This is an episode guide for Thunderbirds , a British Supermarionation television series produced by AP Films (later named Century 21 Productions) from 1964 and first broadcast on the ITV network in 1965 and 1966. It lists both the TV episodes and the 1960s audio plays by Century 21 Records, along with their adaptations.
Two feature film sequels to the TV series were released in 1966 and 1968, followed by three made-for-TV compilation films in the early 1980s. In 2015, a mini-series based on the three original audio stories was produced to mark the series' 50th anniversary.
All TV episodes were released on Region 2 DVD by Carlton in 2000 and 2001. [1] A Region 1 box set by A&E Home Video followed in 2002. [2] The episodes were released on Blu-ray Disc in 2008. [3]
Series 1 of Thunderbirds comprised 26 episodes, each approximately 50 minutes long. Episodes are listed in the official order published by distributor ITC Entertainment, which matches the order of production. [4] [5]
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by [4] | Written by [4] | Original air date (ATV Midlands) [4] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Trapped in the Sky" | Alan Pattillo | Gerry and Sylvia Anderson | 30 September 1965 | |
The Fireflash , on its maiden flight from London to Tokyo, is sabotaged by the Hood, an Asian criminal who has learned of the formation of International Rescue, and is unable to land. The Hood's attack is intended to draw out International Rescue so he can record secrets of its machinery for sale to the highest bidder, an attempt thwarted by the intervention of the organization's London Agent. | ||||||
2 | 2 | "Pit of Peril" | Desmond Saunders | Alan Fennell | 7 October 1965 | |
A 500-ton U.S. Army walker, Sidewinder, falls into a pit during testing and International Rescue are called to save the crew trapped inside. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "City of Fire" | David Elliott | Alan Fennell | 6 January 1966 | |
The world's tallest tower catches fire following an explosion in the car park and International Rescue are called to rescue a family trapped in the basement, which they can accomplish only with an experimental cutting gas ("Oxyhydnite") that previously rendered Scott and Virgil Tracy unconscious during testing. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "Sun Probe" | David Lane | Alan Fennell | 9 December 1965 | |
The Sun Probe rocket and its crew are locked in a collision course with the Sun, prompting the launching of Thunderbird 3 –but International Rescue itself requires saving when Thunderbird 3 is unable to escape the Sun's gravitational pull. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "The Uninvited" | Desmond Saunders | Alan Fennell | 2 December 1965 | |
6 | 6 | "The Mighty Atom" | David Lane | Dennis Spooner | 30 December 1965 | |
The Hood plans to corner the Thunderbirds vehicles by drawing them out to an emergency at an atomic irrigation plant in the Sahara, then photographing them with a miniature camera disguised as a mouse. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "Vault of Death" | David Elliott | Dennis Spooner | 23 December 1965 | |
During the installation of a new, airtight security vault at the Bank of England, one of the employees is accidentally locked inside, and International Rescue must come to his rescue before the air is extracted. | ||||||
8 | 8 | "Operation Crash-Dive" | Desmond Saunders | Martin Crump | 16 December 1965 | |
A series of unexplained Fireflash airliner disappearances sees Thunderbird 4 being called to rescue a crew stranded on the ocean floor. International Rescue then volunteer its services in helping to diagnose the cause of the mechanical fault. | ||||||
9 | 9 | " Move – and You're Dead " | Alan Pattillo | Alan Pattillo | 10 February 1966 | |
After Alan Tracy returns to motor-racing, his rivals decide to remove the competition by rigging a bridge with a movement-sensitive bomb, which will explode the moment that Alan and Grandma Tracy try to escape. (Some of this episode is narrated in flashback.) | ||||||
10 | 10 | "Martian Invasion" | David Elliott | Alan Fennell | 17 March 1966 | |
