Plot
1. The Bolts
2. The Mark
3. The Food
4. The Coming
5. The Frenzy
6. The Destroyers
Following the events of The Quatermass Experiment, Professor Bernard Quatermass
is now working on a powerful new rocket, as well as a project to establish permanent bases on the moon. However, all is not
well on Earth: strange objects are falling from the sky and many senior governmental figures are behaving oddly. One of these
strange objects is brought to Quatermass at his lab by Captain John Dillon, the fiancé of Quatermass's niece Paula. The Professor's suspicions are aroused and he travels to Winnerden Flats, which seems to be the centre
of the occurrences. There he finds a huge synthetic food plant which he is shocked to realise is an exact replica of one of
his proposed moon bases. When Dillon also becomes infected by 'the mark' and begins opposing Quatermass, he faces a race against
time to discover the cause of the alien infection and a way to combat it. He
finds that figures to the highest levels of power in Britain have been marked, and with little time left to prevent a catastrophe, he and
his assistant Dr Leo Pugh are forced to use Quatermass's experimental rocket and attempt to fight the alien menace in space.
Info
Quatermass II is a British television science-fiction serial, the second in the popular and
influential Quatermass series written by Nigel Kneale. It was first transmitted on BBC Television in the autumn of 1955, and
is the first of the Quatermass serials to survive in its entirety in the BBC archives.
The first serial in the series, The Quatermass Experiment, had been an extremely popular
and critically well-received hit for the BBC in the summer of 1953, and the Corporation were very keen for a sequel. 1955
was an important year for them as it saw the breaking of their broadcasting monopoly in the UK with the launch of the rival ITV television network, so they were determined to counter the new channel's arrival
with as many popular shows as possible.
Thus Quatermass II was commissioned from writer Nigel Kneale, who since the previous serial
had seen huge success with productions such as Nineteen Eighty-Four and The Creature for the BBC. Both of these were directed
by Rudolph Cartier, who had directed The Quatermass Experiment and teamed up once again with Kneale to direct this serial.
As was usual at the time, Quatermass II was transmitted live from the BBC's Lime Grove Studios,
with a certain amount of material pre-filmed on location and played into the live broadcasts as and when required. The serial
was broadcast in six half-hour episodes on Saturday evenings from October 22 to November 26, 1955. Episodes one, two, four, five and six (The Bolts, The Mark, The Coming, The Frenzy and The Destroyers) were all scheduled
from 8.00-8.30pm, with episode three (The Food) scheduled from 9.15-9.45pm. As with the previous serial, the live nature of
the production meant that most of the episodes overran slightly, although none by more than two minutes. In a new development,
each of the episodes was successfully telerecorded onto 35mm film as they were broadcast in order for them to be repeated
the Monday following transmission, with all of the repeats scheduled in a 10.15-10.45pm slot that
night.
It should be noted that although the telerecordings mostly represent the programmes as originally
broadcast, a handful of scenes were in fact re-shot and edited into the films for repeat broadcasts, possibly because the
technical or acting quality of the original scenes was considered inferior. This explains how the actors sometimes appear
to change studios more quickly than would be possible in a live broadcast.
These telerecordings survive complete in the BBC archives, and episode three was repeated
on Bank Holiday Monday,
August 26, 1991, as part of The Lime Grove Story on BBC
2. This was a full day of programming celebrating the history of the Lime Grove Studios, which had closed a month before and
would be demolished two years later. For many years the full serial was not repeated or commercially released on VHS or DVD:
it was believed that this is because Nigel Kneale did not wish it to be released. But in April 2005 the serial was released
for the first time as part of a DVD compilation.
The role of Quatermass was originally to have been played by its originator, actor Reginald
Tate, but sadly Tate died only shortly before production was due to begin. He was replaced at short notice by John Robinson,
who was an experienced actor and veteran of many small and character parts in a variety of films and television programmes.
