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Thunderbirds Are GO

Original title: Thunderbirds Are Go
  • 1966
  • G
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Thunderbirds Are GO (1966)
Home Video Trailer from MGM
Play trailer1:03
2 Videos
29 Photos
ActionAdventureDramaFamilySci-Fi

When the launch of Zero-X - the first manned spacecraft bound for Mars - goes awry due to sabotage, International Rescue is requested to assist in the mission's second attempt.When the launch of Zero-X - the first manned spacecraft bound for Mars - goes awry due to sabotage, International Rescue is requested to assist in the mission's second attempt.When the launch of Zero-X - the first manned spacecraft bound for Mars - goes awry due to sabotage, International Rescue is requested to assist in the mission's second attempt.

  • Director
    • David Lane
  • Writers
    • Gerry Anderson
    • Sylvia Anderson
  • Stars
    • Sylvia Anderson
    • Ray Barrett
    • Alexander Davion
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Lane
    • Writers
      • Gerry Anderson
      • Sylvia Anderson
    • Stars
      • Sylvia Anderson
      • Ray Barrett
      • Alexander Davion
    • 52User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Thunderbirds Are Go / Thunderbirds Six: International Rescue Edition
    Trailer 1:03
    Thunderbirds Are Go / Thunderbirds Six: International Rescue Edition
    Thunderbirds Are Go / Thunderbirds Six: International Rescue Edition
    Trailer 1:03
    Thunderbirds Are Go / Thunderbirds Six: International Rescue Edition
    Thunderbirds Are Go / Thunderbirds Six: International Rescue Edition
    Trailer 1:03
    Thunderbirds Are Go / Thunderbirds Six: International Rescue Edition

    Photos29

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    Top cast17

    Edit
    Sylvia Anderson
    Sylvia Anderson
    • Lady Penelope Creighton-Ward
    • (voice)
    Ray Barrett
    Ray Barrett
    • John Tracy
    • (voice)
    • …
    Alexander Davion
    Alexander Davion
    • Space Captain Greg Martin
    • (voice)
    Peter Dyneley
    Peter Dyneley
    • Jeff Tracy
    • (voice)
    Christine Finn
    Christine Finn
    • Tin-Tin Kyrano
    • (voice)
    David Graham
    David Graham
    • Gordon Tracy
    • (voice)
    • …
    Paul Maxwell
    Paul Maxwell
    • Captain Paul Travers
    • (voice)
    Neil McCallum
    Neil McCallum
    • Dr. Ray Pierce
    • (voice)
    Bob Monkhouse
    Bob Monkhouse
    • Space Navigator Brad Newman
    • (voice)
    • …
    Shane Rimmer
    Shane Rimmer
    • Scott Tracy
    • (voice)
    Charles 'Bud' Tingwell
    Charles 'Bud' Tingwell
    • Dr. Tony Grant
    • (voice)
    • (as Charles Tingwell)
    • …
    Jeremy Wilkin
    Jeremy Wilkin
    • Virgil Tracy
    • (voice)
    • …
    Matt Zimmerman
    • Alan Tracy
    • (voice)
    • …
    F. Vivian Dunn
    • Self
    • (as Lt. Col. F. Vivian Dunn)
    Charlie Bowden
    • Self
    • (uncredited)
    Cliff Richard
    Cliff Richard
    • Cliff Richard Jr.
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    The Shadows
    • Themselves
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • David Lane
    • Writers
      • Gerry Anderson
      • Sylvia Anderson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews52

    6.42.7K
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    Featured reviews

    3The_Secretive_Bus

    "Now this is going to be a tough assignment..."

    I grew up on Thunderbirds repeats as a kid. The excitement, the explosions, the majestic Barry Gray scores... It was a wonderful programme. Even now I have a great soft spot for it and own the whole series on DVD. Though the episodes now seem quite padded here and there and I watch it with much more cynicism than I did as a child, I still love it. A good episode of Thunderbirds is the perfect nostalgia trip for me.

