THE EAGLE OBSESSION - Promo (4K)
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- čas přidán 15. 02. 2024
- A special preview of the forthcoming feature-length documentary. Now includes closed captions.
Learn more at the film's homepage (eagledocumentary.com).
Produced & Directed by Jeffrey Morris
Written by Jeffrey Morris & Fredrick Haugen
Produced by Anne Marie Gillen
Edited & Colored by Fredrick Haugen
Music by Jeff Rona
Visual Effects by The Light Works
Sound Design by Jon Schell
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I still love space 1999 after all these years. Now i am 61.
Me too… we’re the same age.
We only had Star Trek, Logan’s Run, and Space:1999.
I’ve seen “The Day After Tomorrow” with Brian Blessed and Nick Tate that had I thought was a prequel to Space:1999 as a kid.😂
It was after Apollo -Soyuz mission - beginning the long drought of U.S. manned space missions until the Space Shuttle.
All this before Star Wars… that opened the flood gates to SciFi shows.
Salvage One being a lovable show about adventure, problem solving and getting rich doing it.
Something like today’s private space launch industry.
Me too
Beat ya, I'm 69 and still love Space 1999.🤭 Just season 1 though. I have always loved the Eagle, I just wish we could have had the Hawk as a regular vehicle as well. Gerry always had beautiful vehicles in his shows.
@philipc2025 The models were and still are fabulous. I just love the Eagle but could only dream of the toy in the shop window, priced at 6 pounds, which you needed to take out a personal loan for. I did in the 1980's make the Airfix model of Eagle, but it just didn't feel right like the corgi one. Blessings from Ireland ❤️ Eamon
Snap
Still the best looking ships in sci-fi. They haven't dated one day. They look like they can actually fly. Can't wait for the full film.
Glad there are others out there with an appreciation of Space 1999.
There are many, many of them, they are just not vocal about it.
I built the Eagle out of coat hangers and egg crates. I flew it millions of miles in our living room as a kid. Great vid.
I hope you made it back for supper.
My dad worked as a graphic artist, one day he brought a stack of color printed miniature mockup sheets of all kinds of cardboard boxes, so me and my brothers cut them up and folded them and they made cute little (2-3") color boxes, so that inspired me to make a small papercraft of the Eagle !
So 1975-76 ?
There was no recording devices back then, so I had to take notes in the few seconds the Eagle was on the tv screen...
I so which I would of kept it.
My friend welded one when we were in school. He was amazing at that stuff. We loved Space 1999.
O H M Y G O D !!!! This 59 year old Australian just returned to 1976 when he first saw an Eagle AND the first ever Aussie character in a Sci-Fi series; Alan Carter - greatly looking forward to view your documentary.
59 Year old America, I'm with you buddy. We saw it after you did, but I was just as blown away.
Two years behind you, but ditto to all the rest.
Those awesome days when you could watch Doctor Who at 6:30pm on the ABC, then it was either CH 7 or 9 that ran Space 1999 in the “M” time around 11:00pm.
He was one of the best characters of that show!
UK checking in, 1975 for us I think. Loved it. and the toys were metal!!!
As did this 59 year old Canadian! :)
I loved all the characters but Alan holds a special place in my heart. The action man! In 2014, I went to the New York comic con dressed as Alan. 140K attendees and I was the only Alphan cos player. :)
I bought a collector edition of the Eagle when the show was still on the air. As a teenager, I had a mural of the moon on my wall and the Eagle was suspended from the ceiling with thread. Today, it's in mint condition, displayed in my office.
my brother and I had those. I think mine was a transport and his was a freighter. as far as i know, he still has his, but i cannot recall what became of mine.
Awesome! Treasure it
58-year-old in Canada here, and this brings back great memories of watching Space:1999! I believe I built a model of an Eagle as some point back then. Looking forward to the show!
60-year-old Canadian here. I remember watching on CBC Saturdays at 5pm. I have a large die cast rescue eagle on my shelf. The season one bluray was really well done (though not cheap).
59 year old Canadian. Space:1999 was indeed on the CBC - Saturdays before Hockey Night in Canada.
I had tears coming down my eyes seeing the passion and love for the Eagle.
