Anthology series of scary stories for children.Anthology series of scary stories for children.Anthology series of scary stories for children.
- Nominated for 2 BAFTA Awards
- 2 nominations total
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
There was another episode where two boys were kept in after school and they answered a questionnaire with exactly the same answers. And one about kids in a railway waiting station that went back in time.
My sister and I had to hide behind the couch often during the show as we were so scared.
Anyone know how to get a copy? My sister and I have been searching for this for years.
I think it's Thames Television that produced the 3 series but there are very few references on the web.
The one where the girl goes small - she is looking at a doll house in a museum and goes inside of that.
In the one with the Dad in motorcycle helmet there is a vase with an eye that turned around and I think this was what "possessed" him.
My sister and I had to hide behind the couch often during the show as we were so scared.
Anyone know how to get a copy? My sister and I have been searching for this for years.
I think it's Thames Television that produced the 3 series but there are very few references on the web.
The one where the girl goes small - she is looking at a doll house in a museum and goes inside of that.
In the one with the Dad in motorcycle helmet there is a vase with an eye that turned around and I think this was what "possessed" him.
Currently being reaired in the UK be the Talking Pictures TV channel. Taking into account it dates from the early 70's, I watched it objectively (so forget any special effects!).
Interesting to see a number of actors and actresses before they became famous.
Some stories are stronger than others, ranging from very good to very poor. S2 ep6 "The Eye" is an example of the latter. The least said the better.
A series well worth a view, if only for the few memorable episodes, rather than the forgettable others. This in mind gave it a mid-way 5 star score.
Interesting to see a number of actors and actresses before they became famous.
Some stories are stronger than others, ranging from very good to very poor. S2 ep6 "The Eye" is an example of the latter. The least said the better.
A series well worth a view, if only for the few memorable episodes, rather than the forgettable others. This in mind gave it a mid-way 5 star score.
The first two series were very good for children and adults alike. I loved seeing the future stars of stage and screen including Jenny Agutter, Pauline Quirke and Sophie Ward and a few who became Children's TV presenters. The third series was pretty awful. Bad acting, stories and a lot of green screen scenes. It turned into a pantomime or even a parody of itself. It just became too silly for a fourth series to be made.
I had never heard of this series before, having been born after all three series were broadcast. I read about the series online and was lucky to come across it. The series is very much in keeping with British Horror and Suspense works from the 1970s and early 1980s. Overall there are three series, two of seven episodes each and one of six. Each of the three series begins with different title credits and I noticed that series one appears studio-bound whilst the other two series make great use of location filming as well. Each episode lasting roughly 24 mins which creates a nice pace in which to show a concept, some stories realised much better than others. The series benefits from some strong scripts, generally top-notch acting from both the junior and adult casts, and from some nice production values. Each series has a range in quality between episodes, however there is on the whole a deep sense that even the lesser episodes were aiming for individualism and creativity. Episodes which fall into this category are those such as 'Dutch Schlitz's shoes' and 'The eye'. Overall a nice series with some episodes which are very memorable.
A wonderful collection of atmospheric tales of the Supernatural penned by the likes of J.B. Priestley and Roger Marshall not to mention Ace of Wands creator Trevor Preston.
Featuring tales of long dead witches, ghosts from the future and my personal favorite featuring a very young Pauline Quirke a story about 3 teenagers and a old haunted Tudor mansion.
There are all 7 episodes of the first series shot in 1975 on the network DVD release. Some great actors feature like Jenny Agutter, Russell Hunter John Nettleton and a very young Sophie Ward.
Some stories stronger than others; but series one is by far the best. Sadly the writing became poorer and the acting hammier in later series.
But takes you back to the day's before children's TV became Americanised, patronizing and bland.
Featuring tales of long dead witches, ghosts from the future and my personal favorite featuring a very young Pauline Quirke a story about 3 teenagers and a old haunted Tudor mansion.
There are all 7 episodes of the first series shot in 1975 on the network DVD release. Some great actors feature like Jenny Agutter, Russell Hunter John Nettleton and a very young Sophie Ward.
Some stories stronger than others; but series one is by far the best. Sadly the writing became poorer and the acting hammier in later series.
But takes you back to the day's before children's TV became Americanised, patronizing and bland.
Did you know
- TriviaThe episode "Honeyann" was written by best-selling novelist Fay Weldon, author of "Loves of a She-Devil."
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content