Barriers (TV Series 1981– ) Poster

(1981– )

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9/10
One Of My Favourite memories
integralesixteenvalve16 March 2008
Barriers seems to be one of those series that have been lost in the mists of time. After it's transmission in the early 80s and one repeat, it's since sunk without trace. This is a crying shame.

I originally watched this when it was transmitted in the Southern TV region on Sunday afternoons and was classic tea-time viewing. Although I don't remember a great deal about the program, a few things stuck in my mind. Most notable were the unforgettable titles. The mournful flute music accompanying the attempted escape across an East European border and the subsequent car crash (and that scene has left me with an abiding love of 'fintail' Mercedes models as they used a Merc 200). Although it wasn't obvious at the start, the solution to the series' mystery was in these titles.

The plot about a young music student trying to unravel what really happened when he discovers he was adopted had lots of twists and turns but Barriers was a surprisingly 'adult' children's drama. Benedict Taylor was excellent as Billy and it was a shame he didn't do a lot more.

This was a quality drama, well overdue for a DVD release and I hope I'll get the chance to re-acquaint myself with it in the future.

A fond memory from my childhood
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10/10
someone else who remembers this!
karencole197011 March 2007
what a relief to find out I am not imagining this programme! the summary from taxman is great. I too remember finding it haunting and not particularly family viewing, I must have been 10/11 at the time I watched it. I think for a girl that age part of attraction was lead's very blond hair, and his permanently sad state. The theme was played on a flute I recall - although I cannot remember how it went. I think the intro showed him playing it - or maybe he played a flute in the programme and especially when he was sad? Maybe I am destined never to know how it ended or to see clip or hear the tune, but at least I now know it is not just me.
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10/10
brilliant thriller at tea time
pov9913 September 2005
Warning: Spoilers
A classic series that should be at least repeated or released on DVD.Billy Toth,after realising he is adopted after the death of his parents,embarks on a journey to find his real parents.After various rites of passage,his search culminates in the discovery that his fathers identity was stolen and used by a human trafficker in Europe!If i remember correctly,the series ends on the Austrian(?] ski slopes and a cliff top chase resulting in the death of Billys fathers betrayer. This series was all filmed on location in various destinations round Europe and appeared polished and incredibly well made with some episodes crossing into the realms of film noir and crime thriller.The main arc was often eclipsed by the slices of life that Billy went through during his years of toiling to find his mother and fathers secrets.A class act but underrated and forgotten.
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The-Fugitive-meets-a-Cold-War-Film-Noir-Children's-Television-Serie s
taxman20019 May 2004
For some reason I always seem to remember this being shown on Channel 4 when it first started back in 1982.

It never came across to me as a children's drama (even though it was) and I always felt that I was watching something that the adults wouldn't want me to. The opening credits always fascinated me, which I suppose me being an 11 year old at the time was not hard to do.

It's a dark night on the Austrian/Hungarian border in 1963 as a car drives through some woods. This is inter-cut with the present day (well as present a day as 1980 England could be) and Billy Stanyon (the character played by Benedict Taylor).

Back at the woods, and after some more cutting back and forth, the car crashes first of all through some nasty looking soldiers with machine guns and then through some BARRIERS (get it!). Naturally the car is fired upon, crashes and bursts into flames but not before a solitary figure rolls out into the woods before making their escape.

This whole sequence had me glued to the episode week-in, week-out, when our adopted hero Billy Stanyon would try and discover the truth behind his real parents' death.

I just remember that not only were the opening credits and music haunting but the show was too. Billy Stanyon was always one step behind the truth and because of this permanently had a look of complete dejection etched onto his face.

Unfortunately I never got to find out what the whole damn thing was about. Maybe I missed the last couple of episodes or maybe it is lost in the mists of my mind. Or maybe there never was any ending.

