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IMDbPro

Timeslip

  • TV Series
  • 1970–1971
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
253
YOUR RATING
Spencer Banks and Cheryl Burfield in Timeslip (1970)
Timeslip: The Year Of The Burn Up: Part 4
Play trailer1:10
27 Videos
72 Photos
Time TravelFamilySci-Fi

Simon and Liz fell into a time hole and found themselves trapped in different eras of the 20th century, where they have all sorts of adventures. Many of these involve the nefarious Commander... Read allSimon and Liz fell into a time hole and found themselves trapped in different eras of the 20th century, where they have all sorts of adventures. Many of these involve the nefarious Commander Traynor, who is also traveling through time.Simon and Liz fell into a time hole and found themselves trapped in different eras of the 20th century, where they have all sorts of adventures. Many of these involve the nefarious Commander Traynor, who is also traveling through time.

  • Creators
    • James Boswell
    • Ruth Boswell
  • Stars
    • Cheryl Burfield
    • Spencer Banks
    • Denis Quilley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    253
    YOUR RATING
    • Creators
      • James Boswell
      • Ruth Boswell
    • Stars
      • Cheryl Burfield
      • Spencer Banks
      • Denis Quilley
    • 16User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes26

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season

    Videos27

    Timeslip: The Year Of The Burn Up: Part 4
    Trailer 1:10
    Timeslip: The Year Of The Burn Up: Part 4
    Timeslip: The Year Of The Burn Up: Part 3
    Trailer 1:27
    Timeslip: The Year Of The Burn Up: Part 3
    Timeslip: The Year Of The Burn Up: Part 3
    Trailer 1:27
    Timeslip: The Year Of The Burn Up: Part 3
    Timeslip: The Time Of The Ice Box: Part 1
    Trailer 1:21
    Timeslip: The Time Of The Ice Box: Part 1
    Timeslip: The Time Of The Ice Box: Part 6
    Trailer 1:18
    Timeslip: The Time Of The Ice Box: Part 6
    Timeslip: The Time Of The Ice Box: Part 4
    Trailer 1:04
    Timeslip: The Time Of The Ice Box: Part 4
    Timeslip: The Year Of The Burn Up: Part 1
    Trailer 1:34
    Timeslip: The Year Of The Burn Up: Part 1

    Photos72

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    Top cast41

    Edit
    Cheryl Burfield
    Cheryl Burfield
    • Liz Skinner
    • 1970–1971
    Spencer Banks
    Spencer Banks
    • Simon Randall
    • 1970–1971
    Denis Quilley
    Denis Quilley
    • Commander Charles Traynor
    • 1970–1971
    Iris Russell
    • Jean Skinner
    • 1970–1971
    Derek Benfield
    Derek Benfield
    • Frank Skinner
    • 1970–1971
    Mary Preston
    • Beth Skinner
    • 1970–1971
    Ian Fairbairn
    Ian Fairbairn
    • Alpha 4…
    • 1970–1971
    John Barron
    John Barron
    • Morgan C. Devereaux
    • 1970–1971
    Teri Scoble
    • Alpha 16…
    • 1970–1971
    David Graham
    David Graham
    • 2957
    • 1970–1971
    Merdelle Jordine
    • Vera
    • 1970–1971
    Brian Pettifer
    Brian Pettifer
    • Paul
    • 1970–1971
    John Alkin
    • Young Frank Skinner
    • 1970
    Sandor Elès
    Sandor Elès
    • Captain Gottfried
    • 1970
    John Barcroft
    • Dr. Bukov
    • 1970
    Paul Humpoletz
    • Graz
    • 1970
    Hilary Minster
    • Fritz…
    • 1970
    Royston Tickner
    • George Bradley
    • 1970
    • Creators
      • James Boswell
      • Ruth Boswell
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    7.8253
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    Featured reviews

    Adrian Sweeney

    It's got something

    Kids have adventures back and forth in time. The show had flaws in some ways. In spite of the fact a respectable name is credited as scientific advisor, and a legitimate Scientist Man prefaces several episodes assuring us it's all plausible and trying to explain how it might work, I never did quite get the hang of the rules, and several times it's suggested that they're in effect only hallucinating, which would lower the stakes if true but is surely contradicted by other things. The overall story arc is fairly clearly being made up as they go, and without the slickness with which some modern shows do this, and the ending breezily retcons an early part in a way that made no sense to me.