50 years is a long time for a kid to wait…
By the Year 2000 wasn’t just hype to us but a real dream of a better tomorrow.
As a child, I would take pictures of my TV screen in the dark of Star Trek and Space:1999.
The results were hit and miss but I got a few really good photos of an Eagle leaving a planet and the USS Enterprise.
This was in the days of 8MM home movies.
This is why View Masters were so popular then. No internet, cellphones, emails…just mags and newsletters through the mail.
September 13, 1999 a final message from Sandra (late Zienia Merton) was made that gave some closure to the series.
At 61, I look to SpaceX to achieve what my generation could not.
To the future…
I did EXACTLY the same!!! Will be 62 soon and I still get that...'Eagle' feeling every damn time since I was 13!!
I did too using a Polaroid camer. Normal camera would just be a blank TV screen. I still have some of those old polaroids I took of the Millenium vs Tie fighter battle from the first Star Wars movie. That sequence was shown in a TV program reviewing movies. Our old Philips VCR (no, not vhs) could actually paus the screen, so i could take the photos.
NICK TATE! I met Nick several years ago (2011 or 2012) in a coffee shop in Toluca Lake. Started talking, about all his roles. I hadn't twigged he was from Space 1999. When he said he worked in London on a TV show in the 1970s with "My good friend Martin Landau", I realised it could only be that. "What ... show ... was ... that?" - "Space 1999" - "And which character did you play?" "Chief astronaut Alan Carter!" - and then it was like I saw his young 1970s face over todays! That was great. Had him over for dinner at my sisters in Burbank, the man has great stories! Glad to see him going strong.
That is so awesome.
He is one of a kind!
Someone’s gotta build a life size version as a house.
Fully agree on that one.
Someone did fit out their flat/ apartment as Moonbase Alpha, replicating the wall panels, doors (with replica control panels), but best of all, had actually collected original show-correct furniture pieces (very rare, still 'designer', and therefore, still very expensive). It was online, years ago. No idea if it still is...
I'm from Portugal, I saw both Space 1999 series on black and white TV for the first time. We didn't have color TV here yet.
I was 7 years old at the time and I was on vacation with my parents in a place where the hotel's TV reception was very bad.
My father found a portable TV, connected to the car battery, we drove many kilometers until we found a place where the reception was good enough.
We took a whole month's vacation in those days!!!
For us, missing 3 or 4 episodes of the series was unthinkable.
Even if it was on a B&W screen the size of a cookie, little bigger than that of the series' famous communicators.
I will certainly look forward to seeing this documentary.
Space: 1999 was my first exposure to science-fiction as a pre-teen and I immediately fell into the world of sci-fi. It played on one of our two available local channels at 10 pm weekly but my bedtime was at 8 (yes, I was that young). My mother, bless her heart, would agree to wake me up just before 10 so I could watch the next episode. It will always have a place in my heart.
Great story 👍
That's the kind of parent I needed. Everything I wanted to watch was past my bedtime and my mother was merciless. If only I'd known they'd be available when I grew up.
I still draw the cockpit and exterior of the Eagle when I doodle......best designed fantasy spaceship ever.
The Eagle spacecraft from SPACE: 1999 is finally getting its due and I couldn't be more excited. I'm in my 50's and I grew up at a time when having a base on the moon was a very real possibility and the design of the Eagle added to that believability factor. Seeing the iconic ship getting the respect it deserves is truly heartwarming.
The memories the series brings me. I was 10 years old when it aired, and I remember my grandmother and I watching it together, never missing an episode. My grandmother made sure I was home in good time so that she and I could watch the series. Even when I was sick, she would make up the sofa so I could lie down and watch. She made sure the whole world stopped and no one could disturb us when it aired. She was over 60 years old then. When the Eagle model kit came out, she bought it for me.
WOW! THOSE SURELY ARE SOME TREASURED MOMENTS!! Grandma likening your favorite show and watching together plus all the little things-TRUELY special!
Great memory!
Space 1999’s Eagle made so much sense that when the tech arrives, future designers can just hand a model to engineers and say “OK, make this real.”
As long as it doesn't have to land on the Earth, a spaceship can have any shape. The Eagle's modular construction, its versatility, makes it a logical design. It is mostly a space shuttle without wings.