The Hood arranges for a mishap with explosives during a film shoot, leaving two of the actors sealed inside a cave. When International Rescue arrive the ensuing rescue is surreptitiously recorded by the Hood, and when the Tracys realize they've been set up a tense chase through the nearby desert ensues. | ||||||
11 | 11 | "Brink of Disaster" | David Lane | Alan Fennell | 24 February 1966 | |
An unscrupulous investor attempts to recruit Lady Penelope into funding his automated, cross-country monorail building project. Jeff volunteers to ride the prototype, but he, Brains, and Tin-Tin find themselves trapped onboard, and with no possibility of escape, when it is discovered that the monorail train is speeding towards a stricken bridge. | ||||||
12 | 12 | "The Perils of Penelope" | Alan Pattillo and Desmond Saunders | Alan Pattillo | 14 October 1965 | |
Lady Penelope goes on the trail of a kidnapped scientist, only to find herself in mortal danger at the hands of a megalomaniac determined to exploit the expert's work to his advantage. | ||||||
13 | 13 | "Terror in New York City" | David Elliott and David Lane | Alan Fennell | 21 October 1965 | |
While returning from a mission, Thunderbird 2 is seriously damaged when it comes under attack from a new, high-speed U.S. Navy strike vessel, the U.S.N. Sentinel. After an operation to move the Empire State Building disastrously ends in the tower's complete collapse, Jeff asks that Thunderbird 4 be transported onboard the same ship to the mouth of an underground river to reach a reporter and his cameraman who are trapped beneath the wreckage. | ||||||
14 | 14 | "End of the Road" | David Lane | Dennis Spooner | 25 November 1965 | |
International Rescue's security is jeopardised when Tin-Tin's close friend Eddie Houseman, who recently visited Tracy Island, takes drastic action to save his road-construction company's threatened contract by planting explosives to tear open a jungle mountainside, and the ensuing chaos leaves him trapped on a cliffside in a truck with another case of explosives on board. | ||||||
15 | 15 | "Day of Disaster" | David Elliott | Dennis Spooner | 4 November 1965 | |
The Allington Bridge collapses while a space rocket is being transported over it, trapping the rocket on the riverbed and inadvertently initiating its automatic countdown. International Rescue is called upon to save the crew before the rocket launches. | ||||||
16 | 16 | "Edge of Impact" | Desmond Saunders | Donald Robertson | 28 October 1965 | |
The Hood sabotages the Red Arrow aircraft programme. One of the planes crashes into the TV Tower in England during a brutal rain storm, and International Rescue is summoned to save the engineers inside the tower before it collapses; making their job trickier apart from the driving rain and winds at the site is that the Red Arrow's director, a long time friend of Jeff, is fired from the project and stays at Tracy Island, forcing the Tracys to draw him away and thus remain oblivious to International Rescue's existence. | ||||||
17 | 17 | "Desperate Intruder" | David Lane | Donald Robertson | 18 November 1965 | |
Brains and Tin-Tin set off on an expedition to retrieve sunken treasure from Lake Anasta. The Hood has also set his sights on the riches and plans to put both Brains and Tin-Tin in grave peril. | ||||||
18 | 18 | "30 Minutes After Noon" | David Elliott | Alan Fennell | 11 November 1965 | |
The Erdman Gang has developed an ingenious technique of having their work carried out – an explosive bracelet that can be removed only at the designated target. A secret agent's attempt to infiltrate the organisation backfires as he is left trapped in a plutonium store. International Rescue face a race against time to prevent a massive nuclear explosion. | ||||||
19 | 19 | "The Impostors" | Desmond Saunders | Dennis Spooner | 13 January 1966 | |
A gang of criminals masquerade as International Rescue to conceal their theft of top-secret military plans. The ensuing worldwide manhunt for International Rescue leaves the organisation powerless to operate in a rescue situation until its name is vindicated, just as a member of a manned reconnaissance satellite is suddenly trapped in space while trying to repair the station. | ||||||
