I received the new JttFSotS DVD this week and rewatched it for the first
time in ... ohhh ... 30 years. The things which particularly struck me were: * The look of the production was much more dated than I had expected. There seems to be quite a gulf in production design between JttFSotS and UFO, despite them being just one year apart. * I was watching the nefarious goings-on of Herbert Lom when I suddenly realised that his character was indistinguishable of The Hood in Thunderbirds! The espionage device was just one step beyond the Robo-Mouse that terrorised Lady Penelope in "The Mighty Atom"! * EuroSec had *3* jeeps! I only recall ever seeing 2 jeeps in UFO, whatever happened to the third? * The Straker and Foster cars underwent quite a bit of re-modeling before they appeared in UFO. I had previously thought that they were brought across unchanged. * I realise that the pace of editing has changed dramatically since 1969 ... but I'm still surprised that no one tapped the editor on the shoulder and said "Ere! You've spent a third of the film on the sleeping astronauts and Zero-G transfer to the Dove sequence!" * The sets were impressive, considering the puppet-scale size of everything the Andersons had previously built. Much closer to a Bond flick than I had expected. * Roy Thinnes was enjoyable to watch. I had expected to be mildly annoyed by Gerry's usual <INSERT AMERICAN HERE> hero, but Roy worked well. * Some very good effects work - you could almost believe in the zero-G transfer sequence; that technicians were standing in a vast vehicle assemble building; the rocket launch; etc. -- JasonH [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
--- In [hidden email], "Jason Hellwege" <jhellwege@...> wrote:
> > * I realise that the pace of editing has changed dramatically since 1969 ... > but I'm still surprised that no one tapped the editor on the shoulder and > said "Ere! You've spent a third of the film on the sleeping astronauts and > Zero-G transfer to the Dove sequence!" > IIRC, it's been commented about that particular aspect of the movie; how in the first half of the film not a lot happens. I suppose that it could be classed as exposition, but surely the story could have been tightened up and trimmed a bit here and there. I've seen it mentioned that the film could have started at around the rocket launch and then gotten into the mirror image Earth plotline, which might have made it a bit better. |
I appear to have been wrong about the cars. According to Fanderson:
http://www.fanderson.org.uk/prodguides/movies2.html there were actually *3* cars (again, what happened to the 3rd by the time of UFO?). Straker's and Foster's cars just underwent a re-spray for UFO. It must have been the 3rd car, with a distinctive bonnet, that's confused me. The above page also mentions a major sub-plot, involving Roy Thinnes' character's wife having an affair with a EuroSec PR officer, which is missing from the final film. This better accounts for the scenes where the wife returns from a mysterious drive around Portugal and the fight over the contraceptives which Roy finds. It probably also explains why the sleeping astronaut scenes (and the trippy 2001-style hallucination/flashback sequence) went on for so long. Presumedly they needed to pad out the film once a major plot strand had been axed. I wish they had just asked Derek Meddings to blow some more stuff up! -- JasonH [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
I doubt that the deleted sub plot is the sole reason for the sedate
pace because the film runs, according to IMDB, at 101 minutes. It would have been perfectly acceptable for the the film to be 90 minutes or less. Films of barely over 80 minutes long were quite common. As anyone who has ever cut a film knows, even 1 or 2 minutes judiciously trimmed from a feature can pick up the pace far more than you would imagine, let alone potentially cutting 10% or more of its length. In one sense the missing subplot is significant though: If the subplot was substituted for some of the present footage, the film would probably feel shorter to an audience even if it were the same length, as there would be more dramatic incident. It's been a while since I've seen JttFSotS, I must dig it out, but bearing that in mind, there are a few points, I hope, worth making. It's not, then or now, uncommon for sci-fi films to include lengthy scenes which are (or supposed to be) visually arresting or novel but which have little or no plot or character value. 2001, a recent release at the time of JttFSotS, was an extreme example and very influential. Some films get away with it, many don't. The pace of many mainstream films in the 60s and 70s slowed, partly under the influence of the French New Wave. It was assumed that if you were making a "serious" film, the pace had to be slower. Actors were slower to pick up their cues, pregnant pauses became longer, long slow tracking shots over inanimate scenes increased, static shots were held longer. It became common to have scenes of characters doing little or nothing of dramatic significance which in previous generations would have been cut, if they had even been shot in the first place. Many films were filmed largely with master shots and with fewer alternate angles. This meant that when you came to editing and a particular action needed to be seen in full, there were fewer opportunities for speeding up that action by cutting between angles. I'd hesitate to ascribe any one of these features to JttFSotS without seeing it again, but it was part of the atmosphere at the time. Ironically, Robert Parrish, a fine editor, in his autobiography talks about cutting the over-long initial edit of "All the Kings Men". The director Robert Rossen suggested in desperation that they cut all the beginnings and ends of each scene, staring 100 feet before and ending 100 feet after the central point of the scene. The film won an Oscar. I may be wrong, but I wouldn't be surprised if Parrish wasn't around much for the editing of JttFSotS. There's a long tradition of American directors taking the next plane out of Heathrow after the production wraps on a film they've been hired to make in the UK. Regards John |
In reply to this post by Jason Hellwege
It's been yrs. since I have watched this movie. It's not bad. but there is another made for tv movie {was a pilot to a never produced series} out there with the simeler theme. The Stranger {1973} with the late Gleen Corbett.
