Quatermass and the Pit: Five Million Years to Earth Ebook

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Quatermass and the Pit: Five Million Years to Earth Ebook QUATERMASS AND THE PIT: FIVE MILLION YEARS TO EARTH PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Kim Newman | 112 pages | 14 Nov 2014 | British Film Institute | 9781844577910 | English | London, United Kingdom Quatermass and the Pit: Five Million Years to Earth PDF Book Quatermass presents the recording to the minister and other officials. Sladden tells Quatermass he saw a vision of hordes of insect creatures under an alien sky. Runtime: 97 min. Broadcast Empath: Area Effect. Captain Potter Peter Copley Would you know where it can be found? Over about a quarter hour it broke down its own physical form to convert itself into a giant energy-construct in the image of its creators. Related Searches. They found a family. Trailers and Videos. Language: English. Thank you for being part of this effort to promote respectful discussion. Baker, Roy Ward If the Spaceship has the opportunity to absorb a large initial amount of energy through touch, it can then begin adding 1 AP of Range to its Energy Absorption Power for every 1AP of time that passes until it reaches its full 15 APs of Range after 15 APs of time. Archived from the original on 31 October Howell Edwin Richfield Clear your history. Would you turn out for Munchausen? Some sort of stasis technology held them in a largely dormant state for five million years. Breen concludes the buried object is a V-weapon , but Quatermass disagrees. An estimated five million years ago, the Martians sent ships back to Earth. Roney manages to walk up to the apparition and hurls the chain at it, resulting in him and the spacecraft being reduced to ashes. Since it was originally intended to function as a mere transport device, it is unclear as to why its creators should have taken the trouble to program it in this way. Palaeontologist Dr Matthew Roney James Donald identifies them as five-million-year-old apemen , more ancient than any previous finds. Elderly Journalist Thomas Heathcote I didn't realize there were more than one Quartermass film, none of which I've seen. Soundtracks Martians? Mars in the Movies: A History. Even though the menace is defeated it isn't defeated conclusively, the problem will always be there. Anchor Bay. Disaster strikes when a power line is dropped within the craft. Anonymous 11 October, While learning to hone their growing powers, they discover a new and malicious presence in their sleepy beach town. The Woman in Black Angel of Death While conditions on Earth were not compatible with their insectile bodies, they discovered proto-hominids there. Edit Cast Cast overview, first billed only: James Donald Quatermass Barbara Shelley The power cables that string into the craft fully activate it for the first time, and glowing and humming like a living thing it starts to draw upon this energy source and awaken the ancient racial programming. In order to end the rumors surrounding the object, they set up a television broadcast to reveal the ship to the public. Earth: The Elementals Book Four. Archived from the original on 17 August Kinsey, Wayne The first, The Quatermass Experiment , aired in Sapper West Hugh Morton Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date. An examination of the creatures' physiology suggests they came from Mars. Police Sergeant Ellis. Sergeant Cleghorn. UK quad crown theatrical release poster by Tom Chantrell. Quatermass and the Pit: Five Million Years to Earth Writer Archived from the original on 22 November Add to Wishlist. Can only be used on human beings who carry dormant genetic potential for psychic abilties. And the random movement of objects around them was seen as poltergeist activity. The serial was also parodied by the BBC television comedy series Hancock's Half Hour in an episode entitled "The Horror Serial", transmitted the week following the final episode. Volume I: — Quatermass and Colonel Breen, recently appointed to lead the Rocket Group over Quatermass's objections, become intrigued by the site. Titan Books. Workmen discover a pre-human skull while building in the fictional Hobbs Lane formerly Hob's Lane, Hob being an antiquated name for the Devil in Knightsbridge , London. This was a new compilation made from the episodic film recordings, which had optical sound and telecined film inserts. Kinsey, Wayne Yes, it would be. Duncan Lamont gets some criticism for his part as a specialist driller who is driven near insane by his alien encounter. Owing to a lack of space, the film was shot at the MGM studios in Elstree , Borehamwood , rather than Hammer's usual home at the time, which was the Associated British Studios , also in Elstree. The plot was condensed to fit the shorter running time of the film, with the main casualty being the removal