20 | 20 | "The Man from MI.5" | David Lane | Alan Fennell | 20 January 1966 | |
A criminal organisation steals classified plans. Working in conjunction with a British Secret Service agent, Lady Penelope must recover the material to save the world from total destruction. | ||||||
21 | 21 | "Cry Wolf" | David Elliott | Dennis Spooner | 27 January 1966 | |
Two Australian boys are playing their favourite game — "International Rescue" — when their "distress" call is picked up by John Tracy on Thunderbird 5 . After a tour of Tracy Island, and a warning not to use their radio again, the brothers are returned home. The Hood then tricks the boys into an old mine shaft before stealing secret photographs from their government agent father. This time the brothers' SOS is real, but International Rescue refuses to believe them. | ||||||
22 | 22 | "Danger at Ocean Deep" | Desmond Saunders | Donald Robertson | 3 February 1966 | |
When the Ocean Pioneer tanker inexplicably explodes, Brains investigates the cause. With some help from Lady Penelope, he discovers it to be a chemical reaction between the cargo of liquid alsterene and OD60, which is found in the sea. International Rescue set out to save the crew of the ill-fated Ocean Pioneer II. | ||||||
23 | 23 | "The Duchess Assignment" | David Elliott | Martin Crump | 17 February 1966 | |
The Duchess of Royston has fallen on hard times, leading her friend Lady Penelope to enlist Jeff's help. The Duchess and her one asset – the painting Portrait of a Gazelle, by Braquasso – fall into criminal hands and it is up to International Rescue to save both. | ||||||
24 | 24 | "Attack of the Alligators!" | David Lane | Alan Pattillo | 10 March 1966 | |
When a new growth hormone is accidentally released into a South American river, a house is besieged by alligators – now many times their normal size. International Rescue must subdue the reptiles and save the house's occupants. | ||||||
25 | 25 | "The Cham-Cham" | Alan Pattillo | Alan Pattillo | 24 March 1966 | |
When aircraft are shot down during live broadcasts of a hit song, International Rescue suspects foul play. Tin-Tin and Lady Penelope (posing as the singer Wanda Lamour) investigate, but are left in mortal danger when a ski lift is sabotaged and speeds out of control down a mammoth mountain slide in the Alps. | ||||||
26 | 26 | "Security Hazard" | Desmond Saunders | Alan Pattillo | 31 March 1966 | |
Clip show episode: the Tracy family cannot help but reminisce about their many successful missions after a young boy infiltrates the island. They are nevertheless burdened by the problem that the boy knows their identity and the location of their base – until Jeff realises that they can use the boy's dreams to their own advantage. Includes clips from "End of the Road", "Sun Probe", "Trapped in the Sky" and "Day of Disaster". |
Series 2 comprised six 50-minute episodes. Episodes are listed in the official order published by distributor ITC Entertainment, which matches the order of production. [4] [5]
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by [4] | Written by [4] | Original air date (ATV London) [4] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
27 | 1 | "Atlantic Inferno" | Desmond Saunders | Alan Fennell | 2 October 1966 | |
World Navy tests of a nuclear torpedo inadvertently threaten the offshore rig Seascape. Jeff, having been invited by Lady Penelope to join her on holiday in Australia, places Scott in charge of International Rescue, with Alan substituting for Scott at the helm of Thunderbird 1 . Jeff though is angered when Scott launches a rescue effort to the mid-ocean rig. | ||||||
28 | 2 | "Path of Destruction" | David Elliott | Donald Robertson | 9 October 1966 | |
A new invention – the Crablogger (a nearly fully automated logging machine that converts wood into fuel) — threatens widespread devastation if it collides with an unfinished dam, after its drivers collapse due to food poisoning. | ||||||
29 | 3 | "Alias Mr. Hackenbacker" | Desmond Saunders | Alan Pattillo | 16 October 1966 | |
The passenger aircraft Skythrust, conceived by Brains using the alias Hiram K. Hackenbacker, falls into the hands of fashion criminals who hi-jack the plane to steal a new French design from the renowned François Lemaire. | ||||||