@@xhagastbut there were may episodes of it flying through atmospheres of planets.
@@XtremiTeez I am talking of it as a design for real ships. It would work on the low gravity of the Moon.
@@xhagast so when they showed it taking off and landing on planets with atmosphere and gravity like Earth's, did that seem unrealistic to you?
I used to draw the Eagle at every opportunity, on any surface. I ignored so many school lessons drawing Eagles on every classroom desk. Such an icon. The Enterprise made no sense. I knew the Eagle. I understood the Eagle. It was the first ship that made me think, yeah, this is really going to happen one day.
Same here! In 2nd and 3rd grade i doodled the Eagle every chance I got. Poor drawings, of course, I could barely draw stick figures. But I tried the best I could, fun times!
Woohoo! The reason the Eagle design works is because it genuinely looks like it should work- a no frills and versatile work-horse craft. As an astronomy and Sci-Fi obsessed child in the 70s (I still am!), I had an Eagle Transporter, an Eagle Freighter (both by Dinky) and a plastic Hawk kit (by Airfix), all of which I slowly destroyed by incessant re-enactments of crash-landings in the garden (sounds effects by me). Seeing the incredible models and collections in this video brought it all back. Thanks for reminding me of the awe and fun Space 1999 gave me back then, Jeffrey!
You're welcome. Thanks for the kind comment!
The Eagle makes sense as a ship that works in space.... ONLY in Space. as a vehicle that lands on and takes off of planets, it makes no ruddy sense at all. It's not built for atmospheric entry and it has absolutely no space for.... fuel... the stuff that you need to burn out of those rocket nozzles.
I too have both of the Dinky models, but alas, because of similar Garden Emergency Landings, my green Freight version is well-battered!
Had the same and did the same lol, also played the 45 record over and over with the follow along book.
I am 55 and Space: 99 has to be my favourite show of all times. I watched and rewatched every episode so many times and even bought the DVD sets when they were available. I was extremely fascinated by the Eagle, I loved its modular approach and everything it could do. However, I did not realise until now that I was not alone loving this spacecraft. I can't wait to watch this documentary and learn about all those fans who went over and beyond by collecting miniature Eagles and even building some themselves. Wow!
You are far from alone. I have a bunch of them on my shelves, along with the Kaldorian spaceship, the Mark IX Hawk, Swift and the moon buggy. It's not too late to pick up collecting them again. Join in in reliving your childhood dreams. 😎
Can't wait to see it! I wish someone would do a reboot of this show.
Yes....but not Disney.
I had that dream for a long time. Especially when martin landau was still alive as well. Like we get back to the the planet the Alphans settled on, building on that message from Sandra. Then some new catastophy threatens that planet (maybe a large meteor) and the Alphans realizing that the base could not support them all, so they send up their kids to handla the base. The meteor strike the planet and hurdle the m,oon out of it's orbit aghain and the moon sets off on continous journeys. That way paying respect to the old actors and characters. Like them handing over their legacy. The Eagles not getting some silly redesign to look "hip and cool" in 2024 for some younger audience etc.
Nowdays I'm not so sure though. Battlestar Galactica reboot was really well made, but that was back in 2004. Since then and nowdays reboots or people taking up old franchises has often dropped the ball. Star Trek movies by JJ Abrams and TV-Series by Alex Kurtzman are not at all as good as older Star Trek. Also their new ship designs are hideous. Especilly Klingon ships. Disney Star Wars is mostly not the Star Wars I'm looking for etc (except for a few exceptions like rogue one and andor).
It would have to be someone who really had a passion and understanding of Space: 1999. Respecting it's legacy and canon. Not just random writers, producers and diorectors. Not trampling all over it. Maybe very hard held in restraints and overseen by Gerry Andersons son, or something like that. If not it would most likely turn into something completely different. Shoehorning in various "messages" that do not fit the story, tons of cgi with lense flares and looking more like some New Years lightshow with firewaorks than a serious TV-Series/Movie. Tons of stupid over the top action tempo. Just look at what happend already back then when the American division of ITV (or was it itc, I can't remember exactly) started interfearing too much. Removing characters like Professor Bergman, Paul Morrow etc. Turning the stories in series/season two into more action based silly stuff with less serious topics and things that would make you go "hmmm". Sure some good episodes, but mostly series/season one was a lot better story wise. Series/season two lowered the series ratings and then it was cancelled.
