Sapphire & Steel - Assignment One [TV] (1979) Directed by Shaun O'Riordan

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Sapphire and Steel

Assignment One: Part 1

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Mysterious investigators possess strange powers, including the ability to manipulate time. Popular in Britain, where it aired from 1979 to 1982, it stars David McCallum, one-time 'Man from U.N.C.L.E.' heartthrob, and Joanna Lumley, best known for 'Absolutely Fabulous,' as operatives.

sapphire and steel assignment 1 cast

‘Sapphire and Steel’: Remarkable, obscure, British sci-fi

“All irregularities will be handled by the forces controlling each dimension. Transuranic, heavy elements may not be used where there is life. Medium atomic weights are available: Gold, Lead, Copper, Jet, Diamond, Radium, Sapphire, Silver and Steel…Sapphire and Steel have been assigned.”

A remarkable English sci-fi series. A few years back, Shout! Factory released Sapphire and Steel: The Complete Series , a six-disc, 34-episode (each “assignment” is comprised of multiple episodes) collection of the cult U.K. sci-fi series that ran sporadically on ITV from 1979 to 1982.

Click to order Sapphire and Steel: The Complete Series at Amazon.

sapphire and steel assignment 1 cast

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Starring David McCallum and Joanna Lumley (both cool and elegant and off-putting), Sapphire and Steel is a smart, mysterious, utterly fascinating outing featuring Lumley and McCallum as “inter-dimensional agents” who roam the Time corridor, looking for breaks in the walls…and for the “creatures,” ancient and not-yet-born, who seek to disrupt the balance on the other side. It’s superior television fare, ingeniously and intelligently scripted and produced.

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ASSIGNMENT I

Episode synopsis: “A family’s life in an 18th-century house is disturbed by a break in time, which causes young Rob and Helen’s parents to disappear. As Rob tries to solve the mystery, the enigmatic Sapphire and Steel arrive to fix the disruption. Could a simple nursery rhyme be the cause of it all?”

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Considering the hyper-combative state of establishing sci-fi fanboy cred today, I doubt I would even qualify as a noob with most straight-up sci-fi ballers. I grew up watching repeats of the original Star Trek until their stories and co-stars were burned into my brain…but I wouldn’t know what button to push for a photon torpedo or to engage warp drive if my life depended on it. I also enjoyed Space: 1999 when I was a kid…but I’d skip it if Pal’s The War of the Worlds was on WKBD’s Channel 50. I saw all the original Star Wars (the first 3; the others are…whatever) and the o.g. Star Trek movies when they first came out…but I had more fun going to Outland and even The Swarm (did you hear that? That was the sound of sci-fi fans clicking off this review en masse ).

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I had my Cylon Warrior action figure out whenever I watched the original Battlestar Galactica …but I got bored quick with Star Trek: The Next Generation , while The X-Files paled next to Kolchak: The Night Stalker for me. And when I think of British science fiction, I think of The Avengers before Doctor Who . So I’m no expert on the genre in any way, just an ordinary viewer with (certainly) weird, arbitrary tastes (Sturges’ Marooned in a heartbeat over Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey any day).

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With that rather haphazard sci-fi pedigree, it’s no surprise, then, that I had never heard of Sapphire and Steel before this disc showed up. Researching it, I discovered that it has a small but extremely loyal cult following, and that while it’s relatively obscure among even semi-serious purveyors of the genre, it’s very well regarded among those who really understand a thing or two about sci-fi television. Shot on a minuscule budget (typical for British TV at the time), Sapphire and Steel had to rely on atmosphere and solid writing to get across its attractively vague, enigmatic tale of two inter-dimensional “operators” whose purpose is to protect nothing less than the integrity of Time itself.

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No snazzy special effects here (lots of video chroma key along with good, old-fashioned dark shadows and scary sound effects on the cramped studio mock-ups), no million dollar-an-episode budgets, as was the case for contemporary American sci-fi series, Battlestar Galactica , and no A-list supporting players turning up as “Special Guest Star Creature” of the week. Just good writing, imaginative direction, and two lead performances well-tuned to this series’ thoroughly odd, thoroughly captivating vision.

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From what I gathered, Sapphire and Steel wasn’t a particularly big hit with the critics or British public when it premiered. An industry strike its first year, followed by its production company losing its TV franchise, essentially doomed the series to less-than-optimal visibility with U.K. viewers, until its final “series” (season) was burned off in 1982 without any publicity (plans to continue on were scrapped by Lumley and McCallum who wished, since all signs pointed to a “failed” show, to move on). According to what I’ve read, it wasn’t even repeated on British television.