of a subplot involving the journalist James Fullalove. Andrew Keir as Quatermass. Follow Xpress mxarts mxeat mxenv mxnews mountainx. While digging a new subway line in London, a construction crew discovers first: a skeleton, then what they think is an old World War II German missile. The Quatermass Memoirs The Martian crew were cradled within it during the journey. This movie examines the age old question of how we came to be on this planet. Help Learn to edit Community portal Recent changes Upload file. Sladden tells Quatermass he saw a vision of hordes of insect creatures under an alien sky. Thank you for being part of this effort to promote respectful discussion. Alternate Versions The UK DVD and Blu-ray release has some of the credits in the opening titles reworked to remove the "Associated Britsh-Pathe Limited presents" credit and accordingly the titles appearing from "A Hammer Film Production" to the title of the film appear in a different synchronized order and accordingly have been extended to appear longer on the print by a few seconds so that the title of the film still appears at the same music clash points as intended. The Martians went on to breed the hominids. Retrieved 4 December Quatermass and the Pit: Five Million Years to Earth Reviews From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Watson Sheila Steafel Exploring the production and reception of the film and series, Newman assesses the lasting importance of this landmark franchise. Before you comment The comments section is here to provide a platform for civil dialogue on the issues we face together as a local community. I also have the original BBC television production as well as Quatermass 2 and what remains of Q Xperiment, which are only two episodes. Doctor Roney. Area Effect. This movie examines the age old question of how we came to be on this planet. This yielded better sound quality than the optical soundtracks accompanying the original episodes, and was therefore the main source for the audio remastering except in the case of scenes that were not in the compilation, and in a few cases where faults on the magnetic tracks necessitated their replacement by the optical versions. The opening titles of Quatermass and the Pit. The British Empire had been in transition since the s, and the pace accelerated in the wake of the Second World War. Over about a quarter hour it broke down its own physical form to convert itself into a giant energy-construct in the image of its creators. Palgrave Macmillan on behalf of the British Film Institute. Titan Books. The music was credited to Trevor Duncan , a pseudonym used by BBC radio producer Leonard Trebilco, whose music was obtained from stock discs. Telepathy: Area Effect. It was subsequently destroyed when a mass of electrically-conducting steel earthed to the ground was brought into contact with it. Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date. Our heroes plan to infiltrate Jabba's palace in order to rescue him. Metacritic Reviews. Technical Specs. These carried their hominid heirs. Quiggy 09 September, The Spaceship was a machine, albeit a rather weird one. It is in fact an unexploded bomb, although Hancock claims that the warning "Achtung! I counted mine a few months ago; I think the total was 67 Hammer titles, although several were not horror or sci-fi, but other genres i. Earth Elemental Gia has been poisoned, and the only man who can heal her is the scion of the most evil witch family in history, Salvador. Archived from the original on 21 March Categories : British television series debuts British television series endings s British drama television series s British science fiction television series BBC television dramas British fantasy television series Films directed by Rudolph Cartier Quatermass Television series about ancient astronauts. Successive jigsaw-piece cutaways reveal a slightly psychedelic skull. Breen stands transfixed and is eventually consumed by the energies from the craft as it slowly melts away and an image of a Martian "devil" floats in the sky above London. He developed an interest in electronic music while serving in the Royal Navy as an electronics expert working on radar during the Second World War. You must be a registered user to use the IMDb rating plugin. Quotes Barbara Judd : We are the Martians now. So, as you probably guessed, these are my five picks. Mayer, Geoff An examination of the creatures' physiology suggests they came from Mars. Quatermass and the Pit: Five Million Years to Earth Read Online In order to end the rumors surrounding the object, they set up a television broadcast to reveal the ship to the public. Like its predecessors, Quatermass and the Pit was written by Nigel Kneale. While digging a new subway line in London, a construction crew discovers first: a skeleton, then what they think is an old World War II German missile.
