Alright, I lied. My tale is about One Degree.
So, I'm settling down to view Disc #10 of the Space 1999 series received from Netflix. I've already plowed through the first five DVDs in my UFO Megaset and want to take my time on the remainder. About five minutes into the first episode on the disc, "All That Glisters," I'm thinking, "This series could not possibly get any cheesier." It suddenly hits me. The horny dude going after Catherine Schell is Cass from "The Square Triangle." I love how Gerry recycles actors. My only question is, "Why couldn't it have been Gabrielle Drake?" So I watch a little more of the UFO episode cuz, even though I've seen it recently, it's far more interesting than Space 1999. Here's a couple thoughts: o Why did they dub Lt. Ford's voice? Although I don't know his name offhand, the voice used is the same person vocalizing for villanous operatives in the James Bond film series. o Is that not the coolest Oldsmobile Toronado? I remember my Grandfather, who worked his entire adult life for the Packard Electric Division of General Motors Corp., talking about how advanced the car was in the late 1960s. Although he never bought a Toronado, Granddad did have a string of some wonderful Buick Wildcats. Someone in the UFO production staff surely had an affection for American automobiles. o Speaking of cars, why are they driving on the "American Side" of the road? Tis all. Ciao. Bob
"Imagine a dying planet in some distant corner of the universe. Its natural resources exhausted. Its inhabitants sterile. Doomed to extinction. A situation we may one day find ourselves in, gentlemen. So they discover earth. Abundant, fertile. Able to satisfy their needs. They look upon us not with animosity, but callousness. As we look upon our animals that we depend on for food. Yes, it appears they are driven by circumstance across a billion miles of space, driven on by the greatest force in the universe - survival."
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>>o Why did they dub Lt. Ford's voice? Although I don't know his name
>offhand, the voice used is the same person vocalizing for villanous >operatives in the James Bond film series. It's been speculated by actor Keith Alexander (who played Lt. Ford) that he might have been out of the country when they needed him for overdubbing, so they just used another actor. I recognize that voice from THE PRISONER as well... >o Speaking of cars, why are they driving on the "American Side" of >the road? Well, this was 10 years into the future, and futurists were predicting that England would switch the side of the road they were driving on in 10 years time. Note that when they do "1970" episodes (CONFETTI CHECK A-OK, THE LONG SLEEP), that people are driving on the left side of the road. Marc |
In reply to this post by thelynx
> > o Is that not the coolest Oldsmobile Toronado? I remember my > Grandfather, who worked his entire adult life for the Packard > Electric Division of General Motors Corp., talking about how advanced > the car was in the late 1960s. Although he never bought a Toronado, > Granddad did have a string of some wonderful Buick Wildcats. Someone > in the UFO production staff surely had an affection for American > automobiles. > The Toronado was a futuristic looking car in its day and maybe one of the reasons the production staff selected it for the episode. When I was a kid our family had a 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 which is the car Ed and Mary Straker are driving in Confetti Check AOK. |
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