Space 1999 Episodes.
No. overall |
No.
in series |
Title |
Directed
by |
Written
by |
Original
release date |
Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
1 |
Lee
H. Katzin |
George
Bellak |
4 September 1975 |
1 |
|
In September 1999, John Koenig reports to Earth's Space Research
Center at Moonbase
Alpha as its new commander. A strange sickness is killing some
of the Moonbase Alpha crew. Commander Koenig's investigation reveals
that the source lies at Nuclear Waste Disposal Area 1 caused by
excessive magnetic energy fields. The continuous buildup of energy
shortly causes massive explosion clusters that knock the moon off
orbit into deep space. |
||||||
2 |
2 |
David
Tomblin |
Johnny
Byrne |
11 September 1975 |
9 |
|
The body of Anton Zoref is invaded by an unknown life force. The
man soon manifests an uncontrollable ability to absorb energy. As
the Alphans struggle to understand this mysterious force, Zoref's
need becomes insatiable. Driven by instinct, he makes his way to
the greatest source of energy on Alpha: the Nuclear Generating Plant. |
||||||
3 |
3 |
Ray
Austin |
Anthony
Terpiloff |
18 September 1975 |
13 |
|
The Moon is on a collision course with an enormous planet. On a
scouting mission, Koenig encounters Arra, the Queen of Atheria.
The aged monarch proclaims the collision is a preordained event
and must occur for her people to evolve to a higher plane of existence.
Now Koenig must convince his crew to have faith and do nothing in
the face of apparent destruction. |
||||||
4 |
4 |
Charles
Crichton |
Christopher
Penfold |
25 September 1975 |
17 |
|
Approaching an inhabited planet, the Alphans are suddenly pounced
upon by warships. In an unprovoked attack, Moonbase Alpha is devastated
by Earth-style Hawk fighters. With 128 dead and Alpha unable to
sustain life, Koenig and Helena appeal to the aliens for mercy.
The aliens proclaim the Alphans to be an invading virus, with no
right to exist. |
||||||
5 |
5 |
"Death's
Other Dominion" |
Charles
Crichton |
Anthony
Terpiloff, Elizabeth Barrows |
2 October 1975 |
14 |
On a frozen planet, the Alphans encounter shipwrecked humans from
a lost expedition. The expatriates from Earth enjoy an idyllic existence:
they have been made immortal and have lived there for over 880 years.
They invite the Alphans to join them in paradise, but dissidents
reveal all is not as it seems, teaching Koenig that immortality
comes with a price. |
||||||
6 |
6 |
Bob
Kellett |
Johnny
Byrne |
9 October 1975 |
12 |
|
The automated Earth space probe Voyager
One is approaching the Moon. With the radioactive exhaust from
its engine certain to extinguish all life on Moonbase, the Alphans
try to gain control and shut down the drive. Help comes when the
probe's designer is found living on Alpha under an assumed name.
However, Voyager is being followed by alien ships seeking revenge. |
||||||
7 |
7 |
"Alpha
Child" |
Ray
Austin |
Christopher
Penfold |
16 October 1975 |
10 |
The Alphans celebrate the arrival of the first child born on the
Moon. The blessed event sours when the infant grows into a five-year-old
child in minutes. Trying to accept him, the Alphans do not notice
that little Jackie Crawford is much more than he seems. When hostile
spaceships approach the base, Koenig realises, too late, that the
aliens have an agent on Alpha. |
||||||
8 |
8 |
Charles
Crichton |
Christopher
Penfold |
23 October 1975 |
23 |
|
In 1996, Tony Cellini commanded a high-profile space mission which
ended in disaster. The sole survivor, he told an outrageous tale
of a spaceship graveyard and an alien 'dragon' which devoured his
crew. Believed by no one, he was left a broken man. Five years later,
the truth is revealed when the runaway Moon approaches the same
deadly Sargasso in space. |
||||||
9 |
9 |
Ray
Austin |
Johnny
Byrne |
30 October 1975 |
22 |
|
Encountering a derelict spaceship, the Alphans respond to an automated
distress signal. On board, they discover what remains of the once-great
civilisation of Daria: an elite group which maintains control of
the ship and a tribe which has descended into savagery. The Alphans
are appalled when they discover what measures the Darians have taken
to survive. |
||||||
10 |
10 |
"Black
Sun" |
Lee
H. Katzin |
David
Weir |
6 November 1975 |
3 |
The travelling Moon drifts within range of a black sun. Pulled toward
certain destruction by its inescapable gravitational force, the
Alphans employ desperate measures to stay alive. As a lifeboat Eagle
carries six persons to safety, the Moon plunges into the black sun,
with only an experimental forcefield protecting Alpha. |
||||||
11 |
11 |
"Guardian
of Piri" |
Charles
Crichton |
Christopher
Penfold |
13 November 1975 |
8 |
Strange events befuddle the Alphans as they approach the planet
Piri. When exploring its lifeless surface, Koenig encounters the
seductive servant of the mysterious Guardian of Piri. She offers
the wayward Alphans a life of peace and perfection. Realising the
deadly truth behind the peace of Piri, Koenig struggles to free
his people from the Guardian's influence. |
||||||
12 |
12 |
"End
of Eternity" |
Ray
Austin |
Johnny
Byrne |
20 November 1975 |
16 |
While exploring an asteroid, the Alphans critically injure an alien
trapped within. Bringing him to Alpha, he is declared dead. However,
he recovers spontaneously and his wounds have completely healed.
