Film Review
If there ever were to be to a poll amongst those of school age in the
mid-1970s as to which television programme scared them most there's a
good chance that HTV's seven-part children's drama serial
Children of the Stones would come
top, and by some margin. The title sequence alone is enough to
send any well-adjusted eight to fourteen year-old behind the living
room sofa, and it probably had a similar effect on their parents,
assuming they were brave enough to watch it. Plotwise, it is one
of the most dense and complex dramas ever made for children, and with
liberal references to supernovae, black holes, atomic clocks, ley
lines, magnetic forces and psychic phenomena, it certainly wasn't
lacking in educational content. With lines such as "It's a
special case of a Hilbert transform", the one thing you certainly cannot accuse
the show's writers of doing is patronising their audience.. We even learn that the old Gaelic word for
bear is
mathúin,
leading to a tenuous but freaky connection between maths, the name of
the main child protagonist and the constellation of Ursa Major.
Today's school kids don't know what they're missing.
It's interesting that, when the serial was released on DVD in 2011, it
was given a 12 certificate, which presumably means that it could not be
broadcast today in the UK in its original children's television slot
(4.45-5.15pm on a weekday).
Children
of the Stones isn't only an unusually sophisticated piece of
children's drama (even adults will struggle to make sense of its more
erudite concepts, such as the ideas of parallel time streams and time
endlessly circling) it is also incredibly frightening in parts.
What makes the series so disturbing is its juxtaposition of everyday
normality (the scenes in the school room and Matt's home) with the
totally weird phenomena taking place within the stone circle, many of
which are left unexplained but seem strangely plausible. Gareth
Thomas (soon to find lasting fame as the lead in the BBC's flagship
sci-fi series
Blake's 7) anchors the drama in a cosy
familiarity which is brilliantly undercut by the frightening excursions
into nightmarish
unreality
and the sinister presence of the villain of the piece, a Druidic high
priest-cum-monomaniac Fascist played with magisterial aplomb by Iain
Cuthbertson.
Much of the serial's unique atmosphere is down to Sidney Sager's
avant-garde music, principally its discordant chorus denoting a Pagan
ritual. The events we seen on screen are given a terrifying extra
dimension when the ecstatic wails of a demonic choir begin smacking
into our sensory apparatus. It's like a cross between
The Exorcist and
The
Wicker Man, with elements of
The Village of the Damned and
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
thrown in for good measure - only a damn sight more unnerving. It is
easy to see why Avebury, the location in Wiltshire where the exterior
scenes were shot, has become a Mecca for anyone who saw the series when
it was first shown in January-February 1977 and repeated in 1978.
Almost every shot of the hauntingly tranquil village has an unmistakable
eeriness about it, and the ancient stones take on a life of their own
as the camera tracks around them, as if under the influence of some
powerful force.
Children of
the Stones showcases children's television of the 1970s at its
most original and grown-up, and whilst it may have been made for children
it is just as compelling, and just as creepily unnerving, for
adults. Happy day...
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Adam Brake, an astrophysicist whose wife has recently died, arrives in
the small English village of Milbury with his teenage son
Matthew. Here they intend to carry out a detailed survey of the
magnetic properties of the megalithic stone circle that surrounds the
village. To find out more about the history of the 4000 year-old
circle Adam enlists the help of Margaret, the curator of the local
museum. Meanwhile, Matthew is befriended by the latter's
daughter, Sandra, who points out the differences between normal
teenagers like them and others who are in a state of docile contentment
and show a precocious aptitude for higher mathematics.
Immediately before coming to Milbury, Matthew came across an old
painting depicting a pagan ritual in what seems to be an identical
village. Hendrick, the imposing lord of the manor, shows an
interest in the painting. Adam soon realises that Hendrick is an
eminent member of his own profession, celebrated for his discovery of a
black hole formed from a supernova in Neolithic times. Unbeknown
to the newcomers, Hendrick has found a way of harnessing the power of
the ancient stones to transmit negative energy directly into the black
hole, thereby converting every villager in turn into one of his
so-called 'happy ones', people who can no longer think for themselves
and are incapable of leaving the village. Having
'processed' Margaret and Sandra, Hendrick needs only two more subjects
to complete the circle, Adam and Matthew...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.