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Thunderbird 6

  • 1968
  • G
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Thunderbird 6 (1968)
Several members of the International Rescue crew attend the maiden flight of Brains' revolutionary craft Skyship One, unaware that they are being lured into a deadly trap
Play trailer1:58
1 Video
10 Photos
ActionAdventureDramaFamilySci-Fi

Several members of the International Rescue team attend the maiden flight of Brains' revolutionary airship Skyship One, unaware that they have been lured into a deadly trap.Several members of the International Rescue team attend the maiden flight of Brains' revolutionary airship Skyship One, unaware that they have been lured into a deadly trap.Several members of the International Rescue team attend the maiden flight of Brains' revolutionary airship Skyship One, unaware that they have been lured into a deadly trap.

  • Director
    • David Lane
  • Writers
    • Gerry Anderson
    • Sylvia Anderson
  • Stars
    • Peter Dyneley
    • Sylvia Anderson
    • Shane Rimmer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    1.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Lane
    • Writers
      • Gerry Anderson
      • Sylvia Anderson
    • Stars
      • Peter Dyneley
      • Sylvia Anderson
      • Shane Rimmer
    • 15User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    Official Trailer

    Photos10

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    Top Cast11

    Edit
    Peter Dyneley
    Peter Dyneley
    • Jeff Tracy
    • (voice)
    Sylvia Anderson
    Sylvia Anderson
    • Lady Penelope Creighton-Ward
    • (voice)
    Shane Rimmer
    Shane Rimmer
    • Scott Tracy
    • (voice)
    • …
    Jeremy Wilkin
    Jeremy Wilkin
    • Virgil Tracy
    • (voice)
    • …
    Matt Zimmerman
    • Alan Tracy
    • (voice)
    • …
    David Graham
    David Graham
    • Gordon Tracy
    • (voice)
    • …
    Keith Alexander
    Keith Alexander
    • John Tracy
    • (voice)
    • …
    Gary Files
    • Black Phantom
    • (voice)
    • …
    Christine Finn
    Christine Finn
    • Tin-Tin
    • (voice)
    • …
    John Carson
    John Carson
    • Captain Foster (II)
    • (voice)
    Geoffrey Keen
    Geoffrey Keen
    • James Glenn
    • (voice)
    • Director
      • David Lane
    • Writers
      • Gerry Anderson
      • Sylvia Anderson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.31.7K
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    Featured reviews

    7arch29

    The plot is simplistic and cliché, but many scenes are lovingly crafted and entertaining in their own right

    These films have a certain style and flair, helped greatly by Barry Gray's music. The plot is simplistic and cliché, but has a dash of originality. There is the ongoing Thunderbirds obsession with the form and function of ships and other vehicles. The biplane acrobatics were very well done, and the music playing when the biplane first appears is comical and appropriate. Every scene and transition seems lovingly crafted and there is no doubt that this film is a work of art.
    6S1rr34l

    Brains Is Redundant - Geoffery De Havilland's Taking His Place In International Rescue.

    Greetings And Salutations, and welcome to my review of Thunderbird 6; here's the breakdown of my ratings:

    Story: 1.25 Direction: 1.50 Pace: 1.25 Acting: 1.25 Enjoyment: 1.25

    TOTAL: 6.50 out of 10.00

    As a kid, I always found the Thunderbirds to be a rather uninteresting viewing. I know, wash my mouth out. But I was too young to appreciate the story or the marionette action. At that age, I needed more bang and flash and much less plot. Luckily, I've aged to a point where I can appreciate those things - and more.

    Gerry and Sylvia Anderson take the writers' seats for this big-picture Thunderbird outing. On the whole, they do a decent enough job. However, there appear to be a few alterations to International Rescue's secrecy policy. At the movie's opening, Brains is in a meeting with a top aeronautical company to get his new invention off the ground - a technologically advanced airship. This conference takes place in complete secrecy, and the board members never meet Brains. Once the airship's construction is complete, the International Rescue team receive an invite on its maiden voyage. And as we progress through the story, it becomes evident that the hijackers also know their passengers are International Rescue. So much for keeping a secret, huh? Sadly, the Andersons had to drop the concealment issues due to poor story structuring. This neglect allows the hijackers to bug and record Lady Penelope, enabling them to splice together a recorded message - A message that'll drop the Thunderbirds into The Black Phantom's trap. So the bad guys not only know their passengers' secret identities, but also the content and style of the message they're required to send? Brains should check their security and stop messing about trying to come up with a Thunderbird 6. But apart from that glaring inconsistency, the story is pretty solid. The characterisations are spot on, which is how they should be since their creators are writing their story. And in this journey, the Andersons have taken the marionettes a step closer to a more adult world. There are more killings in this film than in all the TV shows. But what got me was the body dumping of the original aircrew in the ocean. I thought it was great, but I have a dark sense of humour. Luckily for the audience, they've not introduced sex into the International Rescue universe - otherwise, we'd have to have a character called Richard Woodcock.