30 | 4 | "Lord Parker's 'Oliday" | Brian Burgess | Tony Barwick | 23 October 1966 | |
A malfunctioning solar reflector menaces the Italian coastal village of Monte Bianco, where Lady Penelope and Parker happen to be visiting while on holiday. | ||||||
31 | 5 | "Ricochet" | Brian Burgess | Tony Barwick | 6 November 1966 | |
A staffed, pirate telecommunications satellite (which broadcasts a music programme of which Tin-Tin is a devoted fan) is disrupted by the detonation of a rogue unmanned space rocket and is set on collision course with a Middle Eastern oil refinery. This episode was inspired by the offshore pirate radio stations such as Radio Caroline which were operating off the British coast in the 1960s. | ||||||
32 | 6 | "Give or Take a Million" | Desmond Saunders | Alan Pattillo | 25 December 1966 | |
While Christmas preparations are underway at both Tracy Island and a local children's hospital, which is expanding to incorporate a new radiotherapy wing, a pair of criminals attempt to burgle a high-tech vault storing gold bullion. |
Between 1965 and 1967, Century 21 Records released 19 Thunderbirds audio plays in the form of 7-inch, 33 RPM vinyl EP records (promoted as "mini-albums"), each about 21 minutes long. [6] [7] Three of these were original stories; [6] the rest were retellings of selected TV episodes, each condensed from the original soundtrack with added narration by one of the main characters. [8] [9] In 1990, revised versions of eight plays were broadcast as a mini-series on BBC Radio 5. [8]
Of the original stories, voice actors Peter Dyneley, David Graham and Sylvia Anderson featured in all three, Ray Barrett in two and Shane Rimmer in one. [10] [11] Two of the stories –F.A.B. and The Stately Homes Robberies –were told from the point of view of Lady Penelope and Parker, and featured original music by Barry Gray. [12] In 2015, the stories were adapted as screen episodes to mark Thunderbirds' 50th anniversary. [13]
Denotes an original play
No. | Title [7] | Cat. no. [7] | Written by [14] | Based on [14] | Narrator (voiced by) [14] | Original release date [7] | |
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1 | "Introducing Thunderbirds" | MA 103 | Alan Fennell [10] | N/A | N/A | October 1965 | |
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2 | "F.A.B." | MA 107 | Desmond Saunders and David Graham [11] | N/A | N/A | April 1966 | |
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3 | "Thunderbird 1" | MA 108 | Gerry and Sylvia Anderson | "Trapped in the Sky" | Scott Tracy (Shane Rimmer) | April 1966 | |
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4 | "Thunderbird 2" | MA 109 | Dennis Spooner | "End of the Road" | Brains (David Graham) | June 1966 | |
5 | "The Stately Homes Robberies" | MA 110 | Alan Fennell Jim Watson (story) [11] | N/A | N/A | June 1966 | |
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6 | "Thunderbird 3" | MA 112 | Jim Watson | "Sun Probe" | Alan Tracy (Matt Zimmerman) | November 1966 | |
7 | "Thunderbird 4" | MA 113 | Jim Watson | "Terror in New York City" | Gordon Tracy (David Graham) | November 1966 | |
8 | "The Perils of Penelope" | MA 114 | Jim Watson | "The Perils of Penelope" | Parker (David Graham) | November 1966 | |
9 | "Lady Penelope and Parker" | MA 118 | Len Cleal | "Vault of Death" | Lady Penelope (Sylvia Anderson) | January 1967 | |
10 | "Brains and Tin-Tin" | MA 119 | Len Cleal | "Desperate Intruder" | Tin-Tin (Christine Finn) | January 1967 | |
11 | "International Rescue" | MA 120 | Len Cleal | "The Impostors" | Scott Tracy (Shane Rimmer) | January 1967 | |
12 | "Thunderbirds" | MA 121 | Len Cleal | "Day of Disaster" | Gordon Tracy (David Graham) | March 1967 | |
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13 | "Lady Penelope" | MA 122 | Len Cleal | "The Cham-Cham" | Parker (David Graham) | March 1967 | |
14 | "Brains" | MA 123 | Len Cleal | "Alias Mr. Hackenbacker" | Brains (David Graham) | March 1967 | |
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15 | "Brink of Disaster" | MA 124 | Len Cleal | "Brink of Disaster" | Parker (David Graham) | May 1967 | |
