Monday, 31 August 2015
227 Space 1999
First watched : Autumn 1975
Space 1999 was the last and most ambitious project Gerry and Sylvia Anderson worked on before their divorce in 1981. It was developed from ideas originally generated for the aborted second series of U.F.O. although there are no linking characters or organisations between the two series.
The premise of the show was that a team of scientists working at a moon base station called Alpha become marooned in space when a huge inexplicable explosion blows the moon out of the solar system and sends it spinning through black holes and what have you into new galaxies. The moon itself becomes their spaceship. There was an obvious debt to Star Trek in the crew's odyssey as they came across alien civilisations and unknown phenomena.
Lew Grade insisted that the lead roles be taken by Americans to sell the show there and installed husband and wife team Martin Landau and Barbara Bain from Mission Impossible against the Andersons' wishes. The lead Brits were Barry Morse as the chief boffin in the first series and Tony Anholt as Landau's deputy in the second.
The series looked great and expressed some interesting ideas but lacked warmth. Despite their off-screen relationship Landau and Bain seemed to have little chemistry and it was hard to care for any of the characters. Grade could not sell the show to the American networks because it was already completed His man in America Abe Mandell had to sell it directly to local stations.
Mandell saved the show for a second series when Grade wanted to abandon it but there was a price to pay. A new American producer and writer Fred Freiberger came on board as Sylvia departed and made major changes. A glamorous alien played by Catherine Schell replaced Morse, Landau and Bain were instructed to snog each other regularly and a humorous summary scene akin to Star Trek was introduced to the distaste of Landau in particular . The show became less cerebral and more action oriented. It finished in 1977.
I liked it but thought it was never as good as it could have been.
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