The Petrov Affair (miniseries) explained

Director:Michel Carson
Starring:Alex Menglet
Eva Sitta
Country:Australia
Language:English
Num Episodes:2 x 2 hours
Producer:Bob Weis
Network:PBL Productions

The Petrov Affair is a 1987 mini series based on the defection of Vladimir Petrov.[1]

Cast

Production

Filming was scheduled over 10 weeks in Melbourne in 1986. It was written using research from then recently released government documents that disproved a popular conspiracy theory surrounding the defection. Vladamir and Evdokia Petrov were both played by East European born actors, Russian Alex Menglet and Czech Eva Sitta respectively.

Reception

Channel 9 chose to screen The Petrov Affair out of the ratings period.

Barbara Hooks of the Age gave it a negative review and asked "How could a story which has teased the curiosity of Australians for decades be delivered to the screen so bled of its natural drama that, for the most part, it has all the lure of a long-winded night at the politburo?" Garrie Hutchinson, also of the Age, was a little more positive but says the series didn't go far enough. "A scarifying 12 hours about Australia in the 1950s might have been a hit - The Petrov Affair was a victim, like the original events, of its lack of ambition." In the same masthead Jane Sullivan wrote "The Petrov Affair is sometimes muddled, sometimes silly, and about as thrilling as reading back copies of Hansard" and she called "the mediocrity of this mini-series such a tragedy."

The Sydney Morning Herald's Doug Anderson wrote that the story was "enhanced by the recent release of hitherto classified documents which have illuminated numerous aspects of the complex events surrounding [the Petrov's] defection in April, 1954."

Notes and References

  1. Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p222