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Who Dares Wins [DVD] [1982]
 
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Who Dares Wins [DVD] [1982]

Lewis Collins , Judy Davis , Ian Sharp    Suitable for 18 years and over   DVD
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
Price: £12.50 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Actors: Lewis Collins, Judy Davis, Richard Widmark, Edward Woodward, Robert Webber
  • Directors: Ian Sharp
  • Writers: George Markstein, James Follett, Reginald Rose
  • Producers: Chris Chrisafis, Euan Lloyd, Raymond Menmuir
  • Format: PAL
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 18
  • Studio: Universal
  • DVD Release Date: 19 Mar 2001
  • Run Time: 125 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000056JQ9
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 61,315 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review

In an uncanny piece of art imitating life, Who Dares Wins came out in 1982 just after the infamous storming of the Iranian Embassy by the legendary British Special Air Services (SAS) unit. The plot builds up to that unshakeable image of black-clad troops abseiling the front of a stately home and smashing through the windows, and pays off expectations with a thrilling finale. Anyone expecting two hours of military instruction will be disappointed however. After the opening 10 minutes with the troops, the almost James-Bond-like story follows Lewis Collins (riding high in those days after TV's The Professionals) as he infiltrates a radical anti-Nuclear society. Operation: Destroy requires him to go undercover with their potentially insane leader Frankie (Judy Davis), ignoring his wife and child. The period detail is often the film's most entertaining feature as Collins tours across 1980s London constantly eluding spies on his tail. Apart from the endless permed hairdos and the fact that the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament hasn't got much to demonstrate about these days, there's the fashions and low-tech gadgetry to enjoy. In the US the film was called The Final Option.

The DVD includes a photo gallery, and a history of the SAS. --Paul Tonks

Special Features

English
Region 2

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Superb Action Film. 30 Aug 2009
Format:DVD
Superb action film. The casting was perfect and the primary aspects of the movie came across as being believable and authentic, some certainly leapt from the pages of a comic book. But 'Who Dares Wins' was thoroughly enjoyed by most who saw it though, predictably, it was loathed by the critics who invariably operate from the self loathing, left wing, anti-establishment premiss of the modern intelligentsia. Any novel or film depicting fringe groups or minorities being represented by zealots and unhinged fanatics who pose a serious threat to the lives of the majority, and who are subsequently defeated by an organisation or individual employed to protect and stand up for them, has not got a hope in hell in the eyes, and with the pens, of such people in the mainstream media. See it and enjoy.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
A punchy British action flick from the same people who brought you punchy British action flicks "The Wild Geese" and "The Sea Wolves". SAS Captain Peter Skellern (Lewis Collins) is assigned to infiltrate an anti-nuclear terrorist group, the Revolution for Peace movement of the People's Lobby, as it prepares a spectacular publicity coup by taking top-level US and British dignataries hostage at a dinner in London and threatening to execute them unless a nuclear missile is fired - "in the name of peace" - at the US submarine base at Holy Loch. When negotiations stall and one of the hostages is killed, the SAS are sent in to rescue the others. That is the film in a nutshell. It isn't sophisticated, it isn't subtle, and if you are a member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament then you may have a claim to feeling personally slighted. But as a solid action movie, "Who Dares Wins" is excellent - yes, it could very easily be taken as a feature-length episode of "The Professionals", although it would be unfair to say that Collins is merely reprising his Bodie role; Captain Skellern is for starters married (to Rosalind Lloyd) with a child, and while this doesn't stop him from being a complete tart for Queen and Country it does call for a little less smirking glibness than we got with the unattached, carefree Bodie. Skellern has more cares.
It is not action all-the-way, and this is to the film's advantage because, contrary to what some have said, "Who Dares Wins" is not gung-ho. The SAS are portrayed simply as a body of men doing the job they are ordered to do. Indeed, as the SAS Commanding Officer (a crisp Tony Doyle) explains in the early stages of the film: "When we are called to do a job, we have been likened to a surgeon cutting out a cancer. It is a filthy and difficult job. We don't like doing it, but it's our duty." The bulk of the film centres on Skellern's infiltration of the terrorist movement, and his "relationship" with its' leader Frankie Leith (Judy Davis). Those with little patience may thus find themselves fidgeting a bit, but there is ample reward when the action finally does begin, including of course the famous tracking shot with Skellern and SAS comrades charging down the corridor of the US Ambassador's residence. There is also a excellently staged single-shot sequence where a terrorist is standing guard on a balcony, and an SAS man abseils down and shoots him. Then there is the fate that awaits Frankie Leith, as she and Skellern stare down each other's gun barrels....
Along with those already mentioned, the high-grade cast includes Richard Widmark, Edward Woodward, John Duttine, Robert Webber, Patrick "Protect And Survive" Allen and Anna Ford as herself. The title music is ace, and the grimy early Eighties ambience that permeates the film is quite intoxicating. It also boasts a fantastic catfight between Mrs Skellern and a very boo-hiss Ingrid Pitt, as one of two terrorists who have taken Mrs Skellern and her baby daughter hostage. It's more vicious than outside Chicago Rock Cafe in Wolverhampton on a Friday night!
"Who Dares Wins." One of my favourite movies.
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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful
Who dares wins 24 Nov 2002
By Chris
Format:DVD
What a piece of Vintage Film. Anyone who stayed up for the the 9.00 showing each Sunday night of "The Professionals" and still watches them now with fondness will appreciate this film most. Equally fond thoughts will be harboured if you remeber vivdly the scenes of LIVE feed when the Iranian embassy was liberated by the real Men in Black. Namely "the Regiment" or Special Air Squadron(SAS). It is not meant to be the ultimate action film and was probably on a similar budget to The Professionals series but what they manage to capture is the same era and feelings that made you proud, wright or Wrong!, that we posess the means within this small miliatary power we now are, to take on the Baddies and prevail. With all that is written about the exploits of good old British Soldier during the world wars it`s a very satisfying to know that what we once were we still are in smaller number.
The film is a fabulous mixture of SAS action and delivered in a BOND way as we see a mock up training sequence behind the gates at Hereford and a view of the hostage room within the Killing house. Where no other than Mrs.Thatcher and Royal couples have been put through the paces of how to keep still when the SAS decide to enter to bring the terrorists impromptu dinner party to an end.

