TV -- UFO TV Series (1969-70)

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TV -- UFO TV Series (1969-70) (Size: 8.9 GB)
 1-01 -- UFO ~ Identified.avi350.25 MB
 1-02 -- UFO ~ Computer Affair.avi350.42 MB
 1-03 -- UFO ~ Flight Path.avi350.56 MB
 1-04 -- UFO ~ Exposed.avi350.35 MB
 1-05 -- UFO ~ Survival.avi350.58 MB
 1-06 -- UFO ~ Conflict.avi350.55 MB
 1-07 -- UFO ~ The Dalotek Affair.avi350.37 MB
 1-08 -- UFO ~ A Question of Priorities.avi350.32 MB
 1-09 -- UFO ~ Ordeal.avi350.42 MB
 1-10 -- UFO ~ The Responsibility Seat.avi350.21 MB
 1-11 -- UFO ~ The Square Triangle.avi350.49 MB
 1-12 -- UFO ~ Court Martial.avi350.51 MB
 1-13 -- UFO ~ Close Up.avi350.09 MB
 1-14 -- UFO ~ Confetti Check A-O.K..avi350.23 MB
 1-15 -- UFO ~ E.S.P..avi350.27 MB
 1-16 -- UFO ~ Kill Straker.avi350.43 MB
 1-17 -- UFO ~ Sub Smash.avi350.37 MB
 1-18 -- UFO ~ The Sound of Silence.avi350.27 MB
 1-19 -- UFO ~ The Cat with Ten Lives.avi350.3 MB
 1-20 -- UFO ~ Destruction.avi350.47 MB
 1-21 -- UFO ~ The Man Who Came Back.avi350.38 MB
 1-22 -- UFO ~ The Psychobombs.avi350.14 MB
 1-23 -- UFO ~ Reflections in the Water.avi350.33 MB
 1-24 -- UFO ~ Timelash.avi350.37 MB
 1-25 -- UFO ~ Mindbender.avi350.04 MB
 1-26 -- UFO ~ The Long Sleep.avi350.14 MB
 @ About ~ UFO.txt10.79 KB
 UFO episodes listing.rtf32.38 KB


Description

UFO is a British television science fiction series created by Gerry Anderson and Sylvia Anderson and produced by the Anderson's and Lew Grade's Century 21 Productions for Grade's ITC Entertainment company. The Andersons had previously made a number of very successful marionette-based children's science fiction series including Stingray, Thunderbirds, and Captain Scarlet. They had also made one live-action science fiction movie, Doppelgänger, also known as Journey to the Far Side of the Sun, and now felt ready to move into live-action television and aim at a more adult market.



UFO was the Andersons' first totally live-action TV series. Despite the assumption of many TV station executives, the series was not aimed at children, but deliberately sought an older audience; many episodes featured adult themes such as adultery, divorce, and drug use.



UFO first aired in the UK in 1970 and in US syndication over the next two years. In all, 26 episodes, including the pilot, were filmed over the course of more than a year, with a five-month production break caused by the ultimate closure of the MGM-British Studios in Borehamwood, where the show was initially made. It is currently airing in the US in remastered HD on Voom HD Networks' Family Room HD.



An idiosyncrasy of the series is that the term "UFO" is pronounced as a word ("you-foh"), as suggested by the real-world originator of the term Edward J. Ruppelt, and not as the more common "you-eff-oh". This is particularly true of the lead character, Ed Straker. Technically speaking the series title should properly be pronounced "you-foh" as well. However, the "you-foh" pronunciation was not consistently applied and some supporting characters use the more traditional form.Plot overview



A fan-made CGI illustration of two aliens from the series.The show's basic premise is that in the near future –a fictional version of 1980 (a date indicated in the opening credits) – human beings are being covertly harvested for their organs by aliens.[edit] UFOs

