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Rate 'Split!' |
10 |
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6% |
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9 |
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13% |
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8 |
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6% |
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7 |
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6 |
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33% |
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5 |
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20% |
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4 |
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3 |
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Total Votes : 15 |
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peabody Little Wonder

Joined: 16 Oct 2009 Posts: 226 Location: MACS0647-JD
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Posted: Sat Sep 14, 2013 8:59 am Post subject: 6.04 - Split! |
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Discuss, review and rate Split!.
Written by Brian Clemens
Directed by Roy Baker |
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peabody Little Wonder

Joined: 16 Oct 2009 Posts: 226 Location: MACS0647-JD
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Posted: Tue Jan 07, 2014 10:09 pm Post subject: |
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A good episode, and one that some people claim to be the first of the Tara classics. You figure out the entire plot within the first ten minutes. Steven Scott (previously seen in several early Avengers episodes) does the role of his life as Boris Kartovski. Christopher Benjamin does his usual role as a slightly mad professor type person. Here he reminds me of his performance in The Prisoner from a year earlier. Just read that Nigel Davenport passed away a few months ago. RIP.
6/10 |
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Spaceship Dispatcher Winged Avenger

Joined: 01 Jan 2014 Posts: 594 Location: Northampton
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Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2014 9:06 pm Post subject: |
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Not sure what to make of this one. The cast is amazing, even by the standards of a show that always had many familiar faces in most episodes. We have Nigel Davenport, Bernard Archard, Julian Glover and Christopher Benjamin; and they're all on top form too! But there was something about it that made the episode seem to be less than the sum of its parts. Maybe the cast was so good that the episode was over-crowded? Perhaps its because the story changes scenes quite quickly and often, without settling down? Was it because the episode deals with the effects of the problem for too long and, when we finally get to the cause, everything is over too soon? Whatever the reason, this didn't quite equal the standards of other episodes for me. But the wonderful performances of the regulars and guest cast alike paper over any other problems rather well, and Julian Glover inparticular has some great scenes! His fight with 'himself' is effective and comes across as genuine madness and a man turned against himself. Also notable is the Tara abduction sequence, where Linda Thorson has a substantial amount of cotton wool thrust quite deeply into her mouth - enough to make most people retch - and manages to perform the scene! Overall - 7/10 |
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darren Mission... Highly Improbable!
Joined: 01 Sep 2008 Posts: 2077 Location: UK
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Posted: Fri Apr 11, 2014 2:05 am Post subject: |
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I think it's a competent script from Clemens but it's definitely a hasty filler on the producers panic return to the show.
I can't work out if it's supposed to be funnier than it actually is. It's played very straight, in a season 4 way. The guest cast are all very accomplished actors.
Roy Ward Baker returns for his only colour episode and it's all rather dry. There's the clever bit with the lift at the ministry office where it's all done in one take - entering on one floor and exiting on another purely done by removing the extras. Johnson's score is quite melancholy in places which adds to the dry feel.
Roy comments in the DVD commentary that Linda was quite girly in the episode and I thought it was just yet another nasty comment for something who didn't like her but that was an overreaction. I get the feeling that she's feeling quite insecure during this episode. With the producers changed, she was under anew regime who don't appreciate her, I think that explains her off performance.
6/10 - competent but lacking. |
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Frankymole Diabolical Mastermind

