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Re: UFO (1970)
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"The Cat with Ten Lives" -- 3 UFOs approach Moonbase but veer off, as a diversion for another 3 UFOs, which get into a battle with Moonbase's new ground defense tanks. (I suspect these are remote-control, as there's no evidence they're actually manned.) Interceptor pilot Jim Reagan, on leave, takes part with his wife in a friendly seance during which he goes into a trance. On the way home, they stop to pick up a stray cat-- but are then kidnapped by a pair of aliens. When he wakes up, the cat is there, but his wife is missing. Straker cold-bloodedly puts him back on active duty immediately, which shocks Col. Virginia Lake. When a UFO that got thru their defenses and disappeared rises from a lake and heads into space, Reagan again goes into a trance and fails to take it out. Straker admits he made a mistake and orders Reagan to have a 2-week furlough, and orders Dr. Jackson to do a full exam of him. Following an exam of an alien found on the wreckage of the Moon, Jackson proposes all they thought about the aliens previously may be wrong. The alien is completely human, and Jackson theorises the possibility that the aliens may not actually have physical bodies at all, and all the organ-snatching may be to keep their human "bodies" going as a way to give them "vehicles" to operate in space. Reagan clobbers Foster and takes his place on a mission to escort a returning Venus probe, but when he breaks formation and switches off his radio, Straker suspects he's being controlled by the aliens-- via the cat-- and from the film studio, borrows a pack of dogs to track the cat down. Presumably they catch and kill the cat, and Reagan awakens just in time to veer off from Moonbase, crashing and destroying only his interceptor, and himself.
This is a really downbeat episode, but unlike several of the earlier one, extremely complex and well-written. David Tomblin, who contributed so much to THE PRISONER, was both writer and director here, and I have no doubt he's responsible for the casting of Alexis Kanner, who played such an utterly bizarre character as he did in 2 episodes of that show.
The other new Interceptor pilots are Al Mancini (KELLY'S HEROES) and Steven Berkoff (who would later play a major Bond villain in OCTOPUSSY, and another villain much later on SPACE PRECINCT).
After the previous episode was so low-key, things kick into high gear and get REALLY complex here, with a dense story and extremely-intricate editing, at times nearly bringing the pacing up to the high-speed opening theme montage. Lois Maxwell (most famous as "Miss Moneypenny" in the Bond films) fills in for Miss Ealand. I can tell what a good actress she is, as in one scene, she exhibits more personality and warmth than Miss Ealand did in all her scenes up to this point! The fact that Miss Ealand is mentioned suggests that while the actress was unavailable right here, they must have know that she was coming back soon. "Miss Holland" is apparently on loan from "Section 9" and usually works for someone named "Blake"-- who we never learn any more about. It's just one more detail and example of subtle "world-building", which I imagine might have been followed up on, had the show managed to get a 2nd season. Wanda Ventham's "Virginia Lake", not seen since the pilot, returns as a regular, replacing George Sewell's "Alec Freeman". She somehow almost matches Ed Straker's unemotional intenseness here, but as the show continues, she slowly gets more and more to do.
Vladek Sheybal, in his own usual weird way, manages to show more personality than usual, and Ayshea Brough gets more to do than ever before, considering she's been in pretty much every episode up to this point. (Apparently, she's gotten a promotion since "Keith Ford" disappeared off the show.) Also in the cast are Colin Gordon (THE PINK PANTHER) and Windsor Davies (who later voiced my FAVORITE character on Anderson's TERRAHAWKS!).
Someone at the IMDB said this episode was "silly", but to me, the big problem was, as usual, having the episode order scrambled for broadcast. Here we have one of the later episodes, which clearly shows the series was getting more and more complex and intense. It's episode 19-- yet insanely, it was broadcast 3rd! That just COMPLETELY screwed over any sense of character development or continuity!
This was the 3rd episode in a row with a UFO hiding underwater. It was also developing the idea of humans under mind-control of the aliens, as seen earlier in "E.S.P."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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"Destruction" -- A navy ship on a scouting mission sites a UFO and blows it out of the sky. When the event hits the news, and Henderson says it will be officially denied the next day, Straker wants to know what the ship was doing in that area, and so assigns Virginia Lake to SkyDiver. In the tradition of Irwin Allen's VOYAGE, she insists on taking the sub down far below its safety limits, until it's obvious they just can go any further. Henderson & Straker visit Adm. Sheringham about the incident, but he gets very nervous and ushers them out quickly. Then Straker has Paul Foster "investigate" the Admiral's secretary, Sarah Bosenquet, who has a professional-looking telescope set up in her flat. Col. Lake begins spying on that, and it soon becomes obvious the girl is using the telescope to send a high-frequency message into space-- especially when Interceptor pilot Steve Minto is knocked unconscious while parked in its path. It seems Sarah's father was one of the men in charge of building Moonbase, but disappeared 5 years earlier on the Moon, and Straker believes Sarah is either being forced-- or controlled-- by the aliens. Henderson then brings Adm. Sheringham right into SHADO HQ, revealing everything about the UFO threat, to get him to tell what's going on with his ship that required so much security that even SHADO couldn't find out about it! It seems the ship is being used to dump a dangerously-toxic nerve gas into a deep trench, where its casings will last long enough for the gas to eventually become non-lethal. But as Straker suspects (and then confirms) the UFOs have found a way past Moonbase radar, he fears they may attack the ship-- which could cause the death of ALL life on Earth! Sure enough, a pair of UFOs approach, and can only be detected by SIGHT. Minto takes out one, but the other gets through. The Navy ship's missile system is disabled, and it stays out of gunner range. But then SkyOne blasts out of the water, and TAKES OUT the UFO. After, a far-more-reasonable than usual Henderson talks with Straker, who wonders HOW many others like Sarah are out there being used by the aliens.
Building on the previous episode, this was the most intense and COMPLEX episode yet! (It was also the 4th in a row having a UFO hide underwater.) Once again, the broadcast schedule ruined any sense of building moment, as this 20th episode was aired 9th. They were getting better guest-casts by this time. Philip Madoc (INVASION EARTH 2150 A.D.) was the Ship's Captain. David Warbeck (TWINS OF EVIL) was the SkyDiver Captain. Edwin Richfield was Adm. Sharingham (2 years before he played virtually the same part in the DOCTOR WHO story The Sea Devils). Stephanie Beachum was Sarah Bosenquet (2 years before she played Jessica Van Helsing in DRACULA A.D. 1972).
Straker mentions that Adr. Sharingham will have to be given the amnesia drug when he leaves SHADO HQ, but nobody mentions doing the same with the entire crew of the Navy destroyer who not only saw 2 different UFOs but also SkyOne take out the 2nd UFO! Considering all the damage done to the ship during that incident, how would using the drug "explain" away things? I think it reaches a point where all this excessive "security" about SHADO and the UFOs just becomes absurd, and invoking "The Official Secrets Act" might be a more sensible way to go.
I have to rank this as one of Dennis Spooner's best writing efforts I've seen on any show he ever worked on.
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Joined: Sep 2013
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Tempus Fugitive
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Tempus Fugitive
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I'm looking forward to reading the thread Prof.
UFO combined the superb Anderson miniatures work within a sci fi touched world, much like their live action movie Journey to the Far Side of the Sun. That also had Bishop and Sewell in it. It also had Roy Thinnes in it, known for the Invaders.
They wanted to go for a more grown up audience, showing the human cost/drama alongside, and grounding, the plot and the effects.
The stories were going that way even with Captain Scarlet. The best agent is killed and returns as a villain. Another agent, Scarlet, is also killed, but regains his personality from the bad guys. But he did die, and could become a villain too.
It might be a cultural thing, but a lot of our characters are flawed underdogs fighting uphill battles.
Straker is one such character. His personal life and overtime military career ends in that UFO attack, trying to destroy evidence of extraterrestrial visitors. Evidence that worried the Earth's governments to form the clandestine SHADO.
