Bob and Dave couldn’t
be more ordinary names for a couple of tv writers who dreamt up some
extraordinary concepts in a number of Seventies Doctor Who stories
(including inventing K9) and in some of their own children’s series. King of the Castle is a seven part serial
produced by HTV snd shown in 1977. It was one of several keynote productions
ostensibly produced for kids though with a broader appeal such as Sky, Raven
and Children of the Stones. It may though be the most bizarre of them
all- “Kafka for kids” is how Bob Baker himself summarised it acknowledging Franz
Kafka’s story The Castle as an influence. Uncommitted viewers may find
the heightened scenarios too chaotic to appreciate but the serial was nominated
for a BAFTA. Originally meant to be shown on weeknights, transmission was
delayed until a slightly later Sunday slot could be found presumably to ensure
that parents could keep an eye on it. There are certainly some moments that
would disturb younger or more sensitive children especially in the first two
episodes.
The series’ name comes
from a nursery rhyme and children’s game and the phrase is believed to have
originated during the English Civil War of the 1600s. It is that traditional nursery rhyme song that provides
the title music sung by a boy’s choir and set against images of both
traditional stone architecture and the less appealing Seventies flats. The main
character Roland’s
name is inspired by the Robert Browning poem Childe Roland to the Dark Tower
Came, itself inspired by King Lear, and even referenced in episode
6. In turn the poem has inspired several dramatic interpretations notably by
Stephen King. Bob and Dave’s story seems to be some kind of nightmare occurring
when Roland is knocked unconscious when in a crashing lift so in one sense none
of it actually happens. The serial takes us inside an alternative version of
Roland’s life where each of the key people appear as different versions of
themselves often to extreme proportions as Roland’s subconscious issues manifest
themselves in front of him. Their behaviour becomes an exaggerated version of
themselves in the real world. Sometimes events have a mirror in the real world
such as the explosion of Hawkspur’s laboratory happens as some of the lift
circuits suddenly burn out creating a flurry of sparks. Other times they appear
unrelated.
Clearly intended as an
allegory for standing up and asserting yourself it’s fantastical elements
sometimes shroud its intention and anyone not paying attention may dismiss it
as a lot of actors clowning around. Also, by suggesting its central character
is a shy, depressed boy then penning dialogue that paints him as confident and
assertive somewhat weakens the central tenet. Had this change come about as a
result of his experiences that would play better. Adult viewers even then would
recognise much of the series’ imagery and plot comes from established mythology
or draws from well known antecedents.
Roland Wright is a teenager whose father and second wife
recently moved into the tenth floor of a block of flats to enable him to fulfil
a music scholarship granted due to his tenor voice. Music and comics play a big
part in Roland’s life – he would rather sneak a peak at the latest horror comic
than properly participate in choir practice and he has an impressive Greenslade
poster in his bedroom. His father’s a musician, a sax player it seems, with an
impressive amount of musical hardware for someone who lives in a council flat.
His step mum is a typical nice Seventies step mum who worries about Roland more
than his preoccupied father does.
The shorthand often given for King of the Castle
is how bizarre it becomes after a key incident at the end of the first episode
but actually the opener is quite strange in itself. While ostensibly we’re in a
typical Seventies working class drama setting the manner in which director
Peter Hammond shoots it makes it seem anything but. The camera is often at odd
angles, the church in which the choir practice takes place is framed to make
the most of it’s atmospheric stonework while some of the adult characters are already
larger than life. As choirmaster Spurgeon, Fulton McKay is in eye popping form
long before the fantasy elements kick in as he addresses the choir from the
elevated seat of the church organ, an instrument that features prominently in
the series and which he plays with demented delight. Milton Johns brings his
always enjoyable toadying to the role of teacher Hawker complete with a deliberately
obvious wig (which Johns lets slip in a lovely comedic moment).
The caretaker at the flats, Vine, isn’t much more normal
and Talfryn Thomas, who often seems like the only Welsh accented actor around
in those days, inhabits the role with earnestness. You also get a snarling
performance from Jamie Foreman who only has to curl his lip to look menacing.
He’s local bully Ripper (probably not his real name) who `owns the stairs` and rather
than his favourite band has his own name sewn on the back of his jacket. Playing
against all this melodrama, Philip DaCosta settles for normality which really
works well. There’s defiance but also fear though I’m not sure he comes across
as “shy” as the character is often described. The script instead gives him a
cheekiness and also an intelligence that will serve him well as the story
progresses.
He's certainly put upon and after a rollicking from
Spurgeon, then having his school briefcase ransacked and school badge torn off
an alarmingly stripy blazer (notice the badge depicts a castle!) he takes
refuge in the flats’ broken down lifts and part one concludes with it crashing
down. The door opens revealing gothic architecture, torches and the scraping of
feet as someone is heard turning a key behind a wooden door starts to open…and
it carries on behind the credits as the camera jumps a little closer revealing
spider’s webs. Just before it cuts off the door starts to open. For the
intended young viewer this must have been a fairly exciting ending and even now
it plays well. The baroque style Hammond brings to the episode certainly makes
it arresting at every moment.