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Too bad…because it’s one of the most intriguing, entertaining sci-fi series I’ve ever seen. To be frank, when I first heard that Outer Limits -like opening narration and saw those ghostly chroma keyed opening credits rolling, looking like something from the Dumont Network, circa 1953, I was dreading plowing through the 14+ hours here (the animation credits didn’t exactly help, either, executed on about the level of a typical 70s Hanna-Barbera toon). However, in the first few minutes of the opening episode, Assignment I (no official titles were ever assigned by creator/writer Peter J. Hammond Hammond — just another quirky, unusual detail from this oddball series), it had me hooked: a young boy, doing his homework, suddenly notices that all the clocks in the house have stopped…and so have the voices of his parents, who were reading a nursery rhyme to his younger sister.

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Shot on a tight little studio mock-up of an old English farmhouse, the deep, impenetrable shadows (loss of image detail is also due to the poor nature of the original video elements and their original transfers), and the oppressive use of the clicking clocks and subsequent silence on the soundtrack, creates a mood of tense menace and apprehension that seems as much Hammer as Heinlein. Once the young boy determines that his parents really have disappeared seemingly into thin air, operators Sapphire and Steel arrive with equal tenuous reality, and the story kicks into gear, creating an increasingly jumpy, apprehensive mood over its six chapters/episodes until the frightening, violent conclusion.

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What I enjoyed most about this episode and all the others in Sapphire and Steel is how lost the viewer is to what, exactly, is going on, and who, exactly, the participants are here. You have to pay attention…and you’re still not quite sure what the rules are as the episodes progress. In the opener, Sapphire and Steel give to the young kids as close to an explanation of what they do as you’re going to get in the whole series: Time is like a corridor that has weak spots, like worn fabric. And at those weak spots, Time itself, or the “creatures” that roam the corridor — “creatures,” usually the dead but not always, that are past representations of themselves, similar to ghosts — try to either occupy current time, or take away present occupants.

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And the “trigger” for these attempts is usually some kind of siren song of something old: a nursery rhyme, or an old song, or an old house — anything with “old, old echoes” that beckons Time or the “creatures” lost in Time’s corridor. It’s a fascinating representation of that most elusive intangible, Time, but what’s rather remarkable about Sapphire and Steel is that that definition isn’t finite. Hammond constantly comes up with absorbing variations on it in subsequent episodes, constantly keeping the viewers off-balance, and challenging them to try and keep up.

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Along with that refusal to put Sapphire and Steel ‘s “world,” if you will, into sharper, more concrete context, the lead characters as well remain wonderfully unpredictable and elusive. In one episode, Steel admits they’re “extraterrestrial,” but one is never entirely sure if that means they’re “alien,” or advanced humans that no longer consider themselves human, or elemental forces taking human form, or…something else entirely. Clearly they have superhuman powers, and they live for hundreds if not thousands of years. Sapphire can, by touch, “spot analyze” objects or humans and determine where they’ve been or what an object is made of. She can also “take back time,” in a sort of re-wind capacity that can move time backwards and provide an approximation of events and figures that already occurred and appeared.

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Steel, like Sapphire, can communicate telepathically; he possesses super-human strength along with the ability to freeze himself down to zero degrees in order to “touch” the ghostly apparitions/approximations of the dead that roam the corridor and that break through Time to menace others. Perhaps the most unique aspect to this “crime-Time”-solving duo, if you will, is their almost complete disregard for the humans they’re sworn to protect. Their overriding mission is to protect Time’s integrity, no matter what…but if they can save the humans in peril, they must. However, if it’s unavoidable, they’ll sacrifice them, even the innocent, to save the multitude (or even if it’s easier to just let those unfortunate humans die).

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Far from being molded in the traditional “hero” elements, Sapphire and Steel, elegantly cool and distant to their human contacts, have a decidedly patronizing attitude towards them. Steel is just an outright bastard, strong-arming uncooperative suspects, sneering with derision at scared victims, or yelling at little kids to get them to talk, while Sapphire frequently shows a smug condescension for humans, until she either gets bored or she needs to be more ingratiating to get better results than Steel’s bullying. We never discover, though, who or what they really are, or indeed the precise nature of their assignment. Are they from the present, past or future? Are they spies, or independents (that question comes up in the final episode)? Who do they “work” for…if indeed it’s “work” and not something more like “duty?” Who’s their “boss,” if you will, because apparently, there’s a “higher authority” that has it in for them, as we discover in the final installment?

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We just don’t know…and that leaves plenty of room for the viewer to begin to truly wonder what’s up with the whole shebang…and that’s a welcome surprise. Cheap but excellent special effects pop up here and in the other episodes, many of which are of the most mundane origin; in this episode, spots of light travel along the floor and wall, becoming quite creepy as we begin to look for them in other shots. The production values drawback of using cheap video actually helps here in Sapphire and Steel , as the creative versatility of the medium is used to fine effect, such as the constant looping of the copper arriving at the door, repeating faster and faster for a surreal effect. Imaginative direction, as well, features rather dynamic frames (for television), with an ever-shifting perspective that keeps the storyline, its context, the characters, and even the dimension of time, in constant flux — which keeps us thoroughly off-balance.

