Approximately fifty years ago, in September of 1975 -- shortly before I turned six -- I sat down in front of a color TV, turned on WPIX New York, and a TV show blew my mind.
Seriously.
I was watching a new science fiction series, called Space:1999, and, no exaggeration, it changed my life. It was a series that I not only loved as a child, a teenager, and as an adult, but as a writer, it transformed my career.
My very first book was a non-fiction book guide to the series. My first magazine sale was a retrospective of the series. And in 2002 and 2014, I wrote officially licensed novels or new adventures in the 1999 universe, representing my first fiction sale.
My love of the series introduced me to a creative mentor, friend and collaborator in the late, great script-writer Johnny Byrne, and I have made so many new friends and talented colleagues because of Space:1999. Musicians. Writers. Model-makers. Filmakers. Podcast and video-makers.
But in the beginning was the series itself.
Here was a program that felt different from Star Trek (1966-1969) and Lost in Space (1965-1968), and at least to me, it seemed incredibly real; incredibly possible.
Say what you will, but Space:1999 was my sci-fi show, for my era, in the 1970s.
Half a century later, with the year 1999 far behind us, Space:1999 still feels that way to me, and this week, I'll be celebrating the series as it celebrates this milestone and anniversary.
I always say that the year 1999 need not be an expiration date, and that this Gerry and Sylvia Anderson series from the disco decade still has much to share with audiences about ourselves, about humanity.
Those people who compile internet list insisting that its age makes the series unwatchable? Let's just say they suffer a paucity of imagination, understanding of context, and lack of appreciation for the tenets of filmmaking.
As I see it, Space: 1999 was constructed upon the following six creative pillars and philosophical underpinnings.
As I see it, Space: 1999 was constructed upon the following six creative pillars and philosophical underpinnings.
These half-a-dozen ideas represent the identity of the original 1970s program, and keep it vibrant after all these years and decades.
1. Technology is a double-edged sword.
On the contrary, technological solutions to problems (like atomic waste on the moon), cause the "Breakaway" catastrophe in the first place.
And in episodes such as "Space Brain" and "The Troubled Spirit," technological solutions to crises are often proven to be flawed.
A nuclear charge-carrying Eagle (mysteriously) can't return to Alpha when it is on a collision course with a cosmic intelligence in the former episode, and in the latter episode, a scientific "exorcism" of a ghost is the very thing that creates a haunting on the lunar base in the first instance.
And in episodes such as "Space Brain" and "The Troubled Spirit," technological solutions to crises are often proven to be flawed.
A nuclear charge-carrying Eagle (mysteriously) can't return to Alpha when it is on a collision course with a cosmic intelligence in the former episode, and in the latter episode, a scientific "exorcism" of a ghost is the very thing that creates a haunting on the lunar base in the first instance.
In large part, this conceit of technology as a double-edged sword is what distinguishes the Space: 1999 universe from the Star Trek universe. In Star Trek, "Technology Unchained" has made the Federation a paradise. Without the need to worry about survival issues like hunger and poverty, man has turned, particularly in the 24th century, towards "enriching" himself, not his pocketbook.
Writing in Science Digest all the way back in 1975, editor Arielle Emmett wrote that Space: 1999 concerned the "downfall of technological man." That's the template, "Earthbound" is a perfect example of this idea well-executed. It showcases the glorious potential and horrors of advanced suspended animation in a most chilling fashion.
As we are developing new technologies, new medicines, new weapons and new media at a prodigious rate right now, this facet of the original series remains timely.
Do our tools make us more human, or less human? Do our tools connect us or isolate us? Do we control our machines, or do they control us?
2. Outer Space is Terrifying and Mysterious. It isn't a Cosmic United Nations.
Many popular "outer space" franchises, from Star Trek to Farscape to Andromeda have featured recurring alien villains. We all know their names: the Klingons, the Peacekeepers, the Nietzscheans, the Ferengi, the Borg and so on. Communication is possible with all these species, and the galaxy is like a cosmic U.N., with different countries separated by the vast cosmic ocean of outer space. You can radio back to headquarters (Earth) via a sub-space radio, and there is no time dilation at all.
Not so in Space: 1999, the original series.
There, outer space was a realm of mystery and terror and awe. I'm reminded of Taylor's lyrical description of deep space in Planet of the Apes: "Time bends. Space is...boundless. It squashes a man's ego. I feel lonely."
Those sentences perfectly describe the established Space: 1999 aesthetic.
Another way of putting it, the original Star Trek had a rule for prospective writers that they should not get lost in "the bigness of it all" in terms of outer space.
