Although depictions of actual bloodshed were scarce, the series was often criticised for its level of violence, with shootings, martial arts and asphyxiation a common means of assassination. To help maximise the on-screen action, Martin Shaw and Lewis Collins were taught stunt driving skills and encouraged to propel their respective cars through streets as rapidly as possible, although LWT insisted that the stars had to be chauffeured when travelling to filming sets. In his last interview about the series, Brian Clemens laughed off the actors' claims about "doing their own stunts" in the cars. He said that they had been taught "little more" than how to execute a
handbrake turn. The British stuntman and stunt co-ordinator
Peter Brayham did most of the precision driving, and with his dark curly hair, often stood in for Martin Shaw during the scenes where Doyle was driving. Shaw in particular, was known within the production team to be fairly inept with the cars. He was far too heavy on the brakes and throttle, regularly kerbed the cars, and often over-steered himself into trouble. This can be seen in many episodes. In the episode "Weekend in the Country", Gordon Jackson can be seen pulling away from a stationary position at the roadside, in a
Chrysler Alpine. He can be seen pulling out without fully checking the traffic flow, directly in front of an approaching
Volkswagen Beetle. The scene was cut at that point as this was either an accident or at the very least, a near miss incident. Some quarters of the British press seized on these aspects to insist that the programme was moronic and "comic-strip". However, reaction from other critics, including
The Times and
The Daily Telegraph newspapers, was more favourable. The first series episode "Klansmen" was withdrawn in the UK, ostensibly due to its race-related subject matter. The episode has never been screened on
terrestrial television in the UK, although it did screen uncut on the
cable television channel
Super-channel in 1987, and has been screened in other countries including
South Africa,
New Zealand,
Australia,
Argentina and the
Philippines. In 2020 the episode was available to stream on Amazon Prime. LWT refused to explain its view that while the episode remained unsuitable for British television viewers, it continued to be licensed to broadcasters in other countries. The show was also criticised for
political incorrectness.
Mary Whitehouse, President of the
National Viewers' and Listeners' Association, called the show, "violent, uncouth and unsavoury". In the closing credits of the episode "Stake Out" two supporting actors are identified as "Attractive Blonde" and "Handsome Negro". At the time such dialogue or descriptions were not seen as being disparaging. However, in the late 1980s and early 1990s the series was criticised by feminist groups. Yet, with the exception of "Klansmen", for which racist terms were a necessary part of the story, use of such terms in
The Professionals was scarce in comparison to, for example, the 1970s police television programme
The Sweeney. Martin Shaw was publicly critical of the series during its production, feeling that he was playing a one-dimensional character in a one-dimensional show. Several years after the series ended London Weekend Television was contractually obliged to re-negotiate repeat fees with the lead actors. Unwilling to accede to Shaw's demands, plans for further repeat screenings on the ITV network had to be withdrawn, leading to Lewis Collins expressing his frustration toward Shaw in an interview for the British press. However, Shaw eventually agreed to UK satellite screenings; although, according to a
Radio Times interview, he did so only after being discreetly made aware that Gordon Jackson's widow, actress
Rona Anderson (who guested in "Cry Wolf"), was suffering financial difficulties after her husband's death and needed the repeat fees. Episodes were shown on terrestrial TV as part of special occasions, such as a general overview of ITV's history; LWT, which produced the series, repeated a selection of episodes from the series in the early 1990s, although was the only region to do so. It was not until 2008 that the series gained a re-run on
ITV4.
The Professionals has also been regularly shown on cable TV. The entire series was regularly screened on the now-defunct
Granada Plus channel from 1997, where it was consistently the channel's highest-rated show, initially achieving close to one million viewers. The episodes shown were heavily edited to make them suitable for daytime viewing and it is these same prints that are being used for transmission on ITV4. Neither station screened the "Klansmen" episode, stating that London Weekend Television continued to forbid its transmission. In 1987, ITV was re-running some episodes. After the
Hungerford shooting incident the particular episode that was to be aired, "Lawson's Last Stand", had a theme that was deemed insensitive and was replaced by the less violent "The Untouchables". ==Legacy==