The Flashing Blade

The Flashing Blade
Also known as Le Chevalier Tempête
Genre Drama
Written by Andre Paul Antoine and P A Breal
Directed by Yannick Andrei
Starring
  • Robert Etcheverry
  • Jacques Balutin
  • Denise Grey
  • Genevieve Casile
  • Jean Martinelli
Country of origin France
Original language(s) French
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 12
Production
Cinematography Pierre Petit
Running time 22 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel France: ORTF
UK: BBC One
Original airing 1967 (France), 1969 (UK)

The Flashing Blade (Le Chevalier Tempête) is a French television serial made in the late 1960s. It was first broadcast in the UK on BBC children's television during the 1960s, with several re-runs throughout the 1970s. The British version of twelve 22 minutes episodes was created from the original four French 75-minute episodes.[1]

The fictional story is based upon historical events during the War of the Mantuan Succession (1628–1631) between France and Spain and its allies. Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy, a supporter of Spain, laid siege to Casale, the capital of Montferrat on the Savoie (Savoy) border. Despite numerous attempts to scale the defences, the beleaguered garrison held out. The Savoy army was eventually defeated by a French relief force on 18 March 1629.

Plot

The series revolves around the efforts of a dashing French spy to engineer the garrison's rescue. Francois, the Chevalier de Recci, and his servant Guillot are trapped in a besieged castle on the border between France and Spain. When the Spanish elite hear of a possible truce between France and Spain some of them do not want a truce because the capture of the castle has greater strategic importance. They begin a bombardment order to capture the French castle before any form of ceasefire agreement is signed. The garrison commander, General Thoiras, recruits Francois and Gullot to break through Spanish lines to get word of the attack to the French Army. The pair, with their superior swordplay and horsemanship, embark on a daring mission evading capture, enemy spies and pursuing soldiers to deliver their message. The series ends with the Chevalier bringing news of the peace conference's decision to the Spanish Forces surrounding the castle.

Cast

Actor Character
Robert Etcheverry The Chevalier de Recci (Francois)
Denise Grey La Comtesse – The Duchess
Jacques Balutin Guillot
Genevieve Casile Isabelle de Sospel
Jean Martinelli Duke de Sospel
Mario Pilar Don Alonso

Production

Several cast members from The Flashing Blade appeared in similar serialised action productions for French children's TV. Desert Crusader was virtually identical to The Flashing Blade but set in 12th century Palestine during the Third Crusade. The Aeronauts was set in the present day and featured a couple of daring French Air Force Mirage fighter pilots.

Broadcast

It was perhaps most notorious for the fact that on its last two (conventional) broadcasts, the final episode lost vision through an apparent fault with the film stock;[1] a considerable disappointment to its viewers after it had been running for many episodes over many weeks. The final few minutes of the last episode were later shown on Michael Aspel's "request a repeat" show Ask Aspel.

Theme Tune

The theme song was "Fight" by The Musketeers (written by Alex Masters), which was issued on a Philips single in 1969.

Re-dubbed parody

In 1988, Andrew O'Connor, Kate Copstick, Bernadette Nolan and Terry Randall produced a spoof version which was broadcast on the Saturday morning children's show On the Waterfront. The scripts for the new comic soundtrack were written by the award-winning dramatist Russell T Davies.[2] This team reunited in 1995 for a one off episode that was broadcast on Children's BBC for Red Nose Day. The parody version was followed by a re-run of the original series in the autumn of 1988.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Worthington, TJ (February 2008). "You've Got to Fight for What You Want". OFF THE TELLY. Retrieved 1 February 2008.
  2. "Interview – writer Russell T Davies". Classic TV. BBC. Retrieved 1 February 2008.

External links