It seems like Hollwood and even broadcast companies like BBC, these days, can not make series anymore for the ones that are actual fans and like the series. Look at latest Dr. Who. I would not want anyone to do something like that to Space: 1999. I have no idea what they think they will accomplish by insulting the fans and what audience they think will watch it instead? Clearly it's not going so well, since movie and series flop one after another. The same with Marvel.
@@scottbrower9052Most definitely!
It's a show that still has so much potential... as it did back in the 1970s. And in this era of remakes and remakes of remakes... I'm genuinely surprised nobody has succeeded in bringing it back to the small screen.
I agree about season 2 there was a couple of good one's but the rest were real clunkers in my opinion plus were some of the main characters were either killed off or lost on a planet.@@Lord_Funk
I'm so proud that my Eagle build is playing a part in Jeffrey's masterful Eagle documentary!!!
I know I'm not the only one here who will have a hard time waiting for the full movie to premiere. We all follow excited!!
Davs mand. I have watched your videos on your channel for years now. I hope to one day be able to visit you and watch your masterpiece. That is if that is even allowed? I live in a country not too far away and I do undersyand Danish well, I even worked in Denamark as a DJ back ion the 80's, so it's not like an around the world trip for me. I actually gave Gerry Anderson store the tip of your videos and channel some time back. Also to a Space: 1999 collectors from Italy who puts together Space: 1999 conventions in his country. They have even had some of the actors visiting that convention over the years. Still that would be along trip for me, so I have not been to any of his conventions in Italy. Anywasy. Your work is mazing and I liked how you wore the Koenig shirt from Gerry Anderson in more than one of your videos. It was sold out in my size, so I only have the Paul Morrow version. 😎
@@Lord_Funk You shall be very welcome 👍 however right now it is not assembled, but it will be again.
@@jwenneberg That's so sweet of you. Thank you. I also saw the video of you having put it together at a convention. It stood next to some large windows.
If you look up SciFiWorld which is a convention put together by a guy called Jesper Isberg. Most often in 4 differet locations during a year. I often visit at least two of them which are not too far from me every year. It's the same convention just in different locations. Sometimes the guest can vary a bit too from location to location. Maybe you could hook something up with him and have it displayed there.
This year they had a full size X-Wing made by a guy from Germany set up and you could get photos taken either infront of it or sitting in the cockpit. They have had things like a full size Batmobile, jeep from Jurassic Park, even one fo the tanks used in Saving Private Ryan (or maybe it was brothers in arms) displayed over the years.
It would be awesome to see Your Eagle there and get to meet you in person. There is this one guy that I have talked to at the conventions who comes there fully dressed in an Alpha season 1 outfit, with the season one silver jacket, laser gun and comlock etc. Not sure how many others are Space: 1999 fans there, but it's all about movies, mainly sci-fi, horror, fantasy and anime. Of course 501 Legionis there and they are all dressed up as various Stormtroopers and characters from Star Wars. Tons of visitors are also dressed up as cahracters from various movies and such. LoTR, Harry Potter, Halo, alot as Anime characters etc.
Tons of people visting every year. Many from Denmark too. I remember one Danish guy who I saw first time in 2009 dressed as Indiana Jones and he still comes dressed as Indy to this day.
Also always various guests. I have met John Rhys-Davies/Gimli there and he signed two of my Dwarfen axe replicas. Billy Dee Williams/Lando Carissian, Michael Bien from Terminator and Aliens etc. Different guests each year.
Next occasion is in Mars, but that location is a bit far away, both for you and me as well. However In April it's held in a location just across Öresund from Copenhagen. Closer for you. That's the one I have visited every year since 2009.
Even if you don't bring your Eagle I can really recommend vistiting it. I personally always visit in the first day (saturday) since that is usually the most busy day. I'm there like 40 min before opening and usually get very near the entrance in the queue. Soon after the queue can get pretty long and be around a whole block.
Sundays are a bit more laid back and calm, but at the same time you can make nice deals with sellers that day for collectibles, since they want to sell stuff before they wrap it all up, but it can feel a bit dead on Sundays compared to the busy Saturdays.
