• Pathfinders in Space -- 2. Spaceship from

    From Solar Penguin@1:2320/100 to All on Thu Apr 12 10:52:02 2012
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.drwho.moderated
    From Address: solar.penguin@gmail.com
    Subject: Re: Pathfinders in Space -- 2. Spaceship from Nowhere

    Sorry, I forgot to add that the previous episode was called "Convoy to
    the Moon", beating Roddenberry's "Wagon Train to the Stars" concept by
    several years!

    Episode 2 is called "Spaceship from Nowhere". Now that's a pretty
    good title which hasn't dated much. You could imagine it being used
    on something like DW nowadays.

    Anyway, the episode opens with the reprise of the cliffhanger, re-
    enacted rather than replayed from telecine. However, this is followed
    by some reused film from last week: the cardboard cutout animation,
    this time representing the supply rocket, rather than the main one.
    Good job both rockets are totally identical, despite having been
    designed for totally different purposes!

    There's a lengthy montage sequence showing people around the world
    watching or listening to the news about the moon mission. The British
    and French are in bars, while the Canadians, Germans and Australians
    are doing more wholesome if lonely pursuits. Of course, the show's recorded-as-if-live approach means these places are all just
    represented by one very small set each, in a different corner of the
    studio. We don't see the USA or Russia at all, implying nobody in
    those countries is interested in news about space research!

    Professor Wedgwood is upset when he learns that Henderson has brought
    the kids with him. He orders the supply rocket to remain safely in
    Earth orbit, while the scientists in the first rocket continue out to
    the moon, land, study it, and take off again without any food, fuel or
    other supplies. Instead of pointing out the obvious flaw in this
    scheme, Henderson and the kids agree, then pretend they can't enter
    orbit without risking burning up the rocket in the atmosphere.

    All this time, everyone's walking around normally, as if under Earth
    gravity. Then the rocket passes out of the gravitational pull, and
    the gravity is just switched off, instantly. This is represented by a
    bad overlay of Jimmy floating up and down, his arms and legs vanishing
    and reappearing, since the video effects weren't up to the task.

    Luckily everyone else is wearing magnetic boots, so they aren't
    affected. They even fall down and sit down normally, although that
    can't be due to magnets, since apart from the boots they're wearing
    their normal clothes. Even Valerie has changed out of her spacesuit
    back into her chunky cable-knit cardigan!

    Anyway, crossing the sudden boundary of Earth's gravity means the
    supply rocket is unable to enter orbit, and has to accompany the main
    rocket to the moon after all. The children are pleased. The
    professor isn't.

    Suddenly, another TV news bulletin is telling us it's 48 hours later.
    It's being watched in the same British bar as the previous one,
    although the two girls playing its only customers have swapped seats
    to denote the passage of time. They both look about 14, so there is
    some teenage rebelliousness in this world after all, as kids sneak out
    for a night of underage drinking and watching the news!

    We see the moon lunar surface from the professor's rocket. It's a bit
    like the "rolling log" effect of the Voga planet surface in "Revenge
    of the Cybermen". Only it doesn't look as crap as that. In fact,
    it's almost good by comparison.

    Anyway, Professor Wedgwood has now decided that the supply rocket will
    remain in orbit around the moon, while his team lands, spends weeks
    studying it, and takes off again without any food, fuel or other
    supplies. This time Dr O'Connell does spot the flaw, and refuses to
    let the landing go ahead. (Personally, I think his supplies of pipe
    tobacco are in the other rocket and he's just desperate for a smoke.)

    Talking of the professor's team, when I listed them yesterday, I
    forgot one of them: Ian. But that's not surprising as he's just so
    bland. Not the old grumpy one like Dr O'Connell, or the female one
    like Professor Meadows, or the leader like Professor Wedgwood. He's
    just there, with no characteristics of his own. Even now I can't
    remember his surname.