The extraterrestrial spacecraft can readily cross the vast distances between their planet and ours, but are only large enough for one or two crewmembers. Their time on station is limited; UFOs can only survive for a couple of days in the Earth's atmosphere before they heat up, deteriorate, and finally explode. The alien craft can survive for far longer underwater, however; one episode deals with the discovery of a secret undersea alien base. In flight they are surrounded by horizontally-spinning vanes and emit a distinctive pulsing electronic whine (actually produced by series composer Barry Gray on an Ondes Martenot). The craft is armed with a laser-type weapon, but can be destroyed by conventional explosives. The personal arms of the aliens resemble shiny assault rifles; these have a lower rate of fire than that used by SHADO.[edit] Aliens

Notably for science fiction, and uniquely for a television series, the alien race is never given a proper name, either by themselves or by human beings; they are simply referred to as "the aliens." Humanoid in appearance, the autopsy of the first alien captured reveals that they are harvesting organs from the bodies of abducted humans. Their faces are stained by the hue of a green oxygenated liquid which is believed to cushion their lungs against the extreme acceleration of interstellar flight; this liquid is contained in their space helmets. To protect their eyes the aliens wear opaque sclera contact lenses with small pinholes for vision. The show's opening sequence begins by showing the image, remarkable for its time, of the removal of one of these contact lenses from an obviously real eye with a pair of forceps — although the scleral lens is never shown actually in contact with the eye.[edit] SHADO

To defend against the aliens, a secret organisation called SHADO (Supreme Headquarters Alien Defence Organization) is established. Operating behind the cover of the Harlington-Straker Studios movie studio in England, SHADO is headed by Commander Ed Straker (played by Ed Bishop), a former United States Air Force Colonel and astronaut who poses as the studio's chief executive.



In reality, this was a cost-saving move by the producers — the studio was the actual studio where the series was being filmed, originally the MGM-British Studios, later Pinewood Studios, although the Harlington-Straker studio office block seen throughout the series was actually Neptune House - a building at the former British National Studios, in Borehamwood, that were owned by ATV. Pinewood's studio buildings and streetscapes were used extensively in later episodes, particularly "Timelash" and "Mindbender", the latter featuring scenes that actually showed the behind-the-scenes workings of the UFO sets when Straker briefly finds himself hallucinating that he is an actor on a TV series and all his SHADO colleagues are likewise actors.



Typical of Anderson productions, the studio-as-cover idea was both practical and cost-effective for the production and provided a ready-made for the viewer's suspension of disbelief. It removed the need to build an expensive exterior set for the SHADO base and combined that all-important "secret" cover (concealment and secrecy are always central themes in Anderson dramas) with the trademark ring of at least nominal plausibility. A studio was a business where unusual events and routines would not be remarkable or even noticed. Comings and goings at odd times, the movement of vehicles, equipment, people and materiel would not excite undue interest and could easily be explained away as "sets", "props", or "extras".



Another Anderson leitmotif was the concept of the mechanical conveyor — e.g., the automatic boarding tubes of Stingray and the Thunderbird craft. In UFO, this appeared in the guise of Straker's "secret" office, which doubled as a lift (elevator) that takes him down to the SHADO control centre located beneath the studio. The pilots of the Interceptors slide down a boarding tube into the craft. After the tube retracts the Interceptor is raised from the hanger on a platform the actual launch pad being disguised as a lunar crater.[edit] SHADO equipment

SHADO has a variety of high-tech hardware and vehicles at its disposal to implement a layered defence of Earth. Early warning of alien attack would come from SID (Space Intruder Detector), a computerised tracking satellite that constantly scans for UFO incursions. The forward line of defence is MoonBase from which the three Lunar Interceptor spacecraft from which nuclear missiles are launched. The second line of defence includes SkyDiver, a submarine mated with the submersible, undersea-launched Sky One interceptor aircraft which would attack UFOs in earth atmosphere. The last line of defence is ground units including the armed, IFV-like SHADO Mobiles, fitted with caterpillar tracks. Special effects, as in all Anderson's marionette shows, were supervised by Derek Meddings, while the vehicles were designed by Meddings and his assistant, Michael Trim.[edit] The stories

The show's concept was very dark for its time — the basic premise was that the alien invaders were abducting humans to use as involuntary organ transplant donors. A later episode, "The Cat with Ten Lives", contains a particularly sinister plot point which suggests that the UFO pilots are not humanoid aliens at all, but are in fact human abductees under the control of the alien intelligences. This suggests that the aliens may have no physical being themselves and therefore need a vehicle or container, meaning our human bodies, to incarnate.



