is there a name or a phrase for or anything much written about that distinctly British CREEPY VIBE prevalent in TV shows and movies of the '60s/'70s? (e.g. The Prisoner, Sapphire and Steel, Baker-era

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(with added toyah)

koogs, Friday, 1 April 2022 18:57 (two years ago) link

Is that only on DVD? I see that some of the episodes are on YouTube

It was on my old Netflix DVD queue for several years, but never materialized

Andy the Grasshopper, Friday, 1 April 2022 19:24 (two years ago) link

it is also, for any fall fans, where the LAY LAY LAY LAY intro to Lay of the Land comes from.

i think it may be my favourite of the quatermass series too. brings together a lot of pastoral and science fiction elements. also has simon maccorkindale bawling all his lines at point blank range to his interlocutors ofc.

Fizzles, Monday, 4 April 2022 17:00 (two years ago) link

There's a Region B Blu-Ray of Quatermass IV that includes the chopped down 'TV movie' version:

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47546/the-listeners

I'm coming down to London in a couple of weeks for this Nigel Kneale centenary celebration:

https://www.nigelknealecentenary.com/

Ward Fowler, Monday, 4 April 2022 18:19 (two years ago) link

heh - wrong link!

https://networkonair.com/all-products/2248-quatermass-blu-ray-pre-buy

Ward Fowler, Monday, 4 April 2022 18:20 (two years ago) link

Yeah I scored that blu at a second hand store recently - but was assuming Andy meant "DVD only" as in "not streaming anywhere".

Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 5 April 2022 09:50 (two years ago) link

I watched Quatermass and the Pit yesterday (the original serial). I knew the bit about finding the insectoids in the ship but I thought that was the climax of the whole thing, not the cliffhanger of the middle episode - possibly I watched that episode when it was shown by itself in 1986 - so that was a surprise. The top brass being the bad guys was also unexpected.

Started on IV and wow this is a different thing altogether, heavy Riddley Walker vibes - a book I found hugely depressing.

ledge, Wednesday, 6 April 2022 12:43 (two years ago) link

The initial entry into the Academy might be the hardest part? Or at least the most chaotic (that outdoor area with all the skeletons and dogs).


that is a massive pain in the ricker.
There's a Region B Blu-Ray of Quatermass IV that includes the chopped down 'TV movie' version:

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47546/the-listeners🕸

I'm coming down to London in a couple of weeks for this Nigel Kneale centenary celebration:

https://www.nigelknealecentenary.com🕸/
There's a Region B Blu-Ray of Quatermass IV that includes the chopped down 'TV movie' version:

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/47546/the-listeners🕸

I'm coming down to London in a couple of weeks for this Nigel Kneale centenary celebration:

https://www.nigelknealecentenary.com🕸/


Would’ve been quite keen to go to that but unfortunately don’t think i’ll be able to. i think he is a crucial link in the application of US horror and science fiction to the British pastoral tradition particularly out of fin-de-siecle ghost and horror writing. episodes of beasts, the quatermass work and the year of the sex olympics are incredible.

Fizzles, Wednesday, 6 April 2022 14:11 (two years ago) link

This YT channel is a good little resource for obscure TV from past decades, found some mad Canadian sci-fi series with Kier Dullea.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCk78MjZcIF

Maresn3st, Wednesday, 6 April 2022 14:19 (two years ago) link

Okay fuckit, it's called - 50's Sleaze, 60's Ease & 70's Cheese From London

Maresn3st, Wednesday, 6 April 2022 14:20 (two years ago) link

That's a shame Fizzles, would've been v cool to see you there. You don't mention The Stone Tape in your note, which is possibly my favourite because it really does foreground folk tradition v modern technology so well, and Jane Asher being there to introduce it on the Saturday was enough to sell me a ticket.

BFI are just about to reissue his 1984 adaptation on disc:

https://shop.bfi.org.uk/nineteen-eighty-four-dual-format-edition.html

And I keep meaning to pick up The Crunch disc from Network, which rounds up three different one-offs:

https://networkonair.com/features/2019/10/31/lesser-known-nigel-kneale/

Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 6 April 2022 14:34 (two years ago) link

It occurred to me today that Arthur C Clarke's Childhood's End (1953) has a couple of elements seen in Quatermasses Pit & IV - racial memory of demonic looking aliens, and a kind of alien induced mass hypnosis of children.

