Hogan's Heroes - Season 3
Hogan's Heroes DVDs

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"What is this man doing here?" an increasingly agitated Major
Hochstetter of the Gestapo demands of Col. Klink (Werner Klemperer)
in "War Takes a Holiday," one of the best episodes of Hogan's
Heroes' third season (or any season, for that matter). "This man,"
of course, is Senior P.O.W. Officer Col. Hogan (Bob Crane), who, by
now, has the run of Stalag 13, and seemingly, all of Europe. The
beginning of the episode, "D-Day at Stalag 13," finds Hogan in
London to receive his orders on how his barracks operation will
further "tie up" the German general command to distract them from
the planned Normandy landing. "You have quite a reputation for the
offbeat and the bizarre, and for pulling it off," Hogan is told. And
he more than lives up to it over the course of season 3. In "War
Takes a Holiday," Hogan and company convince their captors that the
war is over. But sabotaging the German war effort is not all fun and
games. In "One in Every Crowd," Hogan is threatened with exposure by
a barracks traitor, and in "Two Nazis for the Price of One," a top
Gestapo officer likewise learns of Hogan's operation, and demands
information about the Manhattan Project. These excellent episodes
belie Hogan's Heroes unwarranted reputation as a series that treated
life in a prison camp as a lark.
This season welcomed back several recurring characters, most
notably, Bernard Fox's Col. Crittendon, "the most incompetent
British officer in the entire British Navy." Reprising her role as
the very suspect White Russian, Nita Talbot was nominated for an
Emmy for her performance in "The Hostage." For his commanding
performance as Klink, Klemperer was honored with an Emmy this
season. As lovable oaf Sgt. Schultz, John Banner enjoyed some of his
character's most memorable episodes, including "Sergeant Schultz
Meets Mata Hari" and "The Ultimate Weapon." (In "War Takes a
Holiday," it is revealed that Schultz was the owner of Germany's
biggest toy company!) This five-disc set contains a short but sweet
excerpt from a Pat Sajak Show appearance by Klemperer, who reveals
one of show business's most fascinating ironies; how a man whose
family fled Hitler's Germany became television's most famous and
oddly beloved Nazis. --Donald Liebenson
Product Description
The inmates of a German World War II Prisoners of War camp conduct
espionage and sabotage campaign right under the noses of their
warders. While the enemy is often gullible, easily fooled or
downright incompetent – the real strength of Hogan’s men are the
elaborate ruses and sometimes dangerous lengths they will go to
complete their mission.