In Space: 1999, the bigness of it all is the very point of the drama.
It's important to remember that on Space: 1999 the errant moon was moving through alien star systems, on an unplanned course, never to return, so there were not recurring enemies to battle. This makes it more challenging, I suppose, in terms of drama: you don't have a regular villain to fall back on. But the idea was also rewarding, each episode offered new horizons. Space: 1999 wasn't pinned to an increasingly complex alien-based continuity where you had to say, "but a Ferengi would never do that!"
There was a logical reason for this approach in terms of the structure of Space: 1999. The Alphans had few resources and fewer weapons on their cosmic odyssey. Thus they were never in a position to combat a continuing enemy like the Borg or the Klingons.
Indeed, Moonbase Alpha might -- with luck and ingenuity -- survive one engagement with a militant alien empire, but it would never have survived if the Sidons, the Dorcons or other villains had kept hammering at it, week after week. The base was too fragile for that, its life support systems too precarious, its defenses too "primitive."
Again, this goes right back to the late Martin Landau's (correct) assertion back in the 1970s that Space: 1999 was less "macho" than Star Trek. Star Trek was about peaceful contact with aliens in a universe of plenty, but also about gunboat diplomacy. The Enterprise had phaser banks to make certain the crew was safe, and the Federation was protected. By contrast, Space: 1999 was about a Darwinian universe where survival was the overriding issue, and this was distinctly a battle for limited resources.
We saw many aliens in Space: 1999 who attempted to steal the Alphan resources ("The Beta Cloud" and "Bringers of Wonder" to name two episodes), and the series obsessed on matters of survival. One character, in an episode called "Dorzak" said that the battle for survival "makes monsters of us all." Yet another episode, "The Exiles" saw characters debating survival explicitly.
Is it more important that you simply survive, or how you choose to survive?"
Is it more important that you simply survive, or how you choose to survive?"
Johnny Byrne's "Mission of the Darians" looked at a disaster on an alien spaceship where the crew turned to cannibalism because there was no uncontaminated food remaining. The series hero, John Koenig was asked if he would have turned to the same grisly solution if that crisis had occurred on Alpha.
Rather pointedly, he didn't answer.
Rather pointedly, he didn't answer.
3. Mankind in Space: 1999 is technologically and psychologically unprepared for the mysteries of deep space, and when he countenances those mysteries, it is his human nature which will either hand him defeat, or bring him to victory. The scientists and astronauts of Moonbase Alpha were not examples of evolved, idealized, romanticized mankind, but us -- contemporary man -- in space, replete with all our flaws, emotions, paranoia, fears and hopes.
Frequently in Space: 1999, a mistake by the Alphans was the very thing that led into the adventure of the week. They tampered in alien justice in "End of Eternity." They investigated and opened up orbiting cryo-chambers in "The Exiles."
Humans are curious, and that can be a strength, but it can also be a weakness.
Humans are curious, and that can be a strength, but it can also be a weakness.
The story "Collision Course" depicted beautifully how man is psychologically and technologically unprepared for life in space. An alien from an advanced race, Arra (Margaret Leighton), informs Commander Koenig that he must permit the moon to collide with her colossal world. In this case, she claims, it will trigger some kind of evolutionary metamorphosis, but that Alpha will survive the event. That's a lot to "believe in," but Koenig discovers that he trusts Arra. He's made a human judgment about her.
Back on Alpha, however, his team can't get on board with this idea of letting the collision occur and it goes around Koenig's authority to attempt to avoid disaster with mines deployed in space.
What is the superior value in this instance? Trust in science? Or trust in a person? Do we depend on what we know, or what we feel?
What is the superior value in this instance? Trust in science? Or trust in a person? Do we depend on what we know, or what we feel?
I'm not drawing any universal conclusions regarding that idea, but Space: 1999 meditated on the notion that in deep space, the "laws" of the universe might not be exactly exist as we understand them now, from our perch on Earth. Instead, man is going to be asked to take -- now and again -- a "leap of faith."
Some men and women will be equipped to do so, some will not. This creates tension amongst the Alphans.
Some men and women will be equipped to do so, some will not. This creates tension amongst the Alphans.
Now, Space: 1999 has been accused of being anti-science, and this is so because the series suggests that:
a.) technology is not always the answer, and...
b.) that the laws of science as we understand them in the here-and -now may not apply, exactly, in the far corners of space and time. In Space: 1999, man must puzzle his way through answers, based not on techno-babble, but on a combination of technology, psychology, philosophy and even spiritualism.