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16 | "Atlantic Inferno" | MA 125 | Len Cleal | "Atlantic Inferno" | Gordon Tracy (David Graham) | May 1967 | |
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17 | "Ricochet" | MA 126 | Len Cleal | "Ricochet" | Brains (David Graham) | May 1967 | |
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18 | "One Move and You're Dead!" | MA 128 | Alan Pattillo | "Move – and You're Dead" | Tin-Tin (Christine Finn) | July 1967 | |
19 | "Thirty Minutes After Noon" | MA 129 | Alan Fennell | "30 Minutes After Noon" | Parker (David Graham) | July 1967 |
Two Thunderbirds feature films were released in the 1960s. [4] The events of the first film, Thunderbirds Are Go , precede those of the final TV episode, "Give or Take a Million". [22]
No. | Title [4] | Directed by [4] | Written by [4] | Length | Original release date [4] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Thunderbirds Are Go | David Lane | Gerry and Sylvia Anderson | 93 minutes | 15 December 1966 | |
The spacecraft Zero-X is bound for Mars, carrying a crew of five astronauts. But when the craft experiences a critical mechanical fault shortly after take-off, the crew are forced to eject to safety while the multi-million dollar spacecraft crashes into the ocean. Two years later, an investigation committee releases the official report on the crash, concluding that the cause of the crash was sabotage. While the mission is put on hold, the committee decides that extra security measures would be required for a re-launch. After some debate, they decide to call on the services of International Rescue. The Thunderbirds machines, with the help of London Agent, Lady Penelope, make sure that the second launching attempt is successful. Once the craft lands on Mars, the crew start to explore the planet and collect rock samples, but when they encounter unexpected problems, they are forced to return to Earth sooner than planned. On re-entering Earth's atmosphere, the crew encounter further problems when a lifting body (one of two remote controlled wings equipped with additional engines and undercarriage and used, one above the nose-end of the spacecraft and one under the engine cluster at the tail, for take-off and landing) suffers a mechanical fault and collides with the rear of the craft, damaging the escape unit circuit. With the crew unable to escape, it is again up to International Rescue to save the astronauts, as well as a town in the Zero-X flightpath, from disaster. | ||||||
2 | Thunderbird 6 | David Lane | Gerry and Sylvia Anderson | 89 minutes | 29 July 1968 | |
Jeff Tracy wants Brains to design a new Thunderbird vehicle, a project of such complexity that he is forced to decline his place on the maiden round-the-world flight of his jet-assisted airship, Skyship One . Lady Penelope, Alan, Tin-Tin and Parker are invited, and fly a rebuilt, vintage Tiger Moth biplane before boarding the airship. The International Rescue representatives set off on a luxury world tour, unaware that they are entrusting their safety to assassins who have murdered the real crew of Skyship One, are working for a master criminal identified as "Black Phantom", and are covertly recording and editing Penelope's conversations to assemble a false distress call summoning International Rescue to an abandoned airbase in the north African desert. With the ship inbound to England, the assassins have finally secured enough tape to send the message, but the four passengers have figured out the plan and warn Jeff Tracy in time to avert the hi-jacking of Thunderbirds 1 and 2 . On Skyship One, the assassins are attacked, but in the ensuing gunfight manage to capture Tin-Tin as hostage. The ship's gravity drive is also damaged, and Skyship One crashes into the top of the central relay tower of a missile base near Dover. With the ship precariously suspended above ground, International Rescue must use the Tiger Moth to rescue the passengers and crew. The rescue attempt is disrupted when the assassins hi-jack the Tiger, just before Skyship One finally crashes to the ground. |
