Thursday, December 22, 2022

SAS: Rogue Heroes (2022)

 


                I had been waiting for this series and it finally got to me via Goran Hedlund.  The 6-episode series was made for the BBC and was one of the most costly projects in BBC history.  It also premiered on EPIX.  The director was Tom Shankland who is noted for other TV series.  It was filmed in Morocco.  They had a snake wrangler to clear the sets, but even then a sleeping asp was found sleeping under a chair causing a minor panic.  The crew included 50 stunt men.  They made use of Me-109 mockups, like in the “Battle of Britain”.  The series was written by Steven Wright.  He researched using Ben Macintyre’s “Rogue Heroes:  The History of the SAS, Britain’s Secret Special Forces Unit That Sabotaged the Nazis and Changed the Nature of Warfare”.  He also used first-person accounts and interviewed the veteran Mike Sadler (one of the characters).  He provided stories that were not included in Macintyre’s book.  Each episode starts with the disclaimer:  “Based on true story, the events depicted which seem most unbelievable… are mostly true.”  Cheeky, but true.  Knight insists that the more outrageous the incident, the more likely it actually happened. 

                The first episode is set in May, 1941.  It leads with snare drums on the soundtrack.  Before I can finish shaking my head at this trope, here comes an AC/DC song as a convoy crosses from Cairo to Tobruk.  The trucks come to a halt in the middle of the desert because they carried enough gasoline for 500 kilometers instead of 500 miles.  An officer named Stirling is disgusted with this incompetence.  Within the first ten minutes, it is obvious this is not your father’s WWII series

  The main characters are quickly introduced.  David Stirling (Connor Swindell) is a heavy drinker who has been in the Army since he was a teenager.  He has contempt for higher ups and the social standing to get away with it.  Paddy Mayne is a low-born brass-hater who is constantly in trouble.  His alcohol consumption makes him a loose cannon ready to explode.  Jock Lewes (Alfie Allen) is a strict officer, but good leader.  Lt. Col. Dudley Clarke (Dominic West) is first seen in drag, but he is an officer who is a wiz at deceiving the enemy.  Clarke is in league with a sexy French intelligence agent named Eve (Sofia Boutella), but she will be Stirling’s love interest.

                Stirling creates a commando unit that will harass the German/Italian supply line.  He brings on Lewes to train the hand-picked men.  You have to be a renegade to qualify.  Mayne is recruited by Sterling after escaping from a jail cell after he beat up a Major.  The other men are the usual motley group that you see in war movies that involve a suicide mission.  Originally, the idea was the SAS (Special Air Service) would be paratroopers.  Sterling talks Gen. Auchinleck into backing the unit by promising him the SAS will destroy more Axis planes than the Royal Air Force.

                Their first mission is going to be a paradrop, but a sandstorm makes it very risky.  Stirling forces the pilot to take off.  When they land, the wind pulls their parachutes across the desert.  Some of the men are killed when they strike objects.  The men are scattered, some are picked up by the jeeps of the Long Range Desert Group. (For American baby boomers, they would be similar to the Rat Patrol, but were used mainly for scouting and as a sort of taxi service for the SAS).  This introduces Sgt. Mark Sadler (Tom Glynn-Carney).  This fiasco results in 22 out of the 55 men being killed or captured.  One of the dead is Mayne’s best friend.  From now on, they will use jeeps to ingress. The next mission is more successful as the four main leaders attack four air bases using Lewes bombs named after their inventor -  Jock Lewes.  The episode jumps between groups and the places are identified on the screen.  (The series also does this to identify new characters.)  Mayne’s group sets one of the themes by slaughtering unarmed Germans in a barracks where they are socializing.  The theme is there are no gentlemanly rules in their type of warfare.  They start keeping score of how many planes each leader destroys.  This exacerbates the simmering dysfunctionality between Stirling and Mayne.  Not to mention the dispute between Stirling and Clarke as to who created the SAS and how it should be used.  This mission proves the efficacy of vehicular raids and the rest of the series will reenact several, with plenty of gunfire and explosions.  The vicious nature of their tactics are contrasted to their trips to Cairo for rest and recreation.

                In episode 4, the Brits are united with French paratroopers.  Stirling assigns Maynes, of all people, to train them.  Meanwhile Stirling infiltrates Benghazi with Randolph Churchill in tow.  Later, Stirling meets Randolph’s father.  He breaks the ice by telling Winston that he has a rash on his c---.  Unfazed, Winnie asks him to use the SAS to help get a crucial convoy to Malta through.  “Let slip the dogs of war” is Winston’s advice.   That would make a good motto for the unit.  This sets up the big final mission.  Not everyone will survive, but the Germans and Italians will suffer.  Don’t get too attached to any of the characters

                That AC/DC song sets the tone early.  The series is accompanied by 1980’s rock, including punk rock.  That is not the only genre.  In one sequence, the episode moved from a march to rock to swing to belly dance music.  Before you yell “anachronism!”, the idea behind the odd choice of music is the series is about a unit that does not play by the rules, so the series shouldn’t either.  Personally, I loved the music.  It does fit a series that is not your traditional WWII show.  The length of the series allows for the development of some fascinating individuals and they are all real people, except for Eve.  As you can read below, there were liberties taken with Stirling, Mayne, Lewes, and Clarke, but this was within acceptable artistic license.  The raids are well within acceptable history.  The series does not depict the missions in a hagiographic manner.  Mistakes are made and lives are lost.  The show has a big budget for blanks and those blanks are fired from vintage weapons.  The explosion budget was also high.  For men, this series has it all, including some cheesecake from Ms. Boutella.  Cover your kids’ eyes when she is in a bed, but you won’t need to for the action scenes as the series is not graphic.