As an opener it’s hard to imagine how much more could
have been put in. It has lashings of atmosphere while Bob and Dave’s script is
economical, the dialogue crisp and the scenario outlined without sounding too
much like exposition. Some may find the eccentric direction at this point
intrudes and there’s certainly an argument that it might have been better to
have filmed the first episode in a more standard way so that the world we
subsequently enter seems odder. Then again are we even here seeing reality or
looking at it through Roland’s eyes? Remember how school teachers always seemed
remote and strange when you were at school? Is it Roland who sees in Spurgeon
the lively haired madman?
Episode two takes us into a subterranean nightmare where
the architecture seems to shift and curl not unlike one of those Escher
paintings. We meet caretaker’s Vine’s alter ego Vein who carries an enormous
cache of keys and it is these that are crucial. In a scene with somewhat
elliptical dialogue Roland learns he is “ever so far” down and the only way out
is to go up – “ever up” - with the aid of keys he must find along the way. His
first encounter takes him into a fizzling laboratory that, like the episode’s
storyline, takes its cues from Frankenstein. Here, Doctor Hawkspur, the
alternative Spurgeon is experimenting with “life” to create a new human being
he’s dubbed Ergon. It’s a word derived from the Greek for “function, task or
work” and indeed the first thing
Hawkspur tries to do is teach this creation to bow to him. The next
thing is he tries to steal Roland’s voice to give to the creature.
This somewhat random scientific moment is achieved through
a remarkable series of electronic bleeps, picture fades and effects. As soon as
it becomes clear how this “new life” will be treated, Roland stands up for him
showing his humanity though here the boy’s confidence in the face of such odd
circumstances seems the least believable aspect of all. However if he was
terrified the drama wouldn’t progress. This is Milton Johns’ episode though. The actor utilises
mime and movement to convey this hastily assembled being with a shock of red
hair and director Peter Hammond is eager to show us his expressive face at
every opportunity. However absurd this all seems (and I can imagine parents coming into the
room at tea time in 1977 and thinking “what the…”) there’s a surprising
poignancy to it. Thanks to Milton Johns’ performance you are drawn in by the
sheer bewilderment of Ergon as he behaves like a caged animal longing to be
free. The moment when he earns a sort of voice is actually quite moving.
The episode disguises budgetary limitations by overlaying
images on top of each other, fading the picture or other tricks to suggest far
more space than was probably available as this is all a studio production with
just occasional trips back to the baffled police and caretaker at the flats.
Sometimes it looks like shots from some off the wall prog rock tour. With
incidental music played on a church organ and sundry bleeps on the soundtrack
it sounds like one too! You half expect Peter Gabriel to emerge from a cupboard
or something! Unfortunately, this is as avant garde as the presentation gets,
subsequent episodes are directed by others with a more straight forward studio
based approach. Shame as episode two must rank as one of the weirdest twenty
three minutes of Seventies TV!
After such a vibrant opening, some of the weaknesses of
the production are exposed by the third episode. Conventionally directed by
Terry Harding it lacks the grand operatic qualities that made the first two
parts stand out. It’s also a less involving part of the story. The encounter
with Warrior at the start, which Peter Hammond would probably have done
something interesting with, just looks clumsy though it’s a nice touch that
Ergon saves Roland at his own peril. Before long, Roland dumps Vein preferring
to find his own way which leads him into a pink curtained, brightly lit chamber
that is the domain of the Lady of the Castle played by Angela Richards who is
Roland’s step mother in the real world. I’m not sure why this alter ego would
be so unkind as Roland and June seem to get on fine. Here, the Lady tries to
imprison him shrinking him to the size of a doll and even selecting doll
clothes for him to wear. While this is quite sinister in itself without the
eccentric staging of the previous episodes it lacks the menace it should have.
The Lady’s abilities are somewhat undefined and Roland’s eventual escape poorly
choreographed albeit with some above average CGI effects. Part three was
actually wiped from the archive and the extant version was put together from an
original VHS copy. Was it wiped because it was so dull I wonder?
The fourth episode is better as Roland finds himself in a
kitchen whose cowed child slaves declare that “work is freedom.” Roland though
finds it all “pointless” as the operations seems to consist of two chefs
cooking a random slop with most of the ingredients pushed onto the floor for
him to clean up- and it gets put back in the pot. Furthermore this conveyor
belt of production seems to be to feed nobody. This is all conveyed rather well
and there are some funny moments from Patrick Durkin and David Trevana as the
hapless chefs who’s real life counterparts as lift engineers also lighten the
tale. Unlike the fugal scenery in part three much effort goes into this set
which has the air of a Victorian kitchen though following the logic of the
piece I’m not sure who the other children are supposed to represent. Some of
them are Warrior’s gang but what about the others?
