Public Eye

1965
Public Eye

Seasons & Episodes

  • 7
  • 6
  • 5
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • 0

EP1 Nobody Wants to Know Jan 06, 1975

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EP2 How about a Cup of Tea? Jan 13, 1975

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EP3 How About It, Frank? Jan 20, 1975

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EP4 They All Sound Simple at First Jan 27, 1975

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EP5 The Fall Guy Feb 03, 1975

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EP6 What's to Become of Us? Feb 10, 1975

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EP7 Hard Times Feb 17, 1975

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EP8 No Orchids for Marker Feb 24, 1975

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EP9 The Fatted Calf Mar 03, 1975

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EP10 Lifer Mar 10, 1975

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EP11 Take No for an Answer Mar 17, 1975

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EP12 Fit of Conscience Mar 24, 1975

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EP13 Unlucky For Some Apr 07, 1975

Frank goes undercover at a hotel when the owner is convinced that her son's new wife is a gold digger. This is the very final episode of the series. At the time Alfred Burke told the TV Times that that was it but also said that was the case every season.
8.5| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 23 January 1965 Ended
Producted By:
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Public Eye is a British television series that ran from 1965 to 1975. It was produced by ABC Television for three series, and Thames Television for a further four series. The series depicted the investigations and cases handled by the unglamorous enquiry agent Frank Marker, an unmarried loner who is in his early forties when the series begins. In the words of an ABC trailer for the third series: "Marker isn't a glamorous detective and he doesn't get glamorous cases—he doesn't even get glamorous girls. What he does get is people who are in trouble—the sort of trouble you can't go to the police about, even if you are innocent."

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Reviews

alexanderdavies-99382 They don't come any better than "Public Eye." It is one of the more realistic kinds of British television with a leading character who most viewers were rooting for. The series made the name of Alfred Burke, who easily made the character of Private Inquiry Agent Frank Marker his own. The tone and the style of the series never changed in the 10 years it was broadcast and that was the correct decision. It is a bit difficult in reviewing the episodes of "Public Eye" that were made from 1965 to 1968 as most of them are missing from the archives. Only about 4 exist. However, the episodes made from 1969 to 1975 all exist in their entirety. Amen to that! The very best of this series, are the episodes from 1969 til 1973. We are treated to some vintage television drama, the writing and the acting being of a high calibre. Frank Marker invariably finds himself on the receiving end of some decidedly dishonest and unlawful people in his line of work. It can be put down to an occupational hazard of a sort as he encounters dishonesty and corruption in almost of all his cases. There are times when Marker fails to be even paid for his troubles when his client is revealed to be less than genuine in many ways. It is a rather harsh and uncompromising world that he inhibits and this is magnified in that most of the police look down upon Marker. The moment he stumbles upon a case which perhaps includes something serious like murder or extortion, the police soon make themselves known to him. Frank Marker was based in different areas across England. To begin with, he set up a practice in Birmingham. Then after being sent to prison for something he hadn't done, he relocated to Brighton. The 1969 series covered his time there. For the 1971 series, Marker moved to Windsor. You would think that being based in such a prosperous area would mean he could make a respectable living. Not so as he is still struggling to make ends meet, financially speaking. For the rest of the series, he operated in the Surrey area. Alfred Burke is certainly playing the character as being downtrodden and someone who is usually lead up the proverbial garden path. For all of this, Marker still manages to maintain his own self-respect, honesty and integrity. Even so, he is quite a guarded person when it comes to trusting anyone and with good reason. The viewers never dispute why he doesn't take many people into his confidence. A rare exception to the rule was when Marker was living at the guest house in Brighton. His landlady was someone decent and honest but someone he could talk to. During the 1971 series, he befriended a local police officer. This character actually tolerated Marker more than most of his colleagues. This is a landmark television series, the kind of quality that is a thing of the past.
mdepre These series in my opinion are British television at its very finest, centred around a marvellous sustained performance by Alfred Burke which stands comparison with anything to be seen anywhere in film, TV or theatre; and scripts of high intelligence, firmly grounded in the downbeat experiences of everyday English life, yet psychologically profound.The support acting rises to the occasion too, in all the episodes I have seen - Pauline Delaney's performance in Series 4 for example.By all accounts the show was widely popular when originally broadcast, and it is a mystery to this viewer why repeat broadcasts are so very seldom seen.
Spondonman It's been over 30 years since I last saw Public Eye on UK ITV, but having just watched some of the 1969 episodes released on DVD it's as I remembered it: grimy and gritty. There was a marvellously downbeat downtrodden atmosphere to all the series (I'm too young to remember the first from the mid-sixties, all wiped), partly thanks to the fact neither ABC nor Thames wanted to spend much money on it, and not just the acting or the stories. Those who remember the series have no chance in forgetting the lugubrious theme music, oft repeated per episode at the commercial break bumpers.Welcome to Brighton? broadcast 30.07.69: Framed ex convict Frank Marker indelibly played by angular and craggy Alfred Burke leaves HMP Ford for a new start in Brighton. A few ordinary adventures later his cynical outlook is seemingly proved justified by our glimpse into a dull grainy world of varying but usually seedy human emotions. Being an "Enquiry Agent" was in his blood, as performing a simple favour to an acquaintance in prison brings out the bloodhound in him.I don't go overboard for "realism" in films or TV - give me Abbott & Costello any day! But I do recommend Public Eye for something refreshingly different to today's type of TV drama, a realism at once hard but at the same time humdrum and fantastic too, and also basically portraying a non-colour, non-violent and non-CGI world too.
Drew McFarlane Slack Alfred Burke deserves to be ranked with Sean Connery, Edward Woodward and Roger Moore for his portrayal of Frank Marker in Public Eye. This was the detective story from the council estate, and at the time in the UK, there were no better writers nor better actors. Burke plays the poor man's private eye, operating in an environment where there is neither money not glamour. He needs his fee to pay the rent and light, but often does not collect anything other than a beating. His cases are not the stuff of Sam Spade, but Marker is the right stuff nonetheless.I missed the UK Gold reruns, but will not miss them again. If you watch no other '60s specials, watch this.