I rewatched Identified, and enjoyed it. It's the episode that sells the show (mainly aiming for the US market, which meant financial success - the timing of those plot breaks for ads are odd to our UK eyes).
It's well structured, with the disappearance of Carlin's sister at the start being bookended by her fate being revealed at the end.
We get to see a number of the SHADO vehicles and locations (Andersons well ahead in realising the bonus for tie ins) in the titles, and throughout the episode. The future of 1980, the glamour of a film studio, loads of sci fi vehicles combatting aliens more directly than Thinnes was ever able to and some lechery all look to draw in a wide audience.
As above we see Straker's personal struggles, and how his approach differs from Freeman's. Poor Ford is used to receive a rather clunky outburst. But Straker has a more anguished scene at the end.
The alien's are handled really well. Both the UFO and occupant are initially unseen, and are gradually revealed. SHADO has only recently in a position to seriously tackle the alien menace. It's taken years to get to this stage. They've yet to intercept one.
When they do down a craft and capture the injured occupant, they find a very similar looking humanoid. Shadows (or SHADOs) of their film, which was also released as Doppelganger.
After all these years, SHADO are still speculating on where the aliens are from and what they want. There's not too much revealed here. They breathe fluids to protect their pilots from long journeys at vast speeds. Several organs are from humans.
It adds the creepy horror that Scarlet also had, as does fighting an unknown enemy. In Scarlet, The Mysterons were arguably taking revenge after an attack from our heroes. In UFO, they could be a race like us, looking to use their advanced technology against a planet they consider inferior, in order to survive. There's some moral greyness that goes through some of Anderson's work. There's also that hard, uphill struggle ahead.
The show also touches on the UFOlogy of the time: Abductions, mutilations and organ harvesting. Also investigations such as Project Bluebook. This would continue to be polished over the years, by the likes of Tim Good giving us films like Close Encounters.
A direct descenant of UFO, would combine the later UFOlogy narratives with UFO, to give us the game UFO: Enemy Unknown (aka X-Com: UFO Defence.).
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Joined: May 2013
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Wanderer
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Wanderer
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Thoth, glad to see you joining the discussion. Hoped you would as I figured with your UK background it would be a familiar topic to you. Prof, thanks for continuing to summarise and review the episodes. There are quite a few of the later ones that I have never seen. Really motivating me to give it another go. Your description of the ongoing wrangling between Straker and General Henderson remind me of one of my favourite comic stories from Countdown #12-18 "The New Boss". General Henderson is injured in a car crash after a UFO attack and is temporarily replaced by a General Calper who is somewhat hostile and uncertain about how SHADO is being run. After a UFO attacks the SHADO plane he is on, he argues at a conference that SHADO is being mismanaged and insists on doing a complete inspection. During the inspection he tells Straker that all the camouflage and subterfuge of hiding the alien menace are severely hindering SHADO's ability to fight and declares that he will be announcing the truth on broadcast television that evening. When Straker objects Calper pulls a gun on him saying he is under arrest. Straker knocks him down and escapes while Calper puts SHADO on high alert declaring Straker a wanted fugitive to be shot on site. When Foster tracks him down he is convinced by Straker to join him as they theorise that Calper is being influenced or mind-controlled by the aliens. That evening as the motorcade is escorting the General to the television studio they are blocked by Foster's mobile and suddenly an alien appears who is really Straker in a pretend suit. When the guards prepare to defend General Calper the alien/Straker tells him to order the guards to stop which he does saying the alien is a friend, thus demonstrating the truth to their alien influence theory. Just then a UFO turns up and kills Calper. The issue ends with confidence in Straker restored and a discussion of some of the points that Calper made about the problems of secrecy, but Straker concludes that they are fighting the aliens the only way they know how and the fact that the aliens tried to use Calper to change that proves that it's working. It's a well told story that would have been great to see filmed with some excellent action scenes including Straker escaping in a Formula 1 car from a film the Straker Studios is making. This series of stories is illustrated by Gerry Haylock who does a terrific job. If you would like to view a summary of the stories and some of the artwork, there used to be a website dedicated to the comic depictions of Anderson properties. Although the website is gone a good copy is maintained on the Internet Archive through their Wayback Machine and the Countdown UFO stories can be viewed here: https://web.archive.org/web/2011060...pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Upload01/UFOPt1.htm
Last edited by stile86; 09/24/24 05:51 PM. Reason: fat fingers
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Joined: Sep 2013
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Tempus Fugitive
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Tempus Fugitive
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I only found out about UFO from reading an article about the origins of X-Com. I did do a post somewhere with all the bits of X-Com sourced years later for a spiritual successor game. I'd have seen Captain Scarlet by then, so was keen to see it. Apparently UFO was a fav show of some of the team at Microprose UK. When someone suggested fighting an alien menace as something to hang their game on. it came up, and SHADO became X-Com.
When I was very young, Space 1999 might have been getting a rerun, or the toy of one of their craft was still around to be bought as a present for my older brother. I remember one being around. Actually. I fib. My brother had a starship enterprise. Another kid had a Space 1999 toy. which I thought looked cool. But not something I got to play with.
I did see some episodes of it when young, but not as a regular thing. The craft and Moonbase were timelessly awesome. Quaternass had a domed moon base with geodesic domes quite similar to the UFO/Space 1999 ideas. A lot of UK Moonbase concepts go down that route as a result, in games and comics.
I didn't read Anderson comics either. Doctor Who may have appeared in some of the anthology ones the Beeb put out. I remember getting a Doctor Who annual. The colour art was of Eagle standard for a Daleks strip. Well above the quality of the perfectly fine , later Doctor Who weekly.
Other Anderson things were before my time too. We knew about The Thunderbirds. While I might have seen the odd bit, it didn't do much for me. There was a much later national surge of interest in it. Tracey Island became a massive toy one year, decades later. I'm a fan of Captain Scarlet. Off hand I couldn't say when I first saw a repeat though.
So, I look back on childhood snippets, how our culture shaped it and the ripples it cast on other shows. So, getting to it late actually helps, as I'm a lot more aware of events, films etc around that time.
There is a UFO anthology comic. I own it volume 1, but haven't read it. There's also a SHADO technical manual. I've yet to flick through. Konami released lovely minis at some point too.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Tempus Fugitive
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I remember Computer Affair as coming across as a clumsy attempt at supporting racial equality. But a rewatch shows there's more going on.
After all this time, SHADO are only being able to implement better detection from episode 1. But their single shot fighters still have to hit them, and find that very difficult. Having seen Battlestar Galactica as a kid, one shot craft seemed very odd. But if they could hit them in orbit, the action would never reach Earth, where much of the rest of the show was. It continues the uphill struggle of the first episode.
I enjoyed the Ellis/ Bradley relationship more this time round. Analysis shows she favoured Bradley. Nothing that definitely got the other guy killed. But it's there. Ellis ends up actually putting Bradley in more danger later on, over compensating. Neither knew of feelings for the other. Ellis pushes back on that with her actions. Freeman believes what he sees, handing in his resignation in protest against Straker's cold calculations.
Except it took the computer to make them realise they did actually have feelings after all. Straker's cold approach results in a romance. Freeman rips up his resignation, grudgingly accepting that human instincts aren't everything. Straker is humanised by the outcome.
We get to see the cast in different roles. The idea was for one of rotation. Carlin and Bradley suffer from being associated with one vehicle, limiting their involvement. Both do get more varied scenes in the opening 2 episodes. But it would have needed reasons to keep them at SHADO HQ for other episodes. Ellis would find herself on Moonbase more often than not (no coincidence that this was part of moonbase's popularity, resulting in Space 1999)
An alien is captured. His death at Straker's instruction to get more information alienates (no pun intended) Freeman. Straker is desperate to learn about the threat after 10 years. But they are beginning to at least learn about the pilot's biologies now. No big reveal. Just hopes dashed a bit as the struggle continues.