Between 1980 and 1982, three compilation films were produced. Released on VHS by PolyGram and its subsidiary Channel 5 Video, each of these was made up of re-edited versions of two TV episodes. [4]
No. | Title | Compilation of | Length | Original release date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Thunderbirds to the Rescue | "Trapped in the Sky" and "Operation Crash-Dive" | 95 minutes approx. | 1980 |
2 | Thunderbirds in Outer Space | "Sun Probe" and "Ricochet" | 95 minutes approx. | 1981 |
3 | Countdown to Disaster | "Terror in New York City" and "Atlantic Inferno" | 95 minutes approx. | 1982 |
In 2015, to mark Thunderbirds' 50th anniversary, ITV commissioned Pod 4 Films to produce a mini-series of new episodes based on the original audio stories from the 1960s. The project's £218,000 budget was crowdfunded through a campaign on Kickstarter. [23] [24]
Filming was conducted on the former premises of AP Films on the Slough Trading Estate, [23] with a crew that included some of the production personnel from the original Thunderbirds. [13] The adaptation of "The Stately Homes Robberies" was directed by David Elliott, making it his first new Thunderbirds episode in 49 years.
The mini-series had a premiere screening at the BFI Southbank in 2016 and was subsequently released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc to its Kickstarter backers. [25] Titled The Anniversary Episodes, it was added to BritBox in 2020. [26]
No. | Title | Directed by | Based on | Length | Original release date (BFI Southbank) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Introducing Thunderbirds" | Justin T. Lee | "Introducing Thunderbirds" | 25 minutes | 17 August 2016 | |
A beautiful island somewhere in the South Pacific. Outwardly, Tracy Island is nothing more than a luxury home for Jeff Tracy and his family. Secretly, it is the headquarters of the heroic International Rescue organisation. When newly recruited London agents Lady Penelope and Parker arrive for their very first visit, Jeff takes them on a tour to show them the fantastic Thunderbirds – the machines of the future. | ||||||
2 | "The Abominable Snowman" | Stephen La Rivière | "F.A.B." | 29 minutes | 17 August 2016 | |
A sabotaged uranium plant explodes in a blazing inferno. Mountaineers in the Himalayas are mysteriously disappearing. What's the connection? Jeff Tracy assigns Lady Penelope and Parker to investigate. Exploring the mountainous Everest region by SkiCopter, the duo soon find themselves in grave danger when they discover their guide isn't who they thought he was. Scott Tracy blasts off in Thunderbird 1 , but will he arrive in time? | ||||||
3 | "The Stately Homes Robberies" | David Elliott | "The Stately Homes Robberies" | 26 minutes | 17 August 2016 | |
When stately homes across England are robbed of their most precious jewel collections, Jeff Tracy realises Lady Penelope's Creighton-Ward Manor may be next. Penelope and Parker track down the criminals in the Tower of London, but soon find themselves trapped inside with a bomb ready to go off. |
Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, often shortened to Captain Scarlet, is a British science fiction television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company Century 21 for ITC Entertainment. It is the sixth Anderson series to be filmed using a form of electronic marionette puppetry dubbed "Supermarionation" combined with scale model special effects. Running to thirty-two 25-minute episodes, it was first broadcast on ITV regional franchises between 1967 and 1968 and has since aired in more than 40 other countries, including the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Japan.
Barry Gray was a British musician and composer best known for his collaborations with television and film producer Gerry Anderson.
Stingray is a British children's science fiction television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and produced by AP Films (APF) for ITC Entertainment. Filmed in 1963 using a combination of electronic marionette puppetry and scale model special effects, it was APF's sixth puppet series and the third to be produced under the banner of "Supermarionation". It premiered in October 1964 and ran for 39 half-hour episodes.