Recommended publications
  • Film Club Sky 328 Newsletter Freesat 306 FEB/MAR 2021 Virgin 445
    Freeview 81 Film Club Sky 328 newsletter Freesat 306 FEB/MAR 2021 Virgin 445 You can always call us V 0808 178 8212 Or 01923 290555 Dear Supporters of Film and TV History, It’s been really heart-warming to read all your lovely letters and emails of support about what Talking Pictures TV has meant to you during lockdown, it means so very much to us here in the projectionist’s box, thank you. So nice to feel we have helped so many of you in some small way. Spring is on the horizon, thank goodness, and hopefully better times ahead for us all! This month we are delighted to release the charming filmThe Angel Who Pawned Her Harp, the perfect tonic, starring Felix Aylmer & Diane Cilento, beautifully restored, with optional subtitles plus London locations in and around Islington such as Upper Street, Liverpool Road and the Regent’s Canal. We also have music from The Shadows, dearly missed Peter Vaughan’s brilliant book; the John Betjeman Collection for lovers of English architecture, a special DVD sale from our friends at Strawberry, British Pathé’s 1950 A Year to Remember, a special price on our box set of Together and the crossword is back! Also a brilliant book and CD set for fans of Skiffle and – (drum roll) – The Talking Pictures TV Limited Edition Baseball Cap is finally here – hand made in England! And much, much more. Talking Pictures TV continues to bring you brilliant premieres including our new Saturday Morning Pictures, 9am to 12 midday every Saturday. Other films to look forward to this month include Theirs is the Glory, 21 Days with Vivien Leigh & Laurence Olivier, Anthony Asquith’s Fanny By Gaslight, The Spanish Gardener with Dirk Bogarde, Nijinsky with Alan Bates, Woman Hater with Stewart Granger and Edwige Feuillère,Traveller’s Joy with Googie Withers, The Colour of Money with Paul Newman and Tom Cruise and Dangerous Davies, The Last Detective with Bernard Cribbins.
    [Show full text]
  • After Fantastika Programme
    #afterfantastika Visit: www.fantastikajournal.com After Fantastika July 6/7th, Lancaster University, UK Schedule Friday 6th 8.45 – 9.30 Registration (Management School Lecture Theatre 11/12) 9.30 – 10.50 Panels 1A & 1B 11.00 – 12.20 Panels 2A, 2B & 2C 12.30 – 1.30 Lunch 1.30 – 2.45 Keynote – Caroline Edwards 3.00 – 4.20 Panels 3A & 3B 4.30 – 6.00 Panels 4A & 4B Saturday 7th 10.30 – 12.00 Panels 5A & 5B 12.00 – 1.00 Lunch 1.00 – 2.15 Keynote – Andrew Tate 2.30 – 3.45 Panels 6A, 6B & 6C 4.00 – 5.00 Roundtable 5.00 Closing Remarks Acknowledgements Thank you to everyone who has helped contribute to either the journal or conference since they began, we massively appreciate your continued support and enthusiasm. We would especially like to thank the Department of English and Creative Writing for their backing – in particular Andrew Tate, Brian Baker, Catherine Spooner and Sara Wasson for their assistance in promoting and supporting these events. A huge thank you to all of our volunteers, chairs, and helpers without which these conferences would not be able to run as smoothly as they always have. Lastly, the biggest thanks of all must go to Chuckie Palmer-Patel who, although sadly not attending the conference in-person, has undoubtedly been an integral part of bringing together such a vibrant and engaging community – while we are all very sad that she cannot be here physically, you can catch her digital presence in panel 6B – technology willing! Thank you Kerry Dodd and Chuckie Palmer-Patel Conference Organisers #afterfantastika Visit: www.fantastikajournal.com
    [Show full text]
  • Shail, Robert, British Film Directors
