Series 3 of the ITV programme Foyle's War was first aired in 2004; comprising four episodes, it is set in early 1941. Series 3 was broadcast in the United States on PBS on Mystery!, on 11, 18, and 25 September, and 2 October 2005 as Foyle's War III,[1] and on Netflix as of April 2014.[2]
Foyle's War | |
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Season 3 | |
No. of episodes | 4 |
Series chronology | |
Episodes
edit"The French Drop"
editWriter: Anthony Horowitz | Director: Gavin Millar | Airdate: 24 October 2004 | Net duration: 94 minutes | Set: February 1941 | Viewers: 9.10 million |
Guests: Ronald Pickup, Angela Thorne, Samuel West, Deborah Findlay, Timothy Carlton, Tony Haygarth, Lydia Leonard | |||||
In occupied France, a British agent named "Facteur" is killed when he steps on a mine after parachuting in near Rouen. The agent is linked to a tense standoff between Major General Sir Giles Messinger of MI6 and Colonel James Wintringham of Special Operations Executive (SOE). Back in Hastings, a body is found after an explosion in a bookshop. Although it appears that Messinger's son William had committed suicide, the facts available are inconsistent. Following the trail to SOE, and their "dirty warfare" training centre at Hill House, Foyle meets Wintringham and Hilda Pierce, and with the help of Milner and Stewart he is slowly able to uncover the true identity of the body and the story behind it. Foyle then reveals that William Messinger and Facteur are the same person, and that the explosion and body-theft were part of a cover-up in order to avoid SOE being shut down by MI6. He decides to remain quiet over SOE's blunders regarding the "Facteur" mission, and accepts accusations of mis-investigation from Messinger, losing the naval security job he had been hoping for, but believing he has best aided the war effort.[3] |
Cast and characters
editIn Hastings, Foyle and Milner (whose marriage is now breaking up) spend time dealing with petty crimes and black marketeers. Foyle, wanting to do more to help the war effort, goes to the Admiralty to see his brother-in-law Commander Charles Howard in hope of being offered a job at Naval Command in Liverpool. This ultimately fails. Foyle also has a run-in at SOE with an ex-con called Mason (alias Leo Maccoby) whom he had helped to send to prison some three years earlier. Stewart returns to her hometown with Foyle, and they meet her uncle Aubrey Stewart, the local vicar. This episode features the second of three appearances by the recurring character Hilda Pierce, played by Ellie Haddington (previously in the Series 2 episode "War Games", and then in the Series 5 episode "All Clear"); she then becomes a lead character in Series 8.
Background and production
editThe title of the episode is taken from the phrase "French drop", which is a well-known vanishing trick involving sleight of hand. Horowitz was also inspired by the Special Operations Executive, which Churchill created in 1940 to develop techniques of sabotage and subversion. By setting the story in the early days of the SOE, Horowitz was able to use the conflict between the new SOE and the older yet under-prepared Security Service and Secret Intelligence Service as a backdrop to the plot. Many of the details are authentic, such as the use by the SOE of carborundum powder to disable cars,[4] and some characters are based on people involved with the SOE, such as the former Shanghai Municipal Police officer William E. Fairbairn and Hilda Pierce, based on the real-life Vera Atkins. Throughout the episode, numerous people are also seen carrying around gas masks in small cardboard boxes with a carry string attached, indicating the concern about possible chemical weapon attacks of the time.
"Enemy Fire"
editWriter: Anthony Horowitz | Director: Gavin Millar | Airdate: 31 October 2004 | Net duration: 93 minutes | Set: February 1941 | Viewers: 8.15 million |
Guests: Bill Paterson, Peter Blythe, Simon Woods, Jonathan Slinger, Alexandra Moen, Shaun Dooley, John Wood, Richard Huw, Martin Turner | |||||
The RAF requisitions Digby Manor as a burns medical unit led by surgeon Patrick Jamieson and Dr. Brian Wrenn. Group Captain Lawrence Smythe is dubious of Jamieson's unconventional yet effective methods. The manor's owner, Sir Michael Waterford, and his housekeeper, Mrs. Roecastle, are troubled by their eviction but comply. Numerous acts of petty sabotage then occur at the manor, and investigations reveal it to be work of the housekeeper, upset at the requisition. Meanwhile, Peter Preston, the new ARP warden, informs Wrenn of his wife's affair. Andrew Foyle is relieved when his friend Greville Woods is sent on a night reconnaissance mission instead of him. The mission ends after Woods crashes and suffers serious burns, and Andrew goes AWOL in Stewart's flat, suffering from severe exhaustion. Gordon Drake, a central figure in the story, being somehow connected to everyone, is murdered. Foyle and Milner are able to determine that even though Wrenn initially assaulted Drake, it was Preston, his brother-in-law, who killed him over his harsh treatment of Preston's sister Beryl. |
Cast and characters
editFoyle is shown visiting the grave of his wife on the ninth anniversary of her death. The tombstone reads: "Rosalind Foyle, June 1902-February 1932, RIP". Wrenn is the surgeon who had amputated Milner's leg. Andrew Foyle receives a promotion to flight lieutenant and is transferred to a training position by Wing Commander Turner, who understands his burnout and the service he has already performed.
