Basedonthebook:TheStrangeCaseOf MrPelham by Anthony Armstrong
Director: Basil Dearden.
Production: Filmed at Elstree Studios and on Location in London in 1969.
TheatricalRelease: 1970
Cast: Roger Moore, Hildegarde Neil, Anton Rogers, Freddie Jones and Thorley Walters
When cautious business man Harold Pelham is involved in a car crash, he momentarily “dies” on the operating table. A decidedly more assertive and sauve doppelganger emerges and when Pelham recovers he finds his life and work being influenced by “another” man. He discovers to his horror… it’s him!
One of Roger Moore’s best movies. A chilling thriller which clearly was once achingly contemporary, yet now is very much a period piece. A cornucopia of late sixties/early seventies sights and sounds, the film is a real nostalgic treasure trove. Writing in his 2008 autobiography Roger Moore describes the film as one of his favourite roles with some genuine acting to be savoured. Forget Bond, this is Moore at his best!
Trivia: Look out for a young Jockey Wilson in a pub scene. The book was also made as a televsion play in the anthology series AlfredHitchcockPresents
ChillingPostscript: Just weeks after the film wrapped, director Basil Dearden was tragically killed in a car crash… on the very same stretch of road as Harold Pelham has his accident in the film.
A fuller review…
The Man who haunted himself is one of those classy 70s films I just love to watch for the period settings. On top of that, it just so happens to have the uber classy Roger Moore in it and any guy worth his salt has a secret desire to be this man, such is his coolness and absoluteEnglishness personified. Roger does not let us down, the film starts out with him looking every inch the dignified cityexecutive with the picture postcard English house, a top quality car he drives to work every day (although I’d love to see him try that nowadays) and finally a rather pretty wife and 2 sons.
But alas, all is not well and our Roger has perhaps a secret yearning to uncover other parts of his personality. I’ll not say any more, but following a car crash, Roger then has to come to grips with the life he knew being less secure than it was previously. People claim to have seen him, spoken to himand tell him he did things that were so strangely out of character that we begin to wonder is he leading a secret double life, simply mad following the accident or, more sinisterly, does he have a double who looks like him yet acts his exact opposite in so many ways?
Aside from watching the story unfold, there’s plenty of opportunity to do some location-spotting, as well as ogling 70s girls, who, to my mind, seem somewhat sexier than many of the modern matchsticks we see on films thesedays. Okay, perhaps just personal taste that one, but I’d be interested to know what other red-blooded males think. All in all, this film is a classic and well deserving of a watching. Interestingly, it straddled the period between Moore finishing on The Saint and getting the James Bond role, and includes a rather classy piece of prediction as Moore makes a joke about James Bond on Her Majesty’s secret service. Ah, not only is the bloke handsome, classy, popular with the ladies andquintessentially English, he can also predict the future. Some guys certainly do get all the luck! So give yourself over to this little masterpiece for 90 minutes or so, you won’t be disappointed!
Production:Bristol and The Forest Of Dean, June to August 1973.
FirstBroadcast:BBC1, 5.20pm Mondays, 6th January to 10th March 1975.
Basedon the book:The Changes Trilogy: (The Weathermonger, Heartsease, The Devil’s Children) by Peter Dickinson.
AdapterandProducer: Anna Home
Director: John Prowse
Cast:Vicky Williams as Nicy Gore, Keith Ashton as Jonathon, David Garfield as Davey Gordon, Edward Brayshaw as The Chief Robber, Bernard Horsfall as Mr Gore, Sonia Graham as Mrs Gore.Rafiq Anwar as Chaca, Rugby Brar as Gopal, Rebecca Mascarenhas as Ajeet, Arthur Hewlett as Mr Tom, David King as Mr Barnard, Jack Watson as Peter, Tom Chadbon as Michael, Merelina Kendall as Mary and Oscar Quitak as Mr Furbelow.
Post apocalyptic drama serial TheChanges is, arguably, one of the most ambitious children’s programmes ever broadcast. Even during the Seventies, a ten part serial on colour film was a bold and unusual move. The extract above is from the beginning of episode four.
