Terrahawks – The Complete Series
Picture:
C+ Sound: B- Extras: B- Episodes: B-
Gerry
Anderson had not done one of his Sci-Fi puppet shows in a dozen years and
SuperMarionation had gone as far as it could go. He never did get rid of the wires, until Terrahawks, which also marked a return
to programming for younger children.
Taking from the many innovations that had happened on modeling,
puppeteering, and the jump in special effects thanks to Star Wars, he introduced the SuperMacromation, which plays like a
generation after Jim Henson’s many innovations after The Muppets. Henson was still innovating at the time.
This
time, Anderson was not working behind the protective walls of ITC and
the big money of Sir Lew Grade, but with producer Christopher Burr. Another change is that the show was shot in
16mm instead of 35mm, but the stock had improved a bit since the early 1960s
and it gives the show a unique look it would not otherwise have, or any show
will ever have again. The absence wires
on any of the characters makes for a whole new fantasy experience.
The
teleplays to all 39 episodes were written under many silly pseudonyms by Anderson veteran Tony Barwick, featuring
the same kind of futuristic space entity going up against dangerous invaders
form another world, but the formula still runs well enough. It is also a throwback to the earliest shows
and marks a third generation of children’s programming for Anderson.
When the
shows do not always have substantial stories or plots, they are interesting
time capsules of a one-of-a-kind show that wants to combine Star Wars, Tron, Battlestar Galactica,
the Gil Gerard Buck Rogers, and
Disney’s The Black Hole. Veteran directors like Alan Pattillo, Desmond
Saunders, and Tony Bell returned, to be joined by one newcomer: Tony
Lenny. The titles to all 39 half-hour
shows are as follows:
Expect The Unexpected (a two-part pilot)
Gold
Close Call
From Here To Infinity
Space Samurai
The Sporilla
Happy Madeday
Gunfight At Okay’s Corral
The Ugliest Monster Of All
The Gun
Thunder Path
Mind Monster
To Catch A Tiger
The Midas Touch
Operation S.A.S.
Ten Top Pop
Unseen Menace
A Christmas Miracle
Midnight Blue
Play It Again, Sram
My Kingdom For A Zeap
Zero’s Finest Hour
The Ultimate Menace
Thunder-Roar
Ma’s Monster
Two For The Price of One
Child’s Play
Jolly Roger One
Runaway
First Strike
Terratomb
Doppelganger
Cry UFO
Space Cyclops
Timewarp
Space Giant
Cold Finger
Operation Zero
The full
frame 16mm 1.33 X 1 image shows it’s age a bit and these prints have scratches
and artifacts here and there. The “Hudson” Color by cinematographers Harry
Oakes, B.S.C., and Paddy Seale pushes the smaller film stock to its limits and
model shots are in exceptional focus. The
more advanced color stocks and formats of past Anderson shows are simply supplanted by
the newer look of single-strip (aka tri-pack) color. The producers can be proud that the show
looks better than most kids shows made today and the minimal computer (and
computer-like) animation has character that is amusing. The craftsmanship of the SuperMacromation
dolls are ingenious. The show was a
three-season hit in the U.K., but not the U.S., unfortunately.
The Dolby
Digital 2.0 Stereo has very healthy Pro Logic surrounds which are highly
unusual for a TV series from 1982! The
score by Richard Harvey is different than Barry Gray’s score, especially in
that it wants to sound like all the space music of the time. Dialogue is very clear, esp3ecially for TV of
the time. Voice artists Windsor Davies,
Denise Bryer, Jeremy Hitcher, Anne Ridler, and Ben Stevens were not the
veterans of other Anderson shows, yet did a great job
bringing new characters to life.
Extras
include a great audio commentary on DVD 1 by Steven Begg on From Here To Infinity, where he gives us
exceptional behind-the-scenes details on the show and how he went on to James
Cameron’s Aliens (1986), including recycling a ship of the evil Zelda character
here for that film’s hospital ship. DVD
2 has father and son Tony and Bob Bell discussing two generations of working
for Anderson on Gunfight At Okay’s Corral.
DVD 5 concludes the extras with text on the Terrahawks’ 10 codes, a
slideshow narrated by Begg, text character descriptions, a history of the story
that unfolds on the show, technical details on the main spaceships, and a
stills gallery of the Bell’s return where the series was
produced in the first place.
That
makes for a nice package and hours of fun for kids and fans all around. Several of the Anderson shows are being revived, beyond
the live-action Thunderbirds for
2004. After seeing this show, I strongly
believe Anderson will be able to expand his legacy to a fourth and fifth
generation of new programming. With
DVDs, it will hopefully never be forgotten.
- Nicholas Sheffo