Buy this DVD it is a thrill to watch and feels very much like the Sweeney films in a nostalgic way, a sort of Top Flite episode of the Professionals. The climactic end sequence is second to none and stirrs the spirit and hairs on the back of the neck. Especially when Lewis Collins leads the troops down the corridor of the embassy to some fabulous back music.
BUY IT!!!

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
why good brits dont beleive in rambo
a well presented brit action story of the early 80s released in the patriotic wake of the falklands war. Read more
Published 1 month ago by hanging judge
ROMP
This is the simply the best film ever. The dialogue is second to none with lewis collins smugness and pick up lines. "im gonna try that bed. My knees are killing me". Read more
Published 16 months ago by drewboy
Who Dares Wins
An oldie but a goodie despite what Leonard Maltin says. A cinema recreation of the Iranian embassy hostage liberation by the SAS. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Ruth Hay
A fantastic film yet seriously underrated
Who Dares Wins is one of the best films I have ever seen, yet so far I've only seen it twice. I first saw it on the now defunct cable channel called Granada Plus, and then I... Read more
Published on 6 April 2010 by Mr. A. J. Tennant
Who Dares Wins
The original and the best! Who Dares Wins is a classic SAS action movie with the GORGEOUS Lewis Collins doing his bit for Queen and Country. A must have for any Lew fan.
Published on 31 Aug 2009 by Mrs. S. Rolls
Who Dares Wins
Excellent service - arrived very promptly (back in May - sorry about delay in reviewing!), and very good quality (bought as a gift)
Published on 13 July 2009 by JJ
Boring and implausible
This is actually a pretty bad film. The ideology is not as perverse as in those films Collins made later. Read more
Published on 27 Mar 2008 by TKr
pure 80's hokum - and all the better for it !
For all those viewers of a certain age (ie who remember watching the storming of the iranian embassy live) this a thrilling blast-from-the past . Read more
Published on 14 Jun 2007 by the judas piglet
A Guilty Pleasure
I have to agree with both the good and bad reviews here for this movie. There are many valid reasons to hate this movie. Read more
Published on 13 Mar 2007 by Simon T.
One of the Greatest Movies of All Time
I first saw this movie when I was in college. At the time it was made, there was nothing more enjoyable than watching Lewis Collins and the lads slot two dozen anti-nuke, Marxist... Read more
Published on 4 Oct 2004
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