ASSIGNMENT II

Episode synopsis: “A paranormal expert’s study of an abandoned train station is interrupted by the arrival of Sapphire and Steel. As the two inter-dimensional agents investigate a dark force that lives on the bitterness of the dead, the assignment challenges them to consider the value of one human life versus the security of reality itself.”

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A remarkable episode because it leads SPOILERS ALERT! straight to the deliberate, unapologetic sacrifice of an innocent — a nasty reality of Sapphire’s and Steel’s priority to keep Time inviolate, one that brings the viewer up sharp. Steel’s contempt for sad-sack amateur spiritual investigator George Tully (Gerald James) is open and unrelenting, with Steel dismissively calling him a “crank” and mocking his spirituality. It will take Sapphire’s more nuanced approach, as usual, to get Tully’s help, and they need him, because both are in real danger (Sapphire is taken over by a malevolent force, while Steel almost dies in a parachute jump and then on barbed wire in “No Man’s Land”).

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However, after several episodes where we really being to feel sorry for scared, pathetic Tully (he sadly admits to only having a cat in his life), it’s a shocking ending to see Steel lie to him as he sends poor Tully to his death (check out Tully’s little goodbye wave). The script makes no bones about Steel and Sapphire not honoring the resentment the dead soldier feels for dying too young — another unusual twist in the story. The spooky abandoned train depot set is utilized quite well, along with an evocative score (that Third Man twang is offset nicely by all the creepy whistled WWI songs), and excellent effects (the sudden flashing of costume changes over dimensional lines is perfectly realized; the grunginess of the video effects looks almost contemporary).

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ASSIGNMENT III

Episode synopsis: “Sapphire and Steel encounter a pair of time travelers from the distant future. The travelers are involved in an experiment with repercussions for the future of the human race — but are they the conductors of this experiment, or the subjects?”

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This is the only “assignment” in the collection that I had just the slightest bit of trouble with, not because of the ideas in the eventful, suspenseful story line (which are cool), but because of the execution. Here is the only time that Sapphire and Steel ‘s el cheapo budget works against itself: when you have to actually show one of the Time corridor “creatures” as an actual creature, it’s a fine line between believable and silly, and the difference is always dollars (or in this case, pounds).

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The notion of the two sealed, invisible space pods on the London apartment building is good, with well-designed location shooting of Steel and Sapphire trying to determine the crafts’ dimensions a fun sequence. The growing baby Frankenstein (he even wears the uniform: a sports coat!), educated Superman-style via audio/visual stimuli, is also nice, especially when he starts going around, turning everything he touches into dust. And the anti-cloning, cyborg animal-machine hybrid bent on revenge against human kind, while not too terribly well presented here, is at least whacky enough to be interesting. Only when we’re forced to see this creature do the giggles set in (first it’s a floating fetus, and then it appears to be 15 pounds of skinned veal, pulled fast along by a string — seeing McCallum chuck a raw joint into a wall conduit to feed it is hilarious).

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As for our operatives, we learn Sapphire can’t always “take back time,” while Steel shows his complete lack of concern with wiping out an entire apartment building and its inhabitants if it makes it easier to deal with the unknown invaders on the roof (“Humans love a good sacrifice,” he offers flatly). Once they ascertain the nature of the “invaders'” plan, his contempt for them is just as pronounced; learning that they’re incompetent scientists from Earth’s future, he advises them to kill themselves, like their colleagues did, to save Time’s integrity.

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The episode’s big plus is the first appearance of Silver, played to perfection by David Collings (Albert Finney’s Scrooge ). A rather jaunty and flip tech, Silver is sent down to help out operatives with his specialized skills…with the responsibilities of the mission left to them (“I’m a technician, not an explorer!” he exclaims when faced with the prospect of equal, and dangerous, duty). His flirtatious behavior with Sapphire raises Steel’s blood, giving the duo an intriguing new element to their relationship. His character is a much-needed counterpoint to Sapphire and Steel’s relentless “otherness,” with Collings’ amusing, light approach most welcome here.

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ASSIGNMENT IV

Episode synopsis: “The agents’ investigation of a mysterious apartment building leads to a confrontation with a faceless man who possesses the power to trap people in photographs.”

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A shorter entry in the series, this “assignment” is the most visually claustrophobic of all the episodes, with a cramped, murky, dingy feel to it that contrasts nicely with the expansive (and creepy) nature of the Time creature: one who has been in every photo ever taken, either with his back turned…or unseen behind walls or other objects. Sapphire fails twice this time around to “take back time,” giving the character faults that further removes these operatives from standard “superhero” status (they almost “die” here, too, trapped in an old photo that the creature plans on burning).