The indestructible Balor is a scientist whose people had discovered
the secret of immortality. He explains that his people branded him
a dissident as their society descended into malaise brought about
by widespread deathlessness. He was imprisoned inside the asteroid
and cast out. Actually Balor is a psychopath, offering a drastic
solution to his people's apathy; now freed of the eternal prison,
he plans to spend eternity practising the art of pain and torture,
with the Alphans as his subjects. |
||||||
13 |
13 |
Charles
Crichton |
Art
Wallace, Johnny Byrne |
27 November 1975 |
2 |
|
A lush Earth-type planet holds the promise of a new home for the
people of Moonbase Alpha. When the reconnaissance Eagle returns,
it carries an unexpected passenger: Helena's husband, who died five
years ago. The mysterious Lee Russell tells the Alphans that death
awaits them on the new planet. The Alphans ignore his warning and
unknowingly descend into a world of antimatter. |
||||||
14 |
14 |
Charles
Crichton |
Anthony
Terpiloff |
4 December 1975 |
5 |
|
An alien spacecraft crashlands on the Moon, its passengers refugees
from a dying world. As their destination is Earth, they generously
offer to take one person with them when they depart. The scheming
Commissioner Simmonds takes steps to ensure that he is the lucky
individual chosen, even if it means destroying Alpha. |
||||||
15 |
15 |
Bob
Kellett |
Jesse
L. Lasky Jr., Pat Silver |
11 December 1975 |
15 |
|
When exploring a habitable planet, members of the Alphan survey
party vanish without a trace. Are they the victims of an indigenous
tribe of Stone Age humanoids? The mystery deepens when a dead caveman
is found to have capped teeth. Others soon notice the primitive
cave chief and his mate bear an uncanny resemblance to the missing
John Koenig and Helena Russell. |
||||||
16 |
16 |
David
Tomblin |
Johnny
Byrne |
18 December 1975 |
6 |
|
After an encounter with a space-time anomaly, the Alphans find their
Moon back in the Solar System on a course to re-enter Earth orbit.
