Joshua Jackson? Too young to play a full Colonel, methinks...
Marc said:no they breathed liquid and it was theorised that was help them during space travel.
I thought it was so the acceleration didn't crush their lungs (or the lungs of their host bodies). 'Breathing' a super-oxygenated liquid would be the answer to that.
Later Dinky versions of Thunderbird 2 were the wrong color, as were some of the Eagles.
its very much a product of it's time
younger kids might like it.
younger kids might like it.
Start them with the episode about Straker's divorce because of his devotion to his job, and then the one about his having to choose between using one of his aircraft to save his son's life or stop a UFO that only that craft can reach in time, and then the one about the couple that encounters aliens in the countryside while they're tripping their faces off on acid.
That will mean a lot to younger kids! And also that set a good example.![]()
This show is definitely not obscure. It was a major series at the time, and remains a major part of the Gerry Anderson canon. It was also an early case of programmers not knowing how to handle a series; Anderson's previous series were all for kids, but UFO - forget the wigs - had some extremely adult storylines. One was about marital infidelity, another was about Straker having to make a choice involving the life of a loved one (Torchwood Children of Earth had to have been influenced by it), and I've pointed out before how the US series Threshold of a few years back borrowed things almost beat for beat from UFO.
UFO was cancelled after the first season because US syndicators didn't know what to do with it, so Anderson took his original plan for Season 2, which was going to focus more on the Moonbase, and came up with Space: 1999.
There are a few clunky bits, as is the case with any old show, but I highly recommend the DVD (I hope in the wake of The Prisoner and Space: 1999 going to Blu-ray that UFO follows suit).
My only disappointment is Wanda Ventham, who plays Colonel Veronica Lake, is only in a handful of episodes (there were two production blocks, and for the second block a number of cast members were changed and Wanda's character was added to give a stronger female presence on earth). But Gabrielle Drake rocks the purple wig. One of the early episodes also features Jean Marsh. Interesting someone above also mentions The Prisoner, as Alexis Kanner from that series (he played a bunch of characters include the Dem Bones-singing No. 48) appears in one of the strongest episodes of the season.
Alex
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