                The cast is outstanding and they are all-in.  I don’t know what the experience was like filming in Morocco, but it probably helped them get into character.  The Stirling/Mayne dynamic is at the core and Swindell and O’Connell are outstanding.  There is a nice cameo by Jason Watkins as Churchill.  The actors get good dialogue to work with. The cinematography makes it an interesting watch. In a nice touch, archival footage is blended into the action.  Everything points to a prestige project. 

                The series ends with several questions unanswered.  They are already planning a second series to deal with the unit’s actions in Europe.  Let’s hope the high quality continues.  And it keeps its Quentin Tarantino vibe.

GRADE  =  A-

HISTORICAL ACCURACY:  David Stirling was the son of a general.  He left college to go to Paris to become an artist.  He was a mountaineer who was in training to climb Mt. Everest when the war began.  He joined the commandos. When Force Z (later called Layforce) was disbanded because of heavy casualties on Crete he was out a job.  He snuck in to see Gen. Auchinleck and got him to approve the idea that became SAS.

                Paddy Mayne was not lowborn.  He came from a landed family.  He became an outstanding rugby player, boxer, and golfer.  He was in the artillery before joining the infantry.  He became a commando and first saw action in Lebanon fighting the Vichy French.  He did attack a superior officer who he had a feud with.  The beating he doled out was provoked by the killing of his dog (not a chess game).  He was not imprisoned for it, but he was dismissed from Commando 11.  He did join the SAS with best friend Eoin McGonical.  During the period covered by the series, he was credited with the destruction of 100 aircraft.  He was awarded the Distinguished Service Order for his actions in their first successful attack.  It was Italians he massacred, not Germans.

                Jock Lewes was born in India and grew up in Australia.  He attended Oxford.  While working in Berlin for the British Council, he flirted with admiration for Hitler and Nazism.  It’s temporary.  He enlisted before WWII began.  He was an infantry officer before Stirling recruited him for the SAS.  He was in charge of training, but he also led raids.  He did invent the bomb named after him.  It was a combination of plastic explosives, diesel and thermite.  Spoiler:  he did die when his jeep was attacked by a plane.  He was hit by shrapnel in the leg and then killed by a bullet.

                Dudley Clarke was born in South Africa, but grew up in Britain.  For WWII, he joined the royal artillery and transferred to the Royal Flying Corps.  He spent the war in flight training.  In the interwar years, he returned to the artillery and then joined intelligence where he found his niche.  In Cairo in 1940, he was assigned the job of coordinating strategic deception.  He went on to become “the greatest British deceiver of WW2.”  One of his talents was creating orders of battle that would fall into enemy hands and convince them that the British had phantom units and/or placing actual units away from where they were.  The SAS was originally one of those fake units.  He also organized small commando raids into France.  Clarke did have wild personal life.  The series introduces him with an homage to his notorious arrest in pre-war Madrid dressed as a woman.

                As far as the missions, the series gets them mostly accurate.  On their first mission (Operation Squatter), they did foolishly jump in a sand storm with disastrous results. 22 of 55 were killed or captured.  They did set up base at Qaret Tartura on the edge of the Qattar Depression.  They did steal from a New Zealand unit to get set up.  They were equipment and vehicle poor until they got successful.  The first jeep (modified American jeeps) attack was basically as shown.  They hit three airfields in Libya and destroyed 60 aircraft.  Mayne’s group did slaughter unarmed Italians (Germans in the show).  Lewes was killed in the manner shown in the episode. 

                 Stirling did take Randolph Churchill on a raid into Benghazi.  It was not as successful as the series implies.  The episode does not show Randolph severely dislocating his back when the truck he was riding in overturned.  The series is accurate in depicting that the support of Winston Churchill got the unit all the weapons, vehicles, and manpower needed.  This manpower included a unit of French paratroopers led by Georges Berge.  He was captured in the raid on Crete

                Their biggest success is covered in episode 6.  On July 26-27, 1942, 18 jeeps raided five airfields along with the raid on Crete. Stirling did ride down the airfield at Benina strafing the aircraft.  Stirling was captured when his jeep was ambushed in Jan., 1943.  By then, Rommel was referring to the thorn in his side as “The Phantom Major”.  I think it’s safe to assume he won’t be playing a major role in the next season.  But since Mayne gets promoted to command the SAS, there’s bound to be plenty to entertain viewers. 

2 comments:

  1. SAS - was Special Air Service NOT Strategic Air Service. LRDG were NOT the British version of the "Rat Patrol". Their mission was to go behind enemy lines and gather intelligence e.g. number and types of vehicles using the main highway along the coast and similar roads ("Highway Watch"). They were not to engage in combat unless absolutily forced for self-defence (else their other wise secret presence would be disclosed and information gathered would not be as useful). The one notable exception being Operation Caravan.
    "Commando Force Z" did not exist. - Middle East Commando was formed from the survivors of "Layforce" ('A' Troop from No. 3 Commando, No. 7 Commando, No. 8 (Guards) Commando and No. 11 (Scottish) Commando, with additional personnel being drawn from No. 50 Commando and No. 52 Commando upon their arrival in Egypt). This was after operations in Bardia, Tobruk ("Raid on Rommel") Syria and Crete. Jeeps did not appear in the LRDG until July 1942 - preference early on was 30 cwt Chevrolets which were replaced by the CMP Ford 30 cwt F30 trucks.
    LRDG was used a a "taxi service" and guide by other units incling the early SAS and Popski's Private Army (PPA).

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    1. Thanks. That's some good information. I don't mind being corrected.

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