@@jwenneberg I did reply again, but I now notice that CZcams AI bot/algorithms have deleted my comment. It is something I have noticed happening a lot lately. Now I have to figure out what word or words in my reply the AI bot deem as unsutiable, so I can rewrite those words and post it again. It seems with all the staff cuts/layoffs Google has made, more and more is handed over to AI and it's self learning bots which do not work well at all. Just common words can be deemed "problematic" or as "foul" language and whole comments just gets deleted, even if they in fact contain no foul language. It seems it can get deleted just because the bot thinks the whole topic is unsuitable, or some words are used more than x amount of times in a comment.
@@jwenneberg I have tried to reply again twice now, but CZcams bot have deleted both times within seconds. It's happening a lot lately. It seems Google makes more and more is to be handled by AI which do not work well at all. Just common words can be deemed as not suitable and whole comments just gets deleted, even if they in fact contain nothing bad at all. It even seems it can get deleted just because the AI thinks the whole topic is unsuitable, or some words are used more than x amount of times in a comment.
You got me, can't wait to see what you do. Please try the kickstarter again. This best selling Sci-fi author will help. Many days sitting on my living room floor watching this as a 12 year old boy.
My office is filled with Eagles, Space:1999 premiered when I was 10 years old and encapsulated the awe and mystery of space for me. Can't wait for this documentary!
Oh man, I loved watching Space 1999. Had the Eagle model and wished I still did. What a real piece of space hardware.
Not to mention my ridiculous crush on Sandra Benes.
I can very much relate to the term "The Eagle Obsession" I have 11 Eagles and 1 Hawk from "Space 1999" as well as a collection of vehicles and ships from "The Thunderbirds" "UFO" and "Star Trek" the Orion and Moonbus from "2001 A Space Odyssey" the Dropship from "Aliens" the Spinner from "Blade Runner" and even the Starbug from "Red Dwarf" and it all started with a diecast Dinky Toys' Eagle, UFO Interceptor and SHADO2 from the 1970s (which I still have in a box) and was rekindled by a series of diecast Eagles that were released between 2004 and 2006.
Are they all the old Dinky-Toy ones, or also some of the newer Project Enterprise and later Sixteen12 versions? I guess the once between 2004 and 2006 are the Project Enterprise ones.
@@Lord_Funk I think they are Product Enterprise I have a set of the smaller diecast as well as the larger scale Eagles which includes the Hawk.
Ha! I was watching this thinking, "This needs to be three times longer!".
And then I learn it's just a trailer!
Absolutely outstanding, really looking forward to it! I have very fond memories of Space: 1999 and the Eagle I had then (long since lost to history unfortunately).
Thank you! 😊
Wow, wow, and triple wow. If you'd told me 15 minutes ago that an extended trailer for a documentary about a seventies TV show would bring tears to my eyes I would've confidently told you you were nuts, but here we are. If Netflix picks this up (and they should) it will smash all records for a documentary. Really can't wait for the finished film.
I'm a 52 year old male living in Washington, DC.
I've been a daydreamer all of my life.
Recently I've had dreams of re-inventing Space: 1999 for the current time. I've even dreamed stories and plots.
One of the things I've been attempting to realize is a design for an updated Eagle. I've even played with AI image generation to limited success.
It's good to know I'm not the only one who still loves this show and the iconic stories and settings they gave us.
Thank you for making this video.
There was an attempt to for a remake called Space: 2099 but it never got off the ground. I am in total agreement. An updated version would be a welcome series because, like then, what was presented LOOKED REALIATIC AND VIABLE. Keep at your project and good luck.
@CliftonWood: From Paris - same age, exactly - same kind of daydreamer person, woolgathering all the time - Space 1999 fan too.
@CliftonWood @ogungou9 Exactly the same age here and exactly the same condition as you two :)
Congratulations Jeffrey!! You’ve succeeded in truly striking a chord.
