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Spies of Warsaw is a British television miniseries in which a Deuxième Bureau intelligence agent (spy) poses as a military attaché at the French embassy in Warsaw, and finds himself drawn into the outbreak of World War II. [1] The television series takes its name from its source, The Spies of Warsaw, a 2008 spy novel by Alan Furst.
The plot takes place in 1943 at a hospital under the Nazi regime during World War II and shows how the war affected the doctors, nurses and students at Berlin's renowned learning hospital 2017 2017 United Kingdom The Halcyon: 2017 2017 United Kingdom SS-GB: 2018 2018 Ukraine Someone else's life: Чужая жизнь: 2018 2018 Russia Staying Alive
Spycatcher was a BBC television series, starring Bernard Archard, which ran from 1959 to 1961.It was based on the real-life activities of Dutch counterintelligence officer, Lieutenant-Colonel Oreste Pinto (once called "the greatest living authority on security"), [1] who specialised in the interrogation of suspected spies during World War II and had later published his memoirs under the title ...
The Secret Agent (1992 TV series) The Secret Agent (2016 TV series) The Secret Show; Slow Horses; Smiley's People (TV series) Special Branch (TV series) Spies of Warsaw (TV series) The Spies (TV series) Spooks (TV series) Spooks: Code 9; Spy (2011 TV series) A Spy Among Friends; Spycatcher (TV series) Spyder's Web; Strike Back (TV series)
Churchill's Secret Agents: The New Recruits, [1] originally released as Secret Agent Selection: WW2 in the UK, is a BBC television programme produced by Wall to Wall in association with Netflix. The five-part series was originally broadcast from Monday 29 June to Tuesday 8 May 2018. [2]
Baa Baa Black Sheep (TV series) Band of Brothers (miniseries) The Bay of Spies; Die Bertinis; Blood and Honor: Youth Under Hitler; The Blood of Others (film) Blue Light (TV series) Bluebell (TV series) Bomb Girls; Das Boot (2018 TV series) Das Boot; Bride of War
Cambridge Spies is a four-part British drama miniseries written by Peter Moffat and directed by Tim Fywell, [1] that was first broadcast on BBC Two in May 2003 and is based on the true story of four young men at the University of Cambridge who are recruited to spy for the Soviet Union in 1934.
Norman, Dennis, and Polly suspect Grainger is to blame. Later, the whole village attends a lecture where Cyril Jenkins shows them a series of posters of people who may be spies in disguise, but one poster in particular startles Norman, Dennis and Polly; an image of a woman in half a Nazi uniform and half normal clothing stays in their minds.