Roland is also taking a pleasingly proactive part in
escaping again from Warrior and later from the kitchen via a dumb waiter. The
latter syncs rather well with the real life lift being winched up manually.
Director Leonard White handles the ensemble well and there’ s plenty of sound
effects as a side course. It does seem a
bit odd that Vein should be such a major player seemingly able to pop in and
out of anywhere but I suppose that is symbolic of the real life Vine’s status
as a caretaker.
In part five Roland is attempting to apply to exit the
castle and becomes emmeshed in the type of petty bureaucracy with which anyone
who’s ever applied to a large organisation will be familiar with. A wittily
conveyed sequence amidst endless booths with each official being played by
Derek Smith with the addition of different styled beards it has the tenor of a Monty
Python sketch. It’s a spot on portrayal of the way regulations sometimes
can stop exactly the sort of thing they are designed to assist. After cleverly feigning an injury to get
through Roland ends up at the top to try and meet the Lord of the Castle.
Played by Sean Lynch his real life counterpart is Roland’s Dad and the argument
they eventually have is reminiscent of a father / son bust up. You notice
Roland’s confidence increasing every episode as he overcomes the various
obstacles in his way. By the end of part five he wants to be king of the castle
and the sixth episode sees him becoming just that.
A neatly concise analysis of the way power acts, the
sixth episode sees Roland delaying his departure to enact a series of reforms
aimed at righting the wrongs he has encountered. Though well- meant this change
to the status quo provokes an unexpectedly hostile response – Vasey can’t deal
with the lack of forms, the Lady bemoans a ban on magical practices, the
kitchen kids are lost without work and Hawkspur is insulted by the command that
he should put his energies into building a lift. Vein is promoted taking him
close to the throne and is soon plotting to take the final step up. Simplified
it may be but as a sketch on the way that people respond to the use of power it
works and provides Philip Da Costa with a chance to expand his acting as Roland
becomes proactive and indeed bossy. His demeanour and the script suggests
Roland is enjoying his power and won’t be leaving any time soon until, that is,
the assorted subjects refuse to co-operate and he has to once again run for his
life.
In real time the lift is finally brought up to reveal
that it’s empty suggesting Roland really is somewhere else and what we’ve seen
is more than a mere nightmare. The final episode is a successful knitting
together of the storylines in the form of
trial in which Vein parades Roland’s supposed misdemeanors in front of a
seemingly invisible jury. Each of Vein’s charges takes the opposite interpretation
of events to how they really are and gives Talfryn Thomas a lengthy time in the
spotlight. Roland can only protest but then his `punishment` turns out to be
banishment which means he can “get out” as he has been trying to do from the
start. So, in fact Vein has been manipulating everyone on the boy’s behalf all
along.
Once Roland is back in real life we see him emboldened by
the experience quitting the choir –“it’s my voice” he declares pointedly,
standing up to Ripper who turns out to be less dangerous than he seems and
trying to re-establish a more mature relationship with his father. There are
hints that a second series might have been planned- Vein’s parting words
suggest as much though it is difficult to see what spin could be put on it.
What the final episode does do is suggest that Roland’s experiences were more
than just a nightmare.
King of the Castle is a challenging series though perhaps it’s tone and
heightened performances would not be appreciated by a modern audience. Its
ambitious indeed to try and build a world in essentially six episodes and there
are times when the budget is stretched as much as the narrative. Roland’s
progress can seem random and the pieces of the puzzle fit together a bit too
neatly. Yet there is a real sense that the production was trying to break the
mould and make its juvenile audience think.
King of the Castle Bitz
· The striking organ
music is from Sydney Sagar who also composed the startling choral
incidental music for Children of the Stones that year.
· Milton Johns was the Treasurer of
actors’ union Equity for a while. It is unlikely he ever attended a meeting
wearing his red wig from this series! His birth name is John Robert Milton. One
of his favourites of the series he did was 1972’s The Intruder which
oddly was scheduled for release for years but never actually was released.
· Fulton Mackay was best known for
playing a character also called Mackay in Porridge. He could have been
the third Doctor Who as he was under consideration for the role in 1969.
He was a mentor for a young Brian Cox, now the star of Succession.
· Talfryn Thomas was Private Cheeseman
in the 1973-74 series of Dad’s Army. His character was Welsh. All his
characters were Welsh! He was, in fact, Welsh!!
· As an adult, Philip
DaCosta left acting and has enjoyed a successful career in music working as
an engineer and producer for artists from Take That to the Military Wives to
Bob the Builder! His company is named Crazy Joe Cola after an advert he did as
a kid.
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