His performance is somewhat more detached and officious than Tate's, and he is often regarded as the weakest of the five actors
to have played the part on television.
There were no other characters re-appearing from the first serial aside from Quatermass himself,
although the character of Lomax may have been intended to feature, as Quatermass attempts to seek the policeman's help during
the serial and is told he no longer works at Scotland Yard. Thus another similar character is used instead, probably as the
original actor who played Lomax, Ian Colin, was unavailable. This is supported by the fact that the character does re-appear
in the feature film version, which was scripted by Kneale. The role of Quatermass's assistant, Dr Leo Pugh, was played by
Hugh Griffith, who later won an Academy Award for his role in Ben-Hur.
Three actors who would later go on to become extremely familiar faces on British television
feature in small roles in the serial: Roger Delgado, who found fame in the 1970s as the Master in Doctor Who, played a journalist
who helps Quatermass before falling victim to 'the mark' (in episode 4); Wilfrid Brambell, later star of Steptoe and Son and
The Beatles' movie A Hard Day's Night appeared as a tramp, and Melvyn Hayes, who here plays the small part of Frankie, became
one of the stars of the hugely popular 1970s sitcom It Ain't Half Hot Mum.
As with all of the three 1950s Quatermass serials, Quatermass II was directed by Rudolph
Cartier, the BBC's most esteemed director of the day, who worked with the writer Nigel Kneale on a variety of successful programmes
during the decade. These included literary adaptations such as Wuthering Heights
and Nineteen Eighty-Four and other original written for television pieces such as The Creature.
As before, the film rights to Quatermass II were bought by Hammer Films, who released the
feature film version Quatermass 2 in 1957. The film again starred Brian Donlevy and was directed by Val Guest. In America, it went under the title Enemy From Space.
It was to be three years before the Professor returned to action again, when the third serial
Quatermass and the Pit began showing on the BBC. After that there would be a twenty-year break on television before he returned
in a final serial, this time for Thames Television and transmitted on ITV, in 1979. Simply titled Quatermass, the character
was played then by John Mills.
The television scripts for Quatermass II were released as a book by Penguin Books in 1959,
with a selection of stills from the production also included. The book was re-released in 1979 to tie-in with the transmission
of the final Quatermass serial on ITV.
In April 2005, BBC Worldwide released a boxed set of all their existing Quatermass material
on DVD, containing digitally restored versions of all six episodes of Quatermass II, as well as the two existing episodes
of The Quatermass Experiment and all of Quatermass and the Pit, along with various extra material.
The 1970 Doctor Who serial Spearhead from Space by Robert Holmes contains elements inspired
by the plot of Quatermass II, including meteorites bringing aliens to Earth, invasion by imitation and stealth, and a creature
growing in a tank. Supporting evidence comes from the programme's script-editor, Terrance Dicks, who has often quoted Doctor
Who writer Malcolm Hulke as having said, "A good television script requires just one good idea. It doesn't necessarily have
to be your idea." Nigel Kneale has often had scathing words about Doctor Who, and has been known in interviews to accuse of
having copied storylines from his Quatermass serials. The Doctor Who story, The Invisible Enemy features one short sequence
almost identical to that in Quatermass II, as the Doctor (rather than Quatermass) peers through a window, observing alien
parasites growing in industrial surroundings.
During the rocket launch in Episode 6, the rod supporting the model rocket can be seen.
Leo Pugh claims the odds of a meteorite reaching the Earth's surface are something like "one
in a billion". In reality such events are much more common.
At the start of the scene in the camp committee's office, the first part of Dawson's dialog is all but inaudible due to the wrong microphone having been faded up.
When Dillon and the Sergeant are in the Land Rover, the shadow of a studio technician can
be seen crossing the rear window of the vehicle.
Episode Three was broadcast in 1991 as part of the programming celebrating the history of
the BBC's Lime Grove facility. In order to fit into the half-hour timeslot, several minutes of footage were cut from the episode.