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Gerry Anderson Collectables
Book
This book covers the whole range of collectables from the Gerry Anderson shows, from the 1960s to...
Captain scarlet
TV Show
Captain scarlet spectrums top agent against the mysterons and he's indestructible
Doppelganger (1969)
Movie
Live-action sci-fi from puppet maestro Gerry Anderson, a.k.a. Journey to the Far Side of the Sun. A...
Space: 1999
TV Show Watch
Eerily prescient sci-fi drama from Gerry Anderson. Poorly stored atomic waste on the Moon explodes,...
Kevin Phillipson (10021 KP) rated Captain scarlet in TV
Nov 3, 2019
Captain scarlet (3 more)
Mysterons
Captain blue
Francis Matthews
Probably my favourite of the Gerry Anderson puppet shows more than Thunderbirds it had everything aliens the mysterons and captain scarlet spectrum agent who was basically indestructible and then there's the drum beat before each scene for kids show it could be really dark what with death and resurrection each week but that was what the appeal of the show for me when I was growing up
Awix (3310 KP) rated Doppelganger (1969) in Movies
Apr 12, 2020
Thunderbirds and Captain Scarlet creator Gerry Anderson turned down Stanley Kubrick's offer of the chance to do the model effects for 2001: A Space Odyssey, but jumped at the chance to do his own space adventure film a couple of years later. The good news is that all the model-making and visual-effects skill of the operation that Anderson had put together by the late 1960s is on display in this movie. The bad news is that Anderson and his wife wrote much of the script themselves, resulting in a plodding movie which focuses on all the wrong details instead of telling a compelling story.
The problem is that the basic idea - space mission discovers a replica counter-Earth - isn't properly developed, and the characters take nearly an hour to get there, let alone work out where they've ended up. The generally dour tone and rambling metaphysics would become more prominent in future Anderson shows (much of the supporting cast of this film turn up playing regular roles in UFO), but this first effort with live actors is lumpy and frustrating to watch.
The problem is that the basic idea - space mission discovers a replica counter-Earth - isn't properly developed, and the characters take nearly an hour to get there, let alone work out where they've ended up. The generally dour tone and rambling metaphysics would become more prominent in future Anderson shows (much of the supporting cast of this film turn up playing regular roles in UFO), but this first effort with live actors is lumpy and frustrating to watch.