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There’s a good performance by Alyson Spiro as Liz, a sad tenant of the building where the creature resides, a girl who knows she’s going nowhere (the operatives offer little if any comfort to her: they have a job to do). The special effect of the “no face” man is quite effective, and there’s a tour de force effects sequence on the staircase, employing double images, positive and negative, looped editing, and an increasingly hysterical audio track depicting Sapphire’s unsuccessful effort to drag the creature’s time back for analysis (whoever the sound editor was on this series is a genius). A solid entry in the series.

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ASSIGNMENT V

Episode synopsis: “An industrialist’s 1930s-themed party creates an anomaly where the past merges with the present. Sapphire and Steel’s attempt to correct this dilemma is further complicated when the party guests begin to be murdered one by one.”

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The only episode not written by Hammond (scripters Don Houghton and Anthony Read take over here), this “assignment” is a fun amalgamation of reverse time travel and Agatha Christie, with Sapphire and Steel just as much amused bystanders as active investigators in this witty outing. The main mystery involving too-far-advanced DNA research and mutant bacteria is quite good, as is Sapphire and Steel’s duty, yet again, to make sure a death — this time a murder, more accurately — occurs to ensure the proper realignment of Time. The direction is quite good, with the constantly shifting context of the various characters’ coming in and out of the present into the past making this seemingly ordinary “English country house murder mystery” doubly impenetrable. It’s also fun to see Sapphire and Steel begin to succumb to the games-playing (Sapphire not only kisses Steel but also tries to blow him away via pistol), while the seemingly dotty old ladies (Nan Munro and Patience Collier) trade hilariously crusty one-liners. Different in feel from the other series’ entries thanks to the new writers, this lighter touch is a nice contrast to the heavier outings…particularly the final one.

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ASSIGNMENT VI

Episode synopsis: “An old service station where time has seemingly stopped is the site of Sapphire and steel’s latest assignment — but the two operatives are unsure what that assignment entails. The service station’s two inhabitants, who claim to be from the year 1948, might be their only clue to solving this mystery.”

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The best “assignment” is also the final one in Sapphire and Steel . Inexplicably assigned to a Time breakage at a modern gas station/cafe, Steel and Sapphire are surprised to see Silver already present — an anomaly in procedure they should have noted more carefully.

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Faced with human occupants that seem to occupy three distinct time periods, Steel and Sapphire face an almost impossible task of figuring out who is lying, who is human, and who is the creature that has broken the barrier. Set on a convincing gas station set that’s blown out by deliberately fake-looking lighting, the viewer of this assignment feels unease right from the start: nothing is as it seems here. Surreal in terms of exposition and context, it’s impossible to get your bearings as a new character pops up and fades out like a ghost as the operators are confronted with the increasingly probable possibility that they’ve been lured into a nightmarish trap. With elliptical, diffused dialogue worthy sometimes of Pinter, this final assignment is a perfect distillation of the series: Time is forever and nothing, as is existence…even for those who supposedly can master it.

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The final image is chilling, SPOILERS ALERT! as the operatives hurtle through space, trapped in the illusion of the station. According to all involved in the series, this “assignment” was not intended to be the last, and this rather dour, downbeat ending just another cliffhanger to be addressed when the series returned the following year. Of course that didn’t happen…but I rather like how it just abruptly ends here. Like the characters themselves, Sapphire and Steel the series, abandoned at this last juncture before its production team and actors moved on to other things, is now forever stuck in time, inviolate, with absolutely no possible chance at resolution.

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Unlike that other cult U.K. sci-fi/espionage show The Prisoner , where a brilliant series was built up to a planned finale that failed utterly to send off the storyline and character in a fashion that matched what came before it, Sapphire and Steel , merely by accident of cancellation, ends in a manner, and on a final image, that is the very embodiment of the show’s vision: hopeless nothingness .

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7 thoughts on “‘sapphire and steel’: remarkable, obscure, british sci-fi”.

What a load of rubbish

I agree–that review was terrible.

Who tbh says they can live hundreds + thousands of years, then ? The stories indicate they are mortal because they can get into danger, who they are is mysterious, no sources mention long lifespans. I have the same objection with Doctor Who. Why tbh do many folks enjoy fantasising of vastly superhuman lifespans for non-humans who they can never fantasise of being ?

This review was quite, heh, american but better than nothing. At least reviewer understood and appreciated truly wonderful series

Well…considering the reviewer is, heh, American (and that’s with a capitol “A,” you worthless, jealous p.o.s.), it would be strange if the review wasn’t, heh, “american.”

“….hyper-combative state of establishing sci-fi fanboy cred today…”. Judging for m the comments above, no kidding!

Would be remiss if I didn’t say RIP Mr. David McCallum.

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Sapphire and Steel

Assignment i.