The show also featured realistic, believable relationships between the human characters to a far greater extent than usual in a typical science fiction series, showing the clear influence of American programmes like The Twilight Zone and Star Trek and British action series such as Danger Man. One early episode, "The Computer Affair", strongly hinted at an interracial romance between two continuing characters (something that was uncommon on British TV in those days), while others showed the heroes making mistakes with sometimes fatal consequences. Furthermore, relatively few episodes of the series actually had happy or (for the characters) satisfying endings.



One especially dramatic episode "Confetti Check A-OK" is almost entirely devoted to the breakdown of Straker's marriage under the strain of maintaining his secret identity. Another, "A Question of Priorities" hinges on Straker having to make an agonising life-or-death choice — to rescue his critically-injured son by diverting an aircraft carrying SHADO mobiles to deliver life-saving medical supplies, or to attempt a last-chance intercept against an incoming UFO. Interestingly, two key images from "A Question of Priorities", Straker's son being struck down and his ex declaring she never wants to see Straker again, are repeated in "Sub-Smash" and "Mind-Bender", suggested Straker remains haunted by unresolved emotions to the series end and perhaps beyond.



Another episode "The Square Triangle" includes a plot by a woman and her lover to murder her husband. When they accidentally kill an alien from a downed UFO instead, SHADO intervenes and doses the guilty pair with amnesia drugs (decades ahead of a similar story device in Men in Black, and one deployed for similar reasons). Straker realises, however, that the drugs will not affect their basic motivation. The end credits of this episode feature a very dark scene set in the future with the woman visiting her husband's grave, and then walking to meet her lover.



Some critics complained that the emphasis on down-to-earth relationships weakened the show's science fiction premise and were also a means of saving money on special effects. The money-saving argument may have been true to a limited extent, but the Andersons made a virtue of necessity. They had always hoped to direct live action TV drama, and although the marionette shows helped them develop impressive skills in effects and scripting, they had always considered them as essentially being a way of keeping in work and earning money while they tried to break into "real" TV drama. Others countered that the characters were more well-rounded than in other science fiction shows and that science fiction concepts and special effects in themselves did not preclude realistic action and interaction and believable, emotionally engaging plots.



UFO confused broadcasters in both Britain and the United States who could not decide if it was a programme for adults, or for children (the fact Anderson was primarily associated with children's programming did not help matters). This confusion — coupled with erratic broadcasts — are considered as contributing factors in its cancellation, although UFO is credited with opening the door to moderately successful runs of later live-action, adult-oriented programming by Anderson such as The Protectors and Space: 1999.

Episode List



1. Identified

2. Computer Affair

3. Flight Path

4. Survival

5. Exposed

6. Conflict

7. The Dalotek Affair

8. A Question Of Priorities

9. Ordeal

10. The Responsibility Seat

11. The Square Triangle

12. Court Martial

13. Close Up

14. Confetti Check A-O.K.

15. E.S.P.

16. Kill Straker!

17. Sub-Smash

18. The Sound Of Silence

19. The Cat With Ten Lives

20. Destruction

21. The Man Who Came Back

22. The Psychobombs

23. Reflections In The Water

24. Timelash

25. Mindbender

26. The Long Sleep



VIDEO (AVI)



Frame Height:352

Frame Width: 480

Data Rate: 916kbps

Total Bitrate: 1030 kbps

Frame Rate: 25fps



AUDIO

Bit Rate: 114kbps

Channels: 2 (stereo)

Audio Sample Rate: 48khz

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