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IMDbPro

Spazio: 1999

Titolo originale: Space: 1999
  • Serie TV
  • 1975–1977
  • T
  • 50min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,3/10
10.048
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
3078
463
Spazio: 1999 (1975)
Home Video Trailer from A&E Home Video
Riproduci trailer0: 31
22 video
99+ foto
Sci-Fi EpicSpace Sci-FiAdventureDramaSci-Fi

L'equipaggio della base lunare Alpha deve lottare per sopravvivere quando un'enorme esplosione getta la Luna dall'orbita nello spazio profondo.L'equipaggio della base lunare Alpha deve lottare per sopravvivere quando un'enorme esplosione getta la Luna dall'orbita nello spazio profondo.L'equipaggio della base lunare Alpha deve lottare per sopravvivere quando un'enorme esplosione getta la Luna dall'orbita nello spazio profondo.

  • Creazione
    • Gerry Anderson
    • Sylvia Anderson
  • Star
    • Martin Landau
    • Barbara Bain
    • Nick Tate
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,3/10
    10.048
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    3078
    463
    • Creazione
      • Gerry Anderson
      • Sylvia Anderson
    • Star
      • Martin Landau
      • Barbara Bain
      • Nick Tate
    • 146Recensioni degli utenti
    • 37Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 candidatura in totale

    Episodi48

    Sfoglia gli episodi
    InizioI più votati

    Video22

    Space: 1999: The Complete First Series
    Clip 1:41
    Space: 1999: The Complete First Series
    Space: 1999
    Trailer 0:31
    Space: 1999
    Space: 1999
    Trailer 0:31
    Space: 1999
    Space 1999 30th Anniversary Edition Megaset-Disc 3
    Trailer 0:47
    Space 1999 30th Anniversary Edition Megaset-Disc 3
    Space: 1999
    Trailer 0:47
    Space: 1999
    Space 1999 30th Anniversary Edition Megaset-Disc 7
    Trailer 0:56
    Space 1999 30th Anniversary Edition Megaset-Disc 7
    Space 1999 30th Anniversary Edition Megaset-Disc 16
    Trailer 0:58
    Space 1999 30th Anniversary Edition Megaset-Disc 16

    Foto463

    Visualizza poster
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    + 456
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    Interpreti principali99+

    Modifica
    Martin Landau
    Martin Landau
    • Commander John Koenig
    • 1975–1977
    Barbara Bain
    Barbara Bain
    • Dr. Helena Russell
    • 1975–1977
    Nick Tate
    Nick Tate
    • Alan Carter
    • 1975–1977
    Zienia Merton
    Zienia Merton
    • Sandra Benes
    • 1975–1977
    Sarah Bullen
    • Main Mission Operative Kate Bullen
    • 1975–1977
    Barry Morse
    Barry Morse
    • Professor Victor Bergman
    • 1975–1976
    Catherine Schell
    Catherine Schell
    • Maya…
    • 1975–1977
    Prentis Hancock
    Prentis Hancock
    • Paul Morrow
    • 1975–1976
    Clifton Jones
    Clifton Jones
    • David Kano
    • 1975–1976
    Anton Phillips
    • Dr. Bob Mathias
    • 1975–1976
    Tony Anholt
    Tony Anholt
    • Tony Verdeschi
    • 1976–1977
    John Hug
    John Hug
    • Bill Fraser
    • 1976–1977
    Yasuko Nagazumi
    • Yasko
    • 1976–1977
    Jeffery Kissoon
    Jeffery Kissoon
    • Dr. Ben Vincent
    • 1976–1977
    Albin Pahernik
    • Creature…
    • 1976–1977
    Annie Lambert
    Annie Lambert
    • Main Mission Operative Julie Tracy
    • 1975–1976
    Shane Rimmer
    Shane Rimmer
    • Eagle Pilot…
    • 1975–1976
    Robert Rietty
    Robert Rietty
    • Luke Ferro…
    • 1975–1976
    • Creazione
      • Gerry Anderson
      • Sylvia Anderson
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti146

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    Recensioni in evidenza

    MarcelloDL

    You don't feel at home in deep space.