    There's brief scene back at the mission control, introduced by a model
    shot of the base exterior, showing the two rockets still in place on
    the launchpads! (Now there's something for lunar-landing-hoax
    conspiracy theorists to think about!)

    Back on the rocket, Wedgwood tricks O'Connell into pulling the wrong
    lever, causing the rocket to swerve, and O'Connell to conveniently hit
    his head and knock himself out. (He falls downwards, of course,
    despite the lack of gravity.) I suppose I'd better say something
    about the control levers. They're great big things, over a metre
    long, like something from a signal box or the engine room of a paddle-
    steamer. On their own terms they look wonderful, but it's as if the
    designer has never heard of these newfangled things called switches
    and buttons!

    With O'Connell out of the way the rocket can land on the moon.
    There's another cardboard cutout animation showing it manoeuvring into position. But despite a clean star-free path for it in the background
    picture, the animated rocket still ends up missing it and passing
    _behind_ the stars instead!

    Leading up to the cliffhanger, there's a very long, supposedly funny
    sequence where both the landed rocket and the orbiting supply rocket
    spot something on the radar, each thinking it's the other. They talk
    at cross purposes over the radio for what seems like ages, before they
    realise it's a mysterious unidentified spaceship. And it's on a
    collision course for the supply rocket!!!

    Oh, and the theme music for the closing titles seems to be the old
    "Quatermass and the Pit" theme, or something very similar anyway. Bit
    of a cheek, borrowing the tune from a much better series like that!

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  • From John Hall@1:2320/100 to All on Thu Apr 12 13:52:02 2012
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.drwho.moderated
    From Address: nospam_nov03@jhall.co.uk
    Subject: Re: Pathfinders in Space -- 2. Spaceship from Nowhere

    In article
    <839659f4-5fcd-4695-89f9-e875488a9aae@d17g2000vba.googlegroups.com>,
    solar penguin <solar.penguin@gmail.com> writes:
    <snip>
    Oh, and the theme music for the closing titles seems to be the old >"Quatermass and the Pit" theme, or something very similar anyway. Bit
    of a cheek, borrowing the tune from a much better series like that!

    Your description of the series is ringing faint bells with me. I think
    that I saw it when it was first broadcast. My eleven year old self
    thought that it was very good. But having been converted to SF by the
    "Dan Dare" strip in The Eagle, at that age I'd have thought almost
    anything set in space was very good. :)
    --
    John Hall
    Johnson: "Well, we had a good talk."
    Boswell: "Yes, Sir, you tossed and gored several persons."
    Dr Samuel Johnson (1709-84); James Boswell (1740-95)

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  • From Solar Penguin@1:2320/100 to All on Fri Apr 20 04:27:02 2012
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.drwho.moderated
    From Address: solar.penguin@gmail.com
    Subject: Re: Pathfinders in Space -- 2. Spaceship from Nowhere

    John Hall wrote:

    My eleven year old self
    thought that it was very good.

    I think it's very good too, but in a "so bad it's good" way. It's
    like what you'd get if you asked Ed Wood to make a cross between
    "Quatermass" and "Lost in Space". How could anyone not love that?

    This is actually my second time watching the episodes, since I watched
    them all in almost one go after getting the DVDs for Christmas.

    This time, I'm going through them one episode a week, since that's how
    they were supposed to be seen.

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  • From Solar Penguin@1:2320/100 to All on Fri Apr 20 04:29:02 2012
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.drwho.moderated
    From Address: solar.penguin@gmail.com
    Subject: Pathfinders in Space -- 3. Lunar Bridgehead

    "Lunar Bridgehead" is a rather weak title for a rather weak episode.
    It's mostly concerned with the practical technicalities of lunar
    exploration. And, with hindsight, gets most of them completely wrong.

    The cliffhanger reprise is re-enacted, with the unidentified spaceship
    being seen on the periscope once again. Yes, periscope. The rockets
    each have a big submarine-style periscope for seeing out! (I can't
    help thinking of that scene with Shatner in Airplane II.)

