Force of Life
"Force of Life" | |
---|---|
Space: 1999 episode | |
Episode no. | Series 1 Episode 2 |
Directed by | David Tomblin |
Written by | Johnny Byrne |
Editing by | Alan Killick |
Production code | 9 |
Original air date | 11 September 1975[1] |
Guest appearances | |
| |
"Force of Life" is the second episode of the first series of Space: 1999. The screenplay was written by Johnny Byrne; the director was David Tomblin. The original title was "Force of Evil". The shooting script is dated 15 May 1974; the final shooting script is dated 24 May 1974. Live-action filming began Wednesday 29 May 1974 through Friday 7 June 1974. After a three-week hiatus, filming resumed Monday 1 July 1974 through Friday 5 July 1974;[2] the hiatus was planned, as the Landaus' contract guaranteed them time off for a summer holiday.[3]
Plot
[edit]This article needs an improved plot summary. (May 2019) |
The body of Anton Zoref is invaded by an unknown life-force. The man soon manifests an uncontrollable ability to absorb heat. As the Alphans struggle to understand this mysterious force, Zoref's need becomes insatiable. Driven by instinct, he freezes Mark Dominix, Hilary Preston and the security guard dead until he makes his way to the greatest source of heat on Alpha— one of its Nuclear Generating Plants. As Zoref himself is killed by a hand laser to prevent him from attacking Commander Koenig, the laser only strengthens the starving force long enough to enable it to enter one of Alpha's reactor cores and feed off of the power of the nuclear energy generating plant. This causes a massive explosion. The force leaves Moonbase Alpha and Eva, Anton's wife, grieves as she thinks about her life with Zoref.
Regular cast
[edit]- Martin Landau — Commander John Koenig
- Barbara Bain — Doctor Helena Russell
- Barry Morse — Professor Victor Bergman
- Prentis Hancock — Controller Paul Morrow
- Clifton Jones — David Kano
- Zienia Merton — Sandra Benes
- Anton Phillips — Doctor Bob Mathias
- Nick Tate — Captain Alan Carter
- Suzanne Roquette — Tanya (uncredited)
Music
[edit]To highlight the utterly alien nature of the unknown life-force, the regular Barry Gray score was replaced by abstract electronic compositions drawn from the music library. Those featured were 'Cosmic Sounds No. 1', 'Cosmic Sounds No. 2' and 'Cosmic Sounds No. 3' by Georges Teperino and 'Videotronic No. 3' by Cecil Leuter. Another synthesised music track, 'The Latest Fashion' by Giampiero Boneschi, was used as the piped music heard throughout the Solarium scenes.[4]
Production
[edit]Johnny Byrne recalls that the original story idea featured a malevolent alien force (hence the previous title "Force of Evil"). During a story conference with executive producer Gerry Anderson, Byrne rethought the concept, with both men agreeing the entity should instead be following an evolutionary imperative unconnected to human emotion or understanding. To emphasise the truly alien aspect of the life-force, Bryne set the action against the very human domestic life of Anton and Eva Zoref.[5] ITC executives insisted Byrne add the sequence where Koenig and Bergman speculate the entity's evolutionary cycle might be that of a developing star, hoping to provide some explanation for its actions.[2]
Byrne attributes the episode's success to the directorial style of David Tomblin. Tomblin would employ a number of unusual camera-angles and lens techniques to enhance the eerie quality inherent in the tale. After completing "Force of Life", Tomblin (one of three directors employed by the series on a rotating basis along with Ray Austin and Charles Crichton), would take a sabbatical from Space: 1999 to serve as assistant director for the feature film Barry Lyndon.[2] He would be replaced for three installments by director Bob Kellett.
This episode was taken to task by critics who accused Space: 1999 of being poorly plotted and/or deliberately enigmatic. While appearing on an American news programme, Martin Landau was confronted by a fellow guest personality, actor Buster Crabbe (star of the 1930s Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers serials). Having watched "Force of Life" and not understood the story, Crabbe demanded Landau explain what the alien force represented; to the delight of the series' detractors, Landau responded he had no idea.[6]
Novelisation
[edit]The episode was adapted in the third Year One Space: 1999 novel The Space Guardians by Brian Ball, published in 1975. Ball's adaptation is true to the story, but some liberties are taken: (1) Suffering from a bout of depression, Koenig has become a recluse after his experience on Zenno (as seen in "Missing Link"). He is seen convalescing in his quarters and experiencing migraine when thinking of his lost love Vana. This crisis eventually forces him out of his fugue state; (2) The approaching entity does not employ a paralysing force in the adaptation. The Alphans attempt to blast it with nuclear missiles before it joins with the unfortunate Zoref; (3) While harbouring the entity, Zoref undergoes a gradual physical transformation into a shambling, thick-skulled humanoid creature.[7]
References
[edit]- ^ Fanderson - The Original Gerry Anderson Website. Original ATV Midlands broadcast date
- ^ a b c Destination: Moonbase Alpha, Telos Publications, 2010
- ^ Anecdotes & Armadillos, Lulu Enterprises, 2005
- ^ "Force of Life" episode guide; Fanderson - The Official Gerry Anderson website
- ^ Johnny Byrne interview re: "Force of Life"; Space: 1999 website 'The Catacombs', Martin Willey
- ^ Exploring Space: 1999, McFarland & Company, Inc., 1997
- ^ Space: 1999 - The Space Guardians, Futura Publications, 1975