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Sapphire and Steel - Assignment Two

Following on straight from " Assignment One ," Sapphire & Steel's second serial is widely considered one of its very best. An outright ghost story, "Assignment Two" ups the atmosphere and the scares. While the first serial reveals its origins as a children's programme, "Assignment Two" is supernatural horror that addresses the folly of war and the injustice of untimely death.

Like the first story, which was enclosed in a single house, this serial is confined to a single location. In this case, it's an abandoned rural train station – an impressively convincing piece of setwork – naturally during the night. It's a spooky enough setting in itself, and co-directors Shaun O'Riordan and David Foster imbue the serial with an oppressive claustrophobia. The two directors would, between the two of them, direct all six serials of the series.

Sapphire and Steel - Assignment 2

At the station sits George Tully, a very mild-mannered middle-aged man who is an amateur ghost hunter. Played by Gerald James ( The Sound of Laughter, A Traveller in Time, The Crezz ), Tully is a sweet, sympathetic character, and you can't help but feel terribly sorry for him as various unnerving entities converge upon him. After spending months investigating the station, Tully's ghost hunting is suddenly about to become very successful indeed.

Sapphire and Steel - Assignment 2

Before tonight, the spectral activity at the station had been fairly minor. Flowers appear out of nowhere and vanish again. There's the sound of a man carrying equipment while he whistles. The occasional echo of a voice recorded on his equipment. When Sapphire and Steel arrive, he takes them for fellow ghost hunters – which, in a way, they are. They've arrived because a disturbance in time is becoming more profound. Before the ghosts proper turn up, the two elements are unnerving enough. Sapphire displays remarkable powers during the story – rolling back time, holding it still, communing with forces from beyond and sensing disturbances in time. It's winter at the station, yet she can feel the summer heat and smell the flowers. Steel displays less in the way of power in this story, but is pragmatic to an extreme when it comes to dealing with dangers from the past.

Sapphire and Steel - Assignment 2

The story unfolds slowly, with the presence Tully has been investigating gradually manifesting and becoming more threatening as it does so. To begin with, it manifests as Sam Pearce – a young WWI soldier, sympathetically played by Tom Kelly. While Sam is the main ghost, he's accompanied over time by others – a trio of submariners, and a WWII pilot (portrayed with character and likeability by David Cann). It's classic ghost story material – the figures are able to communicate with Sapphire, Steel and Tully, but find themselves repeating the last days and moments of their lives. At first, they don't seem to fit together – they're all military personnel, but none died anywhere near the station, and they all come from different times.

Sapphire and Steel - Assignment 2

Sapphire is sympathetic to the ghosts, but she can feel the presence of something else – a force of darkness that is using the ghosts for its own reasons. Before long, it starts lashing out. The second episode ends with a fantastic cliffhanger, as Steel finds himself reliving the pilot's death – and is only narrowly rescued by Sapphire when she rolls time back to before he was pulled in. Steel's reaction to the ghosts' actions is anger, and he, foolhardily, decides the best way forward is to wind them up. Inspired by Sam's whistling refrain, he and Tully engage in a rousing chorus of "Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag," over and over again, in the hope of forcing the ghosts to manifest. Quite how Steel expects to deal with them isn't clear, but he's not quite feeling himself. He's obviously terrified by his experiences and is far more animated than we usually see him. It's a brilliant performance by David McCallum, and it's truly unsettling to see this previously unflappable figure so visibly shaken.

Sapphire and Steel - Assignment 2

Tully is far more respectful, and is upset at having to follow along with Steel's actions. For his trouble, he is forced to experience the suffocation of the submariners. He remains convinced, as Steel does, that they need to find a way to communicate on their own terms, and suggests a séance. Sapphire, of course, acts as medium. It works, to a point, as Sapphire is possessed by the spirit of a young woman. She insists the darkness isn't using her, as she has no grievance, but she is linked to the station and is able to communicate on behalf of the ghosts. It is revealed that she was Sam's lover, but her involvement angers the soldier. He sets the darkness on them, leaving Sapphire catatonic, with her spirit seemingly separated from her body and now roaming with the ghosts.

Sapphire and Steel - Assignment 2

It's now clear that the darkness and the ghosts are far more powerful than Sapphire and Steel, upping the tension even higher. There really doesn't seem to be any way to escape the ghosts. The darkness plays with them, seeming to give them opportunities to leave, but then leaving them running into barbed wire on the edge of No Man's Land. Sapphire's spirit speaks with Steel, and it becomes clear that it's just another aspect of the darkness, using her image. It insists that neither the ghosts nor the darkness are a threat – as long as they're left alone. Steel disagrees – the darkness is recruiting the ghosts of those who died not merely unjustly, but pointlessly. Sam died after the armistice was called (eleven minutes after, just to pour salt on the wound); the submariners suffocated due to a design flaw in their craft; and the pilot died on his last flight before being demobbed. The darkness feeds on the collective resentment and fury of those who died when they should have lived.