Also was surprised to see the figure in The Pit with sixfold symmetry (sevenfold in the film) described as a pentacle - then was delighted to learn (via Wikipedia) that traditionally a pentacle can be any kind of magical symbol and is probably etymologically related to pendant (and [pit and the] pendulum!) , not greek penta/5.

ledge, Wednesday, 6 April 2022 20:25 (two years ago) link

I was going to say 'The Crunch is excellent although you probably don't need' then reminding myself what's on it I remembered all three are great in their own way. The Gentlemen's club one is the most predictable, the gentrification one the most contrived but they're all very watchable.

The Stone Tape is probably my favourite Kneale and The Witches is his best adaptation.

Long enough attention span for a Stephen Bissette blu-ray extra (aldo), Wednesday, 6 April 2022 22:15 (two years ago) link

Is that only on DVD? I see that some of the episodes are on YouTube

Quatermass IV is easily findable on archive.org, as is Quatermass and the Pit. Otherwise finding some of this stuff to stream, legally or otherwise, is annoyingly difficult, I would have thought that some of the ones released on DVD in the last few years (Penda's Fen, Robin Redbreast) might be available somewhere but apparently not.

ledge, Thursday, 7 April 2022 13:00 (two years ago) link

The Stone Tape is of course also a parable about the superiority of physical media.

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 7 April 2022 14:06 (two years ago) link

Ha! Maybe he was bitter at the loss of the first Quatermass serial.

ledge, Thursday, 7 April 2022 14:22 (two years ago) link

One final Quatermass IV thing - watch out for a poor extra getting seriously knocked over by the van when they try to escape the stone circle in Ep 1, 47 minutes in.

ledge, Thursday, 7 April 2022 14:36 (two years ago) link

_Is that only on DVD? I see that some of the episodes are on YouTube_

Quatermass IV is easily findable on archive.org, as is Quatermass and the Pit. Otherwise finding some of this stuff to stream, legally or otherwise, is annoyingly difficult, I would have thought that some of the ones released on DVD in the last few years (Penda's Fen, Robin Redbreast) might be available somewhere but apparently not.


Robin Redbreast is available via the BFI catalogue on Amazon iirc.

Fizzles, Thursday, 7 April 2022 16:15 (two years ago) link

And I think Artemis 81 is available in its entirety on youtube? yep.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Rn7LmYfiD8

Fizzles, Thursday, 7 April 2022 16:17 (two years ago) link

Ah right, I did look on the BFI site - definitely not available there - and I tried to look on Amazon but for some reason it's not easy to search these things if you're not signed up. Penda's Fen may be available on Britbox via Amazon but I couldn't confirm this either.

ledge, Thursday, 7 April 2022 16:21 (two years ago) link

it does puzzle me that they think people will sign up before they can see what they're signing up for.

i can only find britbox US links, nothing in the UK. as you said it was reissued a couple of years ago, i think mine was ÂŁ5 from fopp. (just don't ask me where it is)

koogs, Thursday, 7 April 2022 16:31 (two years ago) link

pendas fen isn’t available there afaict. odd about robin redbreast, it comes up when i search but… i’m not sure if it’s *actually* via the BFI catalogue or just a general “available to buy” thing.

anyway still amazes me how patchily available a lot of these things are.

and yes, got The Stone Tape on dvd - it’s v strong in terms of the themes, though for some reason it didn’t quite do it for me overall. maybe a rewatch is due.

Fizzles, Thursday, 7 April 2022 16:35 (two years ago) link

that last bit a belated response to ward fowler!

Fizzles, Thursday, 7 April 2022 16:35 (two years ago) link

The Stone Tape is verrry hammy in places, more so than the usual amount of charming ham you get with most of these pieces. But the good bits make it incredibly special, imo.

emil.y, Thursday, 7 April 2022 17:07 (two years ago) link

I was looking at a blog that focuses on this kind of thing but with a broader remit - http://www.wyrdbritain.co.uk/ - and found two shows I'd never heard of before: Leap in the Dark (BBC) and Shades of Darkness (ITV), the former featuring Russell Hoban and Alan Garner as writers, the latter dramatising classic tales and probably more straightforwardly supernatural than the stuff in this thread. Perhaps forgotten for good reason, certainly I'm not particularly keen to give them a go, but maybe of interest to others here.

ledge, Thursday, 7 April 2022 17:49 (two years ago) link

Hoban and Garner??? OK, am intrigued.

