The Trap (Captain Scarlet)
"The Trap" | |
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Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons episode | |
Commodore Goddard opens fire on Captain Scarlet as the Magnacopter flies to safety. | |
Episode no. | Episode 07 |
Directed by | Alan Perry |
Written by | Alan Pattillo |
Cinematography by | Ted Catford |
Editing by | Harry MacDonald |
Production code | 17 |
Original air date | 10 November 1967 |
Guest actors | |
Voices of: | |
"The Trap" is the seventh episode of the Supermarionation television series Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons. It was first broadcast in the United Kingdom on 10 November 1967 on ATV Midlands, was written by Alan Pattillo and directed by Alan Perry. In this episode, the Mysterons plot to cause disaster at a secret International Air Conference.
"The Trap" is the only contribution to Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons from Pattillo, who was a major scriptwriter for Thunderbirds. The episode features several special effects sequences and models, and its production included some challenges for the effects departments. Footage from "The Trap" is used as a flashback in the clip show episode, "The Inquisition".
Plot
An International Air Conference has been organised to discuss anti-Mysteron defence. However, Commodore Goddard and his pilot, Holt, are killed en route to Cloudbase to finalise arrangements when their XQR plane is struck by storm lightning and crashes. The XQR's escort, Melody Angel, is uncertain what happened due to poor visibility. On arrival at Cloudbase, a Mysteron reconstruction of Goddard announces that, for secrecy, the conference will be held at the remote Glen Garry Castle in the Scottish Highlands. The Mysterons cryptically warn that the "wings of the world will be clipped" the next morning.
Checking security at Glen Garry, Captain Scarlet encounters the reconstruction of Holt, who has mounted a machine gun in a secret passage leading off the conference hall that is concealed by a slide-up portrait. Goddard holds Scarlet at gunpoint, revealing that the next morning the conference delegates will be massacred. When Symphony Angel arrives in a Magnacopter with the delegates, she too is captured and is gagged and manacled in the dungeon with Scarlet. Melody Angel launches from Cloudbase to search for proof that the original XQR was destroyed and soon sights wreckage. Colonel White realises that the air force leaders are at the mercy of Mysteron reconstructions and, with Scarlet and Symphony out of contact, dispatches Captain Blue to Scotland.
Scarlet and Symphony are released by Morton, the caretaker, after prodding a lance at a ceiling grille to attract attention. As Holt prepares to open fire, Scarlet bursts into the conference hall and shoots the Mysteron agent through the wall portrait, despite sustaining a bullet himself. Blue arrives at Glen Garry in a Spectrum Pursuit Vehicle and warns Symphony, in the Magnacopter with Morton and the escaped delegates, that Goddard is on the battlements and prepared to open fire with another machine gun as soon as she lifts off. The injured Scarlet arrives and, gliding up to Goddard in a jet pack, draws his fire so that the Magnacopter can clear the area. Scarlet is eventually shot down by Goddard, who is also killed when Blue blasts the battlements with the SPV gun.
Production
Script editor for Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, Tony Barwick, was determined for Alan Pattillo to produce material for the series due to his experience as a script editor and writer for Thunderbirds.[1] However, commitments to other projects meant that Pattillo was able to submit only one script.[1] For "The Trap", the castle setting was prescribed by Gerry Anderson[2] whom, Pattillo states, "always liked to have a Scottish subject in his series."[2] Previous Supermarionation adventures set partly in Scottish castles include Stingray episode "The Loch Ness Monster" and Thunderbirds episode "30 Minutes after Noon", which both feature a miniature model that would make a reappearance in "The Trap" as Glen Garry Castle.[3]
In the opening sequence depicting the XQR's destruction, the visual effect of the lightning bolt striking the aircraft would have been too much of a challenge to create live,[4] and was therefore superimposed over the recorded film in post-production.[4] Flames and smoke issuing from the crippled XQR were produced by Jetex fuel pellets attached to the side of the model turned away from the camera.[4] Making its only appearance in "The Trap" is the Spectrum Magnacopter, the model of which was designed by Mike Trim.[5] The scale interior sets, however, were the responsibility of the art department, which made use of mainly "flat sheet" rather than malleable materials in their designs:[5] as a result, there are discrepancies between Trim's streamlined model and the art department's more angular puppet sets.[5]
Alan Pattillo's script included challenging camera sequences which called for all ten "revamp puppets" that would portray the World Air Force leaders to appear in one shot.[2][6] The character of Morton is portrayed by a puppet which had previously appeared in the episode "Point 783" as Colonel Storm, and which was modelled on American actor Robert Mitchum.[6] Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons writers Chris Drake and Graeme Bassett also note the mixture of live action with Supermarionation puppetry in the dungeon scenes with the restrained Scarlet and Symphony, and their rescue by Morton.[7]
The gun battle between Captain Scarlet and Goddard, which forms the climax to "The Trap" posed a number of special effects challenges. In one shot, Goddard fires a line of bullets at the wall behind which Scarlet is concealed: to realise this effect, a strip of Cordtex explosive was lit at one end,[8] resulting in a succession of miniature blasts as the flame travelled to the far end.[8] The Glen Garry model was filled with petrol gel which, ignited, created an explosion to portray the destruction of the castle.[8] Making only its second appearance in all of Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons in the climax to "The Trap" is the Captain Scarlet "grimacing head",[8] which first features in the pilot episode when the character is similarly shot down by Captain Blue.[8]
Incidental music for "The Trap", which includes tracks such as "The Fate of the XQR" and "Castle Glen Garry",[9] was recorded by Barry Gray on 27 August 1967 .[10] The four-hour[10] session also included recording for the 18th episode in the production schedule, "Model Spy",[10] and used a 16-member orchestra.[10] This is the first episode in the ITC recommended broadcast order to feature the lyrical version of the end titles song, "Captain Scarlet".[3] However, the first produced episode with this revised version is "The Launching".[3]
References
- 1 2 Drake and Bassett, 264.
- 1 2 3 Drake and Bassett, 265.
- 1 2 3 Bentley, 71.
- 1 2 3 Drake and Bassett, 267.
- 1 2 3 Bentley, 22.
- 1 2 Drake and Bassett, 266.
- ↑ Drake and Bassett, 249.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Drake and Bassett, 271.
- ↑ "Captain Scarlet Music CD Release Information". soundtrack-express.com. Archived from the original on 9 May 2006. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
- 1 2 3 4 de Klerk, Theo (25 December 2003). "Complete studio-recording list of Barry Gray". tvcentury21.com. Archived from the original on 13 December 2009. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
- Bibliography
- Bentley, Chris (2001). The Complete Book of Captain Scarlet. London: Carlton Books. pp. 22, 71. ISBN 1-84222-405-0.
- Drake, Chris; Bassett, Graeme (1993) [1993]. Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons (2 ed.). London: Boxtree. pp. 249, 264–71. ISBN 1-85283-900-7.
External links
- "The Trap" at TV.com
- "The Trap" at Fanderson.org.uk
- "The Trap" at CliveBanks.co.uk
- "The Trap" at TheVervoid.com
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