Looking back on it, the closest I could describe it was as a The-Fugitive-meets-a-Cold-War-Film-Noir-Children's-Television-Series.
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9/10
Barriers theme tune
bigdigger-102-66108 September 2014
Loved that show. Shame it's not on DVD.I have tracked down the Barriers theme tune on Youtube for those that were looking to hear it again.....just key in Barriers TV show. It's quite a moving piece of music and quite an eerie opening, set around the war but I don't remember much about the storyline at all. All I know is the series starred Benedict Taylor as Billy Stanyon, a teenager facing up to the loss of his parents in a sailing accident only to discover that he was adopted. Billy then set off on a journey to find his real parents that takes him across Europe. The series was filmed on location in Scotland, Germany and Austria. But I remember watching it every week. I remember Benedict Taylor well, the start of career. The last time I saw him on TV was in Darling Buds of May. It would be great to see this series again, so if anyone knows if it's available on DVD, I'd appreciate it. Like many great children's TV shows of the era, it's gone without a trace.
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10/10
My introduction to British television
palevixen23 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The opening tune hauntingly played on a flute. Cold War. Orphaned boy. SOLD!

Benedict Taylor was a revelation.

Young man navigating an alien world.

Austro/Hungarian border. Checkpoints reminded me very much of my own memories of West Berlin. Walking down Oranienstrasse to Checkpoint Charlie. Looking out my own grandmother's window seeing The Wall in the mid 70's. Seeing the memorials of those who attempted to leave the East. Not a bit of wonder Berlin is known as the Grey City.

Looking over The Wall at the ditches and battlements and towers with Alsatians roving with armed guards at the wall itself. Terrifying.

Watching this program proved those memories weren't just my nightmares.

Very dark yet oddly uplifting.
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6/10
Rating does not match the emotional heartstrings
ozwillb1 March 2018
37 years ago on a Sunday afternoon this was required viewing.! Just finished watching it again after all these years, and well! Each week, great! Back to back, and in hindsight, this series has more holes than a Swiss cheese. Billy wants a damn good slap; Robert Addie, dressed as a purple crested spaceman, haggling with a drunk in a Newcastle Cafe (spam I think?). The drunk, considering it was 1981, was haggling pre decimalisation, was it tanner or tenner! I don't think these are spoilers, they just made me laugh! Throughout, I kept thinking that I'd missed an episode, I hadn't. The continuity of everything back to back was excruciating, laughable, and innocently beautiful. Mr Whittaker and Pricey were wonderful, and considering it was TyneTees, I didn't see anyone from Byker Grove or Spender in it! Bravo to TV from a more naive era, and although I've been a little bit critical, I had a great, yet brief period wallowing in a pool of sweet nostalgia. Well done!!
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Flute theme music to Barriers (1983)
dei-gratia1 April 2008
I am glad to have found as much information as this! I've been searching the 'net about once a year trying to find a recording of the theme to Barriers. At least now I have the composer's name (Bert Grund) thanks to this website. I spent several Sundays trying to record the theme on a tape player, but none of the tapes survived my childhood. Anyone who can direct me to a sound-clip will be very gratefully thanked :-) Hero Billy Stanyon was a flautist, although I don't recall that he actually ever played this piece of music. He attended a music college of some kind in Austria, from what I remember, possibly Vienna. Other than that most of what I remember has already been covered in other posts.

And yes - as Karencole remarked - it was the blonde hair that I remember best about him/Benedict Taylor.
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What happened at the end??
vlperese19 August 2011
So nice to read reviews of Barriers. I loved it, I was hooked on it. The theme music was sooo haunting and Benedict Taylor was so gorgeous (I was so in love with him, I think I was 13). Only one other girl in my whole school, watched it. I'm 41 now and was also starting to think I'd imagined the series, because no knows of it. Does anyone know how it ended? I don't know if I missed the final episode (cant imagine I would have) or if I cant remember the outcome or if they never screened it. Billy was such a loner and you just wanted to be the girl to take care of him, lol. I would love to watch that series again. Would be interesting to see what we all think of it now.
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