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Friday, 8 April 2022 02:26 (two years ago) link

Here's a more helpful link: http://www.wyrdbritain.co.uk/search/label/Leap%20in%20the%20Dark

ledge, Friday, 8 April 2022 07:22 (two years ago) link

the Hoban and Garner episodes are on youtube

Number None, Friday, 8 April 2022 08:34 (two years ago) link

Artemis 81, um, not for me. Far far too deeply embedded in its niche, too ponderous and obscure and too much unsaid for my liking - of course what is left unsaid can be a major aspect of this genre and what can seem to one person vague or empty can to another seem loaded with implicit or potential meaning. I did lol when i was wondering what, if anything, it all meant, and Harlax said "a story is a sequence of fictitious events! how can it mean?" - and then Gwen proceeded on a long expository speech explaining precisely what it meant - well, one aspect of it anyway.

The strange city probably the best bit, though unfortunately too dark in the youtube version. Reminiscent of Lanark I think, though it's a long time since I read that. Note that if you do watch the youtube version, there's a somewhat important scene missing at 1:54, which can be found on another full version on youtube in even worse quality.)

ledge, Friday, 8 April 2022 13:06 (two years ago) link

I watched the first half of Artemis 81 at original broadcast but it annoyed the fuck out of my dad, o got sent to bed and I've never watched the second half

I mean he was probably otm but this is my memory

a spectre is haunting your mom (Noodle Vague), Friday, 8 April 2022 21:01 (two years ago) link

quatermass xperiment on tptv tonight

koogs, Tuesday, 12 April 2022 18:00 (two years ago) link

i liked artemis 81 but it is ponderous af. the simultaneous suicides is a good sinister opening, and the alternate city also good. there are many laboured bits and im not sure it really makes any sense but the whole thing seems so wild as a thing to get from mind to screen im delighted it exists.

Fizzles, Tuesday, 12 April 2022 18:49 (two years ago) link

Yes, any air of mystery it has for me is nothing to do with the content and all to do with "how did this ever get made?", and though I didn't particularly enjoy it I don't mean that at all disparagingly.

When I get back from hols I'll start on the other Nigel Kneales on youtube, and see about getting hold of Robin Redbreast, and Penda's Fen for a second viewing.

ledge, Tuesday, 12 April 2022 19:24 (two years ago) link

I enjoyed it at the time, my mate was over (I guess his family wasn't going to watch it), my mum (fairs fair it's her house) and maybe my sister..

I don't remember much of it, there was a foreign town which was supposedly hell or purgatory or some such, although it looked like Prague or some such..

I've not seen it since, and I don't remember seeing it available on video or dvd etc. Unless it's just you lot have good memories!

Mark G, Tuesday, 12 April 2022 19:43 (two years ago) link

Oh there it is, upthread on YouTube!

Mark G, Tuesday, 12 April 2022 19:45 (two years ago) link

I watched Penda's Fen for the first time last night. It's weird how certain obsessions can revolve around a text you've not read or a film you've not seen and this is right up there for that - a kind of ur-text for landscape mysticism or whatever you might want to call it. What a beautifully strange film. This is undoubtedly recency bias but I've convinced myself the landscape shots in Joanna Hogg's The Souvenir are homages to Penda's Fen. Something in the hovering stillness, the interaction with the voiceovers.

One person I've not seen mentioned here is Derek Jarman. Something about the way he shot landscape and blended ideas of disobedience, oppression and that sense of the ungovernable chimes with Penda (and Hogg, who worked for Jarman in the 80s). I first saw his A Journey to Avebury in a gallery and couldn't take my eyes of it. It's stayed with me and I can't really say why.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yalyDdSGn-I

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Tuesday, 19 April 2022 10:16 (two years ago) link

Just in case anyone was still thinking of attending the Nigel Kneale fest on Saturday, it's apparently sold out now.

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 21 April 2022 18:44 (two years ago) link

Watched By Our Selves yesterday, which sort of fits here. It's an Andrew Kotting film from 2015, tracing one of his and Iain Sinclair's obsessions: John Clare's escape from the asylum in Epping Forest and his subsequent four-day odyssey back to Helpston to find the love of his life, Mary Joyce (who'd been dead three years, incidentally). It's black and white, features a silent moon-faced Toby Jones as Clare on his hopeless walk, and also Jones' dad - who played Clare in a TV play in the early 70s - reading some of Clare's accounts of the walk. It does start to feel its 80 minutes by the end but it has something about it. It's on Amazon Prime if that's your thing.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Sunday, 24 April 2022 10:39 (two years ago) link

Did anyone go to the Kneale thing in the end? Any good?

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Sunday, 24 April 2022 10:40 (two years ago) link

By Our Selves sounds good, will steal

Number One shlong in Devon (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 24 April 2022 10:54 (two years ago) link

I think I should give that a go too.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Sunday, 24 April 2022 11:48 (two years ago) link

rewatched penda's fen ahead of listening to the Uncanny Hour podcast thing that robin ince does (or maybe did, i an over a year behind). still don't know what to think (and it was ÂŁ6 rather than 5 from fopp but was a blu ray)

koogs, Sunday, 24 April 2022 23:16 (two years ago) link

Did anyone go to the Kneale thing in the end? Any good?