We get to see the super Shadomobiles in this episode. The miniatures were great in this show. Watching them converge on a UFO while being tracked from the Shadows control vehicle stands out even now.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Tempus Fugitive
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Tempus Fugitive
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Love is also key in the third episode. Roper's love for his wife costs him his life, and doesn't save her. He gives up information to another contact in order to protect her.
There's a nice combining of plots, as they realise the only person who could know to blackmail Roper would also have to be on the base. Two traitors!
The blackmailer was himself abducted. They implanted him with a small control device. Classic UFOlogy tropes, to bring in creeping horror at the aliens' plans.
Roper is a fair bit older than his wife. It comes up in the dialogue and there's some nice chemistry there, in their teasing and comfort with each other.
Just enough to get us to like them, even knowing Roper is up to no good. Freeman has known him for years and you can see he's concerned at the change in his friend. After his retracted resignation last episode, now he's thinking that age can play a factor in perhaps calling it a day.
Mrs Roper is already highly strung after a threatening appearance by the blackmailer, and nearly shooting Roper. A third appearance completely unerves her. She does shoot the blackmailer, but is rooted to the spot as her assailant inches towards his gun. Earlier we saw Roper removed the remaining shotgun cartridge, after he avoided getting shot by her. Someone must have put one back in?
I know doubt shared Prof's feeling about them only putting one man on the surface to destroy the UFO. But it wouldn't be a redemption arc if another, random soldier blew it up. Poor Roper would have to return to face a court martial and news of his wife's death. That would be bleaker still.
This one is a nice combination of a tense betrayal plot, combined with the Anderson's miniatures (interceptors. Skydiver, Moonbase etc all used) supporting the drive of the episode, which ends in an action finale on the surface of the moon. The bittersweet ending is very much in keeping with struggles of the show's cast.
When I first watched this George Cole had been Arthur Daley in Minder for so long, it was hard to think of him in anything else. He had appeared in Tom Sharpe's Blott on the Landscape (starring David Suchet) as a MP/ landowner caught in a very compromising position. That was odd to, to see him play another role.
Sewell and Bishop were remembered from the film Doppelganger because they had to adlib in one scene, and carried it off so well. In UFO, Bishop is the driven leader, a bit highly strung. Sewell the low key agent, capable and experienced agent carrying out the legwork. They have a good dynamic in these episodes.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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"The Man Who Came Back" -- Another TRIO of UFOs are approaching, and one veers off to intercept a deep-space capsule piloted by Craig Collins. We don't see what happened, but soon after he's declared dead, and Straker is annoyed that Miss Holland has neglected to move his file to the deceased list. But Collins turns up alive on a remote island, and brags that their "survival training course" really works. During the attack, SID was damaged, and Collins, as one of the men who helped put the satellite into orbit, is the obvious man to do a spacewalk to repair it. Virginia Lake is temporarily assigned to Moonbase, where Collins seems annoyed that Paul Foster has moved in on "his" girl. She says she grieved for awhile, but then stopped grieving. She also takes offense to his acting as if she's his "property". Col. John Grey, who's acting as Straker's right-hand man while Lake is on the Moon, has had personal problems with Craig, and Straker advises him to put those aside. But while on the Moon, Craig tries to kill Grey while he's asleep. Later, while working out, he causes Foster to suffer broken bones! The only obvious man left now to join him reparing SID is Straker-- who considers Craig one of his best and oldest friends, as they both went thru astronaut training together and originally put SID in orbit. Dr. Jackson has been experimenting with an isolation chamber, and has made a strange discovery. While in the chamber, Craig's mind becomes a total blank. Grey confronts Craig with this, accusing him of being under control of the aliens-- and Craig beats him into a near-coma. Straker & Craig go into orbit, and Grey recovers just in time to contact Straker and warn him, just at the moment that Craig tries to kill Straker.
Here we have ANOTHER episode where the aliens are using mind-control over humans, following "Flight Path", "E.S.P.", "Kill Straker" and "The Cat With Ten Lives". Most of these have been in the 2nd half of the run, and there's a growing sense of paranoia and uncertainty if you watch these in the right order.
SHADO continues to move their personnel around, obviously so people get more well-rounded experience, and also not get bored just staying in one job. It's interesting to speculate on how this episode might have gone if the cast hadn't had such a large turn-around in the later episodes. For example, John Grey (Gary Raymond), who we never saw in any other story, seems slotted in instead of Alec Freeman (George Sewell), even though by this point, that role was already being filled by Virginia Lake (Wanda Ventham). Lake in this story is on Moonbase, filling the slot left by Gay Ellis (Gabrielle Drake), in a much-larger role than Ellis ever got in earlier stories. Foster spends most of his time at Moonbase in this one, but I can't be sure who's supposed to be in charge of Moonbase here, Lake or Foster. (Though, it seems Lake has the seniority.) Collins having been romantically involved with Lake suggests that Craig is filling the slot of the departed Mark Bradley (Harry Baird), although, there was never any indication that Straker & Bradley were actually friends.
I like how Doug Jackson (the always-creepy Vladek Sheybal) is experimenting on his own. The aliens are upping their game, and they need someone in SHADO to do the same. This is at least the 2nd time he's admitted to Straker that he "could be wrong", but we can tell, HE ISN'T. He acted like such a total JERK in "Court Martial", it's way better to have that episode in the past by here, while it hadn't turned up yet when broadcast!
I do find it bizarre that SHADO had to use a NASA rocket launch in order to get into orbit to repair SID, when it seems to me, they should very well have been able to use their own Moon Shuttle! It strikes me as nothing but an EXCUSE to re-use footage from the film JOURNEY TO THE FAR SIDE OF THE SUN, which was technically-efficient but horribly-written.
For someone Staker considered a good friend, Craig consistently comes across and smug, arrogant and annoying as hell throughout this entire episode, and I have to wonder how much or little of that was due to alien control. He keeps calling Grey "Master", he gets possessive and rough with Lake, and during workout / briefings, he's so excessively physical with Foster he acts as if HE's Foster's boss, not the other way around. Sad to say, I didn't feel that sorry when he wound up killed at the end. I've also seen actor Derren Nesbitt on THE PRISONER, RETURN OF THE SAINT, and WHERE EAGLES DARE.
This was written by Terence Feely, one of the most consistenly-good writers I've ever seen from England. He's also done episodes of THE PRISONER and THE NEW AVENGERS, and his work stands out wherever it shows up.
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Tempus Fugitive
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Tempus Fugitive
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Exposed was a mixed one for me.
Foster's character is introduced as the action hero of the series. Bradly and Carlin are relegated to their craft. Ellis has vanished and Freeman gets a few lines. My understanding was that this was in reaction to early viewings by the TV execs who felt it needed someone more charismatic that Sewell. But in a few episodes, I'd become loyal to the established cast. I wanted more of Straker and Freeman. Foster seemed to be shoehorned in. Now, I must have seen Foster's face to know he'd be recurring. They could have used this as a one off, to show how the agents got recruited.
On the plus side, there's classic ufology here. A test pilot gets caught up in a UFO encounter. It crashes as a result, and Foster pursues the incident. The personal angst in the first episode wasn't mined as much here. Straker does coldly order the interception to proceed. Foster does refuse to follow a direct order to clear the area. The dead co pilot is mentioned. But the instigating event is not a subject of anger between them. There's mentions of government cover ups, and of pilots choosing not to report for fear of career damage.
Foster chases the film from the flight, only to be stonewalled, until he sees a picture of a uniformed Straker in a newspaper, and connects it to the name on an envelope he stole from a safe. I don't think it's made clear why the clip was around. But Foster had previous sightings, so perhaps had been researching anyway.
Straker looks set to eliminate Foster to protect the secret war that SHADO fights. There's a nice use of SHADO's cover as a movie studio to set Foster up for this encounter. Straker has been recruiting him, pretty much from the outset. All the characters Foster has met were SHADO agents.
