Tuesday, 15 November 2011

The Knightsbridge Apemen

 Far and away one of my favourites series of films are Nigel Kneales Quatermass series. With the exception of the later tv series on ITV and BBC4 respectively, they are easily some of the best British sci fi to date. Every year about this time, I break out the BBC boxed set of the 1950's live broadcast TV serials. Unfortunately, most of the first part - the Quatermass Experiment has been lost to time and the depredations of improper care. But out of the trilogy of Quatermass series, my favourite is Quatermass and the Pit. Originally broadcast live each week in 1958, the serial covers the discovery of a spaceship buried in central London after an excavation reveals ancient skulls of what appear to be apemen. Further investigation proves that the apemen were in fact buried with the spaceship and actually carried inside it. After a hurried excavation of the entire hull, a sealed compartment is found and efforts made to penetrate its hidden mystery. Once the hull is opened, rapidly decomposing bodies of three insectoid aliens are revealed, which Bernard Quatermass suggests are in fact martian colonists, fleeing a dying world to repopulate Earth by proxy, by genetically modifying apes to continue the martian culture.
Considering the series was performed live, its a powerful and dramatic piece, with few flaws. The model making and effects are for their time, stunning. The dvd set comes with copious notes on production and the aliens are apparently cast in fibreglass with hydraulic inserts to make them move. One part of and episode shows a reconstruction of a 'race memory' from a martian hive purge, featuring the tripedal aliens hopping and jumping around the screen as they flee their city. A brief close up of one of the animated martians shows the eyes dilating rapidly and this effect was apparently achieved with condoms inside a clear plastic shell!
 More memorable for me than the Dr Who-like aliens is the ship itself. A dramatic departure from the conventional V2, aerodynamic rocket fare of its contemporaries, the martian ship looks more akin to a sea-mine with a vaguely shell like casing and bumps and horns all over it like a giant larva.
The show was so successful that it spawned a feature length film, the first Quatermass feature to appear in colour. Released by Hammer and shown as 'Five Million Years to Earth' in the US, Quatermass and the Pit was a  big budget production starring Andrew Keir as the good professor. The poster showed a semi naked busty female, very prominently and carried the rather fetching Barbara Shelley as his screaming sidekick.
Hammers treatment of the script was faithful to the original though, although the ship itself was vastly different. The movie ship was still insectile, but went for another beautifully designed form, owing more to a surrealist beetle in glossy electric blue finish. The martians themselves were similar, although their initial appearance showed them as toothy, satanic creatures, the rapid 'rotting' of the tissues rendered them into bendy, ineffective rubber models which detracted from their initial menace.
Hammers ending of the film was a little more downbeat than the serial, adding images of a burning London with their traditional fiery finish and Quatermass and his lovely assistant taking a much needed breath after vanquishing the monster.

9 comments:

  1. Nice post Wote! I had no idea that the original series was live! Bet they couldn't do that now! Watched it on Love Film a while back. Fantastic. The film version is one of my top 5 films of all time. I love the reference to Hobb's Lane and it's inference of devilry. The ensuing alien 'invasion' is just brilliant film-making. Ah yes, Barbara Shelley, along with Barbara Steele, the UK's best Scream Queen. Watch her in the Gorgon for a real treat. The ship in the TV version of ...The Pit reminds me of a tubular dalek and the ship in the film version always made me think of the the Flying Sub from Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. Wonder if there are any Quatermass collectables?

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  2. Good series of films, I love 'em all including the'Depressing' Euston Films version with Sir John Mills and the Radio 4 'mockdoc' with Andrew Keir (not so keen on the BBC 4 version, of course - came across a bit sycophantic and amature to me.)

    Pit is my favourite but I do have a nostalgic soft spot for the two earlier films starring, and in spite of that old soak, Brian Donlevy.

    While I can't really comment on the TV adaptation of 'Experiment', the TV version of Quatermass 2 does contain much more menace than the film - a comparable scene is journalist, Jimmy Hall's (played by Sid James) relatively simple demise in the film as he is machine gunned down by the guards as opposed to the similar character, Conrad played by Roger Delgado. We see him clinging hopelessly to his free will, as his mind is slowly taken over by an alien intellegence as he desperately tries to convey his story to his newspaper.

    Another hook for me is the obvious influence the Quatermass serials had on the plots during Jon Pertwee's tenure as Dr Who.

    'Spearhead from Space' using the old 'meteorites containing lifeforms' chestnut, 'The Daemons', very popular with fans and an unashamedly quality rip off of 'Pit', and 'Ambassadors of Death', aliens in the guise of british astronauts.

    Marvelous stuff - I think I'll dust off my boxed set and give it a watch'

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  3. I had no idea about the Dr. Who connections guys! Fabulous! I don't remember the Deamons. I do recall the Sea Sevils.

    I did love Dr. Who though. My young excitement for it at 6pm on Saturday [or Sunday] lead to excruciating injury one year, the story of which I would have to leave for the next Fandercon Mike!

    As a kid I always wanted to see an Avengers/ Dr.Who crossover show! Emma Peel and Steed in the tardis - yeahhhhh!

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  4. Roll on that next Fandercon, Woodsy :D

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  5. BTW The Amicus film' They Came From Beyond Space' also rips off the 'aliens in a meteorite' scenario. - but that really is a guilty pleasure for me - just like The Terrornauts!

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  6. I'm a big fan of TV's Quatermass. Very sinister, depending on a good script not just special effects -something I also liked with early Dr Who.

    One of the Quatermass stories (with meterorites) is available on the "Internet archive".

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  7. Think a retrospective on some classic Who connections is called for! Ill have to dig out my old Radio Times Dr Who special!

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  8. Right now I'm working on finishing up my best attempt at a model of the movie martian ship. It took a lot of scrutiny and I'm still not sure it's right. I wish the prop itself still existed.

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    1. hi Hydra, if you ever want to show off your model ship then do share with us Moonbase. We'd love to see it. <y email is at the very bottom of the page. Woodsy PS. have you seen these fan models over on Ringstone Round? http://kristian.anapnea.net/quatermass/fan-art/

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