    The first science fiction work I ever saw was Space:1999, and i was six. Italian Tv had co-produced the stuff so it was aired around 6pm, not a very appropriate slot to broadcast scenes of people burned alive by their commander's lasergun... I probably had nightmares about it, but missing a single episode was out of the question. I got to see some first season episodes some twenty years later and I appreciated the show even more. I don't recall much of the second season apart Maya and Tony, so let me concentrate on the first one.

    The electronic soundtrack and the opening credits (a kind of "Pulp Fiction" style guitar alternated with an orchestral version of the same theme) were very original, as it was the look of the Eagles: they are solid transport spacecrafts but at the same time one can see their pilots from the outside, so that Eagles seem vulnerable... well, they are, most of the time. Base Alpha is a large, well lit and comfortable place (some stylish seventies furniture, too) which is home and prison at the same time.

    Anyway the most peculiar aspect is the atmosphere in Moonbase Alpha: The crew is shocked for what happened to them, unprepared to deal with the future, they don't agree with each other, they make mistakes, they often prefer not to show much emotion. No "Space as the last frontier" rhetoric, here. Space is cold and mistakes are lethal. That increases the realism even if 1999 is well past. Action progresses like a slowly unfolding bad dream.

    Don't believe people complaining about bad acting. They just expect things that Space:1999 wasn't going to offer. The actors performed well. For example, Commander Koenig (the symbolism in the name is evident) is waiting for the "black sun" to swallow the base, he's talking with Prof. Bergman. He's about to break into tears but manages to restrain himself so that his eyes show only a little trace of what he's feeling underneath: A very good performance from Martin Landau, nearly impossible to find in better rated SF series/movies.
    suferia

    One of those shows that gets better with time.

    OK, after reading a few posts, I had to include one as well. I too was a charter watcher of space 1999, back when the 20th century was but just 3/4 through. I was excited because the Moonbase Alpha was obviously inspired by the Moonbase in 2001: A Space Odyssey. Of course Space 1999 was no 2001, so my expectations were met with disappointment. Early in the first Season my dad came in while "Dragon's Domain" was airing. We both frowned when the tentacled monster came in, seemed every bit as childish as one of those "Lost in Space" episodes with a monster on the prowl, and my dad asked to change the channel, arguing that that show could have been made by any idiot! As much as I hated agreeing with with him I felt the same way, and changed the channel to a nature program. Neither one of us were aware that episode was directed by Charles Crichton (who died in 1999) the man behind the British classic "The Lavender Hill Mob" in 1951 and later "A Fish called Wanda" in 1987!

    I continued to watch this show and few weeks later my dad plopped down on the couch for "The Black Sun". This time we were both deeply moved with the same awe and wonder of Kubrick's 2001. To me this type of stuff is science fiction at it's best (Everything Disney's "The Black Hole" should have been). Space 1999 was a mixed bag for me; some of the shows like the one where they became prehistoric cavemen, really sucked, while others were highly imaginative. Several episodes later my dad sat in on another viewing and after awhile, exclaimed that "it's a much more beautifully made show than that one by Desilu!" (referring to "Star Trek").

    Space 1999 came out at a time when television was in an interesting era. 1975 yielded a record worst season; the most embarrassing new TV shows to premier and disappear in a single season. Many dreadful sitcoms including one set in a prison (On the Rocks) clearly revealed the desperate state of affairs the entertainment industry was in at the time. Meanwhile an offbeat show featuring never-before-imagined live comedy sketches premiered one late Saturday night and television would never be the same again!

    Space 1999 was another attempt to give the audiences something new and I'm glad it lasted as long as it did. Shortly after it's American premier, Barbra Bain appeared on "The Tonight Show" and explained to Johnny Carson why this series was syndicated for broadcast on local channels rather than network television. Producer Gerry Anderson had offered it to the networks who guaranteed only 13 air dates with more to follow...........if the Nielsen ratings were high enough. With 26 episodes already in the can, the only package Gerry would consider was a full season, which the networks balked at. So the big budget show ended up on KHJ channel 9 here in Los Angeles, and after a full season, lasted another round. Some new changes included women in skirts instead the the pantsuits And lovely transmute alien Catherine Schell added some eye candy to the show. Also more humorous overtones were introduced.