    BRITISH FILM DIRECTORS INTERNATIONAL FILM DIRECTOrs Series Editor: Robert Shail This series of reference guides covers the key film directors of a particular nation or continent. Each volume introduces the work of 100 contemporary and historically important figures, with entries arranged in alphabetical order as an A–Z. The Introduction to each volume sets out the existing context in relation to the study of the national cinema in question, and the place of the film director within the given production/cultural context. Each entry includes both a select bibliography and a complete filmography, and an index of film titles is provided for easy cross-referencing. BRITISH FILM DIRECTORS A CRITI Robert Shail British national cinema has produced an exceptional track record of innovative, ca creative and internationally recognised filmmakers, amongst them Alfred Hitchcock, Michael Powell and David Lean. This tradition continues today with L GUIDE the work of directors as diverse as Neil Jordan, Stephen Frears, Mike Leigh and Ken Loach. This concise, authoritative volume analyses critically the work of 100 British directors, from the innovators of the silent period to contemporary auteurs. An introduction places the individual entries in context and examines the role and status of the director within British film production. Balancing academic rigour ROBE with accessibility, British Film Directors provides an indispensable reference source for film students at all levels, as well as for the general cinema enthusiast. R Key Features T SHAIL • A complete list of each director’s British feature films • Suggested further reading on each filmmaker • A comprehensive career overview, including biographical information and an assessment of the director’s current critical standing Robert Shail is a Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Wales Lampeter.
    [Show full text]
  • Celluloid Television Culture the Specificity of Film on Television: The
    ORBIT-OnlineRepository ofBirkbeckInstitutionalTheses Enabling Open Access to Birkbeck’s Research Degree output Celluloid Television Culture The Specificity of Film on Television: the Action-adventure Text as an Example of a Production and Textual Strategy, 1955 – 1978. https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/40025/ Version: Full Version Citation: Sexton, Max (2013) Celluloid Television Culture The Speci- ficity of Film on Television: the Action-adventure Text as an Example of a Production and Textual Strategy, 1955 – 1978. [Thesis] (Unpublished) c 2020 The Author(s) All material available through ORBIT is protected by intellectual property law, including copy- right law. Any use made of the contents should comply with the relevant law. Deposit Guide Contact: email Celluloid Television Culture The Specificity of Film on Television: the Action-adventure Text as an Example of a Production and Textual Strategy, 1955 – 1978. Max Sexton A thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Birkbeck, University of London, 2012. Declaration I hereby declare that the thesis presented by me for examination of the PhD degree is solely my own work, other than where I have clearly indicated. Birkbeck, University of London Abstract of Thesis (5ST) Notes for Candidate: 1. Type your abstract on the other side of this sheet. 2. Use single-spacing typing. Limit your abstract to one side of the sheet. 3. Please submit this copy of your abstract to the Research Student Unit, Birkbeck, University of London, Registry, Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HX, at the same time as you submit copies of your thesis. 4. This abstract will be forwarded to the University Library, which will send this sheet to the British Library and to ASLIB (Association of Special Libraries and Information Bureaux) for publication to Index to Theses .