Joined: 01 Sep 2008 Posts: 5467 Location: Carmadoc Research Establishment
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Posted: Fri Apr 11, 2014 9:27 am Post subject: |
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This episode was included in the Lumière "Firsts" attaché case set. I think the rationale was that it was the first Tara episode actually completed - hence the different title sequence (and had been an unmade Emma Peel script, or did I get that wrong? It's been some decades since I read the set's booklet!). _________________ Last watched: "The Gilded Cage" |
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mousemeat Diabolical Mastermind
Joined: 04 Sep 2008 Posts: 6041 Location: Elvis Central, U.S.A.
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Posted: Fri Apr 11, 2014 11:49 am Post subject: |
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peabody wrote: | A good episode, and one that some people claim to be the first of the Tara classics. You figure out the entire plot within the first ten minutes. Steven Scott (previously seen in several early Avengers episodes) does the role of his life as Boris Kartovski. Christopher Benjamin does his usual role as a slightly mad professor type person. Here he reminds me of his performance in The Prisoner from a year earlier. Just read that Nigel Davenport passed away a few months ago. RIP.
6/10 |
classic...perhaps...darn close... |
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darren Mission... Highly Improbable!
Joined: 01 Sep 2008 Posts: 2077 Location: UK
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Posted: Fri Apr 11, 2014 12:31 pm Post subject: |
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Frankymole wrote: | (and had been an unmade Emma Peel script, or did I get that wrong? It's been some decades since I read the set's booklet!). |
Jaz brings this up in the commentary about it also being a Dennis Spooner script, Clemens says that he wrote it for this season. It wasn't a recycle job. |
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Lhbizness Guest
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Posted: Sat Apr 12, 2014 9:14 am Post subject: |
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I'd agree that it's a very dry episode for the most part - very little humor, very little repartee. But I do like the edge of seriousness, and it's a bit deeper in terms of plot than most from the same era.
Of course, I agree with the criticism that Tara is a bit girly - or rather, a bit useless and non-descript. There are moments in the season where she has far more heat and chemistry with Steed, but this one she's very much a blank slate. She's not helped by the script, which gives her very little to do, but she also delivers her lines with a slow, vacuous lilt to her voice that seems to indicate she really is not very bright.
It does give Steed the opportunity to play the dashing hero, and there's a beautiful moment at the end when he refuses to kill the Major. I'll admit that as someone who primarily watches the Tara era for Steed, I enjoy those moments when he gets to be a hero. |
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Frankymole Diabolical Mastermind

Joined: 01 Sep 2008 Posts: 5467 Location: Carmadoc Research Establishment
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Posted: Sun Apr 13, 2014 2:44 am Post subject: |
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Lhbizness wrote: | I'd agree that it's a very dry episode for the most part - very little humor, very little repartee. But I do like the edge of seriousness, and it's a bit deeper in terms of plot than most from the same era.
Of course, I agree with the criticism that Tara is a bit girly - or rather, a bit useless and non-descript. There are moments in the season where she has far more heat and chemistry with Steed, but this one she's very much a blank slate. She's not helped by the script, which gives her very little to do, but she also delivers her lines with a slow, vacuous lilt to her voice that seems to indicate she really is not very bright.
| Aka "flirty"? _________________ Last watched: "The Gilded Cage" |
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Lhbizness Guest
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Posted: Sun Apr 13, 2014 6:22 am Post subject: |
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Frankymole wrote: | Lhbizness wrote: | I'd agree that it's a very dry episode for the most part - very little humor, very little repartee. But I do like the edge of seriousness, and it's a bit deeper in terms of plot than most from the same era.
Of course, I agree with the criticism that Tara is a bit girly - or rather, a bit useless and non-descript. There are moments in the season where she has far more heat and chemistry with Steed, but this one she's very much a blank slate. She's not helped by the script, which gives her very little to do, but she also delivers her lines with a slow, vacuous lilt to her voice that seems to indicate she really is not very bright.
| Aka "flirty"? |
Flirty? No, stupid. It's not something that's ongoing in the season, but it pops up every once awhile ("words of one syllable, please.") |
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MikeR Epic
Joined: 19 Jul 2009 Posts: 1130 Location: UK
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Posted: Wed Apr 16, 2014 6:49 am Post subject: |
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Darren wrote: | Frankymole wrote: | (and had been an unmade Emma Peel script, or did I get that wrong? It's been some decades since I read the set's booklet!). |
Jaz brings this up in the commentary about it also being a Dennis Spooner script, Clemens says that he wrote it for this season. It wasn't a recycle job. |
Jaz’s comments come from an interview Andrew Pixley and I did with Dennis Spooner at the Fan Aid North convention in Leeds in November 1985. This was later written up and appeared in the first issue of the magazine Vulcan in May 1987 and then I reworked it with additional material and it appeared again in my own magazine Action TV (number 14) in August 2007.
After Brian Clemens and Albert Fennell returned to The Avengers at the beginning of the Linda Thorson season they badly needed new scripts and one weekend Brain started writing Split! This happened while he was at home on his farm at Ampthill in Bedfordshire. Brian’s close friend Dennis Spooner was staying with him for the weekend and he assisted in the plotting of the screenplay, which was still being written as the episode went into production.
If you take a look in the Merchandise section, there is a certain book coming out that will give the full details and a whole lot more. |
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darren Mission... Highly Improbable!
Joined: 01 Sep 2008 Posts: 2077 Location: UK
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Posted: Wed Apr 16, 2014 10:48 am Post subject: |
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MikeR wrote: | Darren wrote: | Frankymole wrote: | (and had been an unmade Emma Peel script, or did I get that wrong? It's been some decades since I read the set's booklet!). |
Jaz brings this up in the commentary about it also being a Dennis Spooner script, Clemens says that he wrote it for this season. It wasn't a recycle job. |
Jaz’s comments come from an interview Andrew Pixley and I did with Dennis Spooner at the Fan Aid North convention in Leeds in November 1985. This was later written up and appeared in the first issue of the magazine Vulcan in May 1987 and then I reworked it with additional material and it appeared again in my own magazine Action TV (number 14) in August 2007.
After Brian Clemens and Albert Fennell returned to The Avengers at the beginning of the Linda Thorson season they badly needed new scripts and one weekend Brain started writing Split! This happened while he was at home on his farm at Ampthill in Bedfordshire. Brian’s close friend Dennis Spooner was staying with him for the weekend and he assisted in the plotting of the screenplay, which was still being written as the episode went into production.
If you take a look in the Merchandise section, there is a certain book coming out that will give the full details and a whole lot more. |
Now this is exactly the reason why I'm soooo looking forward to your book. These kind of details are ten a penny for something like Doctor Who but the Avengers has never had the benefits of such a book before. |
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Rhonda How to Succeed... at Posting!

