| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
After the success of the two previous Quatermass serials The Quatermass Experiment ( 1953) and Quatermass IIQuatermass II is a British television science-fiction serial, the second in the popular and influential Quatermass series written by Nigel Kneale. It was first transmitted on BBC Television in the autumn of 1955, and is the first of the Quatermass serials ( 19551955 is a common year starting on Saturday. see link for calendar) Events January events January 2 Panama president Jose Antonio Remon is assassinated. January 19 The Scrabble board game debuts. February events February 8 Nikolai Bulganin ousts Georgi Mal) the BBC were more than willing for Kneale, now a freelance writer and not on the BBC staff, to pen a third instalment in the series. Since Quatermass II Kneale had been working mostly in film, penning the screenplay adaptations of his own television serials The Creature (as The Abominable Snowman) and Quatermass II (as Quatermass 21957 advertising poster for the film's UK release. Quatermass 2 (also known as Quatermass II is a British science-fiction / horror film, produced by the famous Hammer company and released in 1957. It is based on the BBC Television serial Quatermass II and), and John OsborneJohn James Osborne ( December 12, 1929 December 24, 1994) was a British playwright, the first of the Angry Young Men of the 1950s. He was born in London, the son of a copywriter. He was educated at Belmont College, Devon but was expelled after attacking t's play Look Back in AngerLook Back in Anger ( 1956) is a play by John Osborne. It was originally produced at London's Royal Court Theatre, with the press release calling the author an " angry young man", a phrase which came to represent a new movement in 1950s British theatre.. For Quatermass and the Pit, he was reunited once again with director Rudolph CartierRudolph Cartier (born Rudolph Katscher on April 17 1904 in Vienna, Austria-Hungary; died June 8 1994 in London, England, UK) was an Austrian television director, who worked almost exclusively in British television for the BBC. Cartier initially trained as, who had helmed the previous two Quatermass serials as well as many other Kneale scripts for the BBC. It was to be the final collaboration between the two, who had formed the most successful writer/director partnership in British television of the 1950s.
Quatermass and the Pit built on the already popular status of the Quatermass character and created a story that enthralled much of the television-watching public: for many years it was stated that the final episode famously "emptied the pubs" as enthusiastic viewers rushed home to watch. It helped to popularise the science-fiction genre on television in the UK, and make it a respectable and adult format. The serial is also notable for the distinctive electronic wailing noise that accompanies alien phenomena, which was created by the then newly-formed BBC Radiophonic WorkshopThe BBC Radiophonic Workshop the sound special effects unit of the BBC was created in 1958 to produce sound effects for radio and was closed in 2001. It was based in Maida Vale in London. The techniques initially used by the Radiophonic Workshop were clos.
As with the previous two serials and in common with most other television drama of the day, Quatermass and the Pit was transmitted live, from the BBC's Lime Grove StudiosLime Grove Studios was a film studio complex built by the Gaumont Film Company in 1915 situated in a street named Lime Grove, near Hammersmith, west London and described by Gaumont as "the finest studio in Great Britain and the first building ever put up in London. However, it also had a large amount of pre-filming work carried out on external location and, for complex sequences not easily achievable in the confines of a live television studio, at Ealing Studios. For these filmed sequences, Cartier employed the services of the BBC's experienced film cameraman A. A. Englander, who was at the time one of the top film cameramen working in the UK. As usual, the pre-filmed sequences would be played into the live transmission as and where required.
The serial was broadcast over six Saturday evenings from December 22 1958 to January 26 1959. Although all six episodes The Halfmen, The Ghosts, Imps and Demons, The Enchanted, The Wild Hunt and Hob were written as half-hour instalments, each was given a thirty-five minute timeslot due to the overruns most of the episodes of the previous two Quatermass serials had gone into. All six episodes were scheduled in an 8.008.35pm timeslot.
As each episode was being transmitted it was telerecorded onto 35mm film, and these telerecordings proved to be of exceptionally good quality. Keen to take an example of what it felt to be an important piece of television, the British Film Institute took prints of these telerecordings, all of which survive in the BBC's archives. In 1960, an edited compilation version was prepared and screened by the BBC, broadcast in two instalments as Part One ( January 2 1960, 8.4010.10pm) and Part Two ( January 9 1960, 8.4510.15pm). This compilation version also survives in the BBC's archives, and is very important because the scenes originally shot on film were removed from it and replaced with the corresponding original film sequences, meaning that these pre-filmed inserts survive in excellent quality for potential re-mastering of the story.
In November 1986 episode three, Imps and Demons, was selected by the BBC for transmission as part of their fiftieth anniversary of television season, although Kneale felt the broadcast of a single episode on its own to be a waste of time. He did, however, assist BBC Video with the preparation of a 178-minute two-part compilation version of the serial, which was released on VHS in 1987 the only one of the original 1950s Quatermass serials to have seen commercial release to date. In 1995 this video was re-released by independent budget label Revelation, who also put out a DVD version of the same compilation in 1999. Fans are still hoping for a remastered and uncut release.