    The actual shot of the spaceship from nowhere is different this time.
    Not necessarily bettter or worse, just different. It's now a model
    shot, rather than a painting. This means there's some parallax as the
    camera pans past, but it's a lot less detailed. The original painting re-appears soon after as a background for when the rocket shoots past
    with a near-miss.

    The mysterious ship difts on, apparently in a fixed orbit.

    There's some discussion over the radio about what just happened. I
    should've said something about the two-way radios before now. They
    have 'futuristic' handheld microphones with three rings/discs around
    the end you speak into, making them look like something you'd find in
    George Jetson's house!

    Anyway, the upshot of the discussion is the Henderson is told to land
    the supply rocket to avoid another collision with the mysterious
    spaceship. Landing is done with the same mix of model shots and cut-
    out animation as before, except the shot of the rocket passing behind
    the stars in the background has been trimmed to be a bit shorter.

    The rocket lands is a deep crater, 150 miles away from the main
    rocket. Dr O'Connell is upset when he hears how far away the supplies
    are. He's supposed to be Irish but his accent might as well be
    Scottish, and it's easy to imaging him doing a Private Frazer, "We're
    all doooomed!"

    Back in the supply rocket, Geoffrey carries out the show's educational
    remit as he lectures the other children about radio waves not
    travelling past the moon's horizon because there's no atmosphere for
    them to bounce off. At mission control, a technician called Jean has
    to act as telephone operator relaying messages from one rocket to the
    other.

    The educational stuff continues on the other rocket, as Professor
    Meadows lectures her colleagues on the height of the Lunar Apennines
    and the hot temperature of the moon's surface. (It's 215 Fahrenheit
    in case you were wondering.) They're need to know this because
    they're setting out to walk the 160 miles to the supply rocket. Well,
    all except Ian, who's too bland to come.

    The supply rocket's crew have been told to wait for them, which annoys
    little Jimmy who's impatient to get out onto the moon's surface. (You
    can just imagine him going "Are we nearly there yet? Are we nearly
    there yet?" all the way from the earth to the moon!)

    But even though they're waiting in the supply rocket, they've all
    changed into spacesuits anyway. (This is because they'll need to go
    out later and the "recorded-as-if-live" format won't give the actors
    enough time to change costumes then.) The suits' helmets don't have
    visors, in order to avoid reflecting the studio lights. Instead they
    have thin metal crosses to symbolise where the visors would be. These
    are made from straightened wire coathangers. But not very well
    straightened, as the close-ups show!

    More educational talk about radio waves leads to Henderson deciding to
    take the portable radio up to the top of the crater's rim to get
    better reception. He decides to take Jimmy and Valerie with him,
    leaving Geoffrey to monitor the rocket's radio. No-one thinks of
    contacting Earth to explain what they're doing, but luckily Jean
    radios in as they're preparing to leave, and they explain it to here.

    The rocket doesn't have an airlock. Everyone (including Geoffrey who
    isn't going out) will have to be suited up when the door opens. Good
    job they were already wearing them then! Hamlet the guinea pig
    (remember him?) will have to be put in a spare helmet so he can
    breathe, even though it doesn't seem to be connected to an air tank.

    Jimmy's also having problems with his suit's air supply. This seems
    to be scripted ("Why don't they make spacesuits in my size?" he
    complains) but in the end the actors don't manage to get connected
    properly and he steps out onto the lunar surface with a lose airhose.

    He also forgets to turn on his suit radio. The strange thing is, he
    can still talk and hear normally standing in the open doorway of the
    airless rocket, but not once he's stepped outside! I'm not sure how
    that works.

    Talking of bad science, apparently Sting and Sir Isaac Newton were
    wrong. Giant steps aren't what you take walking on the moon. This is lampshaded by a throwaway line explain that the idea is pure "science
    fiction." Even though you only have one sixth your normal weight, the
    extra weight of your spacesuit cancels that out.