I did and it was good. Well organised etc. I think for a lot of the attendees, myself included, it was the first affair of this kind they'd been to since lockdown so the overall vibe was friendly, positive, upbeat. A celebration of Kneale rather than a rigorous critical interrogation, although most of the speakers had good things to say and there some genuinely funny moments. I learned some things I didn't know before (a lost tv one-off called Chopper with Patrick Troughton and an evil motorbike; Kneale working on a TV adaptation of Brian Aldiss's Non-Stop!) The lost radio play reading wasn't the absolute worst of its kind I'd seen, but it went on too long and was undermiked (the main technical flaw of the day).

I knew all the films/ tv progs on the bill, although it was nice to see them on a big screen. Larger projection did really reveal the limitations of BBC budgets. The special effects in the Stone Tape are just really shoddy, even for the time.

I was utterly ambushed by unexpected emotion when they introduced Jane Asher with a clip from the first Quatermass movie - I'd totally forgotten that she was the little girl who gets her dolly broken by the space man-monster, very nearly 70 years ago. It's all about time, innit.

Ward Fowler, Monday, 25 April 2022 22:58 (two years ago) link

I watched By Our Selves. I only really enjoyed the documentary bits, most everything else seemed a tad sterile to me. I knew nothing about John Clare so I would have enjoyed a straight documentary more. I'm curious about the director's other film This Filthy Earth.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Tuesday, 26 April 2022 17:18 (two years ago) link

Cool little BBC feature on Quartermass:

https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20220427-quatermass-the-terrifying-sci-fi-that-changed-tv-forever

Andy the Grasshopper, Thursday, 28 April 2022 17:08 (two years ago) link

oh, i have a question.

what if anything does this have to do with ^ that quatermass? is there a wider meaning of the name?

https://dockstader.bandcamp.com/album/tod-dockstader-quatermass

koogs, Thursday, 28 April 2022 17:47 (two years ago) link

Kneale got Quatermass from the phone book - one of the researchers at that centenary thing said they'd even tracked down the particular phone book in question, with a Mrs Quatermass listed.

Don't know how Dockstader came by that name tho

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 28 April 2022 17:53 (two years ago) link

six months pass...

Going to do The Edge of Darkness here, even though it doesn't fit for a number of reasons – it doesn't have the CREEPY VIBE and it's from 1985. tho I think it's closer to the type than it looks on first inspection. Apologies, I couldn't be bothered to work round SPOILERS, so all spoilers I guess. You should watch this though. It's incredible.

BOB. PECK.
The line from Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy about Jim Prideaux being made 'by the same firm that did Stonehenge' applies perfectly to Bob Peck. He seems bigger even than Joe Don Baker, which if you've seen Charley Varrick sounds like a hell of a statement. Wikipedia tells me he's actually an inch shorter at 6'1". still, Bob Peck looks he doesn't need to move for anyone and this makes his placidity potent and his portrayal of grief feel subterranean, a huge, implacable motive force. He's very still. This is all very important for his symbolic role, I think. The direction and editing show his mild eyes noticing everything. Other people spar off him, weighing him up with uncertain glances, unclear about his meaning and purpose.

The Sources of Information
This is very noticeable watching it now. It's in a middle place between computer databases and everything still being on a hard copy somewhere. Phone calls still needed. Having to go to places to collect information. It made me wonder how modern writers manage to move their characters about at all. What is the motivation to move someone from one place to another when an awful lot of essential information can be garnered online. It becomes more esoteric. Less about necessity.

This is from a time just before that conundrum is posed, so that phone calls and rendezvous and travel are all required. People may not be contactable when you need them. How Craven navigates the world of information is interesting. Detection doesn't happen as such – he is just *driven* (as Jedburgh says of him in the final episode) to acquire whatever he needs to get to the centre of the web. Craven finds recordings, notes, interrogates, interviews, a computer database, he uses psychic contact with his dead daughter, Emma, and talks to himself, he exists in a web of surveillance, data security and information secrecy, odd secret service functions. Colleagues consider him on the edge of sanity – one version of the 'edge of darkness' at play – and he himself wonders what territories he is walking in, especially when he loses the link with his Emma. It is becomes increasingly clear his role as a policeman is becoming entirely absorbed by an emotional quest. Quest? Yes, the motives behind the drive are sexualised, animistic, mythic, arthurian.