    But it's very entertaining and just has a certain something about it, perhaps just the charisma of the leads, in particular the kids and Dennis Quilley as the machiavellian Traynor, and some very good scripts, and it fully deserves its enduring cult status. The parts revolving around the children encountering their future selves and not much liking how they've turned out are especially great. There are some good twists and cliffhangers, images that stay with you and much food for thought, and it gets eerily apocalyptic at one point in a way I've rarely come across. Among other highlights is a turn by CJ out of Reginald Perrin as a genuinely chilling and intimidating mad scientist that has to be seen to be believed.
    ericredfearn

    A Sci-Fi Classic

    This was actually released on Video quite a few years ago, and I bought the first three series, but somehow missed out on the fourth. This is a classic children's sci-fi drama which gripped tea time viewers during 1970. Comical in parts, and quite dramatic in others, particularly the cliff hangers which left you waiting for the next episode. Those who love Cult TV would have really enjoyed this. Perhaps now is the time for a re-release, perhaps on DVD.
    9peter-faizey

    Intelligently written, remarkable slice of 1970's television

    Timeslip is one of many science fiction series from the 1970's. However, crucially it is also one of the best, standing the test of time better than say the excruciatingly cheap but entertaining romp that was the Tomorrow People or the imaginative fantasy series The Ace of Wands. Created by Ruth Boswell and husband James Boswell, the series focused on crucial issues in an increasingly technological age and did so all under the banner of a serious children's television drama, which for its time was really quite something. Aimed as a rival to the BBC's Doctor Who, the Boswell's and excellent television writer Bruce Stewart produced something entirely different from what was available on British television at the time. Doomwatch - the gritty and often rather lacklustre series covering moral, social and environmental issues was the only programme that came close to Timeslip at this time, but Timeslip was overall much more successful. The premise of the story - a young girl finding a time barrier at an abandoned naval station - is truly intriguing, add in some atmospheric direction from a team of excellent directors, sparse but brilliantly executed location footage and some solid performances - special note goes to the flawless and concentrated performance of Denis Quilley as Commander Traynor and you have a remarkably entertaining and memorable series. The regulars, intrigued by local gossip about the young girl and drawn to the time barrier were an excellent choice as central characters - as children from 1970 could instantly relate to them. Simon, portrayed by the excellent child actor Spencer Banks is the brainy one, interested in science and maths, with an instinct for discovery he single-handedly figures out all the crucial plot points for the audience to absorb, whilst (rather unfortunately) the naive and whining Liz, played by the admirable Cheryl Burfield, whines a little longer. In this respect the serial has dated - but the concepts and ideas put forward, and its ability to predict many future issues put the series way ahead of its time. Timeslip is quite simply 26 episodes of virtually flawless television. Throw away the minor grumbles about the sexist interpretation of Liz and the opening stories slightly laboured execution and delve in. The Wrong End of Time is a fantastic instalment in which one of our central protagonists encounters her father in a 1940's naval station - coincidentally where the time barrier stands in 1970's England - and with the first appearance of Commander Traynor - a character so crucial to the overall story. The Time of the Ice Box gives viewers a terrible insight into future earth - and Liz's alter ego Beth. One of the strongest stories of all - The Year of the Burn Up gives us an equally bleak presentation of future earth - Buckinghamshire turned into an Amazonian jungle, with the issue of climate change being brought to the fore - and all this occurring as a possible projection (like the Ice Box) of the Earth in 1990. The final story - written by the excellent Victor Pemberton - effortlessly following on from Bruce Stewart - addresses the importance of individuality and the limits of genetic progress - with another appearance of the excellent John Barron as Devereaux and a marvellous final twist concerning the malevolent and untrustworthy Commander Traynor. And so after 26 episodes, the series ended. Could it have ran for another series? ........ Quite possibly - but what we have is truly special, consistently brilliant, consistently thought provoking and remarkably well made for its small budget, skillfully avoiding ambitious special effects and concentrating on character, mood and atmosphere. Timeslip is a slice of television gold - one of the best TV series of its time. So sit back relax, and watch the excellent DVD set of all 26 episodes. Beware though, you might want to adjust your lenses for episode 12! To repeat a hideous, but fitting cliché - they don't make them like this anymore!!!
    gnb