    David Lane does a marvellous job with the direction. The one thing that he could've altered to make for a more enjoyable movie was the tempo. He gives T6 a quick stroll of a pace. This speed doesn't always work with the more thrilling aspects of the narrative, like the shoot-outs. In truth, it has the opposite effect and makes them a tad dull. Had he edited quicker, the speedier transitions would have built up the tension and excitement. Where he excels is with the model-to-real-life shifts. The best example of this is the Tiger Moth Bi-Plane. There are at least two versions. One is a remote control model, and the other is a real piloted aeroplane. Having a real aircraft allows Lane to capture more realistic flight scenes with actual scenery and vistas. It works particularly well in the end rescue sequence - you hardly notice the segues.

    As for the performances, the puppeteers are excellent, and the vocal talents are okay. It would've been nice had the actors and actresses put more energy into their portrayals. When your body is actually sculptured from wood, I believe you need to steer clear of wooden acting. By and large, the performers do this. However, there are moments when a few slide towards the lumber pile - namely, Sylvia Anderson as Lady Penelope.

    Thunderbird 6 isn't brilliant, but it's enjoyable enough to waste an hour-and-a-half on a lazy Sunday afternoon. It's one of those films you can stick on for the Grandkids, tell them how much you enjoyed it, and then drift off into snooze-land as they baulk and moan at how boring and stupid it is. Ah, those precious family moments.

    Okay, I've cleared a runway, so land that Thunderbird and nip over here to scrutinize my IMDb lists - The Final Frontier, The Game Is Afoot, Let's Get Animated, and Holding Out For A Hero to see where I ranked Thunderbird 6.

    Take Care & Stay Well.
    5chrismartonuk-1

    The last fling of the Tracey family.

    By the time this belated TV spin-off appeared, Captain Scarlet had come and gone and Thunderbirds was yesterday's news. Such was the shallow fickle values of us kids back in the 60's. I was very surprised to see this announced for production in TV TORNADO. I recall the vast amount of hype the original film received and assumed for years it had been a box-office success. However, the whole Anderson supermarionation empire was in its decline as fashions changed by the late 60's. Joe 90 was to appear to a less-than-rapturous reception and The Secret Service was virtually stillborn. At least Joe got his own comic and a Big Rat toy. All I recall of The Secret Service was a clip on Magpie and a Sweet cigarette picture card of the Rev Unwin. This might not have mattered so much if the Anderson's had learnt the lesson of the previous film. How many producers get the opportunity to make a sequel to a film that flopped? While the plot against the Tracey's by Black Phantom (is it really a suddenly vain toupeed Hood?) is a more satisfyingly personal drama as opposed to the Zero X launch, the whole plot is, again, a bog-standard TV episode dragged out with whimsical foreign interludes that exercised the model makers ingenuity but fatally kill any sense of pace. The finale of the Skyship delicately balanced on the aerial wrenches up the tension but is too little too late - and it drops onto a missile base for added pyrotechnic value. I recall some publicity being raised on national TV news by the live-action shots of the bi-plane roaring over an unfinished motorway. I suspect Anderson was more interested in these as a calling card to show he could handle live-action as opposed to puppetry so - like The Secret Service - this serves as a transitional film to the human-based melodramatics of the 70's with UFO and Space 1999. While Anderson could handle full-sized action, endowing his non-marionette figures with any breath of humanity often proved beyond him.
    bob the moo

    Has all the weaknesses and appeal that you expect

    Having just completed on working as an expert contractor on the production of "Airship One" – a revolutionary new airship – with a private airline company, Brains is tasked with performing his day job. Despite the thunderbirds generally able to cope with the problems facing them, and no other siblings to drive the bloody thing, Jeff Tracy decides he needs a new ship – Thunderbird 6. While Brains tries to design something without Tracy giving him even a hint of a spec to work from, Lady Penelope, Alan, Tin Tin and Parker are guests of honour on the maiden voyage of Airship One.

