Film Review
When
The Quatermass Experiment
was broadcast by the BBC in 1953 it was a landmark event in television
history. A chilling blend of science-fiction, drama and horror,
it attracted a massive audience for its time (up to five million), with
almost everyone who owned a television set tuning in. The
serial's success ensured there would be a sequel -
Quatermass II (1955) - and then
another -
Quatermass and the Pit
(1958). Plans to make a fourth serial fell by the wayside when
the programme's writer Nigel Kneale began working as a freelancer in
the late 1950s. Following the success of
The Year of the Sex Olympics (1968)
and
The Stone Tape (1972),
Kneale was invited by the BBC to pen a fourth adventure for rocket
scientist Bernard Quatermass, but the project was aborted shortly after
production got underway in the spring of 1973.
Despite attempts by Kneale to sell
Quatermass
IV to ITV, it lay dormant until 1979, when Verity Lambert,
recently appointed Chief Executive at Euston Films, a subsidiary of
Thames Television, adopted it as her pet project. Lambert had a
history of bringing innovative, groundbreaking and frankly weird shows
to the small screen, including
Doctor
Who,
Adam Adamant Lives!
and
The Newcomers; she had
great faith in the project and sanctioned a substantial budget (for the
time) of £1.25 million. Unfortunately, by the time
Quatermass IV - now titled simply
Quatermass - went into production
much of its relevance to a contemporary audience was lost. The
main inspiration for the story had been the hippie movement of the
1960s and power cuts of the early 1970s. With its stark portrayal
of urban decay and social breakdown the story still retained a
frightening resonance and offered an all-to-believable glimpse of the
near future for a disenchanted British audience that had just lived
through the 'Winter of Discontent'.
Despite the substantial budget, Kneale was highly dissatisfied with the
production, almost from the start. He resented having to make two
versions of it, one to be broadcast as a four-part serial in the UK,
the other to be edited into a feature film for the American
market. The television version suffers from uneven pacing and
some obvious padding; the first episode crawls along at a snail's pace,
the middle episodes are repetitive and rambling, and the ending feels
somewhat hurried and unconvincing. The special effects are also
disappointing - the model shots of the spacecraft in Episode 1 are
laughably amateurish and the use of a yellow-green filter in Episode 4 to
depict a sky filled with 'alien vomit' gives an ugly, washed out look
to all of the exterior scenes.
Another cause of contention was the cast, in particular John Mills'
suitability for the central role. As a decrepit, barely coherent
Quatermass, Mills lacks the authority of the paternalistic scientist of
the original BBC episodes and seems to stumble through the narrative
with no real idea of what he is doing or where he is going. Simon
MacCorkindale is even less convincing as a career astronomer and spends
most of his time looking like something out of a children's TV drama -
there is no subtlety or depth to his performance and it soon becomes
wearisome. Margaret Tyzack is one of the few experienced actors
to leave a positive impression, although she is abruptly killed off
just when her character comes into her own.
Quatermass is a flawed but
surprising compelling piece of sci-fi drama (a rarity for its time on
British television). Far less impressive than the three serials
that preceded it (only two of which now exist in their entirety) it
does at least convey the intense pessimism and inter-generational
divide that was endemic in Britain in the late 1970s. It may not
be Nigel Kneale's most significant contribution to television but the
story it tells is disturbingly plausible and the gritty action sequences (an
area in which Euston Films excelled) are impressive, even by today's
standards. The series attracted a respectable audience of eleven
million when it was broadcast in the UK on Wednesday evenings across
four weeks (24th October to 14th November 1979) and had school
playgrounds across the land buzzing with the sound of an unfamiliar
nursery rhyme: "Huffity, puffity, Ringstone Round, If you lose your hat
it will never be found..." As exits go, Quatermass could have
done a lot worse.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Professor Bernard Quatermass has for some time being living in
retirement in Scotland. When his granddaughter Hettie goes
missing he travels down to London to look for her. By this time,
England is in a seemingly irreversible state of decay. Armed
gangs terrorise the streets of the broken down cities, power is
rationed and the masses are pacified with pornographic
television. Once in London, Quatermass meets up with a young
astronomer, Joe Kapp, and is invited onto a television programme which
is providing live coverage of a joint Soviet-American space
mission. As the spacecraft from the two superpowers attempt to
lock they suffer a critical systems malfunction and are destroyed by
some unknown force. To investigate what went wrong, Kapp takes
Quatermass to his home in the country where he operates a radio
telescope. Here, they encounter a strange group of young hippies
who call themselves Planet People and believe they will soon be
transported to another world. The professor follows the hippies
to a nearby Neolithic stone circle which is suddenly enveloped by a
powerful light. All that remains of the youngsters within the
circle is a white residue. Quatermass is aghast to learn that the
same occurrence happened at about the same time at sites all over the
world. He makes a horrifying deduction: some alien entity has
come to planet Earth with the intention of harvesting the human race...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.