You’d think
that this story would be too familiar to re-tell, too associated with a soft
rock stage show or various adaptations that have struggled to do justice to the
power of the original story. However you’d be wrong. This opening episode is a
stunner alright, building up for quite a while, simmering and heating until it
explodes in a sequence that certainly justifies the warnings that this is not
suitable for younger viewers. If you thought Martian invasions of this kind
were cumbersome, cosy games of hide and seek while those familiar tripods loom
on the horizon then watch this one.
There are lots
of rumours as to why this production sat on the shelf for a long time. Originally
trailered for the autumn 2018 season and filmed more than eighteen months ago
it could have been because the effects weren’t ready. Or, I heard an odd one
that the BBC didn’t want to show it till after Brexit though that doesn’t make
much sense. Another story I heard that it was because it wasn’t very good they
were looking for a slot to see it off. Well it is very good indeed and whatever
the real reason for the delay I’m glad it’s here now. I suspect whatever the initial
viewing figures, this will be a production that grows in reputation over a
longer time.
It is a potent
story of course which terrified radio listeners the first time it was
dramatized and retains a power despite countless re-tellings. How else do you
explain its success as a concept album and stage show in the Seventies. While
retaining much of the original novel, Peter Harness makes some subtle
alterations to mould a story with greater resonance for our times though I
don’t think this is overdone. Yes, people have called this version of Woking
too Woke but its not like these people didn’t exist in Edwardian times rather
they were excluded.
The chances of
something coming from Mars are a million to one (and I’d imagine in real life
more than that) but still they come and when they appear here it’s powerful
stuff. Bystanders are evaporated by a revolving black globe and as they flee it’s
into the path of those iconic three legged Martian war machines realised here
as well as I’ve ever seen and accompanied by echoing noises. Thankfully they
haven’t messed with the design but what the subsequent scenes do is show just
how devestating they can be. They loose their fire randomly, blowing tops off
buildings, killing fleeing civilians and an English country village soon
becomes as bloody as an battlefield. Director Craig Viveiros
pulls us right into the
mayhem of it avoiding anything that looks too choreographed to create chaos
everywhere. Nice and not so nice people perish- the first to go is the pompous
official who sips tea whole everyone else grafts. Then that friendly maid we’ve
seen a few times is randomly flattened by a falling wall.
Rafe Spall is
our hero George who has already fled a disastrous marriage to his cousin to
live with intended Amy in the picturesque Woking near Horsfall Common where
what at first seems to be a meteorite lands. There’s time for some lighter
hearted banter between the two and neighbour Ogilivy, a photographer who lives
in a palm house. Spall has a good line in straight faced honesty while Robert
Carlyle makes an unexpectedly authentic dotty scientist. Yet Eleanor Tomlinson steals
the show here with an effervescent lively performance drawing the best from
Harness’ depiction of Amy as an independent woman.
Strong support comes
from the wonderful likes of Nicholas Le Provost and Rupert Graves. I don’t know
if they’ve worked on much together but here they seem like the most English
people ever shoring up Edwardian values and attempting news management of
something they don’t understand. The familial issues work their way into the
Martian war machine plot surprisingly well adding verisimilitude and meaning we
know a little about these characters before they are catapulted into a
nightmare.
The other
aspect of the episode is the repeated sequences set in a harsh orangey vista
which the viewer assumes is Mars only for it gradually to become apparent-
though not confirmed till the last scene- that this is a throw forward to a
ravaged Earth. Beset by red dust, electrical storms and wandering nomads, it is
a hellish suggestion that this isn’t going to end well for our characters at
all.
This is a
vibrant, powerful and extremely well rendered opening salvo and just like the
humans vs Martians the audience will succumb to its power
Martians in Liverpool!
I live near the
palm house seen in the episode, which was only renovated relatively recently.
The series was filmed in and around the Liverpool area with a cast and crew of
around 100 people. The shoot lasted nine weeks from March to May 2018.. Locations
used included inside and outside St George’s Hall (inside is
where Chamberlain addresses journalists and also where the refugees come to)
Croxteth Hall, Sefton Park Palm House and Martins Bank Building on Water Street
and Eldon Grove in Vauxhall. The
Cheshire village of Budworth becomes Woking where the Martians strike at the
end of this episode and filming there lasted three weeks. Ainsdale
Woods is where the Martian globe lands in part one and there were also scenes
shot on Formby Beach. An alien landscape was created in a disused Wirral
warehouse.
Peter Harness told local site Liverpool
Express: “We filmed in Liverpool because
it’s the greatest city in the universe! Liverpool has locations that are
pristine, it offered the landscapes we needed and also had the crews up there –
and people are extremely supportive of what we were trying to achieve.”
Craig Viveiros, said: “Liverpool
was great when it came to its architecture and the ability to close it off to
dress it and shoot it. Locations like St George’s Hall, Formby Beach, Croxteth
Hall allowed us to film there and are key scenes in the production.”
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