It's a very upbeat ending as Foster is taken away for training. Even Freemen smiles a bit. No lines, which look to already be reduced. No recriminations about one of the agents pretending to have been the sister of his dead co pilot. Or another, who temporarily blinded him, so they had time to set all this up.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Tempus Fugitive
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Tempus Fugitive
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Exposed had not only brought Foster into the group, but they wanted him for a leadership position. So, Survival starts with him commanding Moonbase.
As prof said, there are some continuing threads here. The UFOs know there's a Moonbase and land a craft to attack it. And the research side of Straker knows it's a great chance of capturing a UFO, which disintegrate in our atmosphere eventually.
The alien cracks a window with a projectile, killing Foster's colleague. There's already a feeling that if you see someone chatting to a regular cast member, they're minutes are numbered. No red space suits to point them out though.
Having been bored by the much later Enemy Mine, and a few similar plots fromm other later things, the earlier version was a tougher sell, which isn't it's fault. The alien was not going to survive it. At least it was set up early on by Foster's damaged radio. He couldn't communicate to his colleagues to save the alien, as he couldn't to get rescued or direct and attack on the UFO.
One clunky was that they dismissed Foster's chances of survival. Straker simply didn't think it was a possibility. As Foster is staggering across the moons ape with his new buddy, SHADO have told his girlfriend he's dead, and replaced him as Commander.
Bradley is the replacement. He initially refused due to race perhaps impacting missions. Straker tells us that such things were over a whole 5 years ago, in 1975. If only. Bradley is the one who sends out a vessel to retrieve the wreckage. They find Foster and kill the alien.
Foster tries to retrieve his relationship, but the secrecy and the small matter of returning from the dead end it.
It's another well structured episode, with nice set ups and payoffs. The X-com guys must have liked it. The space suits, retrieval missions and alien alloys all lifted.
The alien is the one to save Foster's life. Perhaps it knows it has to have a way to get into the base through Foster. With no dialogue and a cool look, it comes across more altruistically.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Tempus Fugitive
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As prof says, Conflict has the surprising return of Henderson, who must have been thrown out of the other door of the car wreckage in episode 1.
As the two don't get on, we're reminded that various countries fund SHADO, and that changes can be imposed.
The aliens have now uncovered the location of SHADO. Which i'd have thought would worry them more going forward. Another pal is killed returning to Earth.
The aliens are using a drone device, hiding behind space debris, to latch onto passing craft. It then distorts their flight path destroying the craft during re-entry.
There's a good few minutes at the start on how space debris is dealt with. This was made well before Dark Star that takes the idea, and method, and runs with it.
Drones, space clutter being dangerous, and international organisations not able to act. All things in today's news.
We get a reminder of Foster's test pilot history, as he repeats the course and reveals the aliens.
But that's only one plot. The aliens were hoping that Moonbase would launch interceptors to destroy the likely debris used to hide the drone. That way their UFO could attack SHADO HQ. As prof said, Straker has maneuvered Henderson to be on the scene of the attack. One thwarted by SKY One. We're not told how SHADO dealt with all the people who might have seen this one.
Foster's hotheadedness allows an interesting dynamic between Straker and Henderson. Henderson is out to get Straker, but will see reason. Straker is frustrated, but always respects Henderson.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Tempus Fugitive
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A meteorite lands near the base of our cast. But it's not the Empire Strikes back or Invaders From Mars or War of the Worlds. It's the Dalotek Affair.
To protect their secret. SHADO have had defence contractors know not to ask questions, and to alter evidence of events. Now pesky private enterprise is on the moon. We learn that all the good minerals have been mined since 1969.
Foster has another romantic entanglement with one of the three astronauts from Dalotek. He's clearly a more suited as a romantic lead, the show having moved a bit away from Freeman's lechery.
When signals get scrambled, SHADO blames Dalotek. As it continues, they use their military backstory to shut down Dalotek's research.
But it wasn't them. It was something in the meteor. The interference is cleared with just enough time to stop the oncoming UFO attack.
This one is a bit more straightforward. But not in a bad way. We had an episode when Foster joined. During it most of the base looked round, at the outsider. You wonder what their stories were. Here, we find out that Comms officer Ford, he of getting snapped at in episode one, was a TV interviewer. He interviewed a number of people on UFOlogy in 1969.
It's always worth mentioning that every plot has to contain the SHADO toys. There is usually Moonbase, Interceptors, UFOs, SHADO hq and frequently SkyOne and assorted other minis.
So, there's some craft in building multiple plots through that each time.
Straker authorises amnesia treatment. I guess he wanted none of them as recruits. It would have been an option in dealing with Foster.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Enjoying your comments!
I find it a bit odd that "Survival" FEELS like it should be watched before "Exposed"-- because it was written & filmed before it-- even though "Exposed" was written SPECIFICALLY to take place before "Survival".
In a way, Straker & Freeman remind me of Spock & McCoy. Foster is the show's Kirk (even though he's not in charge).
After all the drama about Bradley being offered the job, first refusing, then accepting, it may have been frustrating when Foster TURNED UP ALIVE. (Aw, nuts!)
Just watched a short interview excerpt today (I'd seen the longer one earlier) where Gerry Anderson talks about the NYC ITC execs (one in particular who he says "will remain nameless"-- I wish he HAD named the bastard). It seems clear to me, somebody looked at the first few episodes produced, intensely disliked "Computer Affair" & "Flight Path", and when they saw "Survival", took one look at Paul Foster and said, "THAT's what we need!" No other single character (not counting "Confetti Check") on the show got an "origin" story. To go and do a "flashback" showing how he joined SHADO and air it before "Survival" was one thing. To HOLD BACK the 2 earlier episodes to much later, had the effect of dragging down the FAR-BETTER later episodes... and, the entire series. Anderson said UFO won its time-slot in syndication in both NYC and LA for 17 weeks... then, dropped right off the board. Scrambling the running order is what KILLED the show. Holding the entire series back from broadcast until ALL 26 episodes were in the can also killed Century 21 as a production company!
I've said it before, but, I have NEVER seen a show as sabotaged as UFO was. And, frankly, when I bought the DVD set, I was in a STATE OF SHOCK for HOW MUCH BETTER the show suddenly became, when I was able to watch it not only UNCUT, but in the correct running order. (Well, except for "Mindbender" and "Timelash". But that's easy to fix when you're playing DVDs.)
TV execs (at least in the old days) ALWAYS wanted shows to be able to be run in any order. But you CAN'T do that with a "long story" format like a soap-opera... or a series with a "season-long storyline".
Even BATTLESTAR GALACTICA was screwed over early, when they held back "The Gun On Ice Planet Zero" and ran it 5th when I'm convinced it was made 2ND. (There were a few scenes that were clearly written & filmed after-the-fact to cover the change in running order... but I've studied it enough to where I'm NOT FOOLED.)
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Straker authorises amnesia treatment. I guess he wanted none of them as recruits. It would have been an option in dealing with Foster. YEAH, you're RIGHT! (But of course, he really WANTED Foster, and everything he was doing was just a "test" to see how he'd react.)
