"The Protectors" A Kind of Wild Justice (TV Episode 1972) Poster

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1/10
Needs to be around 25 minutes shorter.
rewgreen4 February 2023
The longest episode so far, clocking in at about three hours, or at least that's how it feels. This one just seems to drag on and on, with stilted dialogue, an ambling plot and nothing really memorable enough to warrant reviewing. Sure, there's a plot twist towards the end, but by this point you don't really care.

Vaughn smirks throughout, Porter attempts to add a little 70's glamour, while Anholt merely makes up the numbers. None of the actors come out of this looking anything other than adequate, rather than proficient or likeable.

I always look forward to the relaxed final scene of The Protectors, it's an opportunity for Porter to show some cleavage and for the writers to add a little humour to the otherwise dry programme. Here Nyree succeeds in her task, but the writers unfailingly miss their mark by a country mile. Poor unflappable Harry Rule has to suddenly slip off his dour demeanour and form his expression into something more befitting of an actual likeable human being. This seems to be beyond Vaughn's abilities, but that may be purely down to the fact that the script's humour is so embarrassingly unfunny. You can't even laugh at the clumsiness of it all, you are just left openmouthed as the ever reliable Tony bursts into song.
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4/10
A Kind of Wild Justice
Prismark105 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
It opens with Harry Rule getting shot at close range but luckily he survives.

The Protectors need to protect themselves but they need to find the assassin first. She turns out to be Kate Linderman who is angry that Harry help imprison her father for twelve years.

Her father was a gangster and died in prison. Linderman has travelled from Australia to get her revenge. She does not believe a word that her father was a gangster and vows to get Harry again.

There is a temporary truce as Harry takes Linderman to see some of her father's associates.

Meanwhile Paul Buchet smells a trap after the bullet that was extracted from Harry is examined.

It is a silly story. It turns out that Harry was shot by a rubber bullet. Linderman wanted to meet her father's associates which she did not know about. She was convinced they had some money that her father had stashed for a rainy day. When it poured he could not afford a top lawyer as his associate kept the money.

Well you can be shot dead by a rubber bullet and I was surprised that the surgeon could not readily identify it when Harry was in hospital.
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