I´m 59 years young now, but I saw the series on TV when they were aired in Germany. Then, when I saw the "Eagles" in toy shops I bought - ok, my mother did - 4 plastic Eagles from "Airfix" and some metal ones (I forgot the brand). I also got the Falcons. Then I build myself the moon base made of wood. I recorded on audio tapes (cassettes) all the series, because I relistened them afterwards. Then after some decades I found the series on CZcams and of course I downloaded everything. Space 99 and the Eagles are the love of my S/F-life. Then I wrote a comic, using photographs and put everything in school note books to have my own story. - I still hope, someday there will be a full-length movie which I would pay tickets to see it in the cinema.
Of all the sci-fi ships we've seen in the last 50 years, the Eagle has to be the most believable of them all.
I used to have the toy as a kid in the 80’s, metal, with the detachable cargo section etc.
still a very watchable TV show.
At least Season 1 is. Season 2 was a travesty to suit American "tastes."
@@cpnscarlet yeah can’t argue with that.
Dinky Toys…
Was it the blue or white with red cargo pod Eagle, or do you mean the green one with a white passenger pod)? If you got a hold of the white with red cargo pod and had the green with white passanger pod, you could swap and make the all white passenger Eagle. Unfortunately, in my country I could only find the green passenger and the blue cargo one. Never the white cargo version, but happily I did have the plastic model kits too, which I could paint as I wanted.
@@Lord_Funk hmmmm, think it was white , with a door that flipped down on the pod. I was a little kid, a long time ago lol. It was second hand and kinda scratched up. But I remember it being metal, with spring loaded landing feet.
This looks about right.
2.bp.blogspot.com/-KhSMXb8JI-Q/TZhJrr5RphI/AAAAAAAABdw/1Bo2oVHKeKA/s1600/Eagle%2BDinky%2BToys%2BSpace%2B1999%2BCosmos%2B01.jpg
Wow thank you so much for doing this, this series was so important to the sci fi genre and the first season has left a lasting impression of what we all wanted the future to be.
I have found my people!
Yes, Space:1999's Eagle and the Starfuries from Babylon 5 are my top 2 science fiction spacecraft.
And for exactly the reasons detailed in the video. Both acknowledge zero-g maneuvering and are imminently realistic designs that could be built and work pretty much as depicted in both shows.
I am so glad to find SO many people this passionate about the Eagle.
Thanks for this teaser video. Can't wait to see the complete documentary.
I had the Space 1999 communicator. It was a walkie talkie shaped like the comm device used by the crew. It was so damn cool. I looked forward to the show every week here in the states/ Living in Chicago then, now I live in Wisconsin. I am a 61 year old gal. I was a total nerd back then. I went into computers and still do it. I love what I do.
I wish still had that communicator, probably worth some good money now. I do still have the Moon base alpha patch I wore on my parka. Although now it sits behind glass all nice and safe.
I built one from scratch using all sorts of parts, including the viewfinder CRT from a camcorder. Never actually functioned, but it looks great. No idea where it ended up.
It was called a comlock, for communications and locking device, because it could also lock and unlock the doors to various areas of the Moonbase.
71 and I loved that show.
This is such a great project to be involved with! This our childhood! Great work Jeffrey, we look forward to working on the rest of the show with you and the team here at Pinewood Studios!
Awesome stuff. If you look at my own lenghty comment somehwere here among all others you will se that I am a huge fan and a somewhat fair collector of Space: 1999 stuff. Some stuff I still have saved from my childhood in the 70's. Space: 1999 gave me my life long obsession with sci-fi and it's still my number one favourite show of them all. Thank you for that. 👍
Great to see some hard-nosed footage! Jeffrey, you're doing the fandom and the show proud. Thank you so much for doing this.
This looks like a great project and looking forward to the film in 2025. Remember watching the syndicated re-runs on Monday evenings back in good ol' 1978.
Occasionally I come across these gems on CZcams, finally something really worth watching. Now you need to hook up with Musk and see if he can make a real one !!!!!!
My brother put together a model of an Eagle when we were kids. He also had the Space:1999 soundtrack album on vinyl, which we used to listen to all the time. I never saw the actual series until around 2011, and I really enjoyed it.
Love the video! Remember sitting in my home watching Space 1999 in 1975 with my father. He didn't understand my immediate immersion in the show. Every time any of the transports or external moon shots were on the screen, I was in heaven. Some of the plots like the pilot show, still move me to flights of joy. Built three Eagle models in my life, still have one sitting on my collection shelf beside my USS Enterprise and X-Wing. It commands the center piece place in my heart. Looking forward to your work. Good luck to you!