4. The Alphans are the new kids on the block, literally. I once compared the original universe in Space: 1999 to a classroom. It's a crucible from which the Alphans -- having escaped from a dying, politically-destructive Earth -- learn about themselves and their role in space.
You'll notice that in no episode of Space: 1999 do the Alphans encounter a race that is less advanced than they were, at least in terms of technology (unless you count 13th century Earth in "Journey to Where," or the Alphans themselves, as cavemen, in "Full Circle.")
Instead, the Alphans universally countenanced super-advanced aliens that believe they have life "licked," so-to-speak, and are apparently far more advanced. But these aliens, almost universally have lost or sacrificed some important aspect of humanity.
The Zennites of "Missing Link" have emphasized science over emotion, and have forgotten how to feel.
The Sidons of "Voyager's Return" champion their legalisms over moral solutions to their problems, thus embracing vengeance under the auspices of "law."
The aliens of "War Games" have created a world with no fear...and yet they fear the presence of the Alphans on their world. Planet of the Hypocrites.
In "Guardian of Piri," the Alphans discover an extinct race, the Pirians, that gave up physical labor and "work" and destroyed themselves through lassitude and luxury.
Again and again, the Alphans gaze at alien worlds in the series, and find that while some of those societies possess glorious aspects, they also showcase an absence of something important; the very things the Alphans cherish most in themselves, as human beings.
Space:1999's late story editor, Johnny Byrne always told me that the Alphans would be successful, ultimately, in their space quest, and they would achieve success by accepting their limitations and potential as a species. Their humanity -- warts and all -- is their greatest gift.
5. Horror Mythology. If you look across the catalog of Space: 1999 episodes, you begin to detect that many episodes actually had more in common with the original The Outer Limits than Star Trek. This is because the horror genre -- particularly the Gothic -- played a considerable role in Space: 1999. Various episodes resurrected and updated famous horror tropes.
I've written about this in length in a post here.
I've written about this in length in a post here.
In short, Space: 1999 in 1975 and 1976 gave us outer space, high-tech variations of The Premature Burial ("Earthbound), the Siren ("Guardian of Piri"), the Midas Touch ("Force of Life,") the Midwich Cuckoos ("Alpha Child"), Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde ("Full Circle), Faust ("End of Eternity"), Ghosts ("The Troubled Spirit"), St. George vs. The Dragon ("Dragon's Domain"), The Picture of Dorian Gray ("The Exiles") and even the zombie ("All That Glisters.")
You'll notice that some of these tales arise from ancient mythology (the siren, the Midas Touch, namely), and others come from more recent mythology, 19th and early 20th century literature.
Johnny Byrne once informed me that his idea for "Another Time, Another Place" came from a mythology built around a church in Ireland.
He told me: "One hundred yards up the road from the house where I grew up was this little church with a fantastic reputation. We heard that if you walked around the church sun-wise (clockwise) three times, you'd meet yourself coming out. That kind of legend was the core of "Another Time, Another Place." Our mythology is filled with situations in which a person stumbles into a mist and then emerges 300 years later or some such thing. So I constructed a story around the experience of my upbringing."
6. Mind-blowing Visual Distinction. In terms of visualization, Space: 1999 was a series that took ambitious, even crazy risks on a regular basis, and was never afraid to fail.
There were occasional visual failures (the soap suds of "Space Brain," one of my favorite episodes), of course, but also radically new environments featured on the series.
Who can forget the bizarre but mind-blowing surface of planet Piri in "Guardian of Piri?"
We saw, in Space: 1999 worlds of soft fabrics glowing mists and hard-edged nightmares ("Missing Link,"), diamond-like, jeweled mirrors ("Seed of Destruction"), vast computer/man interfaces ("War Games," "The Infernal Machine"), an anti-matter world of crimson skies ("Matter of Life and Death"), an underground alcove of spheroid "bouncing" probes ("AB Chrysalis"), and much more.
In some sense, Space: 1999 was really about allowing the imagination to run wild -- with very little control or barrier terms of scientific rationalization or explanation. Farscape was truly brilliant in this regard as well, showing us colorful worlds of tremendous ingenuity and visual invention.
these are my thoughts on what Space: 1999 as we celebrate its fiftieth birthday. These are the values I see played out, across the catalog of 48 episodes. These are the reasons I enjoy the series after a half-century.
Other fans have other reasons, I should hasten to add. I'm not trying to speak for anyone else, or for any agenda. This is just my interpretation of a work of art that inspired me (and, incidentally, began my writing career).
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