Baltimore Sun

Thrilling war adventure unfolds across desert in ‘Rogue Heroes’

- By Mark Kennedy

Think of a military unit, and you’ll likely get an image of fresh-pressed uniforms, crisp saluting and a strong sense of hierarchy. But a new TV series offers a much messier alternativ­e — one that can be even more effective.

“Rogue Heroes,” which recently premiered on Epix, examines the origin of Britain’s elite Special Air Service, a unit created in 1941 by a group of misfits who bucked the pomp and red tape of the traditiona­l army and yet had a large part in beating the Nazis.

“All of these people who were in this regiment would not survive or thrive in peace. They were destined for jail and destructio­n,” said Steven Knight, series creator and writer. “They were built for war. And then when war comes along, suddenly you need these people.”

It’s a thrilling series shot in North Africa, and it’s awash in testostero­ne, with plenty of whiskey drunk from the bottle, undulating sand dunes, machine guns, sunglasses, sweat stains and whirling ceiling fans.

Knight, who created “Peaky Blinders,” leans into that same successful blueprint by featuring a gang of nonconform­ists, lavish set designs and lots of cool music unrelated to the time.

The actors are as liable to quote “Ode to a Nightingal­e” by John Keats as plunge a knife into an enemy soldier. They are shown stealing food rations from Australian troops, using hashish as a bribe and getting into barroom brawls.

The series stars Connor Swindells, Jack O’Connell, Alfie Allen, Sofia Boutella and Dominic West. It is an adaptation of Ben Macintyre’s novel “SAS:

Rogue Heroes.”

The SAS thought outside the box, hurting the Nazi march across North Africa by attacking supply chains from the desert instead of the expected coast, destroying planes, aviation fuel and trucks on the ground in secretive commando raids.

“No one gave the order for them to come into being. It was largely three young men in their early 20s who decided to change the way that war was fought,” said Knight.

Adding to the allure is a soundscape that’s pure adrenalin, with jeeps racing across desert dunes to songs by AC/DC, Motorhead and Black Sabbath. Viewers will also hear “I Fought the Law” by the Clash, “Slow Ride” by Foghat and “Smash It Up” by the Damned.

“When you’ve got a desert that is that vast, you need music that’s going to fill that space,” said Knight. “People who make heavy metal and punk are very similar to the sensibilit­y of the people who formed the SAS.”

The SAS was a rarity for the British military by mixing soldiers who were from the land-owning aristocrac­y with working-class men, empowering everyone to challenge orders regardless of class.

“Because the crisis was so great and the need was so urgent, all of that nonsense was forgotten,” said Knight. “People of like minds, people who sort of were not afraid of death and who did think outside the box, gravitated together.”

Personal reasons brought Knight to the project. His father fought in North Africa during World War II as part of the British Eighth Army.

“He’d obviously been through hell, and he would never talk about it. So as a kid, I often wondered what was it like for him.” When Knight read the book, he imagined he could honor his dad: “I just thought, ‘I’ve got to do this.’ ”

While a group of rogue soldiers conducting hit-ormiss raids on Nazi convoys decades ago might not naturally prompt lessons for today, Knight thinks the way the SAS made decisions could teach today’s corporatio­ns.

“The decision-making process has to be a small thing, because when it’s so vast, it becomes quite vague, and it’s very blunt, and it doesn’t hit the target,” he said. Another lesson: “You have to listen to people who are putting forward a different propositio­n because they might just be right.”

 ?? EPIX ?? Jack O’Connell, left, and Connor Swindells in “Rogue Heroes,” based on Ben Macintyre’s novel “SAS: Rogue Heroes.”
EPIX Jack O’Connell, left, and Connor Swindells in “Rogue Heroes,” based on Ben Macintyre’s novel “SAS: Rogue Heroes.”

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