Me too, as a kid. One I painted as VIP pod, one as rescue and one as plain white passenger pod. I also still have two of the Dinky-Toy ones. These days I have quite a few of the Sixteen12 die-cast Eagles. They are really masterfully done. Top-notch quality. Also the new improved plastic kit models by Round 2. They are so much more detailed, but I haven't gotten around to building them yet.
I'm 61 and I remember this first time around and I loved it from the start, now wouldn't it be fantastic to see a full size 1 to 1 version so we could walk around and sit in the seats NOW that be so cool.☺️
I have often thought that someone with the proper resources could make a business out of taking some of the most beloved small-scale spacecraft from Sci-Fi and build 1:1 versions complete with interiors. Then take them on tour to sci-fi conventions, charging a small fee for entry, and larger fees for professional photographic opportunities and private events. I would start with a Star Trek Runabout and the original shuttlecraft from TOS. Then the Eagle. Build them for transport on a flatbed or as a trailer. I would want them to look 100% correct when set-up on-site. What a dream.
I'd love that, it would be cool.🖖🛸@@parajerry
Your initial channel intro...
Silver surfer vibes
The point you make about the Eagle and the Lunar Module ( Both of which I made from Revell kits) struck me - I hadn't considered that. The more I think on it, the more the Eagle "suggests" the Lander module, rather than mimics it.
Brian has been involved in so many British classics. He inspired me to get into theatre tech.
I agree. It feels like an extrapolation or a continuation. Not a rip off of the LEM. Thanks for your comment! oh and I never meant the Silver Surfer when I developed the logo. But that's a cool thought.
This is an amazing project. Thanks Jeffery. Until I saw this documentary I thought I was one of the very few people that liked the Eagle shape..WHO KNew!! I remember that my sister brought me the Eagle Freighter (Booo!) for my birthday, which for some reason had a green midsection but as I was a kid with no money it was still great to have. I still own it today. I'm just about to turn 60 myself and you have just reignited my passion for this ship. Thank you so much.
Last week, I decided to watch Space: 1999 on Prime. It was the first time I'd watched it since the 70's. I had an Eagle back then, but I had totally forgotten about the Stun Gun and Commlock. When they first pulled out the stun gun, I told my wife, "I had one of those! I used to carry it with me everywhere!" Good memories.
Then this pops up in my feed. Looking forward to watching it when it comes out.
"It made sense"
My reaction also when I first saw the "Eagle" in Space 1999.
OMG, I am majorly geeking out right now. 😮 I had no idea what I was getting ready to watch when I clicked on this. I am soooo excited for this! I lovvvvved "Space 1999" when I was young! (I'm 65 now). Can't wait to see the finished film! Thank you for doing this! ❤
I loved the Eagle when I saw the series and build my first model of it in the 70s, and I still loved it when I built one of the new 13" versions of it last year. (I didn't have room for the 22" version.) And I'm greatly looking forward to your documentary! "I have an incredible faith in the human spirit." - Cmdr Koenig
I'll watch it. I was a kid from the 80's and had three staples. Space 1999, Battlestar galactic and Robotech. All three were more mature than anything else around. In the end I became an IT guy now working on Cybersecurity and AI. Those formative years set me on this path. I am who I am today because of shows like this.
This will be an amazing film. It was so great seeing a glimpse of this film being made of your journey toward this iconic ship. How wonderful, to see Nick Tate and Brian Johnson and you introducing them to your latest film project; giving them full respects and participation. And you introducing the various innovative eagle fans worldwide, is rewarding. Only a filmmaker as accomplished and talented as the creator of the incredible Oceanus, could make a documentary of this caliber! Thank you, Mr. Morris for starting this journey, and sharing it with fans.
I watched this show as a kid. My cousin was just as interested, she was mesmerized. I didn't have any of the models but bought Carlton comics of the show. Still have them and the recent Space:1999 Technical Publican from Fanderson.
Sad to see the Kickstarter was cancelled, I was going to donate, guess I came aboard too late.
