This article needs additional citations for
verification. (May 2011) |
More Than Life At Stake | |
---|---|
Also known as | Stakes Larger Than Life |
Written by | Andrzej Zbych (Andrzej Szypulski and Zbigniew Safjan) |
Directed by | Andrzej Konic, Janusz Morgenstern |
Starring |
Stanisław Mikulski Emil Karewicz Bronisław Pawlik Mieczysław Stoor |
Music by | Jerzy Matuszkiewicz |
Country of origin | Poland |
Original language | Polish |
No. of episodes | 18 |
Production | |
Cinematography | Antoni Wójtowicz |
Running time | 45-90 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | Polish Television |
Release | 1967 1968 | –
More Than Life at Stake ( Polish: Stawka większa niż życie), also known as Stakes Larger Than Life and Playing for High Stakes is a Polish black and white TV series about the adventures of a Polish secret agent in Soviet service, captain Hans Kloss (real name Stanisław Kolicki, codename J-23), who acts as a double agent in the Abwehr during Second World War in occupied Poland.
Its precursor was a television play of the same name, broadcast live in 1965 by Telewizja Polska. 14 episodes of the play were made, with the two main characters, the protagonist, Abwehr Hauptmann Hans Kloss, and his key antagonist, SS- Obersturmführer Hermann Brunner, portrayed respectively by actors Stanisław Mikulski and Emil Karewicz. The popularity of the play led to the creation of the TV series; Mikulski and Karewicz returned to portray Kloss and Brunner.
The series was filmed from March 1967 to October 1968. There were 18 episodes, 9 of which were directed by Janusz Morgenstern and the other 9 by Andrzej Konic. The show was very popular in Poland, the USSR, Yugoslavia, [1] and former Czechoslovakia. Re-runs are regularly broadcast on Polish TV.
Both the character of Hans Kloss, and that of Max von Stierlitz, the protagonist of the similarly themed Russian TV series Seventeen Moments of Spring, were allegedly inspired by the real-life exploits of Nikolai Kuznetsov, who had successfully infiltrated Nazi armed forces under the guise of a German officer.
Several episodes of the series were adapted as short stories and collected in printed volumes. The show was also adapted as a comic book series, which gained high popularity and was translated into several languages. 20 volumes of the comic book were released, some of which were direct adaptations of the TV series, while others contained original storylines. The final volume of the comic book series expanded the show's story further, by having Kloss track down Nazi fugitives in Switzerland, shortly after the war.
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (May 2011) |
More Than Life At Stake | |
---|---|
Also known as | Stakes Larger Than Life |
Written by | Andrzej Zbych (Andrzej Szypulski and Zbigniew Safjan) |
Directed by | Andrzej Konic, Janusz Morgenstern |
Starring |
Stanisław Mikulski Emil Karewicz Bronisław Pawlik Mieczysław Stoor |
Music by | Jerzy Matuszkiewicz |
Country of origin | Poland |
Original language | Polish |
No. of episodes | 18 |
Production | |
Cinematography | Antoni Wójtowicz |
Running time | 45-90 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | Polish Television |
Release | 1967 1968 | –
More Than Life at Stake ( Polish: Stawka większa niż życie), also known as Stakes Larger Than Life and Playing for High Stakes is a Polish black and white TV series about the adventures of a Polish secret agent in Soviet service, captain Hans Kloss (real name Stanisław Kolicki, codename J-23), who acts as a double agent in the Abwehr during Second World War in occupied Poland.
Its precursor was a television play of the same name, broadcast live in 1965 by Telewizja Polska. 14 episodes of the play were made, with the two main characters, the protagonist, Abwehr Hauptmann Hans Kloss, and his key antagonist, SS- Obersturmführer Hermann Brunner, portrayed respectively by actors Stanisław Mikulski and Emil Karewicz. The popularity of the play led to the creation of the TV series; Mikulski and Karewicz returned to portray Kloss and Brunner.
The series was filmed from March 1967 to October 1968. There were 18 episodes, 9 of which were directed by Janusz Morgenstern and the other 9 by Andrzej Konic. The show was very popular in Poland, the USSR, Yugoslavia, [1] and former Czechoslovakia. Re-runs are regularly broadcast on Polish TV.
Both the character of Hans Kloss, and that of Max von Stierlitz, the protagonist of the similarly themed Russian TV series Seventeen Moments of Spring, were allegedly inspired by the real-life exploits of Nikolai Kuznetsov, who had successfully infiltrated Nazi armed forces under the guise of a German officer.
Several episodes of the series were adapted as short stories and collected in printed volumes. The show was also adapted as a comic book series, which gained high popularity and was translated into several languages. 20 volumes of the comic book were released, some of which were direct adaptations of the TV series, while others contained original storylines. The final volume of the comic book series expanded the show's story further, by having Kloss track down Nazi fugitives in Switzerland, shortly after the war.