In “Breakaway,” the time is September 9, 1999, and John Koenig (Martin Landau) is ratified Commander of Moonbase Alpha. A distant planet, Meta, is within reach of Earth’s space program, and has begun transmitting a signal that suggests intelligent life exists there. Meanwhile, the International Lunar Finance Committee plans to meet on September 15th, and the Meta Probe must launch during a narrow time window or backing for the project -- and perhaps for all space projects -- could be cut back, or rescinded.
Complicating
Koenig’s crucial task of launching the Meta Probe is the fact that the probe’s
crew members -- astronauts Frank Warren and Eric Sparkman -- have contracted a
mysterious “virus-infection,” just like nine others on Moonbase Alpha.
However,
after replacing outgoing Commander Gorski (Philip Madoc), Koenig learns from
his old friend, Professor Victor Bergman (Barry Morse), that there is no
virus-infection. Instead, Doctor Helena Russell (Barbara Bain) believes that
the affected personnel are suffering from brain-damage caused by radiation.
The
only problem is that no abnormal radiation levels have been detected anywhere
on the lunar surface, not even in the vicinity of the nuclear waste dumps,
Areas 1 and 2.
Koenig
questions Dr. Russell about the Meta Probes back-up crew, and wonders if they
might fall ill on their long journey, suffering from the same baffling
condition. He also meets with Captain Alan Carter (Nick Tate) to find out if
the probe itself is ready to go.
Koenig
makes a horse-trade with his politically-minded superior, Commissioner Simmonds
(Roy Dotrice). He agrees he will get the
probe launched if Simmonds can stop, at least for a while, more waste from
being sent to the moon. Simmonds agrees to his terms, and Koenig continues his
investigation, although he fears the Meta Probe will not be a “giant leap for mankind,” but rather a “stumble in the dark.”
Before
long, Koenig and his team determine that the lunar dumps are evidencing signs
of fluctuating “magnetic surge.” The brain damage Russell has noted in the
Meta Probe astronauts could be the cumulative effect of the magnetic radiation,
but still, there are larger problems to contend with.
After
Nuclear Waste Disposal Area One burns itself out in a surge of magnetic energy,
Koenig realizes that Area Two could follow suit, causing a catastrophic
explosion on the moon.
The
men and women of Moonbase Alpha work to avert “total disaster,” but it is too late. The Moon is blasted out of
Earth orbit with all hands on Alpha marooned there…
“Breakaway” -- the hour-long premiere episode of Space: 1999 (1975 – 1977) by author George Bellak -- is designed to establish the series’ (much-criticized…) premise: that the Earth’s moon, along with the 311 inhabitants of Moonbase Alpha, is blasted out of Earth orbit and into deep space on an unplanned journey of awe and mystery.
When
I watched “Breakaway” again for this review, however, I also detected something
else of interest. Specifically, the
episode’s creators (including Gerry and Sylvia Anderson, Bellak, Brian Johnson
and Keith Wilson) go to tremendous lengths to establish here a believable, realistic
or recognizable near-future world, one that eschews any sense of glamour that
one might associate with space travel.
This is an important notion, especially since the yardstick used to rate
(and often bludgeon) Space: 1999 is in fact, Star
Trek (1966 – 1969), a romantic, idealistic, optimistic even glamorous vision
of man’s distant future.
As
“Breakaway” takes pains to establish, Space: 1999 involves a different
kind of world, one very much in keeping with the series’ 1970s context.
Star
Trek arrived
not long after the Age of Camelot, in the colorful, swinging sixties. The world
was our oyster.
By
contrast, Space: 1999 was created in the early 1970s (following
2001: A Space Odyssey) while the U.S. was mired in political scandal
(Watergate) and losing a war in Vietnam. I love and admire Star Trek, obviously, but
Space:
1999 thus seems a more sober genre effort, and one that deals in mankind’s
real, often-conflicted nature.
For
example, the series eschews imperialism or gunboat diplomacy, having seen,
explicitly, its failure in Eurasia. Space:
1999 also offers, in episodes like “Breakaway” a pointed critique of
bureaucracy and politics.