Joined: 19 Jan 2010 Posts: 831 Location: A town, UK
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Posted: Sat Nov 29, 2014 12:30 pm Post subject: |
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5 from me. Like Tara's fight. _________________ Ron
Last Watched : Stop Me If You've Heard This One, But There Were These Two Fellers... |
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Brigadier Q Nutshell
Joined: 18 Jan 2015 Posts: 15 Location: London 1968
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Posted: Tue Jan 27, 2015 5:46 am Post subject: |
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A good episode, but not as good as its cast - which was superb!
Poor Linda Thorson must have been a bit tired of being the Damsel in Distress so often, I suspect we haven't seen the last of that yet (if memory serves).
Not as stylish as I would like as yet, but well worth a watch or two. |
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Ian Wegg Have Fingers... Will Type!

Joined: 15 Sep 2011 Posts: 417
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Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2020 2:50 am Post subject: |
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I'm watching these on Britbox and for some reason this episode had the original "shooting gallery" titles, rarely seen in the UK.
I agree with most of the previous comments. The downside was that I'd worked out the plot well before the end so the denouement seemed a long time coming and was no real surprise. Nevertheless, lifted by the A-list cast and the welcome return of Steed's 3-litre Bentley.
8/10 |
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Allard The Ministry
Joined: 01 Sep 2008 Posts: 2012 Location: The Netherlands
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Posted: Sat Apr 24, 2021 2:31 am Post subject: |
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Not a favourite, but found it surprisingly good when rewatching it last weekend.
Most noticeable about this one is the alternative title sequence of course.
It definitely has the early Tara King feel over it, some shots could well be The Saint or Randall and Hopkirk. There's the rub, the episode just doesn't sparkle, it isn't really Avengers. But quite well executed, good director helps! And a fine cast. I wonder how this plot would have worked in the Gale era. In the Peel/Tara era it's too dark, the baddies plan is spy-fy enough, but not fantastic . This is a whisky episode, not a champagne one, a bit stronger and less playful. The narrow geographic atmosphere also doesn't help, it all seems to happen in a few miles of each other with a lot of dreary weather driving shots. |
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