Simon and Liz fell into a time hole and found themselves trapped in different eras of the 20th century, where they have all sorts of adventures. Many of these involve the nefarious Commander... Read allSimon and Liz fell into a time hole and found themselves trapped in different eras of the 20th century, where they have all sorts of adventures. Many of these involve the nefarious Commander Traynor, who is also traveling through time.Simon and Liz fell into a time hole and found themselves trapped in different eras of the 20th century, where they have all sorts of adventures. Many of these involve the nefarious Commander Traynor, who is also traveling through time.
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Kids have adventures back and forth in time. The show had flaws in some ways. In spite of the fact a respectable name is credited as scientific advisor, and a legitimate Scientist Man prefaces several episodes assuring us it's all plausible and trying to explain how it might work, I never did quite get the hang of the rules, and several times it's suggested that they're in effect only hallucinating, which would lower the stakes if true but is surely contradicted by other things. The overall story arc is fairly clearly being made up as they go, and without the slickness with which some modern shows do this, and the ending breezily retcons an early part in a way that made no sense to me.
But it's very entertaining and just has a certain something about it, perhaps just the charisma of the leads, in particular the kids and Dennis Quilley as the machiavellian Traynor, and some very good scripts, and it fully deserves its enduring cult status. The parts revolving around the children encountering their future selves and not much liking how they've turned out are especially great. There are some good twists and cliffhangers, images that stay with you and much food for thought, and it gets eerily apocalyptic at one point in a way I've rarely come across. Among other highlights is a turn by CJ out of Reginald Perrin as a genuinely chilling and intimidating mad scientist that has to be seen to be believed.
But it's very entertaining and just has a certain something about it, perhaps just the charisma of the leads, in particular the kids and Dennis Quilley as the machiavellian Traynor, and some very good scripts, and it fully deserves its enduring cult status. The parts revolving around the children encountering their future selves and not much liking how they've turned out are especially great. There are some good twists and cliffhangers, images that stay with you and much food for thought, and it gets eerily apocalyptic at one point in a way I've rarely come across. Among other highlights is a turn by CJ out of Reginald Perrin as a genuinely chilling and intimidating mad scientist that has to be seen to be believed.
Simon Randall (Spencer Banks) and Liz Skinner (Cheryl Burfield) are teenage friends who slipped into a time hole to find themselves trapped in various periods of the 20th century, where they encounter all sorts of strange environments.
Another traveler, Commander Charles Traynor (Denis Quilley) also played Caliban in "The Tempest" with John Gielgud
They are not always alone and are also connected telepathically. Similar to projects like "The Time Tunnel" (1966), but has more of that ancient British TV such as the first shows of "Doctor Who" (1963) with William Hartnell.
This program is broken into many small parts which can be annoying and must have been annoying if you had to wait between the parts on the original presentation. Now we have the opportunity to binge 26 episodes. No fare looking ahead as it does wrap up well.
Another traveler, Commander Charles Traynor (Denis Quilley) also played Caliban in "The Tempest" with John Gielgud
They are not always alone and are also connected telepathically. Similar to projects like "The Time Tunnel" (1966), but has more of that ancient British TV such as the first shows of "Doctor Who" (1963) with William Hartnell.
This program is broken into many small parts which can be annoying and must have been annoying if you had to wait between the parts on the original presentation. Now we have the opportunity to binge 26 episodes. No fare looking ahead as it does wrap up well.
Personally, I've only had the opportunity to find the first complete story, "The Wrong End of Time." I found it quite enjoyable, seeing past the 'children's show' facade and enjoying it as I would a Pat Troughton Doctor Who adventure. Timeslip is a completely different concept of time travel as compared to most programmes/movies, and with an even lower budget than Tomorrow People, the creators have thus far managed to instill a minor obsession in me to find the remaining stories.
If you are looking for vintage British SF without the gloss, then by all means find a copy of this wonderful show. Fans of classic Doctor Who will be very impressed, I think.
The only drawback to the story is the child acting, although it improves a great deal as the story progresses. Also, there is a mild amount of padding, but that is to be expected in a serialized programme. The theme song is VERY reminiscent of another, extremely popular british SF series, as well.
If you are looking for vintage British SF without the gloss, then by all means find a copy of this wonderful show. Fans of classic Doctor Who will be very impressed, I think.
The only drawback to the story is the child acting, although it improves a great deal as the story progresses. Also, there is a mild amount of padding, but that is to be expected in a serialized programme. The theme song is VERY reminiscent of another, extremely popular british SF series, as well.
I was six when Timeslip was shown, but it has really stayed with me. I am surprised that no-one has published anything about it on the WWW, and yes, I have indeed been sad enough to search for it. Hell, there is even a Double Deckers page, so why not Timeslip!
Some things I remember are:
*some episodes were in colour, and others in black and white. Might this be why it has not been reshown?
*that the scary blary ATV sig tune blended perfectly into the theme music: da-da-da-da-DAAAAAA.....
*the way Liz and Simon would feel along the gap in the wire netting to find the Time Barrier.
*thinking how freaky it was when Liz met herself in the future (probably 1988 or something), but that she was called Beth.
*I used to have the novelisation, and there was also the comic strip version in Look-in (someone needs to do a Look-In website, by the way).
Does anyone know if Timeslip is available on video? I have never found it and would love to see it again.
Some things I remember are:
*some episodes were in colour, and others in black and white. Might this be why it has not been reshown?
*that the scary blary ATV sig tune blended perfectly into the theme music: da-da-da-da-DAAAAAA.....
*the way Liz and Simon would feel along the gap in the wire netting to find the Time Barrier.
*thinking how freaky it was when Liz met herself in the future (probably 1988 or something), but that she was called Beth.
*I used to have the novelisation, and there was also the comic strip version in Look-in (someone needs to do a Look-In website, by the way).
Does anyone know if Timeslip is available on video? I have never found it and would love to see it again.
The DVD of the entire series was released by Carlton Visual Entertainment Ltd on Monday 19th July 2004. Spread over four discs, the release features all 26 episodes including the sole surviving colour episode (not included on the original VHS release.) Both the colour episode and the black and white film recordings of the show have been totally re-mastered and cleaned up and, as such, feature much better picture resolution and sound than the poorly sourced VHS versions.
Also included in the package is an essay on the background to the show, the merchandise and brief biographies of the show's regulars together with a map of St.Oswald's and an exclusive gallery featuring never before published photos.
Also included in the package is an essay on the background to the show, the merchandise and brief biographies of the show's regulars together with a map of St.Oswald's and an exclusive gallery featuring never before published photos.
Did you know
- TriviaThe regular cast were very close: Spencer Banks and Cheryl Burfield are still friends (her husband was best man at his wedding), and godparents to each other's children.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Time Travel TV Shows (2016)
- How many seasons does Timeslip have?Powered by Alexa
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