Specifically,
the episode follows John Koenig as he is appointed Commander of Moonbase Alpha.
At first glance, this appointment would seem very much like an honor or
privilege, but as the episode progresses, one can detect how Koenig is actually
being set-up by Simmonds as the fall guy, in the event that things go wrong.
For
example, Simmonds has withheld crucial information from Commander Koenig, and
not permitted Dr. Helena Russell to report her findings about the so-called
“virus-infection,” which is actually brain damage caused by exposure to an
unknown form of radiation.
The
virus-infection” is so insidious a lie or cover story because Koenig has been
led to believe that there is the possibility of the astronaut’s getting
better.
No
doubt he accepted command of Alpha with that idea in mind. Koenig is soon faced with the reality,
however, that here is no getting better or healing from catastrophic brain
damage and genetic mutation (as established by Alpha’s computer).
One
beautifully-orchestrated shot in “Breakaway” reveals the distance between
Russell and Koenig, and their knowledge, at least at first.
In
the foreground, we see a dying astronaut, his weakening form taking up
considerable space in the frame. In the background of the shot, we see Koenig
and Russell framed in separate windows, worlds apart visually-speaking, as they
countenance what his death really means.
Russell knows the truth, and what the astronaut is facing. Koenig, by contrast, is playing catch-up, and
forced to re-examine the facts that he has been provided.
Koenig’s
position as “fall guy” is also established by another character, Commander
Gorski. Koenig notes that Gorski seems
to be handling “his suspension” from command of Moonbase Alpha rather
well. Koenig also observes to Victor
that Gorski is famous for being “flexible,” a coded-commentary on his
propensity to switch allegiance and sides, depending on which way the wind
blows.
Why
is Gorski so friendly and helpful? It
could be because Koenig’s appointment as commander absolves the former
commander of all responsibility or guilt in the matter of the dead astronauts
and the failure of the Meta Probe. It is
Koenig’s neck that is on the chopping block, not his.
And
consider too, Koenig’s terminology vis-à-vis the ex-commander. He declares that Gorski is taking his
“suspension” well. The word suspension explicitly
suggests a temporary status.
Is
it possible that Simmonds has made Koenig commander only to see him fail, and
plans to restore Gorski (a more flexible puppet…) to the same post after
Koenig’s failure? No wonder Gorski seems
unbothered! He’s Simmonds’ man, and has
been taken off the hook. He’ll just wait
in the wings until Koenig is blamed for the situation….
“Breakaway”
is structured in such a way that Koenig, learns, a piece at a time, how he has
been manipulated, and a trap has been sprung (by Simmonds) and the actual science behind the so-called "virus infection." The severity of the crisis, in fact, sort of creeps up on him, another idea reflected in the episode's visuals. The danger is looming, but he is not entirely aware of just how bad it is.
Koenig has been sent to the Moon to get “the
space flight of the century” launched. Everything -- but notably
future-funding from the International Lunar Finance Committee – depends on the
success of the mission. But when he
arrives at Alpha, Koenig learns that crucial information has been denied him
and there is, in essence, no way to get the Meta Probe launched. He recognizes that he is Simmonds’ fall guy.
Angry,
Koenig confronts Simmonds and tells him, point-blank, that Simmonds “lied” to
him. Simmonds attempts to cow him at first, telling him that he will replace
Doctor Russell with a team of “top medical people,” no doubt “yes men” who will
hew to the cover story of a virus infection.
Quite
rightly, Koenig demurs, and rejects the offer.
At
that point, fully cognizant of the situation, Koenig begins horse-trading, as I
noted above, granting concessions only in return for them. This is, Koenig
understands, the only way to get to the bottom of the situation, and to
understand the nature of the crisis unfolding around him.
Koenig
also makes the decision of a good leader. He knowingly and irrevocably takes
his own success off the table, and focuses on the problem. “Forget the probe,” he tells Carter. The space-flight of the century is off, he
decides, until he gets the answers he needs.