    Sad to say, then, that the Thunderbirds movies retain little of the qualities that made the TV show such great fun. Perhaps it's the script: Gerry and Sylvia Anderson were far better leaving the scripting duties to other writers as they couldn't write decent dialogue for peanuts. They wrote Thunderbirds' debut episode, which has awful expository dialogue and lots of pointless sequences that go nowhere - but the episode as a whole is still a classic due to the frenetic atmosphere, the sense of doom and the fantastically imaginative rescue (it's the episode where the Fireflash plane lands on three little buggies). "Thunderbirds are Go!" is just horrendously boring. The first ten minutes are taken up with the Zero-X ship being assembled. Very slowly. Later on we have a long dream sequence where Alan imagines going out for a date with Lady Penelope, which features Cliff Richard and the gang having a sing-song (a musical segment in a Thunderbirds movie - what were they thinking?!) and the entire subplot of what the Zero-X astronauts get up to on Mars has no bearing on International Rescue at all.

    The Tracy brothers get hardly anything to do in their own film (John, as is customary, has about 5 lines of dialogue, and Gordon just sits about looking glum - even everybody's favourite, Virgil, has barely any screen time at all). Nor, in fact, are the Thunderbird craft used all that often. In 100 minutes of film there's only one real rescue (featuring Thunderbird 2), with IR overseeing operations at the beginning of the film - which involves them sitting around and peering contentedly at control panels. You'd think with 100 minutes - double the length of one of the TV episodes - the Andersons could've plotted loads of thrilling situations and rescues that involved all the Tracy brothers and their Thunderbird machines, but it was not to be. Thunderbirds 1 and 3 swoop about for a few seconds. Thunderbird 4 isn't even in it (despite being on the DVD cover). Nor are the pod vehicles present - couldn't we even have had the Mole drilling away at something? It really is a tedious film. And that's not even mentioning Alan Tracy ignoring his girlfriend, Tin-Tin, and fantasising about Lady P instead. Way to be a good role-model for the kiddies, Alan. Then again he was a snot in the telly series too...

    Maybe I'm being too hard on what is meant to be an inoffensive kids' film featuring explosions and great model work. But then again the TV show was a genuinely exciting and exhilarating programme, which, at its best, provided great entertainment. "Thunderbirds are Go!" has an uneventful plot, awful dialogue, no decent set-pieces, and - the cardinal sin - a boring rescue that doesn't even utilise the Thunderbird craft to the best of their abilities. It's difficult to imagine kids being wowed by it. You'd be far better off going back to the telly series. Show your kids the Fireflash episodes, or that brill one where giant alligators attacked a manor house. Heck, show them the daft one where Parker encouraged everybody to play bingo for half an hour. Both younger viewers and adults looking for warm nostalgia will be disappointed with "Thunderbirds are Go!" Avoid.
    bob the moo

    The awful writing means that the potential is wasted and it is no more than a 25-minute story excruciatingly padded out to 90

    The space race continues with the first manned mission to Mars in the shape of the Zero-X. However things are put back when the Zero-X is sabotaged during take-off and crashes. Two years later the team are ready to try again but fears over security give them pause. With the Thunderbird team on standby, the mission goes ahead but can the Tracey family help make the perilous mission a success.

    With the live-action remake hitting the cinemas, I decided to avoid the kids in the cinema by watching this original feature instead. Those complaining about how the remake is not any good because of the fact that Anderson was not hands-on involved should perhaps check this out as it is proof that a feature-length version of the series was not any easier for the creator himself! I sat to this just content to see those great ships used well in a reasonable story but, I'm sad to say, that I didn't even get that. The film leaves it for about 20 minutes before the Thunderbirds even get involved and then they only really do anything of merit in the final 10 minutes. In terms of actual good content, I reckon you could have got an episode out of this easily enough but no more than that – and that's the problem. The plot is padded at the start with a very slow take off of Zero-X, in the middle with a terrible dream sequence and towards the end with a laughable mission on Mars!

    The Andersons' are entirely to blame because they wrote the script themselves and produced a padding piece of nonsense that lacks any sense of excitement, pace or, god help us, fun! The dream sequence is a good example – a silly, overlong section that only pads the film and exposes us to Cliff Richard and the Shadows; however the actual mission to Mars is equally as bad with aliens being settled on for the reason a rescue is needed at the end (however the aspect of flame-throwing aliens on Mars is not even mentioned after this scene!). This is the film's great failing, it just cannot sustain the running time at all and most of the time it is very apparent padding that only frustrates – personally I think anyone else could have come up with a better plot for the film that would have seen more rescues and use of the Thunderbird ships. It is annoying because, as a child, I used to watch the show and I think the ships and the models were all cool however they were all very poorly used and most of the screen time seemed to be given over to the anonymous crew of the Zero-X and Lady Penelope.

