Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuDoomwatch, under Dr. Quist, monitors scientific work to prevent disasters caused by misuse of technology. They confront crises like mutant species while opposing hostile corporations and str... Alles lesenDoomwatch, under Dr. Quist, monitors scientific work to prevent disasters caused by misuse of technology. They confront crises like mutant species while opposing hostile corporations and struggling to survive internal conflicts.Doomwatch, under Dr. Quist, monitors scientific work to prevent disasters caused by misuse of technology. They confront crises like mutant species while opposing hostile corporations and struggling to survive internal conflicts.
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What on Earth have they got in their hair? How can anyone wear those shirts? A character seriously called 'Joby'? Top marks though for effort with effects on a limited budget.
Having said all that the plot and storyline is very good and sadly rather plausible.
I quite enjoyed the movie adaptation so when the wonderful Talking Pictures TV (UK) said that they were going to screen the TV series (what's left of them, some episodes have been lost forever) on Friday nights I looked forward to watching them for the first time. Not impressed so far, very little action, too much talking and the sets look like they were made of cardboard! For every half decent episode there is sadly a disappointing one. I might sound harsh but judged on what I have so far seen I think that Dullwatch would be a far more appropriate title for this British TV series from the early 1970's. I do like watching the great Robert Powell though. Some of those fashions are quite shocking mind, ha ha!
You didn't have to wear paisley shirts and a cravat to work here...but it helped.
Of course if the landscape of Britain really was one of governmental cover ups, bureaucratic red tape, ecological and scientific disasters that is depicted in Doomwatch, we'd surely be in the grip of a pandemic and on the brink of social unrest by now....oh, hang on a minute!!!
Dr. John Ridge where are you when we need you?
Of course if the landscape of Britain really was one of governmental cover ups, bureaucratic red tape, ecological and scientific disasters that is depicted in Doomwatch, we'd surely be in the grip of a pandemic and on the brink of social unrest by now....oh, hang on a minute!!!
Dr. John Ridge where are you when we need you?
...but for all the wrong reasons. I find this series very difficult to love, and believe me I've tried. I bought the whole boxed set, optimistically hoping I'd enjoy it more than on my previous viewing many years before. Generally I love 70s tv, I don't mind the poor effects or the slow pace. But Doomwatch is like the tv equivalent of Radio 4 plays: lots of boring men pacing up and down in offices, shouting at each other, being terribly EARNEST and CROSS, addressing each other by their surnames (unless it's a woman of course), saying "Damn it man!" and either comforting hysterical sobbing women or being patronising towards them. The scripts are often concerned with 'terrifying' issues of the day which we now accept as 'normal life' (Tower blocks! Plastic! Jet lag!) It's all rather humourless and preachy, and the acting style is frequently pitched at borderline hysteria which can be extremely grating and often had me reaching for the volume control. Having said all that, it's well made in most respects, just very much of its time - a 'criticism' which can be levelled at many examples of archive television of course, but plenty of those stand up better today than Doomwatch does.
Just now rewatching the (existing) series episodes on Talking Pictures TV. I was an avid watcher as a school kid in the early 1970's. I'm still suffering PTSD from seeing Toby Wren blown up! The stories are quite inventive, with multiple sets. Unfortunately the thing that lets it down is the character development and the never ending sexist stuff, which at the time was considered edgy but ends up being tiresome.
What saves the series is somewhat understated acting by John Paul, Robert Powell, Wendy Hall and Joby Blanshard. I'm afraid Simon Oates doesn't stand a chance with the ham-fisted way his character is written.
And the ascots/cravats! The TrimPhones, the hair styles. They all take you back to the early 1970's; culturally not the best of times.
What saves the series is somewhat understated acting by John Paul, Robert Powell, Wendy Hall and Joby Blanshard. I'm afraid Simon Oates doesn't stand a chance with the ham-fisted way his character is written.
And the ascots/cravats! The TrimPhones, the hair styles. They all take you back to the early 1970's; culturally not the best of times.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe series suffered from the BBC's lack of a proper archiving policy until 1978. It was BBC policy before 1978 to wipe master tapes and reuse them for other programmes, hence saving money and storage space. There are five episodes from Season 1, and nine from Season 3, of which there are no known copies in existence.
- PatzerThere was seemingly no set continuity for the scenery crew when dressing the studio between recordings. Consequently the three prominent mushroom cloud photographs in Quist's office during the first two seasons regularly swap position between episodes.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Crystal Balls (1998)
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