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(Article by Shaqui Le Vesconte) Also unusual for 'Look-In' at the time, the strip was able to call on the series' continuity and feature Colonel Buchan in a cameo for the second strip, though this may actually have been a forewarning of the character's return in season six, which aired from the end of September 1971, with Max replaced by Steve (Leonard Gregory). With the strip having been 'rested' after issue 26, it returned in issue 50, dated 18 December 1971, just as the new season came to end, and continuing where it left off with the re-jigged character line-up. This second run only lasted thirteen weeks, ending with issue 11, dated week ending 11 March 1972. The art for the strip was somewhat variable, with Brian Lewis and Mike Noble faring better than their foreign counterparts Alcazar and Badia during the first run, but Carlos Pino, a Spanish artist who had worked on 'TV21' drawing 'The Saint' and 'Department S' did a passable effort with good likenesses for the second. Authorship may have fallen to 'Look-In' editor Alan Fennell, who wrote the two 'Freewheelers' novels 'The Sign of the Beaver' (based on season six) and 'The Spy Game' (based on season seven, and reviewed in issue 50 dated week ending 9 December), published in 1972.
Despite
warranting covers and features on two further occasions, for issue 34,
dated week ending 19 August 1972 (a few weeks before season seven), and
issue 36, dated week ending 1 September 1973 (halfway through season
eight), the strip was not to return - the line-up of 'Look-In' now
comfortable with more current successes like 'Follyfoot', 'Catweazle', and
'The Tomorrow People'. |
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