Sapphire and Steel - Assignment 2

With the serial reaching its final couple of episodes, it seems the threat has passed. Dawn breaks, and the three living characters are safe. The threat seems to have passed, but the darkness has moved them twelve days into the future. They could leave now and let the darkness carry on with whatever it has planned, but Steel believes it presents a real threat to reality itself. Steel persuades Sapphire to reach out again so that he can negotiate with the darkness – which results in the force possessing her, in perhaps the most terrifying scene in the story. The darkness agrees to take them back to the time it found them, whereupon he strikes a final deal. To free the ghosts and stop the darkness from forever recruiting more, he hands over Tully – due to die in five years time. This way, he says, the darkness will have thwarted time itself, earning its resentment. Sapphire, reluctantly, agrees to go on with it. Tully's final moment, off camera, is unseen... but it ends with a harrowing scream.

Sapphire and Steel - Assignment 2

"Assignment Two" is a tour de force of understated horror. While it's in many ways a straightforward ghost story, it's full of inventive concepts, not least that of some kind of intelligence that exists beyond time and, seemingly, in opposition to it. For all that, Steel is the most frightening thing in the story, willing to sacrifice the life of an innocent man – with the knowledge of his fated time of death as absolute fact – in order to placate that intelligence. There's even the hint that this was all merely some way of sticking it to the forces of time, and that Steel, for all the fear he displayed during the story, was manipulating the situation to come to a head. Notably, while we see a softer side to Steel, even professing to love Sapphire (although he only admits this to a mirage of her), he is comfortably able to put her in danger and force her into submitting herself to the darkness.

It's a particularly stagey affair, as is the series as a whole, but this is never detrimental. The most effective scenes, such as Steel's near-death flight or the trip to the edge of No Man's Land, are realised with minor prop work and some creative lighting and sound effects. It's a testament to a simpler, cannier kind of filmmaking, when the less was more. Nothing here is graphic or outlandish, and it's all the more effective for it.

At eight episodes, though, this is by far the longest serial in the series, and it does sag a little in the middle. While some of the episodes end on nail-biting cliffhangers, others just sort of stop – twenty-five minutes is up, time for something else. On its broadcast in 1979, this serial fell foul of the electricians' strike which outed ITV for three weeks (the very same that led to the Doctor Who serial City of Death experience such enormous ratings on the other side). As such, there was a huge gap halfway through, after which the serial was restarted from the beginning. It must have seemed to go on forever... Watched now, able to view it all together, it holds together remarkably well even with its extended length. The story of a good man caught among implacable, alien forces – and that's just the alleged heroes – this is genre television at its very best.

Review: Daniel Tessier

Dan describes himself as a geek. Skinny white guy. Older than he looks. Younger than he feels. Reads, watches, plays and writes. Has been compared to the third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth Doctors, and the Dream Lord. Plus Dr. Smith from 'Lost in Space.' He has also had a short story published in Master Pieces: Misadventures in Space and Time a charity anthology about the renegade Time Lord.  

Dan's web page can be here:  Immaterial

Published on December 10th, 2020. Written by Daniel Tessier for Television Heaven.

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All the clocks have stopped. Rob and Helen's parents have vanished. Two mysterious strangers arrive unannounced and tell the children they are their only hope of escaping from the ghosts that have invaded their isolated country house. And then there's that nursery rhyme...

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Sapphire & Steel - Assignment Four

Last night, as I was walking up the stair, I met a man who wasn't there. He wasn't there again today, I wish, I wish he'd go away.

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Escape through a Crack in Time (1)

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When a mother and father disappear from an old house while reading their young daughter a nursery rhyme, Sapphire and Steel arrive to investigate.

sapphire and steel assignment 1 cast

By Gadfly on Dec 19, 2018

In an isolated house, a boy, Robert Stephen Jardine, sits at the kitchen table studying. Around him, clock stick regularly. He hears something moving at the window and goes to investigate. Robert closes the drapes and goes to the stairs, and hears his mother upstairs, chanting numbers and laughing with Robert's sister Helen. They then begin "Ring a Ring of Roses " together, and the clocks keep ticking. Robert continues studying and the cocks keep ticking. Each one shows a different time. The clo…

Mother

Felicity Harrison

Robert Stephen Jardine

Steven O'Shea

Helen Jardine

Tamasin Bridge

Countryman

Ronald Goodale

Father

John Golightly

Cast appearances.

Steel

David McCallum

Sapphire

Joanna Lumley

Episode discussion.

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sapphire and steel assignment 1 cast

  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews

Assignment Five: Part 5

  • Episode aired Aug 25, 1981

Joanna Lumley in Sapphire & Steel (1979)

Sapphire and Steel realize that things must play out exactly as before in 1930 or the human race is doomed, but something is trying to interfere with time. Dr McDee has to die. Sapphire and Steel realize that things must play out exactly as before in 1930 or the human race is doomed, but something is trying to interfere with time. Dr McDee has to die. Sapphire and Steel realize that things must play out exactly as before in 1930 or the human race is doomed, but something is trying to interfere with time. Dr McDee has to die.