    So that means a spacesuit weighs as much as five people. And it still
    doesn't explain how you can just stroll around normally, since the
    suit would still give you six times your normal mass, therefore six
    times your normal momentum, despite the lower gravity,

    If the show goes out of its way to lecture us about science, it might
    at least try to get these things right.

    (OTOH maybe I shouldn't complain too much. Lunar gravity was still
    causing trouble for the BBC over twenty years later in Star Cops,
    where people would bounce around realistically in spacesuits on the
    moons surface, but walked normally inside the moonbase building!)

    The ad-break cliffhanger is actually quite effective as Jimmy
    discovers a small triangle carved into the rocky ground. If he'd
    discovered something big and melodramatic, like an abandoned alien
    spaceship, then it would've been too boring, too much of a cliche.
    But a small triangle is just enough to make us curious.

    We return to mission control, where once again there's an establishing
    model shot showing both rockets still on the launch-pads. You'd think
    that whoever was responsible for that mistake last week would've been
    given a right good bollocking and told not to let it happen again.
    Obviously not.

    There's a press conference going on, hosted by Jean who seems to have
    taken time off from radio operator duties to avoid the need for hiring
    another speaking actor. The journalists ask questions like, "Was
    there ever any water in the lunar Seas? That's what our readers will
    want to know," allowing her to do her share of the educational
    lecturing stuff.

    The journalists don't believe the claims about the spaceship orbiting
    the moon or the symbol on it, especially since the main witness is
    Conway Henderson. Apparently he's not a very trustworthy or reliable
    science journalist, with a reputation for inventing stories, which
    makes it odd that he was the only one invited to watch the launch in
    episode one. (Combine that with the rockets on the launch-pads and
    you've got the makings of a great conspiracy theory!)

    Meanwhile, back on the moon, Professor Wedgwood's team have found
    another triangle carved into a rock. Professor Meadows describes them
    as "hieroglyphics." Well, they may be glyphs, but the word "hieroglyphics"ought to refer to a specific system of Egyptian glyphs,
    and there's no evidence that these triangular wedges were carved by
    Egyptians! (Yes I am nitpicking now, but considering how didactic and educational this show tries to be, it really ought to make the effort
    to avoid mistakes like that.)

    And Geoffrey has been passing the time by making a spacesuit for
    Hamlet the guinea pig. It looks like something the Blue Peter team
    might make, complete with a couple of mini-oxygen cylinders made out
    of pen lids. But he hasn't been able to make a cooling unit for it.
    Instead there's two layers of glass-fibre insulation. (Well, it makes
    a change from sticky-back plastic.) But it only gives two-hours
    protection. As Geoffrey explains, this means that if you keep Hamlet
    out on the lunar surface for longer, you'll have to open up your
    spacesuit and slip him inside to let him cool down. (Geoffrey's
    clearly inherited his father's grasp of practical strategic planning!)

    Then, job completed, Geoffrey chats with Ian in the other rocket over
    the radio. There's a rather embarrassing moment when the picture cuts
    from Geoffrey's rocket to Ian's, but the sound effects don't switch
    from Ian's distorted over-the-radio voice until ten seconds later.
    Oops.

    They discuss the possibility of life on the moon, and Geoffrey
    suddenly becomes all scared and does some some very bad acting: "Do
    you (*pause while he glances nervously over his shoulders*) think
    (*pause while he glances over his shoulders again*) they're still here
    (*pause glancing over shoulders once more*) whoever they are?" Even
    after the conversation's over, he continues to act like a poor man's
    Willie Best for a minute or so, until he suddenly snaps out of it, and
    becomes his usual patronising self again.