    [Show full text]
  • For More Than Seventy Years the Horror Film Has
    WE BELONG DEAD FEARBOOK Covers by David Brooks Inside Back Cover ‘Bride of McNaughtonstein’ starring Eric McNaughton & Oxana Timanovskaya! by Woody Welch Published by Buzzy-Krotik Productions All artwork and articles are copyright their authors. Articles and artwork always welcome on horror fi lms from the silents to the 1970’s. Editor Eric McNaughton Design and Layout Steve Kirkham - Tree Frog Communication 01245 445377 Typeset by Oxana Timanovskaya Printed by Sussex Print Services, Seaford We Belong Dead 28 Rugby Road, Brighton. BN1 6EB. East Sussex. UK [email protected] https://www.facebook.com/#!/groups/106038226186628/ We are such stuff as dreams are made of. Contributors to the Fearbook: Darrell Buxton * Darren Allison * Daniel Auty * Gary Sherratt Neil Ogley * Garry McKenzie * Tim Greaves * Dan Gale * David Whitehead Andy Giblin * David Brooks * Gary Holmes * Neil Barrow Artwork by Dave Brooks * Woody Welch * Richard Williams Photos/Illustrations Courtesy of Steve Kirkham This issue is dedicated to all the wonderful artists and writers, past and present, that make We Belong Dead the fantastic magazine it now is. As I started to trawl through those back issues to chose the articles I soon realised that even with 120 pages there wasn’t going to be enough room to include everything. I have Welcome... tried to select an ecleectic mix of articles, some in depth, some short capsules; some serious, some silly. am delighted to welcome all you fans of the classic age of horror It was a hard decision as to what to include and inevitably some wonderful to this first ever We Belong Dead Fearbook! Since its return pieces had to be left out - Neil I from the dead in March 2013, after an absence of some Ogley’s look at the career 16 years, WBD has proved very popular with fans.
    [Show full text]
  • Quatermass and the Pit: Five Million Years to Earth Free Download
    QUATERMASS AND THE PIT: FIVE MILLION YEARS TO EARTH FREE DOWNLOAD Kim Newman | 112 pages | 14 Nov 2014 | British Film Institute | 9781844577910 | English | London, United Kingdom You May Also Like Technical Specs. Please blast me an email if interested. Kidnapped us. The authorities, and Breen in particular, find this explanation preposterous despite being shown the recording of Barbara's vision. Quatermass Barbara Shelley This movie examines the age old question of how we came to be on this planet. Over the generations, they developed their intelligence and acquired psychic powers such as telepathy and telekinesis. Life Sense: Life In General. A Blu-ray edition Quatermass and the Pit: Five Million Years to Earth released in to mark the show's 60th anniversary. Daniel and Justine Their adaptation was released with the same title as the original indirected by Roy Ward Baker and scripted by Kneale. There are Most filming involved scenes set on location or those too technically complex or expansive to achieve live. Writers: Nigel Kneale original storyNigel Kneale screenplay. I didn't realize there were more than one Quartermass film, none of which I've seen. Keep track of everything you watch; tell your friends. Qeriya, Lahcen and Khalid discovered For centuries the buried ship had occasionally triggered those dormant abilities, which explained the reports of poltergeists; people were unknowingly using their own telekinesis to move objects around, Quatermass and the Pit: Five Million Years to Earth the ghost sightings were traces of a racial memory. Although it cost his life, Dr. It is surprisingly scary. Quiggy 09 September, Kneale had left the BBC shortly before, but was hired to write the new scripts on a freelance basis.
    [Show full text]
  • Nigel Kneale Publicity Photo from the 1950S
    The Kneale ExperimentLIBRARY & ARCHIVE SERVICE Nigel (Tom) Kneale - 1922 to 2006 was the Island’s most successful radio, television and film scriptwriter. He is best known for writing the screenplays for the cult BBC TV science fiction Quatermass series of the 1950s and subsequent feature films. Nigel Kneale publicity photo from the 1950s. Photographer: Oswald Jones (ARCHIVE REF: PG13645) He was born, Thomas Nigel Kneale, in 1922 in Dalton Nigel was educated at in Furness, near Barrow, Lancashire, where his father, Douglas High School for William Thomas Kneale, was a journalist. Boys. Contemporaries at school were Lord Charles Randolph Quirk and Frank Kermode. Mona’s Herald, 3 May 1922 p8 On leaving, he initially studied law with a view to In 1928 the family returned to their Manx homeland practising at the bar as a and by 1931 his father had joined his brother to run Manx advocate. However, one of the Island’s principal newspapers of the time, he decided that the legal Isle of Man Times the Mona’s Herald. profession was not for him 4 Dec 1959 p6 and in 1946, at the age of 18, he broadcast live on BBC Radio, reading his own short story, Tomato Cain. This was later published in 1949 along with others Mona’s Herald, 7 Jan 1931 p8 of his short stories, all reflecting aspects of rural life on the Isle of Man. 1 Collections Guide 11 - September 2015 With the support of the Isle Kneale’s star was now firmly in the ascendant, of Man Arts Council, and although his full-time contract with the BBC was to commemorating the Island of end the following year.