  • Shaun O'Riordan
  • Peter Hammond
  • Don Houghton
  • Anthony Read
  • David McCallum
  • Joanna Lumley
  • Patience Collier
  • 1 User review
  • 1 Critic review

David McCallum

  • Emma Mullrine

Davy Kaye

  • Lord Mullrine
  • Felicity McDee

Jeffry Wickham

  • Felix Harborough
  • (as Jeffrey Wickham)

Jeremy Child

  • Howard McDee
  • Annabelle Harborough
  • Dr. George McDee
  • Don Houghton (uncredited)
  • All cast & crew
  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

User reviews 1

  • Dec 9, 2020
  • August 25, 1981 (United Kingdom)
  • United Kingdom
  • Associated Television (ATV)
  • Colour Productions
  • See more company credits at IMDbPro

Technical specs

  • Runtime 25 minutes

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IMAGES

  1. SAPPHIRE AND STEEL: ASSIGNMENT ONE

    sapphire and steel assignment 1 cast

  2. Sapphire And Steel

    sapphire and steel assignment 1 cast

  3. Sapphire and Steel

    sapphire and steel assignment 1 cast

  4. Sapphire And Steel: Assignments 1-3 (Box Set) [DVD]: Amazon.co.uk

    sapphire and steel assignment 1 cast

  5. Sapphire and Steel: Assignment 1 part 5 of 6

    sapphire and steel assignment 1 cast

  6. Sapphire & Steel. Assignment One

    sapphire and steel assignment 1 cast

VIDEO

  1. Sapphire & Steel Assignment 6

  2. SAPPHIRE & STEEL

  3. Sapphire and Steel: Assignment 4 part 2

  4. Sapphire and Steel

  5. Sapphire and Steel: Human

  6. Sapphire & Steel

COMMENTS

  1. "Sapphire & Steel" Assignment One: Part 1 (TV Episode 1979)

    "Sapphire & Steel" Assignment One: Part 1 (TV Episode 1979) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  2. "Sapphire & Steel" Assignment One: Part 1 (TV Episode 1979)

    Assignment One: Part 1: Directed by Shaun O'Riordan. With David McCallum, Joanna Lumley, Steven O'Shea, Tamasin Bridge. A pair of inter-dimensional operatives, Sapphire and Steel are two of multiple elements that assume human form and are sent to investigate strange events, where they appear to be engaged in guarding the continuing flow of time.

  3. Sapphire & Steel (TV Series 1979-1982)

    Sapphire & Steel (TV Series 1979-1982) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. Movies. Release Calendar Top 250 Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top Box Office Showtimes & Tickets Movie News India Movie Spotlight. TV Shows.

  4. Sapphire & Steel

    Sapphire & Steel is a British television supernatural sci-fi/fantasy series starring Joanna Lumley as Sapphire and David McCallum as Steel. Produced by ATV, it ran from 1979 to 1982 on the ITV network. The series was created by Peter J. Hammond who conceived the programme under the working title The Time Menders, after a stay in an allegedly haunted castle. . Hammond also wrote all the stories ...

  5. Sapphire and Steel

    The cast all impress, particularly Lumley and McCallum. They're pure class and embody their roles from the moment they step onto the screen. While it's perhaps an episode too long, Sapphire & Steel's first Assignment is an atmospheric family-friendly chiller, that promises great things from the series. Review: Daniel Tessier

  6. Sapphire & Steel

    From Assignment Two onwards, the series would show a marked shift towards an adult audience, with more complex concepts and adult themes coming to the fore. Of the six Sapphire & Steel assignments, the first is the easiest to make sense of, but that doesn't mean that it's child's play. Hammond tacitly shies away from offering a clear exposition ...

  7. Assignment One: Part 1

    Sapphire and Steel Assignment One: Part 1 Sci-Fi Jul 10, 1979 25 min Prime Video Available on Philo, Prime Video, Tubi TV, Amazon Freevee ... A pair of strange, time-traveling agents named Sapphire and Steel arrive instead and inform Rob that they are his only hope in getting his parents back. Sci-Fi Jul 10, 1979 25 min Prime Video

  8. Sapphire & Steel: Assignment 1

    Sapphire & Steel is a British television science-fiction fantasy series starring David McCallum as Steel and Joanna Lumley as Sapphire. Produced by ATV, it ran from 1979 to 1982 on the ITV network. The series was created by Peter J. Hammond who conceived the programme under the working title The Time Menders, after a stay in an allegedly haunted castle. Hammond also wrote all the stories ...