    We cut back to Professor Wedgwood's team walking across the moon. Or
    at least standing still waiting for the floor manager to cue them to
    start walking. Once the scene begins for real, the Professor says,
    "Well, there are the lunar Apennines." This is followed by the same
    model shot that represents the crater and every other part of the
    lunar surface. That just might be a deliberate in-joke, since they
    soon realise they're lost, and they've only got five hours of oxygen
    left. Given that it will take them days to walk 150 miles over steep mountains, and they can only have been walking a few hours at most,
    they should've thought about the oxygen issue before setting off!
    Anyway, it gives O'Connell another chance to anticipate John Laurie's
    acting style, which is fun.

    It's approaching cliffhanger time. Back at the supply rocket, Jimmy
    takes Hamlet to the crater's edge to show him the view. And falls
    down a very, very obvious hole that he should've seen even while
    holding a guinea pig. But that's not the cliffhanger.

    Everyone rushes over to the deep hole, which turns out to to be an air-
    shaft lined with metal. "This must be man-made... or made by some
    creature like man," they helpfully explain for the benefit of any
    viewers who might think that metal air-shafts are a natural part of
    the lunar landscape. But that's not the cliffhanger.

    At the bottom of the shaft, Jimmy and Hamlet are unharmed (pity!) and
    in a dark cave. Luckily he's brought along an electric torch, even
    though it was daylight on the surface. The movement of the studio
    spotlight representing the torchlight isn't quite in synch with the
    actor's movements. At one point it illuminates the back of his head
    even though he's holding the torch in front of him. Anyway, as you've
    probably guessed, he finds an abandoned alien spaceship. And, yes,
    that's the cliffhanger. Oh well...

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  • From Solar Penguin@1:2320/100 to All on Fri Apr 27 17:04:02 2012
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.drwho.moderated
    From Address: solar.penguin@gmail.com
    Subject: Pathfinders in Space -- 4. The Man in the Moon

    The picture quality is much worse on this episode, with many dropouts especially in the first half. In fact, none of the episodes have been restored, or at least not to the standard that the RT do for the DW
    DVDs. But this one is worse than most.

    Anyway, the cliffhanger reprise is different from the ending last
    week. We don't get to see Jimmy discovering the derelict spaceship.
    Instead, we stay at the top of the shaft, and he shouts up that he's
    found it.

    Henderson climbs down the shaft to investigate, telling Geoffrey and
    Valerie to stay behind. But they insist on following him because, "We
    should stick together, Mr Henderson." Naturally no-one thinks of
    radioing in to tell the other party what's going on!

    In the cave, they find a lever at the bottom of the shaft. Henderson
    tells Geoffrey not to touch it, and right away, Geoffrey does. The
    hatch closes, sealing the shaft, trapping them. And only then do they
    start to worry how the others will ever find them.

    Not that the others are doing much better. Professor Wedgwood and his
    team are lost and walking round in circles. "I recognise that rock,"
    complains O'Connell, beating DW's "All these corridors look the same,"
    by a good many years!

    Despite this, Wedgwood announces they've past the point of no return,
    and are now closer to the supply rocket than the first rocket. Even
    though has no way of knowing this, since they're totally lost!
    (Perhaps it's just empty morale raising rhetoric?) Anyway, they find
    more little triangles, and decide they must be arrows marking the way
    through the mountains.

    There are more symbols being discovered by the kids in the cave.
    Jimmy asks Hamlet the guinea pig if they're guinea pig language. But
    he doesn't get an answer.

    Ian, who was left behind in the first rocket, is talking to Jean at
    mission control over the radio. He mentions that the suits can only
    hold four hours of oxygen. Dialogue later in the episode confirms
    this is four hours maximum. Which is odd because last week the suits
    were down to five hours oxygen remaining after being in use for
    several hours!

    However, it doesn't matter, since the Professor's party have reached
    the supply rocket, where they can rest and refill their oxygen tanks.

    But down in the cave, Henderson and the kids are running out of
    oxygen. Apparently one of the main symptoms of oxygen starvation is
    wild, melodramatic overacting before passing out. When everyone's
    unconscious, the cave's main double doors swing open flooding it with
    light...

