The adventures of Joe McClaine, a schoolboy and spy for the World Intelligence Network who can have the knowledge of top experts uploaded into his brain by his scientist father.The adventures of Joe McClaine, a schoolboy and spy for the World Intelligence Network who can have the knowledge of top experts uploaded into his brain by his scientist father.The adventures of Joe McClaine, a schoolboy and spy for the World Intelligence Network who can have the knowledge of top experts uploaded into his brain by his scientist father.
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For me personally, Joe 90 is one of the best SUPERMARIONATION shows from the creative talents of Gerry and Sylvia Anderson.
It was one of the first television programmes, I remember watching when I was a boy.
This 1968 tv production, actually looked like it had money spent on it, unlike some 1960's children programmes that looked cheap and awful to watch.
Both the special effects and the model work are excellent for its time. This was in the days before CGI.
The dialogue is well written, and it is spoken well by the actors doing the voices for the puppets.
I have two favourite SUPERMARIONATION tv series, this one and Stingray.
It was one of the first television programmes, I remember watching when I was a boy.
This 1968 tv production, actually looked like it had money spent on it, unlike some 1960's children programmes that looked cheap and awful to watch.
Both the special effects and the model work are excellent for its time. This was in the days before CGI.
The dialogue is well written, and it is spoken well by the actors doing the voices for the puppets.
I have two favourite SUPERMARIONATION tv series, this one and Stingray.
This is so underrated but I remember Joe 90:as clearly as watching Thunderbirds as a child of the late 60s. I love all Gerry Anderson's work but Thunderbirds, Joe 90, Stingray have to be my favourites. Following Captain Scarlet which this is in the style of. And of course another underrated series is The Secret Service. Not forgetting of course the charming black and white series of Fireball XL5, Supercar. Never get bored of watching these. Great storylines, effects and attention to detail.
Joe 90 was one of those precious shows from the Century 21 stable from the glory days of the swinging sixties.
The show depicts the adventures of a young boy who, with the aid of his scientist father (Joe was adopted) is able to assume the brain patterns of any one, provided he wears a special pair glasses.
Typically this might be the brain pattern of a pilot or a computer expert.
This allowed the show's story lines to venture into territory that otherwise would have been impossible
One of the really memorable things about the show was the absolutely cracking title sequence with music by Barry Gray which really set the adrenaline flowing, and could only have been produced in the late sixties.
The whole show oozed quality and imagination of the type that you simply do not get in kids shows today.
This was a truly great and memorable show so come back Joe 90, we need you !
The show depicts the adventures of a young boy who, with the aid of his scientist father (Joe was adopted) is able to assume the brain patterns of any one, provided he wears a special pair glasses.
Typically this might be the brain pattern of a pilot or a computer expert.
This allowed the show's story lines to venture into territory that otherwise would have been impossible
One of the really memorable things about the show was the absolutely cracking title sequence with music by Barry Gray which really set the adrenaline flowing, and could only have been produced in the late sixties.
The whole show oozed quality and imagination of the type that you simply do not get in kids shows today.
This was a truly great and memorable show so come back Joe 90, we need you !
I watched a "SuperMarionation" themed day yesterday on the SF TV Channel, comprising episodes of Stingray, Thunderbirds and Joe 90 and it struck me how much Anderson's puppets had evolved from Stingray, through Thunderbirds to Joe 90. Before Joe 90 the puppets looked toy-like with large heads and stunted limbs. However the puppets in Joe 90 have bodies that are correct in all proportions and faces that look human (in fact they look so human the visual effect can be a bit weird). I especially noticed it in scene in a church where the congregation puppets had such lifelike facial features that, for a second, I thought I was watching inserted library stock of human extras but they were all puppets, all with unique human facial features. Gerry Anderson had reached his goal with Joe 90 of having miniature people but it's a pity the scripts were a bit top-heavy with their wish-fulfilment fantasies of many of Britain's oppressed 10 year-old boys.
When you compare Joe 90 to other Gerry Anderson series such as Thunderbirds, Stingray or Captain Scarlet it just seems totally inferior. To be honest, it was rather average despite it's interesting premise.
The hero was Joe 90, a nine year old boy who could take on the brain patterns of some of the greatest minds. He then went on many missions to save the day. It was a good idea-a nine year old boy on missions to save the world. The series wasn't totally bad but it just wasn't exciting enough for me. I even liked 80's Gerry Anderson series Terrahawks better which is saying a lot.
Young children may appreciate the show more but I don't think it will appeal to adults.
The hero was Joe 90, a nine year old boy who could take on the brain patterns of some of the greatest minds. He then went on many missions to save the day. It was a good idea-a nine year old boy on missions to save the world. The series wasn't totally bad but it just wasn't exciting enough for me. I even liked 80's Gerry Anderson series Terrahawks better which is saying a lot.
Young children may appreciate the show more but I don't think it will appeal to adults.
Did you know
- TriviaAccording to Gerry Anderson, the plot of Joe 90 was based around Gerry's pre-Supermarionation days when he served as an assistant editor for such films as The Wicked Lady (1945), handling recording tape on a daily basis. While pondering on the blanking and re-use of such tape, Anderson made a connection to the human brain's electrical activities, as he would later explain, "I read somewhere that the human brain is controlled by electrical impulses and how thoughts are stored electronically. I started toying with the story potential of a process that would allow the recording of brain patterns and transferring them to another brain. I was really likening it to magnetic recording, where material could be stored or transferred to another tape."
- Alternate versionsSeveral episodes were later re-edited into the made-for-video "movie," The Amazing Adventures of Joe 90 (1981).
- ConnectionsFeatured in Children's TV on Trial: The 1960s (2007)
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