"Endeavour" Quartet (TV Episode 2018) Poster

(TV Series)

(2018)

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9/10
Spies in Oxford
Tweekums9 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
This episode opens with an episode of the comedy international 'sports' show 'Jeux Sans Frontières' being filmed in Oxford. The event shown features runners competing in giant costumes; the winning British runner turns out to be none other than Morse but he doesn't get to celebrate as the German runner has been shot and killed and a child spectator has been seriously injured. The plot quickly thickens as it emerges that the German was originally from East Germany not long after that discovery men from Special Branch turn up to take over the case. Morse refuses to let go as he has promised the boy's mother that he will find out who happened. Not long afterwards he is invited to meet a shadowy agency who point him in the direction of perfumer Sebastian Fenix. As Morse looks deeper he gets into danger as he has a run in with a Russian assassin and starts to uncover a spy ring operating in Oxford. While this is going on Thursday gets involved when he realises that his local newsagent is abusing his wife.

Turning a murder mystery show into a spy drama for an episode could easily have led to a disappointment but here it works nicely. There is a good sense of threat provided by a cold war storyline that obviously features the politics of the time but by remarkable coincidence feels fresh today as the episode was broadcast in the week that a Russian ex-spy and his daughter were poisoned with a nerve agent in Salisbury. The plotting feels like the murky world of Le Carré with shadowy agencies; apparently ordinary people and just a touch of Bond-like villainy with a suspect who keeps a deadly fish in an aquarium. The regular cast does a fine job; Roger Allam is on particularly fine form as DCI Thursday as he deals with the case of domestic abuse. The guest stars also impress; most notably Ellie Haddington who plays an elderly language teacher who is more deadly than anybody would suspect. Away from the police work there is some good character development as Morse's photographer girlfriend leaves him for a job in Vietnam and Thursday considers whether it is time to leave the police. Overall this was another fine episode in what has turned out to be a great season.
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8/10
they are all good episodes but some details in this one unrealistic I feel
ib011f9545i4 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
SPOILERS.

This is a cold war/spy episode with some good period detail.

But being a spy/cold war history fan I found some of the details doubtful.

We know Morse was a conscript in the British Army Royal Signals but would this make him up to speed on KGB communications?

I know from studying history and family connections how the lives of communist party members was dominated by the party in the 1930s.

But a character says they would have starved with party provided soup kitchens.

Surely the British taxpayer and charities fed more people than the CPGB ever did?

But while I am critical of details in general the communist spy plot was believable.
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8/10
Westminster Bridge
ygwerin119 July 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Jeux Sans Frontier the international TV games show comes to Oxford, and England is represented by the County Team.

DC George Fancy is one of the Team Competitors until he comes a cropper, and DS Morse steps into the breach.

A shooting incident occurred at the Tournament and, a little boy gets hit in the crossfire.

An international incident ensues with the Special Branch, stepping in to take everything over.

A D Notice is slapped on the proceedings, putting the kibosh on the police investigations.

Morse and Thursday would like to carry on but have to tread carefully, Morse is approached by mysterious characters with a strange offer of assistance.

Morse may well feel that he has dropped down a rabbit hole, involving Cold War intrigue and European power politics. Morse confides in Thursday, who tries to remind him that "We are meat and two veg coppers"

CS Bright wants the station to concentrate on a new local hood Cromwell Ames, to prevent his arrival from presaging a new Turf War.

The Sword of Damocles is hanging over the Cowley nick, and Thursday confesses to Bright that he doubts he has the legs left in him.

I like Endeavour and much prefer it to Lewis and, for me it has the edge on Inspector Morse. It's more of an ensemble piece police team work, on matters from murder down to the more mundane. I consider the sequal too much of a great detective and his bag man scenario, Morse suffers from some similar considerations.
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10/10
Season's Best.
Sleepin_Dragon4 March 2018
This series of Endeavour has been a real privilege to watch, and for me the peak comes with Quartet (Finale to watch of course.) I've been a fan of the series since the very first, but somehow they took the show up another level with this episode, so many different plots, so much going on, but it was neat, tightly written, cohesive and easy to follow. So often you watch an espionage drama and get lost in complexities or bored, this was captivating.

There are almost too many superlatives for me to highlight, but I'll highlight a few. First of all, the story, absolutely fantastic, multi layered, intriguing, worthy of a John le Carre novel. The characters were incredible, Paul Ready and Ellie Haddington were fabulous, the latter reminded me of her character from Foyle's War. It was socially interesting, it highlighted so much stuff that was going on at the time, The Invasion on Czechoslovakia, the divide in Germany. It was quite action packed, our Morse almost garroted. It highlighted Morse's intelligence very well, and his thoughts on justice compared to those of his boss's. Finally Fred Thursday's decision to retire is told to Morse, so it will be intriguing to discover his fate, and see how the relationship changes between the pair.

I can think of no flaws at all, my only sadness is next week's is the season finale, the decision to put out a six part serial was a great one. It will be good to see the conclusion of the series arc.

Fabulous.
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10/10
Cold War Endeavour
TheLittleSongbird5 March 2018
As said in my review for the entire show three years ago, 'Endeavour' is not just a more than worthy prequel series to one of my favourite detective dramas of all time and goes very well with it, but it is a great series on its own as well. It maintains everything that makes 'Inspector Morse' so good, while also containing enough to make it its own, and in my mind 'Inspector Morse', 'Lewis' and 'Endeavour' go perfectly well together.