The celebration ends when it becomes apparent Earth is an inhospitable
wasteland. The mystery deepens when they discover a duplicate Moon
already in orbit and a duplicate Moonbase Alpha lying empty
and deserted. |
||||||
17 |
17 |
Charles
Crichton |
Christopher
Penfold |
1 January 1976 |
11 |
|
Anonymous alien benefactors provide the wandering Moon with a breathable
atmosphere. The Alphans rejoice as they realise they have a wonderful
new home in their own backyard. Preparations are made to settle
and begin building a new civilisation on the Moon's surface. Koenig
is suspicious of the aliens' motives, wondering how long this generous
gift will last. |
||||||
18 |
18 |
David
Tomblin |
Anthony
Terpiloff, Elizabeth Barrows |
8 January 1976 |
21 |
|
The Alphans are visited by a bizarre spacecraft, whose request for
supplies hides a deeper purpose. The ship, Gwent, is found to be
sentient, the attempt of a vain alien genius to live forever. Powerful,
unstable and craving companionship, Gwent intends for Koenig, Helena
and Bergman to replace its aged, dying creator. |
||||||
19 |
19 |
Ray
Austin |
Edward
di Lorenzo |
15 January 1976 |
4 |
|
A technician falls under an alien influence, accessing classified
information before mysteriously dying. Soon after, the Moon is stopped
in space by the powerful rays of an alien spacecraft. The aliens'
only interest in Alpha is the data held in its computers, information
they now plan to obtain through the possessed eyes of their next
agent: Helena Russell. |
||||||
20 |
20 |
Ray
Austin |
Edward
di Lorenzo |
22 January 1976 |
7 |
|
John Koenig finds himself trapped on the planet Zenno, in the home
of an alien scientist and his daughter. Advanced two million years
beyond Earth's people, the aliens consider Koenig their missing
link. Faced with the threat of being treated like an experimental
animal for the rest of his life, Koenig uses an unexpected weapon
to confound his captor: love. |
||||||
21 |
21 |
"Space
Brain" |
Charles
Crichton |
Christopher
Penfold |
29 January 1976 |
20 |
An Eagle and its crew are crushed to death by an enormous energy
field in space. When one of Alpha's astronauts is possessed by the
anomaly, he tells them the energy field is a living space brain,
which responded to the 'threat' with antibodies. Finding the Moon
on a collision course with the Brain, the Alphans make plans to
avoid the same fate as the Eagle. (This episode is notable for the
inclusion of music from the first movement (Mars, the bringer of
war) of the suite The Planets by Gustav Holst). |
||||||
22 |
22 |
Ray
Austin |
Johnny
Byrne |
5 February 1976 |
19 |
|
Dan Mateo, hoping to unlock the secret of communication with plants,
unleashes a killing force from the depths of his own mind. This
macabre spectre seeks vengeance for Mateo's horrible death—which
has not yet occurred. Bridging the span between science and the
supernatural, the Alphans hope to break the cycle and exorcise the
ghost without killing the man. |
||||||
23 |
23 |
David
Tomblin |
Johnny
Byrne |
12 February 1976 |
24 |
|
The wandering Moon suddenly changes course and comes to a halt in
the vicinity of a dead world. As Alpha's power fails, the only hope
for survival is to evacuate to the planet, which was ravaged by
a nuclear war in the distant past. Searching for answers, a team
is sent to the surface, where they discover the shocking truth of
the origin of the human species. |
||||||
24 |
24 |
Bob
Kellett |
Bob
Kellett |
19 February 1976 |
18 |
|
The Moon approaches a solar system with two planets on opposite
sides of its sun. The Alphans are trapped in an interplanetary conflict
when warships from both worlds trespass on the Moon to fire missiles
at their opponents' planets. After taking in a refugee from a destroyed
gunship, the Alphans discover they have drifted into the middle
of a literal war of the sexes. |
No. overall |
No.
in series |
Title |
Directed
by |
Written
by |
Original
release date |
Prod. code |
||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
25 |
1 |
Charles
Crichton |
Johnny
Byrne |
4 September 1976 |
1 |
|||||||
The Alphans fall into the grasp of the despotic Mentor, an alien
scientist trying to restore his ravaged world to its former glory.
His biological computer requires the energy obtained from living
brains to complete his task. When captured, Koenig is offered a
choice: surrender the Alphans to a horrifying living death or face
complete annihilation. Mentor's daughter Maya, who is a metamorph
and from whom Mentor has concealed his actions, may be able to aid
the Alphans. |
||||||||||||
26 |
2 |
"The
Exiles" |
Ray
Austin |
Donald
James |
11 September 1976 |
2 |
||||||
A fleet of alien missiles takes up orbit around the Moon. When one
is brought down for examination, the Alphans discover it contains
the frozen body of a young man. Revived, he begs for Koenig to recover
the rest of his people, innocent victims of a ruthless alien coup.