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"The Psychobombs" -- SHADO has successfully taken out at least 5 more UFOs, but 1 has gotten thru, and Straker wants it found! 3 innocent people are mesmerized by the aliens, and 1, a woman, while being needlessly harrassed by a policeman, winds up KILLING the cop, then goes to work the next day completely unaware of it. Straker picks up a hitch-hiker who, while being dropped off, knocks Straker for a loop. When he wakes up, he finds a type-written ultimatum to SHADO to "surrender" and shut down all their operations, or their bases, their submarines, and their HQ, along with Straker, will be destroyed. One of the victims, in a trance, walks into a SHADO radar station. He's carefully searched and screened not to have any weapons of any kind on him, but also professes total ignorance of how he got there. But while being escorted to a security cell, he grabs a pair of heavy electrical cables, and, inexplicably, the ENTIRE BASE is destroyed in a COLOSSAL explosion! SkyDiver 3 is the next target, when their new Captain is murdered and impersonated by the 2nd man, who's somhow burned the real Captain's fingerprints onto his own. Straker orders the sub to crash dive while the man is on the conning tower, but, too late! Jackson tells Straker of a theory he has involving the human nervous system, which, if pushed far enough out of balance, could somehow connect with all the forces of the entire universe. Foster & Lake use the computer, and find a report about the murdered cop in the same area as the radar base, and track down the woman to her apartment building, then her work office, where they find her boss murdered. Foster meets the woman, and very pleasantly, takes her out for lunch. Hours later, she feels like she's known him for ages. Lake is shocked when she hears Foster is bringing the woman into SHADO HQ, even if it is on Straker's orders. While she's being interrogated, Straker orders SkyOne to find the still-missing UFO, which has been in Earth's atmosphere almost 2 days. Luckily, it takes off and is spotted. The woman breaks free, walks into the control room and grabs a pair of electrical cables, when Straker distracts her about the "ultimatum". She demands total surrender, but he says, "I can't do that." He then announces the UFO has been destroyed. She grabs the cables, and is nearly electrocuted. Col. Lake gets a report that the UFO has been destroyed. "How did you know?" "I didn't." HOLY S***!!
After 3 fabulous scripts in a row by guest writers, regular writer Tony Barwick returns with what has to be his best work on the series to date!
Another terrifying "alien mind control" story, which has been an ongoing theme ever since "E.S.P.". Among the guest cast are David Collings (DOCTOR WHO: The Robots Of Death), Mike Pratt (RANDALL & HOPKIRK DECEASED), and Tom Adams (THE HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD), the latter as the ill-fated Skydiver Captain. Deborah Grant, who plays "Linda Simmonds", was in 31 episodes of BERGERAC-- but, I've never seen that show!
Although a "fleet of submarines" had been mentioned very early in the series, this is actually the first time since then that they've made a point of mentioning that they do, in fact, have several SkyDivers, and this is the only appearance of both SkyDiver 3 and the massive cavern that serves as its base (sort of a cross between the launch bay in STINGRAY and the cave seen in the 1961 film THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND). Colonels Foster & Lake are seen working together here, but there's no indication of any romance going on, which confirms there wasn't anything serious going on in the previous episode "The Man Who Came Back". But Foster's way with ladies continues unabated, and his behavior with the woman who at times is under the aliens' control is almost shocking. One might almost hope she recovered after the end of the story, but given SHADO's almost-insane obsession with security, she probably won't remember them or Foster after this.
The number of UFOs being sent against Earth, the increased destructive capability the aliens are unleashing, and their blatent "ultimatum" to Straker just shows how much they're continuing to up their game. Which makes it all the more absurd that this 22nd episode was originally broadcast 12th. More and more, I'd like to get my hands around the throat of whichever ITC exec in New York was responsible for SCREWING this show over so completely, then, making sure that a 2nd season could NEVER be produced!
Barry Gray's music is more ominous than ever in this episode. There's a recurring theme he uses involving the growing menace which I have the strong feeling was also used somewhere else, but for the life of me, I can't remember where it might have been.
Jackson's line when he says to Straker, "I have a theory..." became the running catch-phrase of "Dr. Tiger Ninestein" more than a decade later on TERRAHAWKS. That show paid tribute to virtually every previous Gerry Anderson series, but I'd forgotten that line came from this episode.
Last edited by profh0011; 09/27/24 02:19 PM.
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Re: UFO (1970)
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"Reflections In The Water" -- As SID reports an entire fleet of UFOs gathering 4 hours away, a manned deep-space probe is destroyed. A ship in the mid-Atlantic is destroyed by something they report looks like a "metal flying fish". A diver is murdered off the coast of Cornwall, and rising water temperatures are reported, just as SkyDiver found them in the mid-Atlantic. Straker & Foster join SkyDiver to search the area of the destroyed ship, find an underwater dome, and inside, spot a SHADO agent, "Anderson". Suspecting he's turned traitor, they heavily interrogate him, including using what Dr. Jackson says is an "infallable" drug. Straker & Foster return to the dome and break in, and find not only a duplicate of Anderson, but of Foster, Straker, and the entire staff of SHADO HQ, manning a duplicate of their HQ. The aliens plan to use this to order Moonbase to NOT attack the UFO squad when they attack. Straker just barely gets out of the dome before it's obliterated by SkyDiver. The explosions also set off a cable connected to a nearby volcano, which had been used as a "back door" for UFOs, destroying that as well. When the mass UFO attack comes, they're all destroyed by a combination of the Interceptors, Moonbase ground defenses (some of which are destroyed as well) and SkyDiver. Foster says, "They won't try that again.", to which Straker replies, "Don't count on it."
This is another teleplay by David Tomblin, and again, has a very odd feel to it.
At one point Straker seems bored watching the rushes of a film about deep-sea fishing, but the film winds up giving him a clue as to what's going on. The projection room reappeared in the very next episode, "Mindbender" (which stupidly had been broadcast 6 months before this). I believe this episode suggests that every UFO that got through and disappeared was hiding underwater and building that base dome. While they were puzzled how the aliens found out what SHADO HQ and its staff looked and sounded like, I had earlier suspected it was THE CAT that was spying on them, in "The Cat With Ten Lives", as it was wandering all around SHADO HQ for some time.
Knowing how the broadcast order kept screwing with continuity, I wondered if the scene with Anderson being so roughly interrogated & accused of being a traitor might have been run before "Court Martial", but it turns out for once these 2 related scenes were run in the right order, although, MUCH closer to each other than they should have been, as "Court Martial" was 11th but run 20th, while "Reflections" was 23rd but run 24th. As a result, this was the last really "big" confrontation between SHADO and the aliens, even though the real "climax" was supposed to be 2 episodes later.
When Straker apologizes to Virginia Lake, it's the first time we see in her expression that she's beginning to like him more. Of course, as broadcast, the episode where they worked very close together had already been broadcast 5 months earlier.
Straker & Foster are seen both using a SkyDiver "escape" airlock together, which suggests they've been modified and expanded since the events in "Sub-Smash", where ONLY ONE person could use the airlock at a time! I'm just surprised that after "The Psychobombs", they talk as if there's only one SkyDiver, instead of a fleet of them.
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"Mindbender" -- Not for the first time, a UFO closes in on Moonbase low to the surface during sunspot activity. But then, 4 miles away, it takes off-- before then suddenly exploding! WHY? Straker and Foster form one of two teams searching the area for wreckage. Nobody finds anything except for a rare crystal rock, as a "memento" (maybe to "use as a paperweight"). Suddenly, the man who picked it up begins hallucinating, seeing Mexican Banditos all over, gets into fights and shoots someone dead before getting killed himself. Back on Earth, Henderson has stopped by again, truthfully less hostile than before, about the latest budget report, which isn't ready because Straker has Virginia Lake using the computer non-stop trying to figure out what the hell went on at Moonbase. When Straker asks Lake for "moral support", the look on her face shows she's warming up to Straker. Another astronaut, in SHADO HQ, suddenly goes berserk, and sees aliens everywhere. When he holds Lake by force, Straker has no choice but to shoot him dead! Soon after, he's brought the first dead man's personal belongings, and handles the crystal, just as Henderson returns and starts to argue. And then SUDDENLY... Straker finds himself standing on the set of a TV show filming the adventures of SHADO, and everyone refers to him as an actor playing "Ed Straker". WHAT THE HELL? He runs outside, sees himself, but it's really his stuntman. He's told by Miss Ealand he should be watching his "rushes", and in the theatre, watches events from his own life unfold-- the car crash that nearly killed himself and Henderson, his son John as he got hit by a speeding car, his ex-wife screaming she never wants to see him again. Somehow, Straker's will is so strong, he KNOWS-- it's all a dream-- but how to "get back"? He eventually makes his way back to the very spot and moment where it all started, holds up his empty fist, which earlier held a gun, and throws it. And then SUDDENLY, we see the crystal hit the wall and shatter into a thousand pieces. Realizing the crystal was a "booby trap" affecting the minds of whoever touched it, he explains what happened to everyone around him.