Fireball XL5 is a 1960s British children's science-fiction puppet television series about the missions of Fireball XL5, a vessel of the World Space Patrol that polices the cosmos in the year 2062. Commanded by Colonel Steve Zodiac, XL5 defends Earth from interstellar threats while encountering a wide variety of alien civilisations.
Thunderbirds Are Go is a 1966 British science-fiction puppet film based on Thunderbirds, a Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and produced by their company Century 21 Productions. Written by the Andersons and directed by David Lane, Thunderbirds Are Go concerns spacecraft Zero-X and its human mission to Mars. When Zero-X suffers a malfunction during re-entry, it is up to life-saving organisation International Rescue, supported by its technologically-advanced Thunderbird machines, to activate the trapped crew's escape pod before the spacecraft hits the ground.
Thunderbird 6 is a 1968 British science fiction puppet film based on Thunderbirds, a Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company Century 21 Productions. Written by the Andersons and directed by David Lane, it is the sequel to Thunderbirds Are Go (1966).
"Move – and You're Dead" is an episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films for ITC Entertainment. Written and directed by Alan Pattillo, it was first broadcast on 10 February 1966 on ATV Midlands as the 20th episode of Series One. It is the ninth episode in the official running order.
"Trapped in the Sky" is the first episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films (APF) for ITC Entertainment. Written by the Andersons, it was first broadcast on ATV Midlands on 30 September 1965.
"The Perils of Penelope" is an episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films for ITC Entertainment. Directed by Alan Pattillo and Desmond Saunders from a script by Pattillo, it was first broadcast on 14 October 1965 on ATV Midlands as the third episode of Series One. It is the 12th episode in the official running order.
"The Cham-Cham" is the 25th episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films (APF). The penultimate episode of Thunderbirds Series One, it was written and directed by Alan Pattillo and first broadcast on 24 March 1966 on ATV Midlands.
"Pit of Peril" is the second episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films (APF) for ITC Entertainment. Written by Alan Fennell and directed by Desmond Saunders, it was first broadcast on 7 October 1965 on ATV Midlands.
"The Man from MI.5" is an episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films (APF) for ITC Entertainment. Written by Alan Fennell and directed by David Lane, it was first broadcast on 20 January 1966 on ATV Midlands as the 17th episode of Series One. It is the 20th episode in the official running order.
"End of the Road" is an episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films for ITC Entertainment. Written by Dennis Spooner and directed by David Lane, it was first broadcast on 25 November 1965 on ATV Midlands as the ninth episode of Series One. It is the 14th episode in the official running order.
"Martian Invasion" is an episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films (APF) for Lew Grade's ITC Entertainment. Written by Alan Fennell and directed by David Elliott, it was first broadcast on 17 March 1966 on ATV Midlands as the 24th episode of Series One. It is the tenth episode in the official running order.
"Alias Mr. Hackenbacker" is the 29th episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films for ITC Entertainment. Written by Alan Pattillo and directed by Desmond Saunders, it was first broadcast on 16 October 1966 on ATV London and Anglia Television as the third episode of Series Two.
"Ricochet" is the 31st episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films for ITC Entertainment. Written by Tony Barwick and directed by Brian Burgess, it was first broadcast on 6 November 1966 on ATV London and Anglia Television as the fifth episode of Series Two. It had its first UK-wide network transmission on 15 May 1992 on BBC2.
Thunderbirds is a British science fiction television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson, filmed by their production company AP Films (APF) and distributed by ITC Entertainment. It was filmed between 1964 and 1966 using a form of electronic marionette puppetry called "Supermarionation" combined with scale model special effects sequences. Two series, totalling 32 fifty-minute episodes, were made; production ended with the sixth episode of the second series after Lew Grade, APF's financial backer, failed in his efforts to sell the programme to US network television.
This article discusses tie-ins for Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and produced by AP Films.
This article primarily discusses screen and audio works of fiction based on Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson. It also covers imitations and references in other media.