The Stranger was I think the take on the idea used in JTTFSOTS. I would truly love one day to see it cleaned up and remastered and released to {regular} dvd. Maybe someday... :) April |
In reply to this post by Jason Hellwege
Frankly, the one annoying thing I found about the special effects of this movie, (otherwise, I thought they were top notch) was the time scaling of the film. Although the models looked very impressive, it looked like they were hauling a bunch of impressive models around, particularly in the rocket assembly sequence, and the rocket launch off the pad. You could see jiggle, quick movements, and the sudden clapping together of pieces, as well as smoke that looked like it was coming from a railroad flare just kind of lazily drifting out the bottom of the rocket during launch. They needed a serious amount of overcrank in the film speed, to be played back at normal speed, to restore that impression of massive rocket parts being lowered into place, etc. The zero gee transfer was handeled very well. I believe they took a page from Douglas Trumbel's techniques of suspending the actors and filming them from below for that natural "zero gee" look. You can forgive them for being unable to make the astronaut's umbilical cords look right....you can see they are obviously hanging downwards from their suspension points. Otherwise, I've always thought that the "Gerry Anderson" style of special effects were my most favorite of any I've seen back then, or since. I prefer the genuine look of the physical model work of Anderson's crew over the new style exemplified by the likes of "Star Trek the New Generation" anyday.. ....Roy Thinnes was American?.... I learn something new every day. Dave H. ------------------------------------------------------------------ ----- Original Message ----- From: Jason Hellwege To: [hidden email] Sent: Friday, September 26, 2008 1:43 AM Subject: [SHADO] JttFSotS Thoughts I received the new JttFSotS DVD this week and rewatched it for the first time in ... ohhh ... 30 years. The things which particularly struck me were: * The look of the production was much more dated than I had expected. There seems to be quite a gulf in production design between JttFSotS and UFO, despite them being just one year apart. * I was watching the nefarious goings-on of Herbert Lom when I suddenly realised that his character was indistinguishable of The Hood in Thunderbirds! The espionage device was just one step beyond the Robo-Mouse that terrorised Lady Penelope in "The Mighty Atom"! * EuroSec had *3* jeeps! I only recall ever seeing 2 jeeps in UFO, whatever happened to the third? * The Straker and Foster cars underwent quite a bit of re-modeling before they appeared in UFO. I had previously thought that they were brought across unchanged. * I realise that the pace of editing has changed dramatically since 1969 ... but I'm still surprised that no one tapped the editor on the shoulder and said "Ere! You've spent a third of the film on the sleeping astronauts and Zero-G transfer to the Dove sequence!" * The sets were impressive, considering the puppet-scale size of everything the Andersons had previously built. Much closer to a Bond flick than I had expected. * Roy Thinnes was enjoyable to watch. I had expected to be mildly annoyed by Gerry's usual <INSERT AMERICAN HERE> hero, but Roy worked well. * Some very good effects work - you could almost believe in the zero-G transfer sequence; that technicians were standing in a vast vehicle assemble building; the rocket launch; etc. -- JasonH [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG. Version: 7.5.524 / Virus Database: 270.7.3/1693 - Release Date: 9/26/2008 7:35 AM [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Jason Hellwege
---Hey Guy, Like You I have not seen that film: Journey to the Far
Side of the Sun; for a VERY long time (twenty five years(+); and like You I need to rent it (on DVD) and "re-watch" it...There is so much about that film that I have forgotten..I don't even remember (that's how much I've "forgotten")!!! About the only things I do remember are: Roy Thinnes, the "cars" which were later used in: U.F.O.; and the "Doppelganger" Ship...Wow, have I forgotten a lot!! Leo |
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