Sexualisation
His daughter, the absence of the mother, there's something going on here. You notice it in the car in the first episode - it's not entirely clear whether she's his daughter or his young girlfriend. It's in the notorious and powerful episode where he sniffs his dead daughter's dildo, working his way round her bedroom, trying to find, recover, feel her presence.

then there's his very peculiar interrogation technique, of one of the pair who was involved in her death, in the hospital where the mother died. He whispers tenderly and softly to the unconscious terrorist, near death, comforting and sensuously courting him, in order to get the information he needs.

So much!
It's super super dense, the writing, the direction, the acting - it all contains so much. the politics of energy and post-industrial environment, nature v humankind, a psychological portrait of grief, a nuclear era psychomachia - these themes in particular link this to something like Penda's Fen or Quatermass – all connected with Thatcherism, London, mining, masculinity. High relevant to emusk for example. But also the faces in this are alive with abrasive interaction, power plays, sizing each other up. There's an extremely memorable moment where we cut from Jedburgh (Joe Don Baker) in a combat jacket, running around in crisis mode, to him standing, cheerfully grinng, raising a stetson to a sworn enemy flying in from the States. People are not what they seem and are willing to play parts in the dance that's taking place. ie this programme doesn't take its viewers for fools, thank god.

As a by the bye – there's nothing like this era tv ('70s, '80s) for better conveying a grey London in the rain.

psycho psycho machia

so yeah about that. Jedburgh is basically Christianity; that's fairly heavily trailed. He is of course an extraordinary character – Chestertonian in his Christian exuberance to do good, a rather militant good, and to live life and kill enemy. He is clearly co-opted by state authority in the beginning, but recognises this and breaks from it into a sort of Manichean entity, driven to bring about Armageddon. Holding up the plutonium in his extended hands in the form of a cross at the conference. Craven is, as Jedburgh himself says, 'freeze-dried from some earlier epoch'. His an animistic world, variously portrayed as a tree and a stag. He represents the earth, and the Gaia theory, and survival beyond nuclear war. Pastoral v Nuclear makes it very much of that period of drama. And It's interesting to see this conversation – of nature being part of and surviving within the ambit of human's capitalistic behaviour – worked through by The Mushroom at the End of the World by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing.

How the show contains all this in an integrated way is something else that adds to its density, makes it potent like v good whisky.

i haven't seen the hollywood remake, though i'd like to, once i've rewatched this a couple of times.

Fizzles, Sunday, 27 November 2022 16:55 (one year ago) link

Thanks Fizzles, a perceptive and insightful post as always! No it doesn't have the creepy vibe that this thread is all about but I think it's adjacent. The creepiness of the shows in this thread is obviously supernatural, whereas edge of darkness is trading on the very real idea of nuclear terror, which it does it subtly and creepily (the occasional shots of trains of nuclear waste rattling through the night) as well as much more explicitly (sluicing the tunnels with radioactive water, the dead body in the radiation suit at the hot cell). And not to throw the net of creepiness too wide but there's the idea of higher powers (governmental or extra governmental) always watching even when you don't know it - AZURE!

I have to say Jedburgh = Christianity passed me by on my previous viewings, if I rewatch I'll look out for it. I guess I would have characterised him as chaotic neutral.

I have no interest in seeing mel gibson's remake.

ledge, Monday, 28 November 2022 08:54 (one year ago) link

i do think there's an explicitly supernatural element, but yes, this is firmly in the nuclear space. there's a few things that cause me to locate it perhaps more closely to the vibe that might seem appropriate, but they're all fairly subliminal.

- the spring magically appearing where his daughter dies (Jedburgh quotes Hamlet when he sees it: 'Oh Jepthah, Judge of Israel, what a treasure hadst thou' which suggests biblical allusion on his part, but it can also be read as a sacred grove).
- the figuring of craven out of policeman into an avatar of nature, and his final mystical transformation into a stag (it's how he's last seen, and we only hear how he just disappears at the same time as a distant cry)
- the daughter as just on the edge of psychic projection and autonomous ghost
- christianity v nature worship allegory (if you do watch it again i'm interested in your thoughts – there are various key moments throughout, the co-opting and working with the state in the first place, but becoming a radical millenarian by an end seems to me deliberately allegorical)

i guess you could see it as a reverse of penda's fen, where nuclear and military appropriation and potential destruction of the land are a meaningful backdrop to the supernatural events. in this it's the reverse, the supernatural is a deep, unemphasised background to the nuclear and energy political thriller.

Fizzles, Monday, 28 November 2022 09:19 (one year ago) link


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