Sixty years ago today.
Author
Discussion

Ifinishposts

Original Poster:

1,593 posts

155 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
The first episode of Thunderbirds was aired.

tumble dryer

2,233 posts

145 months

Tuesday
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Ifinishposts said:
The first episode of Thunderbirds was aired.
Pahh, Fireball XL5 was where it was at!

Risonax

449 posts

34 months

Wednesday
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BBC did a piece where one of their reporters dressed up in a Thunderbirds outfit, with Captain Scarlet music. Oops.

I hadn't realised what "Supermarionation" was. I thought it was just a gimmick, satirising Technicolor, but no, it was some electronic mechanics to sync lip movement to recorded speech. The solenoids were fitted to the puppets' heads, giving them big heads. With Captain Scarlet, the solenoids were moved to the chest, allowing a more realistic head size. Clever stuff, British Boffinish.

The0perator

400 posts

47 months

Wednesday
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Risonax said:
BBC did a piece where one of their reporters dressed up in a Thunderbirds outfit, with Captain Scarlet music. Oops.

I hadn't realised what "Supermarionation" was. I thought it was just a gimmick, satirising Technicolor, but no, it was some electronic mechanics to sync lip movement to recorded speech. The solenoids were fitted to the puppets' heads, giving them big heads. With Captain Scarlet, the solenoids were moved to the chest, allowing a more realistic head size. Clever stuff, British Boffinish.
It is interesting how it all came about... certainly of an era

NDA

23,606 posts

243 months

Wednesday
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It's odd how the memories from watching those episodes in the 1960's are still perfectly clear.

I used to collect (sort of) the Captain Scarlet bubble gum cards - the bubble gum itself was a fairly large pink sheet, quite odd really. The images from those cards (with sharks, being compressed in a room with spikes, grabbing a vine whilst submerged in a swamp, falling from a skyscraper etc) are very accurately stored in my memory.

I occasionally watch the Thunderbirds on YouTube, it is strangely comforting to be transported back to a world where nothing has changed.

vixen1700

26,623 posts

288 months

Wednesday
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Talking Pictures recently showed all the Captain Scarlet episodes.

Fantastic stuff and pretty dark for us kids watching it at the time. cool

eps

6,586 posts

287 months

Wednesday
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tumble dryer said:
Ifinishposts said:
The first episode of Thunderbirds was aired.
Pahh, Fireball XL5 was where it was at!
Okay Steve

rdjohn

6,780 posts

213 months

Wednesday
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Sadly, I am old enough to remember Gerry Anderson first attempts, Torchy the Battery Boy and Four Feather Falls of 1959 and 1960. Followed by Supercar and Fireball XL5 with Sylvia on board.

Thunderbirds moved the whole thing on, I was getting a bit old, but my brother had all the Merchandise, which probably was a big step at the time. I think Star Wars made more from it than the film.

Great memories.


gt40steve

1,116 posts

122 months

Wednesday
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Display at the Slough Trading Estate Museum. Home to so many good things.






GAjon

3,937 posts

231 months

Wednesday
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But, why didn’t they just plant them palm trees a couple of feet further from the runway?

johnymac

336 posts

189 months

Yesterday (11:57)
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Where's the fun in that?

stumpage

2,176 posts

244 months

Yesterday (12:11)
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GAjon said:
But, why didn t they just plant them palm trees a couple of feet further from the runway?
To make it look like the massive Thunderbird 2 couldn't possibly land on the runway used for Jeff's private jet.

jet_noise

5,939 posts

200 months

Yesterday (14:35)
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tumble dryer said:
Ifinishposts said:
The first episode of Thunderbirds was aired.
Pahh, Fireball XL5 was where it was at!
I see your Fireball and raise Supercar /PH mode!
( Better theme to Fireball, mindsmile )

Granadier

941 posts

45 months

Yesterday (15:05)
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There are loads of documentary videos on YouTube on how the Gerry Anderson shows were developed and made, featuring interviews with the special effects people, voice actors and puppeteers (though some of these videos incorporate bits of each other, so you find stuff repeated). Surprisingly ingenious but also surprisingly simple at times. The runway palm trees were fixed into a couple of broom handles at ground level that were rotated by hand.

The only Anderson series I saw new was Terrahawks but also a lot of reruns of Thunderbirds, Stingray and Joe 90. Joe 90 was a strange one, a little boy sent on dangerous military/spy missions, and when at home his only company was adult men. I wasn't so fond of Captain Scarlet, I felt all the characters looked too similar and didn't have so much personality.

Blib

46,450 posts

215 months

rdjohn said:
Sadly, I am old enough to remember Gerry Anderson first attempts, Torchy the Battery Boy and Four Feather Falls of 1959 and 1960. Followed by Supercar and Fireball XL5 with Sylvia on board.

Thunderbirds moved the whole thing on, I was getting a bit old, but my brother had all the Merchandise, which probably was a big step at the time. I think Star Wars made more from it than the film.

Great memories.
Anderson and his team were involved in Twizzle, which pre-dates Torchy.

Sadly, only the first Twizzle episode survives.