This is a courageous stand, and one that separates Koenig from men like
Simmonds, or Gorski. Ultimately, it
matters more to him that people are dying than that the finance committee is
meeting in a few days.
Again,
just make the comparison crystal clear, in franchises such as Star
Trek or Star Wars, or even Doctor Who, there tends to be very
little if any discussion about the “cost” of space adventuring. Artistically-speaking, as soon as you get
into the realm of budget and financing, and CYA political maneuvering, one
thing has happened: the realm of outer
space has become de-romanticized.
It
has become, essentially, an extension of the (failed?) systems we see playing
out here on Earth.
Importantly,
a close-up look at this world is the starting point of Space: 1999. When the Moon is blown out of orbit, it is
leaving behind a “failed” society in a sense, and mankind – represented by good
men like Koenig -- gets a second chance to write his destiny.
Other
aspects of “Breakaway” also seek to de-romanticize or de-glamorize the series’
milieu.
At
one point, after Koenig survives a dangerous eagle crash, Helena upbraids him
and tells him that she is seeking “answers,
not heroes.”
Once
more, this line is a deliberate rebuke of the popular space opera form, which
suggests that when man is capable of reaching the stars, he will no longer have
to worry about money, or poverty, or even political-backstabbing. Space: 1999 suggests instead that
man will remain man, and that he will takes his nature to the stars, with all
the drawbacks that description (and his psychology) suggests.
Uniquely,
Space:
1999 is both dystopian and millenarian in nature. It is a fin de siècle
production that suggests man must irrevocably separate from his past and
present on Earth to recognize again the value of his humanity. Hence the Science Digest descriptor of the
series as concerning the “downfall of
technological man.”
It
may be more apt, at this juncture to describe Space:1999 as the rebirth of man,
since many episodes of the series reckon with the Alphans facing different
realms of existence, and considering their place and purpose in the universe.
Many
episodes of the series also pit the Alphans -- as examples of restored humanity
-- against more advanced civilizations that, like Earth and men like Simmonds,
seem to emerge from dystopian or sterile states. These worlds and peoples are
examples from the Alphans to learn from; examples of a road that they need not
take on their exodus to the stars, on their new beginning.
It
is so ironic that Space: 1999 is
often criticized for an “unrealistic premise” when the ingenious approach to
storytelling, characterization, and production design is, in some sense,
actually the opposite. It is hyper-realistic.
“Breakaway”
is our starting point. It portrays a
world we recognize as an extension of our own, in which bureaucrats still
practice CYA, and in which the failure to solve big problems (like atomic
waste) leads to bigger problems down the road.
Your Space: 1999 postings are thoughtful and enjoyable, as always, John.
ReplyDeleteI watched "Breakaway" for the first time in decades, recently, and I was disappointed...
http://barrysmight.blogspot.ca/2014/06/breakaway-is-about-it.html
(In contrast: Last year I rewatched -- and reviewed on my blog -- "Earthbound" and it was as watchable as always.)
I think what hurts "Breakaway" is the fact that it's too expository. It may have been better if Andersons & Co had started the show "in progress"; if you get my drift. A later episode could have covered the reason why the Earth's moon was no longer in orbit.
Admittedly, I loved "Breakaway" when it first aired. It was great.
Hi Barry, thank you for your comment. I always appreciate when you write.
DeleteIt's funny, I had exactly the opposite experience. When I want back and watched "Breakaway" on blu-ray, I found myself impressed by how sure-footed it was, both in terms of conveying information through visualization ( film grammar), and how dynamically the mystery unfolded.
I also felt that -- watching it with an eye towards re-romanticizing the future -- the episode really transmitted its thesis remarkably consistently.
Great to hear from you!
best,
John
Thanks, John!
DeleteI had originally intended to first respond to your post on "Another Time, Another Place" but elected to start with "Breakaway".
I'm pressed for time right now, but intend to follow up with more comments on your Space: 1999 postings. Hmm... a cup of instant coffee or a comment on JKM's blog? The battle was "Wargames" in style.
I enjoy your enthusiasm for the series.
Hi Barry! You've got to have that coffee to start the day! I have already had two cups! :)
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