The Alphans are soon reminded that appearances can be deceptive. |
||||||||||||
27 |
3 |
Tom
Clegg |
Donald
James |
18 September 1976 |
5 |
|||||||
A radio call from planet Earth to the moon gives hope of transporting
the Alphans back home, until things go terribly wrong during the
first crewed transport sequence. |
||||||||||||
28 |
4 |
Charles
Crichton |
Tony
Barwick |
25 September 1976 |
3 |
|||||||
Zamara, a striking alien woman, materialises aboard Moonbase and
insists that two crew members must come to her planet, Vega, while
the moon passes through Vega's space. The two, Tony and Helena,
find they are being provoked and it is humanoid versus androids
on Vega. Guest-starring Billie Whitelaw and Leigh Lawson |
||||||||||||
29 |
5 |
Kevin
Connor |
Jack
Ronder |
2 October 1976 |
9 |
|||||||
Guest-starring Bernard
Cribbins in two roles. With the moon's trajectory reported to
be shifting due to an unknown cause, the Alphans happen across a
roving spaceship run entirely by a computer. Brian the Brain, as
he prefers to be called (voice by Bernard Cribbins), proves to be
a devious device until the truth is uncovered. |
||||||||||||
30 |
6 |
Charles
Crichton |
Terence
Feely |
9 October 1976 |
10 |
|||||||
A man appears claiming to be God and proceeds to select two couples
from the Alphans to populate a new earth. |
||||||||||||
31 |
7 |
Charles
Crichton |
Lew
Schwarz |
16 October 1976 |
8 |
|||||||
Searching in the Moon's Catacombs for minerals, Alan Carter and
his assistant come across a buried cryogenic pod containing a man
and a boy. |
||||||||||||
32 |
8 |
"The
Rules of Luton" |
Val
Guest |
"Charles
Woodgrove" |
23 October 1976 |
7 |
||||||
Following the detection of a defect in an Eagle, Tony Verdeschi
is forced to leave John Koenig and Maya on a prospective home planet
for the Alphans, while he returns to fetch another Eagle. After
picking a flower and eating a berry, both John and Maya are accused
of murder by the ruling plant life on Luton. Their sentence is a
fight to the death with three other accused aliens. (In this episode
it is disclosed that John Koenig is a widower when he tells Maya
that his wife died in a (presumed) Third World War on Earth). |
||||||||||||
33 |
9 |
Ray
Austin |
Keith
Miles |
28 October 1976 |
4 |
|||||||
Seeking a mineral, Koenig and his expedition team are trapped on
a desert planet whose dominant life form is a rock that is thirsty
for liquid water. |
||||||||||||
34 |
10 |
"The
Taybor" |
Bob
Brooks |
Thom
Keyes |
4 November 1976 |
6 |
||||||
A roving trader known as Taybor offers to trade the Alphans the
technology to return to Earth, with Maya's companionship as the
price. |
||||||||||||
35 |
11 |
Kevin
Connor |
John
Goldsmith |
11 November 1976 |
13 |
|||||||
While exploring a bizarre asteroid, Koenig is detained and replaced
by a double which directs Alpha to direct most of its energy at
the asteroid. Some of the crew react negatively at his double's
dictatorial behaviour. |
||||||||||||
36 |
12 |
"The
AB Chrysalis" |
Val
Guest |
Tony
Barwick |
18 November 1976 |
12 |
||||||
Koenig, Carter and Maya investigate the source of destructive waves,
occurring at regular intervals, which could destroy Moonbase Alpha;
they encounter an unusual civilisation. |
||||||||||||
37 |
13 |
Robert
Lynn |
Anthony
Terpiloff |
25 November 1976 |
11 |
|||||||
In the catacombs of the Moon, engineer Patrick Osgood is searching
for titanium for a new heart to save his wife's life but he is developing
a psychiatric disorder in his desperation and on account of dreams.