    Some of these episodes remain with me today, including one where they retrieve an early unmanned Earth spacecraft with the help of a scientist who had engineered the propulsion system; the notorious Quella drive, which was responsible for massive destruction and loss of life including aliens which dispatched scouts to follow and exact revenge upon the planet of origin (Earth).

    Really powerful stuff this show could sometimes be! Like Saturday Night Live, and "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman (another syndicated series that came a couple months later which creator Norman Lear said "The show the networks couldn't handle"), Space 1999 was part of a golden era when television was experimenting with new ideas. SNL live took the crown for television and a couple years later "Star Wars" got it for the silver screen, redefining to most what science fiction should be (in that case a western!) But Space 1999 aimed much higher IMHO, seeking out what science fiction can be!

    Prior to this show I was a sometimes watcher a previous Gerry Anderson show: "U.F.O." and I really liked his feature "Journey to the Far Side of the Sun" It's too bad creatively in science fiction today is in itself a science.............of just how much money the dam thing is going to make!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    poopville

    I love this show like family

    This show calls up happy memories of laying on my grandma's shag carpeted living room, totally enthralled by this show. It was the mid 70s and we didn't even have a space shuttle yet. The ships, clothes and hardware of this show looked like something I could possibly experience in my lifetime. I figured that by 1999, I would be living and working in space as an adult. Well none of that really panned out but all these years later, this show is still great fun to watch. It has a style and mood that is so unique. I hope they never try to do a remake. Part of it's charm is how 70s it is. The bell bottom uniforms, the sketchy science, the sideburns. It's all so perfect. As a child, this show made me excited for the future like nothing else.
    8Dragonfly7

    Loved it and still do!

    I saw the show when I was a teenager and loved it instantly. And I still do, as I observed when I saw it again more than 20 years later. Sure, the environment and the tricks are looking a little cheap today, so what. Every show is aging. There isn't much action as in Star Trek, which at one point only seemed to discover planets with beautiful but strange women. Much of the action is between the characters, how to deal with fear,their situation and the loneliness... Love it or hate it, the show had something special. Till today I saved a huge crush on Martin Landau as an actor, I watch everything, even his weakest movies. And I saved a huge crush on Captain Alan Carter as a character of the show, I'd love to be an Eagle-Pilot! Forget that it's a 70s show and enjoy it.
    9peter-faizey

    An excellent series! One of the Sci - fi greats!