Its quite a disturbing watch and given it was originally transmitted at teatime it is all the more remarkable the BBC were able to get away with it. Alright, so technically it was aimed at older children and teenagers, but even so, a whole generation of school kids grew up with half remembered scenes imprinted on their minds.
Synopsis: The first episode is superb and stands up remarkably well, even today. 15 year old Nicky Gore is doing her homework one evening, when suddenly there is a strange noise and her father begins to smash up the televison set he was calmly watching only moments before. Suddenly Nicky finds herself joining in with the whole family, destroying all electronic and mechanical goods. Outside in the street, people are rampaging and all mechanical things are being destoyed… This is the time of “the changes” and only people who aren’t reliant on mechanical or electronic goods and very small children seem to be free from the mindbending noises. The serial suggests the noise is carried on pylons or “bad wires” as Nicky calls them. Abandoned by her parents, Nicky makes friends with some travelling Sikhs, unaffected it seems by the changes. Her friendship causes aggression amongst the local villagers. The Sikhs find themseves branded as ” The Devil’s Children” and Nicky is percieved as being evil for conspiring with them. (One could read this as an allegory for the state of Britain in the early to mid Seventies when racism was rife as ethnic minorities struggled to find a voice in the new multicultural Britain.)
In later episodes Nicky is nearly stoned for being ” a witch” in the eyes of local vigilante Davey Gordon, who since the changes has become obsessed with searching out “evil and evildoers”. Nicky escapes with the help of farmer’s son Jonathon and his boat “The Heartsease”. Davey Gordon gives chase but is drowned when he falls from a canal lock gate and is unable to swim.
Nicky and Jonathon’s boat blows up and they swim to safety, spending a night in the woods. Rescued by a young couple with a new born baby, the serial moves at a calmer pace as the youngsters recover from their recent ordeal. Nicky is determined to discover what is causing the changes and hopefully reverse the process, she and Jonathon head for a nearby quarry in search of answers…
Analysis: Truly chilling but veryexciting stuff! Adapted and produced by Anna Home from the books TheChangesTrilogy by Peter Dickinson, Filming took place in the summer of 1973 in the Clifton area of Bristol, later the setting for shows as diverse as Shoestring, SinkOr Swim and the more recent BeingHuman. Later episodes were shot in the countryside and surrounding areas of the Forest of Dean. Directed by John Prowse, TheChanges was transmitted on BBC1 on Monday afternoons from 5.20 to 5.45pm between 6th January and 10th March 1975. It reached a good audience for its slot and was repeated the next summer on Wednesday afternoons between 5.15 and 5.40pm from 9th June to 11th August 1976 . TheChanges was last broadcast around 1993/4 on UK Gold. Its never been released on video or DVD and is only available on Youtube as a copy of the UK Gold transmissions.
The very effective theme music and incidental score was by Paddy Kingsland of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. What sounds like a piano string adds a feel of menace to the moment of change. The post apocalyptic theme extended to the title sequence. We see the normality of industry and production suddenly frozen and rendered obsolete. Lorries and trains are frozen and reversed or are suddenly seen ablaze. This was terrifying stuff for a five year old but I turned out alright! It would have been great to have seen the story updated to the end of the century when all the horror stories about the Y2K bug were predicting the world would go back to the stone age!
Hopefully, one of these days the BBC will see fit to release TheChanges uncut on DVD, perhaps with some extras such as a commentary by the stars. Vicky Williams who played Nicky Gore was most recently seen on the BBC’s HolbyCity. David Garfield who played Davey Gordon had roles in DoctorWho, CitizenSmith and most recently TheIT Crowd…
The serial predated its adult counterpart Survivors by three months and I actually think TheChanges is the better show. Naturally Survivors has been released on DVD to help the promotion of a rebooted series. If that’s what it takes to see this on DVD then maybe it is time for new version of TheChanges. If they do remake it, I reckon it will be aimed at adults and be shown in a post 9pm slot. It will also probably not be half as good…
MUSIC:TheChangesSuite by Paddy Kingsland. Retrospective:50yearsofthe BBCRadiophonicWorkshop. (Released 2008)