    [Show full text]
  • Quatermass and the Pit: from British SF TV Serial to Gothic Hammer Film
    TV/Series 6 | 2014 Écho et reprise dans les séries télévisées (III) : de la métafiction à la transmédialité Quatermass and the Pit: from British SF TV serial to Gothic Hammer film Gaïd Girard Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/tvseries/336 DOI: 10.4000/tvseries.336 ISSN: 2266-0909 Publisher GRIC - Groupe de recherche Identités et Cultures Electronic reference Gaïd Girard, « Quatermass and the Pit: from British SF TV serial to Gothic Hammer film », TV/Series [Online], 6 | 2014, Online since 01 December 2014, connection on 20 April 2019. URL : http:// journals.openedition.org/tvseries/336 ; DOI : 10.4000/tvseries.336 TV/Series est mis à disposition selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons Attribution - Pas d'Utilisation Commerciale - Pas de Modification 4.0 International. Quatermass and the Pit: from British SF TV serial to Gothic Hammer film Ga&d GIRARD This brief article aims at showing the shift of ideological and aesthetic perspective underl.ing the transposition of the 1950s 0uatermass 1ritish T2 serials to the later 3ammer film version of the original 11C program. 5hile the science fiction T2 0uatermass reads as an obvious declaration of philosophical faith in the restoration of social normalit. and order in spite of alien threats from outer space, the 3ammer films tend to enhance a more Gothic approach of a disaster film where uncertainties of all 6inds eventuall. prevails. 7ost-55II convictions and Cold 5ar tensions either support or undermine the evolution of the plotline and its subterranean vision of the world as we pass from tv serials to films.
    [Show full text]
  • 'Went the Day of the Daleks Well?' an Investigation Into the Role Of
    Tony Keen ‘Invasion narratives in British television Science Fiction’ ‘Went the Day of the Daleks well?’ An investigation into the role of invasion narratives in shaping 1950s and 1960s British television Science Fiction, as shown in Quater- mass, Doctor Who and UFO If the function of art is to hold a mirror up to society, then science fiction (sf), through the distorted reflection it offers, allows the examination of aspects of society that might otherwise be too uncomfortable to confront. This essay aims to look at how invasion narratives, stories concerned with the invasion of Britain from outside, shaped three British science fiction series, and how those series interro- gated the narratives. The series will primarily be examined through aesthetic and social ap- proaches. Particular areas to be explored include the embracing and subverting of common assumptions about Britain’s attitude to invasion, and the differing attitudes to the military displayed. Introduction As an island nation, the prospect of invasion has always occupied a prominent place in the British popular imagination. According to Sellar and Yeatman, the two memorable dates in history are 55 BC and 1066, the dates of the invasions of Julius Caesar and William the Con- queror.1 Subsequent events such as the Spanish Armada of 1588 are also well-known mo- ments in history. It is inevitable that the prospect of invasion should produce speculative literature. Some works appeared around the time of Napoleon’s threatened invasion of 1803,2 but ‘invasion literature’ as a literary genre emerged out of the growing market for novels and short-story magazines, and is generally considered to have begun with the appearance of George Tomp- kyns Chesney’s 1871 story ‘The Battle of Dorking’,3 a story of the German conquest of Eng- land, prompted by the German victory in the Franco-Prussian War of 1871.