Now this was really a VERY disorientating episode! 2 things Gerry Anderson liked to do, in pretty much every one of his TV series, was a "dream" episode, and an "clip show". In "Mindbender", he got to do BOTH at the same time! And, in doing so, I'd say this was arguably one of the BEST "clip" shows I've ever seen.
I have had enough very-vivid dreams in my lifetime, where either I could not understand what was going on, or, I actually KNEW I was dreamng, but couldn't wake up, that watching this was absolutely uncanny. Many dreams are JUST like this! Not the specific details, but the way things aren't as they seem, or where you'd swear you recognize where you are, only it doesn't look like that at all, or people you know AREN'T who they are in the dream.
The opening sequence on the moon was actually reused from "Flight Path". Later, the "rushes" feature clips from "Identified" and "A Question Of Priorities". Paul Foster (not really) in the dream smiles when John gets killed and says, "This oughta make a GREAT episode!" I've heard Gerry Anderson say that himself, and many fans claim it's their favorite-- but I HATE that story, for the way it's so EXCESSIVELY mean-spirited, and had 2 separate plot-lines, BOTH of which had pointlessly-downbeat endings.
This was the latest episode involving alien mind-control, a running theme in much of the 2nd half of the run.
Al Macini, as astronaut "Andy Conroy", looks to have only appeared in 2 episodes-- this one and "The Cat With Ten Lives". I'm actually surprised those 2 were broadcast in the correct order, although, while in production they were 19 and 24, as broadcast they were 3 and 14 (sheesh). Conroy became only the 2nd recurring character to get KILLED on the show, after Michael Mundell as Interceptor pilot Ken Matthews (who was in "Identified" and "Computer Affair"). On that score, the 2 Interceptor pilots virtually "bookend" the series.
The entire 2nd half of this episode takes place all around the film studio. There's a giant hand prop seen, and it returns in the next episode, all of which takes place around the film studio. Crazy enough, Straker damages some of the computers in SHADO HQ in both this episode and the next one, though you don't see it happen in this one. I forget which website I read it at, but someone a few years back clued me in that "Mindbender" and "Timelash" were filmed IN THAT ORDER (24 and 25), but despite this, the A&E DVD box set swapped their order on the disc. I can only imagine the reason for this was someone figured Gerry Anderson tended to do "clip shows" at or very near the end. When I got the DVD set, I tried watching those 2 episodes BOTH ways. (Lucky thing it's easy to do that with DVDs.) I concluded, without any doubt in my mind, that "Mindbender" absolutely SHOULD be watched right before "Timelash". If you watch them back-to-back that way, they feel like a 2-PARTER-- and, by the end of "Timelash", you'll probably feel EXHAUSTED.
In this episode, Grant Taylor, who played General Henderson, looked as if he's suddenly lost about 40 pounds since his previous appearance. By the end of 1971, he passed away at only the age of 54. (Having this broadcast 14th instead of 24th really becomes too obvious when "Court Martial" was aired 20th.) Although Straker gets into an absurd argument with Henderson, in which the General starts going "BAAAAA!!!!!" like a sheep, it seems clear to me this only happened during Straker's dream, a reflection of how much tension there'd been between them for so long. But before this moment (and after the dream ended), Henderson actually was far more reasonable than he'd been in previous episodes. His main concern was just to get the budget report in on time, otherwise, BOTH their jobs could be on the line. And, as he said, HE could leave anytime, but not Straker, who has "a monkey on his back"-- that of DEDICATION to his job. I actually take that as a compliment, coming from the man.
An odd detail I noticed was hot the scene of the motorcade being attacked by the UFO from "Identified" and seen again here, parallelled the near-identical motorcade being attack in "Eleven Days To Zero" but then having that footage be re-purposed with different characters being killed in a later episode of VOYAGE. (I forget which one!) Funny how a scene like that should appear TWICE on BOTH shows.
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"Timelash" -- in SHADO HQ, Ed Straker suddenly appears, smashing computer equipment. Security follows him out thru the film studio until he comes across an unconscious Virginia Lake. In the medical wing, Henderson urges Jackson to use a "dangerous" drug to bring "SHADO's most expensive piece of man-power" back to his senses. Earlier... he's picked Lake up from the airport, and en route she was clearly flirting with him. Then a UFO raced by, blasted the road, and then their car was hit by some unknown energy beam. On reaching the studio, it suddenly went from night to daylight, and, EVERYONE was frozen in place. Time has suddenly STOPPED! But oddly, it doesn't affect things that were not "moving in time", which includes the elevators. Lake sees someone running around, and it turns out it's communications man Turner, who brags the aliens have offered to put him in charge when they come and "take over". A long, long chase and running battle goes all over the studio, until Straker manages to shoot Turner by aiming where he WASN'T. He then fires a bazooka shell and takes out the UFO.
Many feel this is the best episode of UFO, and, frankly, I'd agree. It's always struck me as a variation on the very 1st episode of THE TWILIGHT ZONE I ever saw, "A Kind Of Stop Watch", where a man is able to walk around and do whatever he wants (including committing a robbery) while everyone else is frozen in time... untl the watch breaks and he's stuck in that instant.
There's been a slowly-developing friendship between Ed Straker & Virginia Lake, and it's really beginning to blossom here. That's good, as they spend the bulk of the episode working together, running around, shooting, fighting, and when she gets knocked out by Turner, there seems real concern on his face. They use a dangerous drug to speed up their reflexes, and when it starts to wear off, he takes a 2nd dose, telling here, "I made my choice a long time ago", indicating that his job does tend to take preference over his life and his safety.
Much of this episode ties in with “Mindbender”. Early-on, Straker & Lake are saying it’s like a dream or a nightmare. We see Straker running down the same hallway he did in the previous episode. That strange giant hand prop turns up in both episodes! The 2nd half of “Mindbender” took place in the studio, and nearly ALL of the “Timelash” takes place in the studio. And Straker damages computers in both episodes. They really do feel like a 2-parter, but after watching them both ways, I’m convinced “Timelash” is the LATTER of the 2. Somebody at A&E Video screwed up by swapping them.
Straker shooting down the UFO with a bazooka parallels Paul Roper doing the same thing in “Flight Path” (episode 3, but broadcast 15th—just 3 weeks before this was—TSK!).
It was nice to see Henderson actually pay Straker a compliment for the 2nd episode in a row. Clearly, he was coming to his senses by this point. This was his last acting job before he passed away. Jackson actually had a hint of a smile on his face by the end.
When this was broadcast, it was the 18th episode, and the last before they took a 2-month break. 8 episodes were “held back” until later, I’d say 7 of them were “lesser” stories, and some were even shown at a much-later time slot, due to “adult” content. It’s NO DAMN WONDER the later episodes, run after this, got terrible ratings in the US, all lumped together that way.
I see “Timelash” as the real “action climax” of the series. There’s only ONE episode left to go, and it works effectively as an “epilogue” for the season.
