Survivors tends to be at its' best when it's examining an issue - how a problem or area is affected by the death, for best results something that's taken for granted in everyday society. "Law and Order" is probably the most extreme example and certainly the best. It's again from Clive Exton under his Wodehouse-baiting M K Jeeves pseudonym and it's one of the most brilliant and disturbing pieces of television ever made.
Showing posts with label 1975. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1975. Show all posts
Friday, 6 April 2018
TV Review - Survivors S1E08: Spoil of War
"Spoil of War" was the first of two episodes written by M K Jeeves. If that name sounds like a pseudonym it is, one assumed by Clive Exton, rather a posh playwright who had co-written Hammer horror spoof The House in Nightmare Park; he'd already written the screenplay for Richard Fleisher's 10 Rillington Place and would later write Red Sonja and later the Jeeves & Wooster TV series. So a heavyweight really. His first episode is the first with the group firmly established at the Grange.
Wednesday, 4 April 2018
TV Review - Survivors S1E07: Starvation
Despite the triumphs of Charles Vaughan and Jimmy Garland it's clear the production team saw limited value in the leads as a wandering nomadic trio. While they're living out of cars many others were banding together and forming groups, with the series establishing that humans are sparse but not outright rare. "Starvation" sees the leads given a base at last, and acts as something of a mid-season reformatting - with Jack Ronder writing the script you again begin to see that already the show was moving away from Terry Nation's initial plans.
TV Review - Survivors S1E06: Garland's War
Survivors is overall a positive show - it might start off with the near-annihilation of the human race but really it's about the reaction to the death, one that is quite often positive. To some degree the likes of Abby, Greg, Charles Vaughan and even the likes of Arthur Wormleigh and Ann Tranter are thriving, using skills and knowledge that would have been locked away in their day-to-day lives. Maybe even Jenny was even wetter and thicker in day to day life before the plague, though I'll admit that is a push. Terry Nation returned to script the sixth episode (he wrote seven of the first 13 for the show before leaving) and it makes this theme explicit in the form of Jimmy Garland.
Monday, 2 April 2018
TV Review - Survivors S1E05: Gone to Angels
Well, we were due a fucking stinker. Actually, "Gone to Angels", again from Jack Ronder, isn't outright bad, just a big step down from the first four. Generally episodes of Survivors concentrate on a single plot line and this works as it allows the subject at hand to be explored thoroughly, and the casting structure largely reflects this in that we only have three fully-fledged regular characters with the rest recurring and hired as needed. However, "Gone to Angels" splits the leads fully and the result is scattershot.
Labels:
1975,
Carolyn Seymour,
Gerald Blake,
Ian McCulloch,
Jack Ronder,
Lucy Fleming,
Peter Miles,
Survivors,
TV,
TV Series
Sunday, 1 April 2018
TV Review - Survivors S1E04: Corn Dolly
The initial three episodes of Survivors effectively bring the leading trio of Abby, Jenny and Greg together, more or less establishing them as a unit with the same goals and moral values. It's not quite time for them to become static yet though so "Corn Dolly" is the first of three episodes with the three on the road, ostensibly looking for Abby's son Peter. Of course even to first-time viewers it must have been clear that they were never going to just stumble across him somewhere as that would basically end her personal arc. Instead, they're an excuse to meet three different responses to the death. The first of these is Charles Vaughan.
Labels:
1975,
BBC,
Carolyn Seymour,
Denis Lill,
Ian McCulloch,
Jack Ronder,
Lucy Fleming,
Pennant Roberts,
Survivors,
TV,
TV Series
Friday, 30 March 2018
TV Review - Survivors S1E03: Gone Away
It hit me rewatching this episode that Survivors is actually a lot more optimistic than Blake's 7. Sure, 99.5% of the human race die but once that's done with (basically in the first episode) everything's back on the way up. Not without obstacles and diversions, of course, but as the seasons develop there's a positive response. It's not a bad thing and the show is basically a tenet to the hardiness of the human race, and the real nihilism of B7 (the abject failure of the heroes to destroy the Federation and their increasing irrelevance as opposition to it) didn't come in until Terry Nation's fingers came back out of the mix. In Survivors there's never anything as broadly depressing for the species as the huddled figures moving from campfire to campfire in the opener or Abby living out of the back of a Volvo estate.