  9. Sapphire and Steel

    Sapphire and Steel - Full Cast & Crew. Mysterious investigators possess strange powers, including the ability to manipulate time. Popular in Britain, where it aired from 1979 to 1982, it stars ...

  10. SAPPHIRE AND STEEL: Episode Guide and reviews on the Sci-Fi Freak Site

    ASSIGNMENT 5. EPISODE 1 - Lord Mulrine is having a party to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Mulrine International and has ensured that everything in the house is exactly as it was fifty years ago, with the exception of the security door into his office. The other guests were under orders to wear clothes that fit the period. Sapphire and Steel have invited themselves along ...

  11. Watch Sapphire and Steel · Season 1 Episode 1 · Assignment I: Escape

    On an ordinary evening, a mother and father sing nursery rhymes to their daughter Helen before bed. Their teenage son Robert becomes alarmed when all the clocks in the house stop working. He hurries upstairs to find that his parents have vanished. Left alone with Helen and no neighbors nearby, Rob calls the police for help. But a pair of strange, time-traveling agents named Sapphire and Steel ...

  12. 'Sapphire and Steel': Remarkable, obscure, British sci-fi

    Factory released Sapphire and Steel: The Complete Series, a six-disc, 34-episode (each "assignment" is comprised of multiple episodes) collection of the cult U.K. sci-fi series that ran sporadically on ITV from 1979 to 1982. Click to order Sapphire and Steel: The Complete Series at Amazon. Your purchase helps pay the bills at this website!

  13. List of Sapphire & Steel serials

    This is a list of the television and audio serials of the British science-fiction series Sapphire & Steel . The television series was transmitted between July 1979 and August 1982 on ITV1 and was produced by Shaun O'Riordan, with David Reid as executive. More than two decades later, an audio series was released on compact disc by Big Finish ...

  14. "Sapphire & Steel" Assignment Three: Part 1 (TV Episode 1981)

    Assignment Three: Part 1: Directed by Shaun O'Riordan. With David McCallum, Joanna Lumley, Catherine Hall, David Gant. Sapphire and Steel receive a puzzling assignment at an apartment complex where time is poised to attack. However, their inspection of every room in the complex reveals nothing suspicious. Even the abandoned top floor reveals no indications of trouble.

  15. Watch Sapphire and Steel · Assignment I Full Episodes Free Online

    Watch Sapphire and Steel · Assignment I free starring David McCallum, Joanna Lumley.

  16. Sapphire and Steel

    Following on straight from "Assignment One," Sapphire & Steel's second serial is widely considered one of its very best.An outright ghost story, "Assignment Two" ups the atmosphere and the scares. While the first serial reveals its origins as a children's programme, "Assignment Two" is supernatural horror that addresses the folly of war and the injustice of untimely death.

  17. Sapphire and Steel: Escape through a Crack in Time (1)

    By Gadfly on Dec 19, 2018. In an isolated house, a boy, Robert Stephen Jardine, sits at the kitchen table studying. Around him, clock stick regularly. He hears something moving at the window and goes to investigate. Robert closes the drapes and goes to the stairs, and hears his mother upstairs, chanting numbers and laughing with Robert's sister ...

  18. "Sapphire & Steel" Assignment Five: Part 1 (TV Episode 1981)

    Assignment Five: Part 1: Directed by Shaun O'Riordan. With David McCallum, Joanna Lumley, Patience Collier, Davy Kaye. A wealthy business man holds a party in a 1930's period reconstruction for his guests, but all is not what it seems. Sapphire and Steel invite themselves to investigate.

  19. Rare Richard Mille watch could set a record at Christie's New York

    The transparent Richard Mille wristwatch, with a complex sapphire case design and sapphire crystal skeletonized tourbillon, is expected to sell for up to $4 million at auction at Christie's ...

  20. What to know about tariffs on Chinese goods such as EVs

    Starting in 2018, Trump imposed new tariffs of up to 25% on foreign-made washing machines, solar panels, steel and aluminum, as well as many Chinese-made goods, including baseball hats, luggage ...

  21. "Sapphire & Steel" Assignment Three: Part 3 (TV Episode 1981)

    Assignment Three: Part 3: Directed by Shaun O'Riordan. With David McCallum, Joanna Lumley, David Collings, Catherine Hall. After Sapphire disappears while trying to contact the creature inside the capsule, Steel must figure out where she has gone and how to proceed with the investigation. Luckily, technology specialist Silver arrives to lend a hand with getting inside the capsule.

  22. "Sapphire & Steel" Assignment Five: Part 5 (TV Episode 1981)

    Assignment Five: Part 5: Directed by Shaun O'Riordan. With David McCallum, Joanna Lumley, Patience Collier, Davy Kaye. Sapphire and Steel realize that things must play out exactly as before in 1930 or the human race is doomed, but something is trying to interfere with time. Dr McDee has to die.