    Space: 1999 to me is a truly excellent series. Produced and created by the great Gerry Anderson, it was the most expensive science fiction series of it's time and looks it!! The first Season provided us with some excellent episodes, and some excellent performances from the series leads - Martin Landau, Barbara Bain and Barry Morse. Some of the best episodes of Season One include the wonderfully dark and menacing 'Dragon's Domain', 'The Alpha Child', 'Voyagers Return', 'The Last Enemy', 'Breakaway', 'The War Games', 'Space Brain' and many others. The series writing was, despite the bad press it has often received since, pretty exceptional, although there are a few let downs. Despite the series brilliance occasionally in the Season you will see episodes that suffer from poor pacing - 'The Troubled Spirit' for example, but these episodes are few in number only about 2 or 3 really, so they are easy to overlook, and all series will usually slip up somewhere!!! It is entirely forgivable. I mention this because I am trying to be a reasonable critic to the series, and not just include all the qualities I love about it!! Unfortunately the first season didn't really take off, but a surprisingly generous I.T.C backing allowed a Second Season to be made. I say this because I.T.C's usual concern about how British programmes appealed to the American audience led certain series to have a very short life. Many Gerry Anderson series have been affected by this, The Secret Service seems to be the best example. Due to the marital breakup of Gerry and Sylvia Anderson, Gerry had to hire a new producer. He chose Fred Freiberger, ex- producer of the final series of Star Trek. He changed the series already shaky continuity completely and made the show more Action orientated. This idea appealed to some, but Martin Landau has gone on record for saying that although Freiberger may have helped the show in some aspects, his ideas were (in the opinion of Landau) very boring compared to the way that Season One had been produced. Johnny Byrne the series regular script editor has gone on record in saying (in his words) that Season 2 was 'complete rubbish'!, even basing the story 'The Dorcons' on his dislike to the way that Season 2 was produced. Whatever your views on the Second Season (I personally like it very much, although it takes time to adjust to Season 2 compared to Season 1) some classic stories were produced during it's time. 'The Metamorph' introducing Maya a wonderful character that can change into most forms of living matter, played superbly by Catherine Schell, 'The Rules of Luton', 'The Dorcons', 'The Immunity Syndrome', 'The Lambda Factor', 'The Exiles', 'New Adam New Eve' and many others. The second season was arguably though, the most exciting, with upbeat music and lots of action, the flaw being that some of the scripts were pretty poor. Although 'The Beta Cloud' is a good episode in many aspects, the script is admittedly lousy. As he had done in the First Season, excellent Sci-fi writer Johnny Byrne provides some of the best scripts in Season 2, usually much more serious than other stories, obviously refusing to bow down to Freiberger's 'Scooby Doo action' idea as Freiberger himself described it, lots of action with lots of often silly humour. 'The Bringers of Wonder' despite being very exciting is a ludicrous story in places, and 'The Taybor' despite having some good qualities also suffers from this weakness. However overall I feel Season 2 was a good Season, and it is deeply sad that a third season never got past the drawing board stages. However we must be grateful for what we have got. All the episodes are now provided on shiny DVD's for the enjoyment of all who remember or have come to like the series over it's 30 years existence. Season 1 provided us with lavish and menacing stories, often with hidden morales and examples of the failings of human nature and it's fight to survive in a frequently hostile environment. Season 2 provided us with upbeat and exciting stories, exploring often the most bizarre and intriguing aspects of Science fiction 'The Rules of Luton' for example - highly evolved plants!!! Overall an excellent series, one which belongs with all of the Science fiction greats.

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    • Quiz
      Barry Morse (Professor Victor Bergman) made attempts to rejoin the series while pre-production for season two was underway, but incoming producer Fred Freiberger was against him returning, preferring a younger cast. An explanation of his absence was included in the episode The Metamorph (1976), but ended up being edited out of the finished cut. Dialogue indicated he had been killed due to a faulty spacesuit.
    • Blooper
      Whenever anyone uses a commlock, a communications column in a hallway, or a comm terminal in a room they never set a channel for the call they make; they simply activate the device and it automatically connects to whomever the caller is looking to speak to.
    • Citazioni

      Prof. Victor Bergman: [last message before evacuating Alpha] We are Mankind. We came from planet Earth, and we built this base, called Alpha, to learn more about space. But human error blasted this Moon out of the Earth's orbit. And so, we have traveled the Universe searching for a place to live. Now, we can no longer live here, and we go to face an uncertain future on the planet that has nearly destroyed us. You, whoever you are, who find this empty vessel of Alpha, come and seek us out, if we still exist. Come and teach us all you know. Because, we have learned many things, but most of all, we have learned we still have much to learn.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      During the first season, excerpts for each week's episode were incorporated into the opening credits, more specifically the "This Episode" section, which was something of a Gerry Anderson trademark.
    • Versioni alternative
      A number of syndicated and video-released TV movies were created by editing together assorted episodes. These are: Attacco alieno (1976), _Destination Moonbase Alpha (1976) (TV)_,Oltre lo spazio tempo (1982) and Cosmic Princess (1982).
    • Connessioni
      Edited into Attacco alieno (1976)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 31 gennaio 1976 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Regno Unito
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Anderson Entertainment
      • Fanderson: Official Gerry & Sylvia Anderson Appreciation Society
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Space: 1999
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(Studio)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Incorporated Television Company (ITC)
      • RAI Radiotelevisione Italiana
      • Group 3
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      50 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
      • Cinesound
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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