    [Show full text]
  • Fantastika Journal
    FANTASTIKA JOURNAL Volume 4 • Issue 1 • July 2020 ISSN: 2514-8915 Fantastika Journal • Volume 4 • Issue 1 • July 2020 EDITOR’S NOTE “Fantastika” A term appropriated from a range of Slavonic languages by John Clute. It embraces the genres of Fantasy, Science Fiction, and Horror, but can also include Alternate History, Gothic, Steampunk, Young Adult Dystopic Fiction, or any other radically imaginative narrative space. The goal of Fantastika Journal and its annual conference is to bring together academics and independent researchers who share an interest in this diverse range of fields with the aim of opening up new dialogues, productive controversies and collaborations. We invite articles examining all mediums and disciplines which concern the Fantastika genres. “Most people think time is like a river that flows swift and sure in one direction. But I have seen the face of time, and I can tell you: they are wrong. Time is an ocean in a storm. You may wonder who I am or why I say this. Sit down and I will tell you a tale like none you have ever heard.” (Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, 2003) Time is traditionally seen as being linear; the progression of one moment to the next, a strict separation of past, present, and future based on sequential and causational relationships. Yet memory, imagination, day-dreaming, nostalgia, planning and many other routine processes blur the boundaries between them as temporal linearity appears to fold back upon itself. Certainly, we cannot avoid the reality that time conceptually propels us along in one direction, but it is simultaneously multidirectional and chaotic.
    [Show full text]
  • The Quatermass Experiment by Nigel Kneale the Quatermass Experiment by Nigel Kneale
    Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} The Quatermass Experiment by Nigel Kneale The Quatermass Experiment by Nigel Kneale. He died in a London hospital after a period of ill health, his agent said. Kneale's The Quatermass Experiment in 1953 was the UK's first sci-fi serial and created its first TV hero, the alien-battling Bernard Quatermass. The writer, from the Isle of Man, has been cited as an influence by Stephen King and film-maker John Carpenter. The Quatermass Experiment told the story of an alien monster brought back to Earth by a British space rocket. Robert Simpson, on Hammer Films' official website, said it was "event television, emptying the streets and pubs for the six weeks of its duration". Last year BBC Four broadcast a live remake starring David Tennant and Jason Flemyng. Channel controller Janice Hadlow described the original as "one of the first 'must watch' TV experiences that inspired the water cooler chat of its day". It was followed by two further serials in the 1950s, Quatermass II and Quatermass and the Pit, with all three dramas later turned into films. A fourth serial, Quatermass, was made in 1979. Kneale also scripted TV dramas including 1984, The Year of the Sex Olympics and The Stone Tape, which are regarded as modern classics. His 1954 adaptation of George Orwell's 1984 was so shocking that questions were asked in the House of Commons about the suitability of such material for television. Kneale earned two Bafta best screenplay nominations for his film adaptations of John Osborne's plays Look Back in Anger and The Entertainer.
    [Show full text]
  • Syllabus Should Be Understood As a Provisional Plan for What We Will Do in Class
    LNDN FILM 3367 The City Made Strange: London on Screen in Horror and Science Fiction Cinema CAPA London Film Program Fall and Spring Course Description London has existed for more than two thousand years, and the ghosts of the recent and ancient past remain abroad in its streets and its culture. This course aims to explore the deep funds of strangeness and otherness that permeate London’s places and spaces, through examining films and television series that show the city as a brimming reservoir of past and future shocks. The course will examine science fiction, horror and noir/neo-gothic cinema and television from all eras, with a particular emphasis on works that take London itself as a major part of their story. These might be disaster or alien invasion films that see the city as a site of destruction or devastation, horror films which render a familiar city frightening and strange, or noir explorations of London’s underbelly that expose sides of the city that are normally hidden. The course will both present an alternative history of London on film, and also provide students with rich possibilities for the analytic study of film and television. Horror and science fiction are notorious as vessels for the expression of both social and political anxieties, and the selection of films would encourage analyses of both psychological content and broader contexts (areas might include, for instance, Cold War-era fears, body horror, racial or class concerns). Readings will be both critical and complementary, and hope to locate uncanny London on film in relation not only to American cinematic tropes in genres such as horror, but also to the large fictional and occult literature which features London as a place of archaic energies and occult forces.
    [Show full text]