Episodes
- "Dead Man's Shoes" (September 1940) - Ash joins his new company and learns its mission. He is quickly given command of a section whose previous officer was blown to bits. Under the tutelage of his sergeant, he defuses his first bomb.
- "Unsung Heroes" (October 1940) - Ash is reprimanded, first by Captain Francis for a newspaper story about the section, then by Major Luckhurst for his reckless behaviour defusing a low-priority bomb. Ash becomes acquainted with a new officer, Ken Machin, who is billeted with him, and meets his wife.
- "Just Like a Woman" (November 1940) - Charged with showing Machin what to do, Ash gives in to Machin's pleadings and allows him to finish disarming what seems to be a straightforward bomb alone while Ash goes to deal with a more urgent situation. While he is gone, it explodes, killing Machin. He later learns that the dead man had only just got engaged to his "wife" and that she is pregnant.
- "Cast Iron Killer" (April 1941) - Ash's guilt over Machin's death is eased when it is learned that the Germans have begun boobytrapping the bomb fuses so they cannot be safely removed. A skeptical Ash delivers a disarmed bomb to Dr. Gillespie, an inventor who has come up with a novel solution: drilling a hole in the side and piping in steam to melt the explosive out. Ash meets Gillespie's married daughter Susan. During its first trial, the new method works, but Sapper Copping is killed.
- "The Silver Lining" (September 1941) - The section digs for a bomb in a risqué nightclub. When Susan comes up to London, Ash takes her out for a night of dining and dancing.
- "The Quiet Weekend" (October 1941) - Ash and Susan's relationship turns serious, and they spend a weekend together at a hotel. However, Ash is called back to work, cutting short their tryst. Susan grows impatient waiting for him and returns home to find an unexpected visitor: her husband Stephen.
- "Digging Out" (November 1941) - While the section works on a bomb at an abandoned factory, Corporal Salt wanders off and finds a young woman trapped beside a second bomb with a time fuse. Without Ash's knowledge or permission, Salt and several other men take a great risk and manhandle the bomb into the nearby river just before it explodes. Later, unable to get a leave, Salt goes AWOL to try to persuade his wife to leave Manchester with their children, but a German bomb kills her and injures him. When Salt recovers, he is demoted to sapper. Major Luckhurst informs Captain Francis that he will shortly be taking command of the company, as Luckhurst has been promoted.
- "Bad Company" (December 1941 to January 1942) - Francis' heavy-handed measures to instill more discipline cause widespread resentment. He is particularly harsh with Ash for a more personal reason; Ash's affair with a married woman reminds him of his own wife's infidelity. When Francis is seen secretly burning papers commending Ash, Susan gets her father to use his influence, and Francis is posted to a construction unit in Scotland. Ash's men misbehave. One pawns his "best boots" to pay off a debt without knowing how he will redeem them, while another gets involved in a bar-room fight, bringing him to the attention of the military police.
- "Seventeen Seconds to Glory" (April 1942) - Ash helps a Royal Navy officer defuse a mine that gives a man just seventeen seconds to get clear once the clock mechanism starts. Susan's husband, working on code-breaking at Bletchley Park, has a nervous breakdown. She is advised to look after him, prompting her to break off her relationship with Ash without explanation, just after he has proposed and she has accepted.
- "Butterfly Winter" (December 1942) - The Germans attempt to sow confusion and fear in the British countryside by dropping large numbers of food can-sized butterfly bombs from bombers. Some have impact fuses, while, others are time-delayed or set off by movement. The bombs have a way of finding themselves into all manner of places, and their sheer numbers make it impossible for Ash to deal with them on his own; his entire unit down to the lowest rank must now be directly involved in securing and blowing up these bombs. Salt is killed as a result.
- "Dead Letter" (June 1943) - 14 months after Ash and Susan broke up, they have an awkward reunion when her father, Dr Gillespie, asks for Ash to be assigned to help him figure out how to defuse the new German 'Y' fuse. The new design uses a mercury tilt switch to detect movement of the bomb after it lands; thus, the fuse cannot be touched. Ash is the first to try out Gillespie's solution: freezing it to neutralise its battery. Ash has a liaison with a woman who has lost the man she loves.
- "The Pier" (October 1943) - Susan and Ash get engaged once again following her husband's suicide. Ash's unit is relocated to Brighton. He is assigned a seaside pleasure pier that had been mined heavily in anticipation of the German invasion that never came in 1940. Ivor Rogers, now in overall command, tells Ash to delegate the work, but when a promising new officer under his command is killed by an unmarked mine, Ash goes back to work. While attempting to defuse one device, it explodes and badly injures him.
- "With Love, from Adolf" (May 1944) - When Norma finds out she is pregnant, she finally agrees to marry Mulley. Ash has a difficult recovery, both physically and mentally, and his relationship with Susan is strained nearly to the breaking point. He worries about being useless and discarded. When he sees Ivor about going back to work, he is sent to deal with a routine older-model bomb. Dismantling the fuse, however, Ash finds a note inside that says "With Love, from Adolf.". Ivor, it seems, was testing him.
The series was first broadcast between 8 January and 2 April 1979 on Monday nights at 21:00.
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Famous quotes containing the word episodes:
“Twenty or thirty years ago, in the army, we had a lot of obscure adventures, and years later we tell them at parties, and suddenly we realize that those two very difficult years of our lives have become lumped together into a few episodes that have lodged in our memory in a standardized form, and are always told in a standardized way, in the same words. But in fact that lump of memories has nothing whatsoever to do with our experience of those two years in the army and what it has made of us.”
—Václav Havel (b. 1936)
“What is a novel if not a conviction of our fellow-mens existence strong enough to take upon itself a form of imagined life clearer than reality and whose accumulated verisimilitude of selected episodes puts to shame the pride of documentary history?”
—Joseph Conrad (18571924)