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Thoth, glad to see you joining the discussion. Hoped you would as I figured with your UK background it would be a familiar topic to you. Prof, thanks for continuing to summarise and review the episodes. There are quite a few of the later ones that I have never seen. Really motivating me to give it another go. Your description of the ongoing wrangling between Straker and General Henderson remind me of one of my favourite comic stories from Countdown #12-18 "The New Boss". General Henderson is injured in a car crash after a UFO attack and is temporarily replaced by a General Calper who is somewhat hostile and uncertain about how SHADO is being run. After a UFO attacks the SHADO plane he is on, he argues at a conference that SHADO is being mismanaged and insists on doing a complete inspection. During the inspection he tells Straker that all the camouflage and subterfuge of hiding the alien menace are severely hindering SHADO's ability to fight and declares that he will be announcing the truth on broadcast television that evening. When Straker objects Calper pulls a gun on him saying he is under arrest. Straker knocks him down and escapes while Calper puts SHADO on high alert declaring Straker a wanted fugitive to be shot on site. When Foster tracks him down he is convinced by Straker to join him as they theorise that Calper is being influenced or mind-controlled by the aliens. That evening as the motorcade is escorting the General to the television studio they are blocked by Foster's mobile and suddenly an alien appears who is really Straker in a pretend suit. When the guards prepare to defend General Calper the alien/Straker tells him to order the guards to stop which he does saying the alien is a friend, thus demonstrating the truth to their alien influence theory. Just then a UFO turns up and kills Calper. The issue ends with confidence in Straker restored and a discussion of some of the points that Calper made about the problems of secrecy, but Straker concludes that they are fighting the aliens the only way they know how and the fact that the aliens tried to use Calper to change that proves that it's working. It's a well told story that would have been great to see filmed with some excellent action scenes including Straker escaping in a Formula 1 car from a film the Straker Studios is making. This series of stories is illustrated by Gerry Haylock who does a terrific job. If you would like to view a summary of the stories and some of the artwork, there used to be a website dedicated to the comic depictions of Anderson properties. Although the website is gone a good copy is maintained on the Internet Archive through their Wayback Machine and the Countdown UFO stories can be viewed here: https://web.archive.org/web/2011060...pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Upload01/UFOPt1.htmJust finished reading The New Boss part of the anthology. Excellent work, with increasing tension. It's worth pointing out for those who haven't seen them, but UK comics were weekly anthologies. You had decades of action and adventure stories with cliffhangers every half dozen weekly pages, to bring readers back for more. It's not a coincidence that the British invasion of comic creators, came to US comics with lots of exciting ideas. They'd been brought up on, and own early careers, that sort of pacing. From Alan Moore Green Lantern back up one shots, to ongoing tales with lots of plot twists, it's very much what was expected for the UK market. The UFO strip in Countdown is a variation even on the six pages. Headliner strips, often taking up the colour pages on the comic, operated on two pages. So "The New Boss" gives a cliffhanger every two pages! Breaking down stile's summary by issue, looks like:- Henderson having crashed, Straker and Henderson's replacement, Culper, are on their way to a funding meeting, where they are about to be attacked by a UFO. The transport is damaged but Culper makes his speech, where he turns on Straker and the role of SHADO At SHADO hq, Culper threatens to go public. Straker knocks him out and is now on the run Straker escapes the movie set in a F1 car. Only to be tracked by Paul Foster who has orders to fire Foster allies with Straker, but they must now duel with another armed mobile unit Damaging an escaping the mobile, the pair meet up with Freeman to look at Culper's records. Moving to stop Culper's speech, Freeman dresses as an alien, drawing the aim of a sniper. Seeing an alien under threat, Culper shows his true colours. He's then destroyed by a UFO, before divulging anything. Straker gets his funding. Each issue resolves a cliffhanger, continues the plot and sets up another cliffhanger. All with excellent art and within the wider setup of SHADO's ongoing struggle. A conflict that also works within the small margins of success shown in the TV show. Not surprised these stay in your mind stile.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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"The Long Sleep" -- Straker arrives at work with a smile on his face for once, even being very friendly to Virginia Lake. Then he sees the huge stack of paperwork waiting for him. But before he can get to that... A 10-year-old UFO-siting case rears its head again, when a woman, "Catherine Frazer", who's been in a coma that long wakes up. And, it turns out, 10 years earlier, she ran out in front of Straker's car. On reviving, he tries his best to question her about what happened. It turned out, she'd run away from home , met "Tim", a med student-turned-hippie, the two of them went off to an abandoned farmhouse somewhere in the country, and while on an LSD trip, saw a pair of aliens planting an explosive device. She stole the trigger, he fell off the roof to his death, they carried his body away to their spaceship and departed. She hitched a ride and was almost raped, then, running from that, was hit by a car. Because only 3 days before the accident, a city in India was destroyed in an earthquake and 80,000 people died, Straker suspects the aliens were involved, and it becomes desperate to find out where the explosive device is. Turns out, Tim is still alive-- but working for the aliens. He gives her a drug to help her remember, he tracks down the trigger, and sets the bomb to explode, moments before Straker & Foster arrive! Tim then falls dead on the very spot he died 10 years earlier-- his clothes revert to what he was wearing then-- and he becomes a skeleton. The bomb squad can't defuse the bomb, so Straker orders in a rocket to lift it into space, where it explodes. Back at the hospital, he finds Catherine died at the exact moment the young man did-- and has aged decades in the process! Jackson suggest the aliens "borrowed" from her lifetime to keep the young man young, and "They didn't know how long he might need, so they took decades." In a state of shock, Straker walks away from the hospital, accompanied by Col. Lake.
After "Timelash", I consider this an "epilogue." It's slow, it's moody, it's psychedelic, and terribly sad. Just when Ed is getting closer to Virginia, he meets this young girl, and in a few days, you can see, he's starting to care for HER, too. But then, suddenly, she's DEAD, and in the most shocking, inexplicable fashion imaginable. It seems in nearly every episode in the 2nd half of the run (if you watch them in production order), the aliens are exhibiting more and stranger abilities. SHADO has been upping their game, but so have the aliens, who, after this, we NEVER learn any more about.
I felt sad for the girl. She said she loved her parents, but felt stifled by them. She was very foolish to take LSD the way she did. Then again, the young guy, "Tim", struck me as an idiot. He quit med school after 2 years. As she said, he could have had his own practice by then. But seeing people on TV killed in a war made him think nothing made sense, instead of realizing there was more need for caring people like doctors. And really, taking LSD to "relax" which wound up with him jumping off a roof... that wasn't very productive, was it?
Having Straker be the one who hit Catherine with his car tragically ties in with Straker's SON being hit by a car back in "A Question Of Priorities" (which happened years later).
Knowing the aliens had been responsible for so many deaths earlier made me really wonder about the alien who claimed "We mean you no harm!" in "E.S.P."
I notice an odd, subtle bit of continuity going on over several episodes here. The projection room at the studio appeared in both "Reflections In the Water" and "Mindbender". The studio, including one hallway, a giant hand prop, and Straker damaging computer consoles, was in both "Mindbender" and "Timelash". The use of a hypodermic needle and dangerous drugs, and, the distortion of TIME, was in both "Timelash" and "The Long Sleep". This could have been coincidence, or, it could be subtle planned "continuity", the exact same sort of thing I've seen in, for example, the 2nd season of NIGHT COURT. It definitely tells me these last 4 episodes absolutely should be watched in this order.
UFO is another one of those shows that, whenever I get to the end, I find myself really frustrated, and overwhelmed with the feeling that, "This was NO TIME to cancel the show!!!" Had ITC run the first 13 episodes produced when they were made, it's questionable whether they'd ever have gotten to the 2nd 13. But if they had, I have no doubt, we would have seen a 2ND SEASON... to, hopefully, "finish" the big story. Infuriatingly, waiting until all 26 episodes were done before ever airing the 1st one absolutely DOOMED the show and any possible future it might have had. Some try to blame the show, and a few of the earliest episodes were very questionable, but for the most part, it was the executives who were really responsible for how things turned out-- which almost always seems to be the case.