    I could criticise it on the basis of plot but that would be akin to clubbing a baby seal because, despite howlers in logic and such the story pretty much does what it is required to do in setting up various adventures for the Thunderbirds to get into. It has elements of bigger themes but seems happy just to stick to the basics and doesn't do anything that interesting and lacks any real excitement or tension. Of course this has something to do with the delivery which is, obviously, quite wooden. To fans though this is all part of the appeal and those that enjoy the series will find more of the same here and will enjoy it as such. Casual viewers will be distracted by it for its novelty value but (like me) may struggle to care enough to stick with it.

    The puppets are just what you expect and the models are good for their period – we're not talking Star Wars here but it has an unique feel that is unmistakably Gerry Anderson. Again it is not really fair to criticise it simply for being what I knew it would be so it did look good for what it was. The voice cast are solid enough but Finn (Tin-Tin) is the weakest of the lot, making her young woman sounds like some old woman in the post office.

    Overall though, you know what you are getting when you start this. It is a solid and dated affair which won't win over too many children nowadays but fans will enjoy it because it does just what the series did – if you liked that then you should like this.
    8zethrid

    Better than Hollywood

    Yeah it's definitely cheesy and the marionettes are so lifelike they're creepy, especially when they're laughing maniacally in the beginning, but the creativity and realism are fantastic. The plot is unique, the acting is top knotch and the story is an interesting one. This movie and the original shows by Gerry Anderson are LEAGUES above the dreck that Hollywood has put out over the last 10 years. (Especially the remake. Geesh, what a mess that was) Imagining the actual work involved in making this movie and the shows is mind-boggling and showed true artistry and creativity which is sorely lacking today.

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    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Following filming of a flying stunt on M40 motorway in Buckinghamshire (which was newly completed but not yet open to traffic) Joan Hughes (pilot of the Tiger Moth) was charged but later acquitted of seven counts of dangerous flying when the plane failed to make contact with the surface of the road while passing under a bridge. A crosswind had prevented Hughes from landing the plane on the road before passing under the bridge as stipulated as a condition of permission to use the location. Norman Foster (who supervised the shooting of this scene) was also charged but acquitted of three counts of aiding and abetting. In addition to the court case filming permission was revoked immediately, leading to the sequence being completed with a miniature set of the site and the model aircraft used for other flying sequences.
    • Goofs
      At the time that Thunderbird 6 (1968) was being filmed, the Sydney Opera House was under construction. Construction work could be seen during the shot of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, despite the fact that the movie was set in 2068 (many, many years since the Sydney Opera House was opened).

      CORRECTION: While this probably is an oversight as the Opera House was not completed in real life, it is also possible that it was simply being renovated.
    • Quotes

      Jeff Tracy: Now, let's have a rundown on the International Rescue craft. So far, there are five. Thunderbird 1: sleek, first and fast. Thunderbird 2: giant transporter. Carries all the rescue gear to the danger zone. Thunderbird 3: designed for space rescue. Thunderbird 4: capable of withstanding the pressure of the depths. Thunderbird 5: space monitor. Capable of receiving or intercepting distress calls from any part of the world. And I'm telling you, Brains, in no uncertain terms, that we now need a Thunderbird 6.

      Brains: Sure, Mr Tracy, but can you give me some sort of a steer? I like to work to a specification.

      Jeff Tracy: Specification? You didn't need to work to a specification when you designed that airship for the New World Aircraft Corporation.

      Brains: That's right. I didn't. And what happened? They laughed.

      Jeff Tracy: Yeah, that's right. They laughed... and then they built it.

    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood Burn (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      The Man in his Flying Machine
      (Music from "The Man on the Flying Trapeze" by George Leybourne)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 20, 1968 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Fanderson: the official Gerry and Sylvia Anderson appreciation society site
      • The Official Gerry Anderson Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Thunderbird Six
    • Filming locations
      • Century 21 Studios, Slough, Berkshire, England, UK(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Associated Television (Overseas) Limited
      • Century 21 Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • £300,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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