    surprisingly good

    Mention British, science fiction and the 1970s in the same sentence and images of cardboard sets, tin foil monsters and the worst acting in the history of the business may well spring to mind. However, despite never being on a par with the slick, soap-opera style sci-fi serials from the States, the fact that homegrown sci-fi is often cheap and tatty is surely one of its appealing factors.

    However, when looking at the 1970 ATV serial Timeslip, such criticisms, however quaint, are simply not applicable. Solidly acted, well crafted and smartly directed, this whopping great serial, split into 4 distinct stories, is a television treat.

    First screened in 1970 and then repeated once the following year, Timeslip has maintained a loyal fan base despite its lack of exposure on television.

    The series takes an intelligent look at the concept of time travel and the implications of meeting future/past selves. We travel back to a WWII naval station, forward to a Arctic research centre, the heat is turned up in a sweltering tropical jungle before closing the serial in a mixture of 60s and 70s Earth.

    Epic in terms of its length and its concepts, Timselip benefits greatly from a stunning performance by Denis Quilley as Commander Traynor and a remarkably astute turn by Spencer Banks as Simon. Perhaps a drawback of the programme is the incessantly winy and extremely sexist presentation of Liz, played with little flair by Cheryl Burfield.

    After a limited video release in the mid 90s, it is nice to see this wonderful series released on DVD. Although the original series was transmitted in colour, only black and white tele-recordings were maintained in the ATV archives. However, as a special treat, the final episode of The Time of the Ice Box is presented in its original colour format. Somewhat jarring after 11 episodes of grainy black and white, it makes the serial seem somewhat gaudy and bright and maybe this episode might have been best left as a special feature on the disk but all in all, it doesn't detract too much from this intelligent, well thought out serial.
    humphrey-2

    Remembering Timeslip

    I was six when Timeslip was shown, but it has really stayed with me. I am surprised that no-one has published anything about it on the WWW, and yes, I have indeed been sad enough to search for it. Hell, there is even a Double Deckers page, so why not Timeslip!

    Some things I remember are:

    *some episodes were in colour, and others in black and white. Might this be why it has not been reshown?

    *that the scary blary ATV sig tune blended perfectly into the theme music: da-da-da-da-DAAAAAA.....

    *the way Liz and Simon would feel along the gap in the wire netting to find the Time Barrier.

    *thinking how freaky it was when Liz met herself in the future (probably 1988 or something), but that she was called Beth.

    *I used to have the novelisation, and there was also the comic strip version in Look-in (someone needs to do a Look-In website, by the way).

    Does anyone know if Timeslip is available on video? I have never found it and would love to see it again.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The regular cast were very close: Spencer Banks and Cheryl Burfield are still friends (her husband was best man at his wedding), and godparents to each other's children.
    • Connections
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Time Travel TV Shows (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Rite de la Terre
      (uncredited)

      Composed by Eduard Ben-Michael

      De Wolfe Music

      [Series theme tune]

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    FAQ15

    • How many seasons does Timeslip have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 28, 1970 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • The Official Timeslip Website
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Cuffley, Hertfordshire, England, UK
    • Production company
      • Associated Television (ATV)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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