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Reply to “10 Weirdest Reasons Popular TV Shows Were Cancelled” (Youtube video)
The thing with "FIREFLY" reminds me of "UFO". Over 26 episodes, the series started out terminally-depressing but had slowly BUILDING MOMENTUM, continuity and character growth. The 2nd half of its production run, it just kept getting BETTER AND BETTER! But ITC insanely waited until all 26 episodes were in the can before airing any of them, forcing the production company to SHUT DOWN, and everyone involved had to get other jobs. Then they scrambled the running order like a deck of cards, pushing "better" episodes up and holding "less" episodes back. For 17 weeks it got HIGH ratings, inspiring ITC to order a 2nd season (after the company no longer existed). But once tons of money was spent creating new sets & props, the lesser episodes COMPLETELY tanked ratings, inspiring the same ITC exec to insist that NO stories be set on Earth (even though most of them had been) or he would refuse to fund a 2nd season. I was genuinely SHOCKED at how much better the show became when I got the DVD set (in "production order"), and have come to feel that "UFO" was decades ahead of its time-- but also, the most-sabotaged show in TV history. I don't know who that New York ITC exec was, but he should have been kicked out of the business. He not only destroyed a TV show, but also a long-running production company (Gerry Anderson's "Century 21"). (9-28-2024)
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Tempus Fugitive
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If only Straker's ex had let him in to see the kid's model. But her new partner is the excellent Phillip Madoc, whose glumness puts her off the idea. Madoc, who was also in Doppleganger, would have a long acting career.
Straker's personal life tales another hit, in "A Question of Priorities." Determined to save his son by using UFO transportation to fly medicine to the hospital, your heart sinks with his, as it's diverted to contact a possible alien sympathiser (see also V for an alien fifth column). Freeman's happiness at having a craft so close, that he can divert, adds to the pain.
Straker might have had a small window to redirect the craft. Perhaps it was already too late. As in previous episodes, his position as head of SHADO comes first. Although he's clearly torn throughout the episode. The alien contact, needed to allow for the craft diversion plot point, ends badly too.
Straker's ex never wants to see him again. But could there be other less hostile aliens out there?
Like Prof and stile, I could see no reason why "Ordeal" couldn't be played straight. The carnage at the health farm had the grimness of previous episodes.
Waterman's miss was nicely set up by the time they'd just spent together on Skydiver. Foster, unlike the others, is now fully rotating around the SHADO facilities as the plot requires. There could have been a small "can we trust him" subplot introduced here, as per Captain Scarlet. Instead we get an unusually upbeat ending with some singing. The music at the party included some big names, and the partgoers got properly hammered. Foster requiring to breath liquid for his long journey with the aliens prefigures the abyss even more than previous episodes.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Philip Madoc even came back for another UFO episode, "Destruction", playing a different character (I think).
Suzanne Neve played Mina in the 1968 MYSTERY & IMAGINATION adaptation of "Dracula". She also was in the Douglas Wilmer adaptation of "The Copper Beeches" (1965). She's probably my favorite female character on that run of SHERLOCK HOLMES, and if it had anyone but Holmes, he probably would have asked her out. (I would have!) But I HATED her on UFO. It struck me she and Judi Densch looked like twin sisters back then.
Last edited by profh0011; 10/08/24 04:36 PM.
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Re: UFO (1970)
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Tempus Fugitive
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Philip Madoc even came back for another UFO episode, "Destruction", playing a different character (I think).
Suzanne Neve played Mina in the 1968 MYSTERY & IMAGINATION adaptation of "Dracula". She also was in the Douglas Wilmer adaptation of "The Copper Beeches" (1965). She's probably my favorite female character on that run of SHERLOCK HOLMES, and if it had anyone but Holmes, he probably would have asked her out. (I would have!) But I HATED her on UFO. It struck me she and Judi Densch looked like twin sisters back then. A quick look told me Neve was also in The Forsyte Saga. Even though it was before my time, it was so popular that it was talked about across generations. A massive show.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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Re: UFO (1970)
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"The Square Triangle" -- A single UFO approaches on a path to southern England, and Straker decides to let it through, hoping to get his hands on it INTACT, beforer it disintegrates in Earth's atmosphere. He tells Freeman, "We're waging a losing battle here, because we don't know what we're fighting or why." As it happens, the alien kills a game warden, leaves his body in the UFO, then walks off as it EXPLODES. He then walks into a house... and is shot 5 times by the wife of the owner... who was waiting for her husband to come home. The woman-- and her lover-- are politely taken back to SHADO HQ, where Straker explains the situation. "So, everyone's lives are in deadly danger all the time!" He then explains about the amnesia drug. "Would you like some more coffee?" I find that line somehow HILARIOUS. Meanwhile, the husband surprises Foster when he arrives home, and Foster suggests the man return to London, where they'll "send his wife presently". Foster realizes a cold-blooded murder was planned (shades of COLUMBO) but they have no hard evidence, and the epilogue shows the wife some time later standing over her husband's grave.
This entire episode seems a direct follow-up to the last few in a row (if you're watching them in the correct order, as I am). "The Dalotek Affair" introduced the idea of the amnesia drug. People may forget the last 12 hours, but, we never see them confused about why they can't remember those 12 hours or what happened during them. "A Question Of Priorities" had a lone alien land on Earth and then try to contact SHADO, presumably to give them info about exactly what's going on, but, he was killed moments before they could meet! And "Ordeal" showed that Gay Ellis was back in command of Moonbase, while Paul Foster was being shifted around, first spending 2 months in SkyDiver, and now, assigned to SHADO HQ itself. Simple continuity like that was totally destroyed when someone at what passes for a network shuffled the running order like a deck of cards, and trying to figure out a sensible order in like fashion just DOESN'T WORK. The show makes so much more sense simply watching in production order, that, frankly, I was SHOCKED by how much doing this improved the show on pretty much every level.
By this point, they're also getting more recognizable guest-star each episode. This one had Adrienne Corri, Patrick Mower and Alan Cuthbertson, all of whom I know from other things.
They must have really liked actor Anthony Chinn. He played the alien in this episode, returned to play a member of SHADO in "Sub-Smash", and then became a regular on THE PROTECTORS. Prof is quite correct about the running order of the show, and how this impacts the viewer's enjoyment and connection with it. Thanks for showing some of the connections here, Prof. Seen in this order, Foster (and the viewer) are getting to have plots launched from various aspects of SHADO. No doubt the execs would also look to this to gauge the popularity of each. Something they made that difficult with the shooting and release of the show. We're also settling into the parallel stories in each episode. The alien menace allows us to see all the SHADO vehicles. We may learn a little more about them. In parallel, there's a human drama that touches on SHADO's activities. This one was a slow burn. The writers had the pay off in mind, and there were a number of scenes set in a single location (nice use of the budget) to get us there. It reminded me a little of Flight Path, with both involving an intruder. Actually, a question of priorities also had a home intruder. Home security is a bit rubbish in this 1980. Prof has covered the guest stars, who were part of plenty of other shows. Their performances really carry this one, as the plot depends on their fears and ruthlessness. Perhaps other shows would have had their murder plot foiled. Some tip off or rogue action by Foster. Not here folks. Nothing can be allowed to reveal SHADO's purpose. Now, the husband may have some idea of there having been an incident at his home. No doubt the couple would wonder why the date they had planned for came and went. But they're not deterred. On the alien front. Straker is trying to track a UFO to it's landing site, to better retrieve it's technology (like nearly everything else. this is another X-Com mission type). We never get to know the alien's mission. Why did it detonate it's craft, trying to cover it up? Why did it end up at that house? Perhaps the husband was actually working with the aliens, and the murderers did us a favour. It's a morally dark episode. Straker protects his organisation, allowing murder and forced drugging along the way. The show's action hero, Foster, is happy to let it all happen. The husband isn't that nice a person, and his wife and lover are murderers. The forester is also murdered, as is the alien who was up to no good anyway. The hero, and moral bright spot, is the forester's dog. who tracks the alien. Perhaps Henderson has a point a out the funding, if SHADO rely on stray doggies. A final thought for George Sewell. He's now reduced to confirming a dog collar to an owner. When they felt they had to bring in Foster, it effectively replaced a number of characters, rather than set up a new dynamic. It's a tough ask to provide a triangle where Freeman would have been a balance between Foster and Straker, while also doing some of the nastier things Foster is not prepared to do.
"...not having to believe in a thing to be interested in it and not having to explain a thing to appreciate the wonder of it."
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