Labels:
1975,
BBC,
Carolyn Seymour,
Ian McCulloch,
Lucy Fleming,
Survivors,
Talfryn Thomas,
Terence Williams,
Terry Nation,
TV,
TV Series
Thursday, 29 March 2018
TV Review - Survivors S1E02: Genesis
The problem with a concept like Survivors is that it would quite rapidly get depressing to just watch everything break down and everyone die. Terry Nation's concept for the series was more about how people would deal with the result than the plague itself, which was really just an excuse to get society in a good position to be explored. So here, as the name suggests, are the first kernels of a new start for the characters. A handful of isolated cases over the next few episodes aside the plague has done its' killing - but worry not, as Nation will show, there are plenty of other ways to die horribly in this brave new world. For now though we've hit a level where most of the people who would die from the death or initial death-related stupidity have done so and the survivors are beginning to respond.
Labels:
1975,
BBC,
Carolyn Seymour,
Gerald Blake,
Ian McCulloch,
Lucy Fleming,
Myra Frances,
Survivors,
Talfryn Thomas,
Terry Nation,
TV,
TV Series
Tuesday, 27 March 2018
TV Review - Survivors S1E01: The Fourth Horseman
Terry Nation spent most of the seventies trying to hawk the Daleks to American TV networks and make himself even more money (and when that happened he definitely would have passed on the money to Dalek designer Raymond Cusick, definitely), only occasionally popping back to Blighty in order to turn in effortless occasional Doctor Who scripts (one effortlessly brilliant, three simply effortless) and create a couple of excellent series. A few years before the infamous Blake's 7 pitch he had considerable success with Survivors, which hinged on a single simple premise - if then-present day Earth is struck by a deadly virus which wipes out 99% of the population, how would people cope?
Labels:
1975,
BBC,
Carolyn Seymour,
Lucy Fleming,
Pennant Roberts,
Peter Bowles,
Survivors,
Talfryn Thomas,
Terry Nation,
TV,
TV Series
Thursday, 30 March 2017
Comics: Vulcan
The format of Vulcan gives it a fair claim to the title of the the greatest British comic of all time, despite being a reprint book. Throughout the sixties especially IPC Fleetway had experimented with fantastical stories more in line with the American industry, albeit the majority employing a peculiarly British slant to the concept. However they never really muscled aside the war and football stories which made up the backbone if the weeklies and gradually moved out of print, defiant innings from 'Robot Archie' (effectively a mascot for Lion) and the Steel Claw (who got a sequel strip, 'Return of the Claw' in Valiant) notwithstanding. It took until the seventies for superheroes to take much of a grip in the UK, when Marvel set up a British division and launched the Mighty World of Marvel, soon followed by Spider-Man Weekly Comics, The Superheroes, The Titans and The Mighty Avengers as the industry briefly boomed. Fleetway took note and responded, merging their library of existing strips into a single fantasy/superhero title - the original Magnificent Seven being 'The Steel Claw', 'The Spider', 'The Trigan Empire', 'Kelly's Eye', 'Mytek the Mighty', 'Saber - King of the Jungle' and 'Robot Archie' - made up the arsenal of Vulcan, edited by Geoff Kemp.
Labels:
1975,
1976,
Annual,
Comic,
Fleetway,
House of Dolmann,
Kelly's Eye,
Mytek the Mighty,
Robot Archie,
Saber,
Scans,
Steel Claw,
The Spider,
Trigan Empire,
Vulcan
Tuesday, 28 July 2015
Custom DVD Cover: Picnic at Hanging Rock
This one was something of a challenge; the film itself is achingly beautiful but I dislike covers that are just a single shot however beautiful it is as one shot shouldn't define a film. But the original poster was a bit inappropriate in full colour, so a sepia filter seemed a nice compromise.
Friday, 8 February 2013
Film Review - Royal Flash
Entertaining but a little less than the sum of its' parts. Richard
Lester's 1970s output is to my mind very underrated, classic adventure
fair, from the physical comedy and pure adventure of his Musketeer films through to the superb Juggernaut, before he was vilified by nerds for Superman II.
Labels:
1975,
Bob Hoskins,
Britt Ekland,
Film,
Malcolm McDowell,
Oliver Reed,
Racquel Welch,
Richard Lester
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