    We're treated to a pointless sequence of Ian playing chess against
    himself back in the rocket. It's not even necessary for technical
    reasons, (e.g. giving other actors time to get into position for the
    next scene) since there's an ad break here!

    Back in the cave, it turns out the doors were opened by Wedgwood and
    his party, who'd found the entrance, and have now revived their
    unconscious colleagues with spare oxygen. Including Hamlet somehow,
    even though his suit should be too small to connect to their air
    pipes.

    Once all the reunions are over, they decide to make the cave their
    base. It's doors are airtight, and there's an airlock, which is more
    than there is on their rockets. They can flood it with oxygen and
    have a breathable atmosphere. (I'm not sure how much oxygen it
    would take to fill the large cavern and all its side tunnels, but
    probably more than the couple of cylinders we eventually see being
    used.)

    Back on earth, there's once again an establishing shot of the base
    with the rockets on the launch pads. This is the third week in a row,
    so it must be deliberate. But why? Are these a couple of extra
    rockets that the technicians built from scratch immediately after the
    first ones took off?

    Or are the astronauts still on earth, being brainwashed with
    hallucinogenic drugs to make them think they're on the moon, as part
    of some sinister experiment? That's the only thing which would
    explain the momentum-defying spacesuits, the inconsistent timings, and
    the general stupidity. And I think I know who's behind it... When
    the radio technicians are sceptical about the Professor's report about
    the abandoned spaceship, Jean suddenly gets very, very strict and
    orders them to release it to the press anyway. It's as if she's up to something.

    Meanwhile on the "moon" (yeah, right!) they've set up their base in
    the cave, and are now examining the derelict spaceship. (In case
    you're wondering, it's roughly the same size and shape as the one in "Quatermass and the Pit", what a coincidence!) Despite not being able
    to get into it, Prof Wedgwood is certain that it must've run on
    "atomic power, it couldn't have been anything else." Ahh, that early
    sixties optimism about all things nuclear!

    Conversation is cut short by the discovery of water droplets dripping
    from the roof. Dr O'Connell looks at the water under a microscope,
    and everyone (except Jimmy who's too small to see over them) eagerly
    gathers round to watch him, as though looking at a man looking into a microscope is the most exciting thing ever. As a result of his
    inspection, he announces that the water was originally vapour that
    condensed and froze onto the ceiling and has now been melted by their
    body heat. (He can tell that just by looking at it?)

    While all this was going on, Hamlet wandered off into the tunnels, and
    Jimmy ran off after him him, calling "I told you to stay where you
    were." None of the human characters have stayed where they were when
    told (apart from Ian, the living personification of blandness) so why
    should the guinea pig be any different?

    Valerie notices that Jimmy is missing, and wanders off to look for
    him. At the end of a tunnel she finds a statue of a man. And she
    screams because it's the cliffhanger.

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  • From Solar Penguin@1:2320/100 to All on Fri May 4 12:58:02 2012
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.drwho.moderated
    From Address: solar.penguin@gmail.com
    Subject: Re: Pathfinders in Space -- 4. The World of Lost Toys

    'The World of Lost Toys' is another great episode title. Again, you
    could imagine it being used on something like DW nowadays, perhaps for
    the return of the Celestial Toymaker, or a sequel to that recent
    episode with the doll's house.

    But back to 'Pathfinders', and there's no way this episode is going to
    live up to that title. But it's still better than most. And it shows
    the earliest signs of one of Malcolm Hulke's recurring obsessions:
    prehistoric creatures.

    First Professor Wedgwood identifies the statue as a stalagmite that's
    formed on and around the corpse of one of the alien spaceship's crew.
    The reason it looks like a human is because of parallel evolution.
    "Humans are the most practical size and shape for life on our planet.
    That's why we've survived and become the leading species." (Tell that
    to the insects!)