The Moon is being bombarded by mysterious heat rays. |
||||||||||||
38 |
14 |
"Space
Warp" |
Peter
Medak |
"Charles
Woodgrove" |
2 December 1976 |
15 |
||||||
While Koenig and Tony investigate a derelict spaceship, the Moon
passes through a space warp; at the same time, Maya is stricken
by a fever and loses metamorphic control, becoming beasts the Alphans
cannot manage, while they wait and hope Koenig and Tony will find
their way to the space warp to rejoin them. |
||||||||||||
39 |
15 |
"A
Matter of Balance" |
Charles
Crichton |
Pip
and Jane Baker |
9 December 1976 |
16 |
||||||
Botanist Shermeen is part of a reconnaissance team exploring a new
planet but she is under a mysterious spell, being spoken to by a
spectral man named Vindrus who has recruited Shermeen to help with
a yearned-for escape plan. |
||||||||||||
40 |
16 |
Robert
Lynn |
"Charles
Woodgrove" |
16 December 1976 |
14 |
|||||||
A cloud of space dust causes a mystery illness on Alpha; an Eagle
crew is sent to discover its secrets, but the craft returns only
with a strange beast that withstands all assaults and which Maya
realises is not a life form. The senders of the beast want elements
of Alpha's life support system. |
||||||||||||
41 |
17 |
Charles
Crichton |
Terrance
Dicks |
23 December 1976 |
19 |
|||||||
Maya discovers that a huge gaseous cloud is giving off Lambda waves
which could give some people paranormal powers. One of the affected
Alphans cracks and begins to take control. Koenig faces spectres,
two people he condemned to death many years earlier during an expedition
to a space station orbiting Venus. |
||||||||||||
42 |
18 |
Tom
Clegg |
Terence
Feely |
4 August 1977 |
17 |
|||||||
43 |
19 |
11 August 1977 |
18 |
|||||||||
Koenig seems to go berserk while flying an Eagle; as he is in Medical
Center unconscious, a Superswift lands and its crew is revealed
as a team of people from Earth come to take the Alphans home. When
Koenig seems to recover after some wave therapy applied to his brain,
he does not see the old friends and acquaintances everyone else
sees, nor a Superswift; instead, he sees hideous telepathic aliens
and an unknown spacecraft. Koenig convinces Helena to doubt the
credibility of the visitors and treat Maya the same way he was treated.
Maya can confirm Koenig's perception of aliens, and after treating
nearly everyone, Koenig, Maya and Tony work to stop the aliens,
whose real intent is to detonate nuclear fuel to provide their sustenance. |
||||||||||||
44 |
20 |
Peter
Medak |
Donald
James |
18 August 1977 |
20 |
|||||||
The leader of a surface survey team, Sanderson, all suffering from
a mental disorder brought on from the monotonous lunar terrain,
suspects Koenig of concealing discovery of a habitable planet. He
incites his team to help him take over the Command Center from Koenig,
intent on inhabiting the new planet named Tora that is on a collision
course with the moon. |
||||||||||||
45 |
21 |
"Dorzak" |
Val
Guest |
Christopher
Penfold |
25 August 1977 |
21 |
||||||
An alien ship lands seeking aid, but when its commander emerges
and sees Maya, she stuns Maya, putting her in stasis. It is learned
that the ship bears Dorzak, a Psychon refugee who behaved criminally
on the commander's planet. Dorzak beguiles Maya about his intent,
using extremely well-developed psychic abilities to control others'
thoughts. |
||||||||||||
46 |
22 |
Tom
Clegg |
Michael
Winder |
1 September 1977 |
22 |
|||||||
Koenig and a colleague land on an Earth-like planet, once populated
but now devoid of life, they flee when a man steps from a transport
booth and dies. They fly the Eagle to the planet's companion body
and crash, the colleague is killed by a forcefield and Koenig is
captured. Taken to a penal colony on the planet's moon, he becomes
the person of interest to the warden who then conceals Koenig's
survival when other Alphans arrive in search of the Eagle crew. |
||||||||||||
47 |
23 |
"The
Immunity Syndrome" |
Bob
Brooks |
Johnny
Byrne |
29 October 1977 |
23 |
||||||
While on a survey of a planet to replenish food and water on Moonbase
Alpha, an alien form attacks a crewman who seemingly goes mad; after
a brief struggle with the crewman, Tony Verdeschi is attacked by
the alien as well. Koenig and the survey party must find Tony and
help him regain his senses before the madness kills him and solve
the mystery of the alien life form. All their technology breaks
down, preventing them from leaving or receiving aid; all food -
native and their own supply - become toxic. |
||||||||||||
48 |
24 |
Tom
Clegg |
Johnny
Byrne |
12 November 1977 |
24 |
|||||||
Alpha is approached by an alien vessel, which Maya recognises as
a Dorcon ship. The Dorcons are enemies of the Psychons. The Dorcon
ship eventually manages to take Maya from Moonbase Alpha so that
the ship's commander can harvest Maya's brain stem to provide immortality
to the supreme ruler. An attempt by Koenig to free Maya ensues before
the Dorcons can do the transplant that will kill Maya. But the immature,
scheming heir has other plans. (This episode eventually will serve
as the series finale.) |