Under the Mountain (TV miniseries)
Under the Mountain | |
---|---|
Genre | Adventure / Drama / Family / Sci-Fi / Thriller |
Based on | Under the Mountain by Maurice Gee |
Directed by | Chris Bailey |
Starring |
|
Composer(s) | Bernie Allen |
Country of origin | New Zealand |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 8 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Graeme Henderson |
Running time | c. 45 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | TVNZ |
Original release | June 1 – July 21, 1982 |
Under the Mountain is an eight-part television series based on the novel of the same name written by Maurice Gee, first transmitted in 1981 and produced by Television New Zealand. Many of the minor roles in this series were played by people who were at the time well known performers in New Zealand.
Series overview
Plot
The show focuses on twins Rachel and Theo Matheson. While on school summer holidays in Auckland, they are contacted by a man named Mr. Jones, who had met them briefly eight years earlier. This time, Mr. Jones reveals his true identity and mission. He is an alien, sent from another world in a battle against another race of aliens. These latter creatures were a family of slimy, slug-like beasts who could take on human form. Led by the evil Mr. Wilberforce, the slug monsters were now bent on destroying Earth and only the twins' emerging psychic abilities could turn them back. The other major conflict presented by the series is that of Rachel and Theo's emerging abilities. Rachel accepted the truth of their abilities, while Theo was more of a cynic and often challenged Mr. Jones. The psychic abilities in the series increase in effectiveness as the individual grows in trust and acceptance of his or her abilities. In the final episode of the series, the twins are each required to throw a stone and focus their psychic energy into the stone to create a red and blue bridge-like construct that will defeat the Wilberforces. Because Theo's faith in his abilities and his belief in supernatural phenomena in general is lacking, his half of the bridge is insufficient to complete the construct. Mr. Jones uses the last of his life energy to complete the construct and defeat the Wilberforces, and can no longer be with Rachel and Theo as a result.
Episode guide
No. | Original title |
---|---|
1. | Maar |
2. | Volcano of the Bleeding Skies |
3. | Red Force, Blue Force |
4. | The Alien World Below |
5. | Weapons of the Mind |
6. | Any Shape, Any Form |
7. | Assault |
8. | The Gift of Oblivion |
Location
Filming for the farm & bush scenes in the first episode took place near Silverdale, North of Auckland, at Mt. Pleasant, a historic dairy farm & homestead in Pine Valley Road.
Crew
- Directed by: Chris Bailey
- Produced by: Tom Finlayson
- Written by: Maurice Gee
- Screenplay by: Ken Catran
- Music by: Bernie Allen
Cast and characters
Actors
- Kirsty Wilkinson as Rachel Matheson
- Lance Warren as Theo Matheson
- Roy Leywood as Mr Jones
- Bill Johnson as Mr Wilberforce
- Bill Ewens as Ricky
Character's describtions
Based on the original novel by Maurice Gee:
- Rachel and Theo Matheson: Two seemingly ordinary fraternal twins who lived in a rural New Zealand town. One day when they were three years old, they had wandered away from their home. While a search party tried to find them, they were met by the enigmatic Mr. Jones who telekinetically kept them warm through the cold evening until they were found. Over the years to follow, they had found that they shared a telepathic link and could read each other's thoughts. Upon meeting Mr. Jones again, eight years later, he reveals the reason for his interest in the twins and their important role in his plan for saving the world from the Wilberforces.
- Mr. Jones: The last surviving member of a benevolent alien race. His true form is essentially a living flame: warm, brilliant, and without a definite shape. On Earth, however, he takes the form of a kindly old man. As he explains to Rachel and Theo, his race was known as "The People Who Understand" and had developed technology based on their powerful telepathic abilities. Mr. Jones has the ability to teleport, communicate telepathically and project powerful beams of light from his physical self. He had journeyed to Earth with another member of his race with the intention of finding and stopping the Wilberforces. The other member was older and had succumbed to old age before the Wilberforces could be found. Mr. Jones has since searched for twins whose minds are telepathically linked in order to complete the work which he and his older counterpart had started.
- The Wilberforces: A race of symbiotic organisms consisting of a slug-like brain (roughly twice the mass of an adult) and a large worm like body (about the size of a battleship). According to the account given to the twins by Mr. Jones, the Wilberforces originated millions of years ago on a world consisting of seas of mud which nourished the worm organisms. Threatened with extinction, the Wilberforces resolved themselves to conquering other worlds, using their technology to reform other planet's surfaces into mud in order to thrive and breed. When they had finished using a planet's resources, no life remained on that world. By the time Mr. Jones' world had been visited by them several thousand years ago, the Wilberforces had overtaken one complete spiral arm of the galaxy. Mr. Jones' race succeeded in permanently incapacitating every Wilberforce on every planet they could be found on, including Earth. However, the Wilberforces on Earth had learned to slowly counteract the telepathic weapons of The People Who Understand before being rendered dormant. By the time Rachel and Theo are discovered by Mr. Jones, the Wilberforces have nearly completely awakened.
Broadcast and release
International distribution
- In Holland, the title is Moddermonsters (Mud Monsters) but also known as De Monsterplaneet (The Monster Planet).[1]
- In Poland, it was shown between January 31 and February 10, 1989 on TP1, as Tajemnica wygasłych wulkanów (Eng. The Secret of the Extinct Volcanoes).
- In the United States, Under the Mountain was shown on Nickelodeon as part of The Third Eye. [2]
Home video release
All eight episodes have been released on one dual-layer region-free (region 0) DVD in New Zealand.[3]
For some reason the video format chosen for the DVD was NTSC, while the original production material would have been produced for PAL transmission as that is the standard in use throughout New Zealand and Australia. This makes the DVD unplayable for people with certain older TV sets unable to display NTSC.
Picture quality is described on the DVD cover as "subject to quality of dated production source." Audio is mono, but is of an acceptable quality.
Remake
In 2009 Under the Mountain was adapted into a New Zealand feature film directed by Jonathan King.[4][5]
References
- ↑ http://www.kindertv.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2166
- ↑ The other series included were Into the Labyrinth, Children of the Stones, The Haunting of Cassie Palmer.
- ↑ http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/682685/1757793
- ↑ http://www.flicks.co.nz/movie/under-the-mountain/
- ↑ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1275861/