    Back at the base (with that model shot showing the rockets still on
    the launch pads) , the technicians are talking on the radio to Ian,
    who's getting bored stuck in his rocket on his own, playing chess
    against himself. (Despite this, he remains obediently there, radioing
    in on schedule, and not wandering off without telling anyone. He
    clearly doesn't belong on this mission.)

    In the cave, Valerie is now looking at something through the
    microscope. "So that's what radioactivity looks like," she says. No,
    we don't get to see what it looks like, but I'd love to know. "Let
    Hamlet have a look," says Jimmy, holding the guinea pig up to the
    eyepiece when she's finished.

    Meanwhile, Dr O'Connell has identified the stalagmite's rock as being
    similar to that of Cambian formations on Earth. (Although IIRC
    Cambrian rocks are mostly shale and stalagmites are mostly
    limestone.) From this he somehow concludes that the corpse is 400
    million years old. (Nowadays scientists think the Cambrian was 500
    million years ago, but maybe they thought differently back then. Or
    maybe Hulke was just doing his standard 'Silurian' trick of randomly mixing-and-matching of eras and their interesting sounding names.)

    More confusion about prehistory follows, as the scientists explain
    that 400 million years ago, the 'trilobites' that evolved into all
    Earth's land animals were just climbing out of the sea! OK, OK, these
    are rocket scientists and astronomers, not biologists, but even
    so...! (Later the reporter Henderson will describe this as before
    evolution started on Earth, but that's presumably his just
    journalistic hyperbole, rather than claiming that our trilobite
    ancestors sprang fully formed from the hand of God.)

    Jimmy and Valerie explore the tunnels some more, and find some stuffed
    toys that haven't been turned into stalagmites during this time. In
    fact, they look clean and new as if just made by the studio's prop
    department. They also find a children's picture book, which helpfully
    teaches us the alien characters for "organic life" and "inorganic
    matter".

    Fresh from this discovery, Jimmy goes on to find an air inlet in the
    side of the alien spaceship. Of course it's exactly the right size
    and shape to work with the hoses from their air tanks. Once the
    pressure has been equalised, it's finally possible to open the ship.
    As they do so, Valerie screams that she can see something moving
    inside, and we go to the ad-break. As this show uses the same music
    as 'Quatermass and the Pit', I can't help imagining those Martian
    insects. If it turns out to be anything less, I'll be very
    disappointed.

    Back from the ad-break, and we get a padding scene with Ian playing
    chess by radio against the base technicians, who are cheating by using
    the computer. Fortunately those nice, friendly Soviets have been
    eavesdropping in on the conversation, and their chess champion,
    comrade Federovitch, helps Ian win. An sign of Hulke's interest in
    Communism, perhaps. None of the English characters show any objection
    to calling Federovitch, "comrade Federovitch", even though Hulke
    must've known the significance of that.

    Anyway, back on the moon, the alien spaceship is empty, and the
    movement was just an interior hatch being blown by the breeze. Yes,
    I'm very disappointed. Well, it's not quite empty. Valerie and Jimmy
    find a cupboard that the adults missed, containing a log book and a
    coil of wire. Professor Wedgwood quickly guesses that the coil is a
    magnetic wire recording of a video signal. (So these aliens hadn't
    even invented videotape?)

    I'm not the only one finding all this hard to believe. Back on Earth,
    Jean is having trouble persuading the press that it's true. But then
    her colleagues bring news that a meteor shower is heading towards the
    moon, and could damage the rockets.

    She tries radioing to warn them, but Wedgwood's team are all so
    excited about the discoveries they haven't left anyone monitoring the
    radio...

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  • From Solar Penguin@1:2320/100 to All on Sat May 5 09:18:02 2012
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.drwho.moderated
    From Address: solar.penguin@gmail.com
    Subject: Re: Pathfinders in Space -- 4. The World of Lost Toys

    Oops. Sorry about the typo in the subject line. This, of course,
    should be episode 5 not 4.

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