    The cast do reasonable voice work but never manage to bring emotion to their delivery – something that could really have helped the poor story get a bit of tension into it. Although the song is awful, it is at least momentarily amusing to see puppets of Cliff Richard and the Shadows but, let me stress, it's only momentarily amusing. The only other voice of note is that of the late Bob Monkhouse, but he has little to do and it's one you have to listen for to catch it.

    Overall, even fans of the series will feel let down by this film. It is full of ineffective padding and essentially relegates the all-action thunderbirds into third place in their own movie! The writing is awful and will send fans rushing back to their boxsets and will leave the rest of the viewers reaching for the remote control. A very poor film in the place of what should have been a cool, breezy and fun big screen outing for fans.
    Andrew Foxley

    A Great Adventure for all the Family

    International Rescue make their big-screen debut in a fantastic Supermarionation adventure which puts many modern summer blockbusters to shame.

    Impressive ( if now dated ) special effects and model sequences, together with a strong script and interesting characters ( and of course, Barry Gray's wonderful music ) make this a real treat.
    loza-1

    Not at all Bad

    I remember back in the 1960s the family were out for a walk and we were passing a cinema. We had nothing else to do, so we went in to see this. I had never been particularly impressed with the TV version in black and white (at that time in Britain). But I was very impressed with the film. In full glorious colour, and the special effects looked highly realistic on the big screen - they really did.

    It's kids' entertainment for children aged from 7 to 700. The fact it lasted longer than a TV episode doesn't matter.

    You get a great exciting story, lots of journeys into space in a blistering adventure that'll steam up Brains's glasses and set his bow tie spinning.

    Saw the film again recently, this time with the eyes of an adult. Saw the dream sequence set in the night club. I was amazed at the attention to detail with The Shadows. Not only was each puppet almost a perfect model of Hank, Bruce, John and Brian, but the little Burns guitars were perfect in every detail, right down to the trade mark scroll head. Beautifully done. The singer was Cliff Richard Junior. Oh, well, you can't get everything right!
    Schlockmeister

    Classic Kiddie Movie Fun

    Oh, what a wonderful movie this was to me when I was a child of the sixties! Just enough British sensibility to be "foreign" and different, enough action and plot to hold my interest and, probably pretty important, the rocket ships and planes resembled my 1960s toys so it made me want to rush home and play with them, imagining very closely that I too was a member of the Thunderbird team. Seeing this again after all these years, it still retains some of that playtime magic and I can still see why it held my sttention as a youth. Recommended for the young and (forgive the hopeless cliche, but it is the only one that fits...) young at heart.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The five Tracy brothers were named after five of the NASA astronauts from the "Mercury Seven" space program from the early 1960's:
      • Scott Tracy after Scott Carpenter.
      • Virgil Tracy after Gus Grissom whose real first name was Virgil.
      • Alan Tracy after Alan Shepard.
      • Gordon Tracy after Gordon Cooper.
      • John Tracy after John Glenn.
    • Goofs
      The planet Mars has a largely red surface, yet here it is depicted with a fairly generic grayish appearance.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Glenn Field Controller: This is Assembly Control calling all Zero X units. Assembly Phase One - go!

    • Crazy credits
      None of the characters appearing in this photoplay intentionally resemble any persons living or dead... SINCE THEY DO NOT YET EXIST!
    • Connections
      Featured in Fantastic Fantasy Fright-o-Rama Show Vol. 1 (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      Thunderbirds Are GO
      Written by Barry Gray (uncredited)

      Played by The Band of the Royal Marines

      Conducted by F. Vivian Dunn (as Lt. Col. F. Vivian Dunn)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 12, 1966 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Fanderson: official Gerry & Sylvia Anderson appreciation society
      • Official Gerry Anderson Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Feuervögel startbereit
    • Filming locations
      • Century 21 Studios, Slough, Berkshire, England, UK(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Century 21 Television
      • Associated Television (Overseas) Limited
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • £250,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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