English Lord Brett Sinclair and American Danny Wilde are both wealthy playboys, they are teamed together by Judge Fullton to investigate crimes which the police can't solve. These two men are complete opposites, but become great friends through their adventures and constantly risk their own lives for one another. Mix two relatively harmless compounds like nitro and glycerine, and you've got yourself a very potent combination, just like in the case of the titled Englishman, Lord Brett Sinclair, and the Bronx-raised, self-made American Danny Wilde. Joined into an improbable team by a not-so-unexpected bar brawl and the ingeniousness of the retired Judge Fulton, the two men of immense quality and potential are off to search for loopholes overlooked and to redress one of the anomalies of the law, that is in protecting the innocent, the guilty often go free too. Sometimes rivals, sometimes allies, nevertheless, always companions, Lord Brett, the noble, first-class athlete and artistic polyglot, and Danny, the irrepressible, optimistic and courageous oil tycoon, together they are bound to get the job done. Who could stand in the way of such an unlikely but powerful alliance? As mentioned in somebody else his/ her comment, I also like the theme of the Persuaders by John Barry, and indeed it sounds like there's coming up a lot of danger. As an 8 year old child, seeing the rehearsel, I do found it dangerous. Seeing it now, I see a lot of humour and some played sarcasm between a typical american and a typical englishman. Ask Persuaders fans there favourite "persuader" and you always get the answer that it's hard to choose. I like Roger Moore's way of acting, but without Tony it's no fun. Recently I joint a fanclub, bought all chaptures on DVD and learned much more about my most favourite series ever. The Persuaders should definitely not be missed by anyone who enjoys detective stories, action, and the classical Roger Moore humor. If you enjoyed the Saint, Watch this series too!
Huberrein replied
351 weeks ago