geiger counter alarm, and dealing with the man who hired him who'd just as soon see him dead.

I'll start this by saying that I really enjoyed The Packager. Despite the episode's many flaws (that I'll get to), it's still very entertaining. Mundy's cover, as a pomegranate-carrying member of the Junior Chamber, is about as funny as any he's used so far. I appreciated the heist elements of Mundy's mission - but who doesn't love a heist. Too often, Mundy is just dropped on an island or behind enemy lines with a mission laid out and a ready-made cover. Here, because he's on his own, Mundy has to "case the joint" and think on his feet. Finally, what's not to like about Lee Meredith? She might not have been the best actress to appear on It Takes a Thief, but she has to be one of the most fun. Her dumb blonde rountine is a hoot. The fact she's incredibly easy on the eyes is a plus.

However, as much as I enjoyed The Packager, the plot's not nearly as clever as it wants to be. Too much is left to coincidence and luck. There are details about the nuclear facility's operations that Mundy would have had no way of learning from his limited guided tour. And when things go wrong, Plan B seems to be konk people on the head. This isn't the most detailed, thorough, thought-out plan.

7/10
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One good episode
searchanddestroy-125 March 2015
With this one, I found the heist scheme again. It was so long since the last time. Here, Alexander Monday is blackmailed by a bunch of evil guys lead by a billionaire and then forced to steal an important radioactive material shipment. The heist sequences are amazing to me when he and the billionaire's men pull the job using a concrete mixer truck to enter the firm industrial facilities. I loved the sequence, perfectly in the heist line, with tense moments. The mechanical of the caper is always thrilling to me. The best would be all the episodes were the same. But unfortunately, it is not. Directed by Leo Horn, a TV director who made stuff for the small screen.
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