The pilot was a very promising start if with an understandable finding its feet feel. Things got even better with the consistently outstanding first season, and the darker Season 2 was hardly inferior, with "Neverland" being an 'Endeavour' high point. Season 3 is considered by fans as nowhere near as good as previously. Will admit that it is not as good as Seasons 1 and 2, which had more believable stories and didn't try to do too much but count me in as someone who has still enjoyed the episodes and has found a lot to like, while finding "Coda" outstanding. Likewise with Season 4, with its weak point being the soap operatic Joan subplot in "Harvest".

There is not much else to say to what has been said already about "Quartet". Season 5 has been very impressive with it getting stronger generally with each episode, even the weakest "Cartouche" is still very good. It is agreed though that the season's penultimate episode "Quartet" is the best to date. It does make one highly anticipating the last episode, but there is a touch of sadness as well.

"Quartet's" mystery/story is the best, most thematically involving and dramatically and emotionally involving of the season. It is incredibly compelling throughout, with both alertness and breathing space and a suitably cold and intense spy thriller feel. It is eventful without being over-stuffed, complicated without being confusing and cleverly twisted without being improbable, complete with many layers, an interesting look at what was going on at the time how the period was on a social level and inspired visual references.

Morse continues to be a fascinating, complex and well rounded character that reminds one of the older Morse. The personal life elements do not get soapy, nor do they take over. Trewlove and George are very amusing and sweet, while never being corny or detracting from the dark subject and the generally darker and more serious tone of the season. Just for the record, am liking that 'Endeavour' increased in maturity over the years, not that it wasn't already but meaning that it got darker and tackled heavier themes yet still to me didn't feel like a different show.

Nothing can be faulted with the production values. It is exquisitely filmed and the idyllic and atmospheric setting is beautifully evoked, 1960s Oxford is always interesting to see.

There is something very nostalgic and charming about the atmospherically evoked 1960s period detail. Similarly, as always, the music is hauntingly beautiful with the way it's utilised never in question, the iconic 'Inspector Morse' theme will forever be immortal and it has always been a genius move to use it for 'Endeavour'.

Writing, as has been said many times in my reviews for the previous 'Endeavour' episodes, is every bit as intelligent, entertaining and tense as the previous episodes and as the best of 'Morse'.

As ever, Morse and Thursday's relationship was always one of the show's major high points, it always entertained and warmed the heart and with each episode it gets more so on both counts, with some moving and tense moments too. Especially the former, with a real air of melancholy.

Shaun Evans as ever does some powerful, charismatic work as younger Morse, showing enough loyalty to John Thaw's iconic Morse while making the character his own too. Roger Allam is also superb, his rapport with Evans always compels and entertains but Thursday is quite a sympathetic character, as well as loyal and firm, and Allam does a lot special with a role that could have been less interesting possibly in lesser hands.

The rest of the regular cast are excellent, especially Paul Ready as one of the show's most loathsome characters. There's even a pretty freaky fish character to enjoy.

Overall, brilliant. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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10/10
Incredible Television
Hitchcoc2 August 2018
This is what a truly great series looks like. First, we have a resourceful and fearless character. Actually one who forgets his vulnerability at times. He is also flawed as a human being at times. We have secondary characters that contribute to the sophisticated plots. Here we have Morse finding his way into an inner circle of hell. The tight plotting and cold war espionage and counter-espionage is excellent. Morse tries not to look inward but has to at times. His intense lifestyle is so engaging. He passes on the human pleasures for the most part whenever a clue comes along. This may be favorite episode because it was accessible and intense. Yes, there are plot elements that won't hold up under close scrutiny, but a scripted drama must push beyond normal events. I look forward to seeing the finale.
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10/10
The James Bond movie for 1968
jonniecomet-1420921 December 2021
The 'Endeavour' series is 100% superb all the time; I've seen the whole series (to date) and this is definitely the very best episode of all. 'Quartet' is, in an hour and a half, actually a very deft self-contained Cold War spy thriller that could easily have been issued (with Sean Connery, and added-in action, and a Bond girl) as the James Bond film in the 1968 gap in that franchise.

The story opens with a murder at a clown-giant race with international teams competing in Oxford on live (1968) TV. Endeavour is quick to realise there is more here than meets the eye. The plot continues using all the best Bond tropes - international intrigue, secret spies in HM government, a late-night rendezvous, a code-breaking mystery, a psychopathic industrialist, a clue hidden in a poisonous-fish tank, villains who seem sympathetic victims at first, government's doubt in our super-spy hero, untrustworthy women, and, best of all, an esoteric literature-based riddle that only our hero has the intellect to work out.

On top of all this, it is beautifully produced, with each scene patiently filmed even whilst the plot runs at breakneck pace. As ever for this series the historical details are spot-on and charmingly nostalgic. And there is the start of the secondary subplot that will become the principal plot of Series 6.
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5/10
Twaddle
ray-545-6281222 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I love Endeavour but this was total fantasy. Endeavour breaking into a perfume factory with the security of Fort Knox & rushing around retrieving ambergris & rescuing a key in a fish tank he had spotted earlier & getting out without being spotted! A newsagent being a part of a spy network who was a wife beater! A geriatric Oxford College spy shot dead by the porter who just happened to have a firearm disguised as a rifle handy! Totally absurd I am afraid. Avengers of the 1960s with a touch of The Prisoner comes to Endeavour. Not a good idea.
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2/10
typical morse attitude
sandcrab2779 February 2022
In spite of direct orders not to involve himself in the case, morse charges on anway, demonstrating once again his contempt for authority and proper procedure... this attitude occurs time and again and was repeatedly pointed out by his superiors to no avail, yet he wasn't disciplined .. he'd never make it in the real world.
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