Background and production
editThe hospital and its patients are broadly based on the work of Archibald McIndoe and his "guinea pigs".[citation needed] Waterford's story of battle-fatigue and self-injury 25 years ago parallels that of Woods' injuries and Andrew Foyle's stress in this war. Andrew Foyle's transfer to a training position at an Operational Training Unit (OTU) is slightly inaccurate. 605 Squadron was a front line unit February 1941, and RAF Debden did not have an OTU until March 1941 when No. 52 OTU formed to train fighter pilots using the Hawker Hurricane, so it would be unlikely for him to fly a Spitfire to a unit with Hurricanes. The scenes at the "factory" where Ann Preston worked, were filmed at IWM Duxford's Hangar 3, featuring The Old Flying Machine Company's Spitfire from Series 1.
"They Fought in the Fields"
editWriter: Rob Heyland | Director: Jeremy Silberston | Airdate: 7 November 2004 | Net duration: 92 minutes | Set: April 1941 | Viewers: 8.48 million |
Guests: Nigel Terry, Joe Armstrong, James Wilby, Stella Gonet, Anatole Taubman, Paula Jennings, Trevor Cooper | |||||
After an air raid, two Luftwaffe airmen, Sabatowski and Schimmel, are captured and handed over to the POW interrogation service's Major Cornwall. Meanwhile, on Hugh Jackson's farm, his son Tom (who works as a guard at the POW camp) finds his father shot dead in an apparent suicide. Also on the farm are two Land Girls, Rose Henshall and Joan Dillon, and wood selector Barbara Hicks. Soon, another German airman, Weiser, is found nearby with his pistol missing, and he is taken to the camp's infirmary by Cornwall. However, irregularities come to light after examining the farmer's body. Foyle finds blood while Milner finds a pig carcass in a freshly dug grave, revealing black marketeering at the farm. After Foyle learns Henshall is pregnant with Hugh Jackson's child, they also find Andrew Neame, the man who had supposedly run away with Jackson's wife 11 years earlier. He denies running away with her, and the truth is revealed - that Jackson killed and buried her, and that Weiser is actually a secret German agent sent to silence Sabatowski, and he shot Jackson after being discovered. |
Cast and characters
editFoyle is shown to understand German (in addition to French from the last episode) due to his service in the previous war. He also explains that he was part of a police football team that played while in Germany in 1936. Stewart is scoffed at by Dillon because of her "cushy" driving job, and she decides to help the Land Girls with the potato crop.
Background and production
editWith the air and sea campaigns around the UK, a number of POW camps were set up, as depicted in this episode. The programme also focuses on the voluntary service of the Women's Land Army, started by the government in June 1939 to increase agricultural production.
"A War of Nerves"
editWriter: Anthony Horowitz | Director: Gavin Millar | Airdate: 14 November 2004 | Net duration: 94 minutes | Set: June 1941 | Viewers: 8.19 million |
Guests: Peter Capaldi, Peter-Hugo Daly, Charles Pemberton, David Westhead, Dugald Bruce Lockhart, Joanna Horton, Angela Curran | |||||
Seeking to crack down on organised crime, Milner goes undercover in the building business, which leads Foyle's team to possible racketeering at the Talbot Shipyard. Assistant Commissioner Rose directs Foyle to investigate communist leader Raymond Carter, who is in Hastings with his fiancée, who is Rose's daughter, the painter Lucinda Sheridan. Carter rebukes Foyle for his inquiry, and Sheridan goes on to explain his commitment to the People's Convention. The story then follows a bomb disposal unit composed of Royal Engineers Captain Hammond, Jack Archer, and Ernest Jones, who are called to the shipyard, and find a cache of money which they steal. Foyle later learns from a shop steward and union agitator, Derek Woodgate, that only 200 people work at the yard, whereas the Talbot brothers have been receiving wages for 400. Later, the body of Jones is found, killed by the Talbots' henchmen, and Hammond decides to booby trap a suitcase, ending up killing himself and the Talbot brothers. The money is then returned to the government. |
Cast and characters
editIn this episode, it is revealed that Sergeant Eric Rivers, who normally mans the police station's front desk, has a daughter named Gwen. Further, Stewart agrees to testify on behalf of Jack Archer, Gwen's fiancé, later agreeing to be her bridesmaid.
Background and production
editThe Chatham Dockyards provided the location for the shipyard, featuring both HMS Ocelot and HMS Cavalier.[5] The shipyard racket is based on a real case of fraud by Frederick Porter of Liverpool in 1942, whose ship scaling business embezzled over £300,000 from the government.[4] Rose also invokes Defence Regulation 18B as an extra-legal means of getting to Carter. The episode ends with the announcement of Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union.
International broadcast
editSeries 3 was broadcast in the United States on PBS on Mystery!, on 11, 18, and 25 September, and 2 October 2005 as Foyle's War III,[1] and on Netflix as of April 2014.[2]
References
edit- ^ a b "Series III: Episode Descriptions". PBS. Archived from the original on 20 November 2014. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
- ^ a b Thomas, Chet (2 April 2014). "More British TV Shows on Netflix: 'Foyle's War'". Netflix TV Shows Review. Archived from the original on 8 November 2014.
- ^ Foyle's War Series 3 (DVD). ITV.
- ^ a b Horowitz, Anthony. "Foyle's War: Facts and Fictions". PBS. Archived from the original on 18 November 2014.
- ^ "Foyle's War – A War of Nerves (2004)". Kent Film Office. 17 March 2004.