rareandcollectibledvds
Reilly: Ace of Spies on DVD, Crime, Sam Neill, Michael Bryant
Reilly: Ace of Spies on DVD, Crime, Sam Neill, Michael Bryant

For DVD use the GET DVD Button
For a Digital Download use the DOWNLOAD Button
Couldn't load pickup availability
Description:
A dramatization of the missions and adventures of the greatest spy in British history.
Actors: Sam Neill, Michael Bryant, Norman Rodway
Year Of Release: 1983
Running Time: n/a minutes Color
Language : English
(Manufactured On Demand , Region 0.)
This DVD will play in DVD players worldwide
POSTAGE : Free In Australia. Rest Of The World at Table Rate
Australia : All Orders Of Two Or More Dvds Are Upgraded To Tracked Shipping.
Rest Of The World : All orders shipped with Tracking
Delivery times for tracked shipping are halved compared to untracked shipping
Australia 7 to 15 days : Overseas 18 to 22 days
COMBINED POSTAGE : ONLY CHARGED FOR FIRST DVD ALL OTHERS IN A MULTIPLE ORDER ARE POST FREE
All Dvds Come In A Dvd Case With Color Artwork And Printed Disc.
ALL DVDs ARE AVAILABLE ON Mpeg4 DOWNLOAD FILE
Testimonial:
I fortuitously got turned onto Reilly courtesy of a television review in the Toronto Star, to which I am eternally grateful. I might have missed it otherwise. Reilly was a terrific series. Heavily romanticized and perhaps not quite factually accurate to be sure, but an absolute, rewarding joy nonetheless. The original PBS broadcast of "Mystery" was embellished by the intros and epilogues rendered eloquently by the late great Vincent Price, whose narrative provides a valuable context. Shostakovitch's score sets the tone---romantic, redolent of a bygone era. The series was my introduction to Sam Neill, whose facial image---hard-eyed, with that ruthless slash of a mouth---prefaces the credits. Wonderful set and costume design. Good supporting cast, particularly the wonderful Leo McKern. Terrific script by Troy Kennedy Martin. This inspired me to see out paperbacks on Reilly. A worthwhile addition to anyone's television collection, to stand alongside Patrick McGoohan's The Prisoner.