I can really recommend both "Space: 1999 The Vault" by Chris Bentley and "Space: 1999 Technical Operations Manual". Both containing tons of information and photos. The photos of original outfits, outfit designs, gadgets etc. Even weaving in UFO as a bridge to Moonbase Alpha. That the S.H.A.D.O. moonbase was a secret base that at the time of Space: 1999 was abandoned but still existed. Their underground catacombs and UFO interceptor ships and all left there. Also weaving in early drawings of the Eagels never used as early ships used before finally the Eagles, as we know them, were designed etc. So many great ideas, art-work and photos in those books.
53 and watched the show on a B&W Tv on a local UHF station a long long time ago... This brings back such fond memories.. Can't wait to watch the Documentary... thanks in advance!
I remember eagerly awaiting the pilot episode only to accidentally fall asleep and miss it. Back in those days, if you missed the pilot episode, you had no hope of seeing it again. For some reason, pilot episodes were rarely if ever re-run in the 1970s.
It wasn't until over 30 years later that I finally was able to watch the pilot episode on CZcams.
I watched the show as a teenager when it first aired on television.
About ten years ago I found out a friend of mine had never seen the show. I immediately hauled out my DVD boxed set and introduced her to the show.
She loved how they really tried to have an authentic feel to the walking on the Moon, spacecraft and other technical aspects.
Thank you for this insight to the project. I will be forwarding this to her after I finish typing this comment.
Oh dear, I shed a tear when you put that Eagle together!
The Space 1999 Eagle is just so great and anyone who hasn't seen one in HD hasn't truly seen how incredible it looks. There are lots of great model making fans out there but I never seen anyone recreating the full size interior. Good luck can't wait to see the finished result.
Fantastic, Jeffrey! I cannot commend you enough on your voice, narration, cinematography, editing, music, and the sharing of your interactions with these amazing people. And your own passion and efforts in this wonderful endeavor! Well done. Can't wait for the feature length!
Iconic and a lot of nostalgia. Watched the show in the 80is as a kid. Love it.
I was about 6 or 7 when it first aired in the UK and it was way ahead of it's time. We should also not forget that the series UFO paved the way to it's existence.
Dude, I was so very young when this was on, it's on the edge of my memory. The main thing I remember is the space ship and thinking it was cool. There is something about it for sure.
Absolutely amazing. Thank you for bringing this to us all. Nice to know there are other Space 1999 and Eagle fans out there. Looking forward to more of your incredible work!
This is wicked! I've been a fan of the show, and specifically the miniatures since I was a kid. It's part of what inspired me to become an industrial designer and model maker. I've been designing building and restoring Eagle Transporter toys for over 20 years. I'm at a point now where I might release a full replica of the famed Mattel Eagle. I can't wait to see your film!
Holy crap! I hope people stay and watch to the end. The new Eagle VFX are worth the wait. This is absolutely FANTASTIC work. You nailed the quality. This feels EPIC in scale. So well done. Thank you for making this. It's great to know I'm not alone in my love of this classic sci-fi vessel.
Thus was a major eye opener for me. I'm 67 and grew up in Brevard Co Fla. I watched the NASA space programs during the 60's, 70's and 80's. Watched all the success and failures. Saw all the Apollo launches from the backyard or beach. Can't believe I saw 11 launch and land on the moon. Unfortunately, also watched the end of Shuttle Challenger.(Challenger became part of the Brevard CO Sheriffs Office paint scheme on their Star Cars, as well as on Fla license plates for commemorance.) I live on the West Coast now, and am fascinated by the SpaceX booster returns. That to me is just Amazing!!
I was a big Star Trek fan as a child. Wars hadn't been written yet I believe. When Desilu brought production to the Cape for a ST episode, it was just unreal!
I had seen Space:1999 on some cable channels at the time, but kinda dismissed it, as it was a British production, and unfamiliar to me. This short had made it crystal clear, this series was the most realistic and believable, looking back 50 years now. Gotta love how experience and age finally come together. I can't wait to see this production completed. It is well narrated and interesting. Best of luck.
All buttons pressed, Captain!
Brings back so many great memories. The show had brilliant set design and superb actors with little to no special effects whatsoever, yet they still made it work.
62 years young in England and still watching, in-fact I am currently watching it now on episode "the full circle" I actually have all of Gerry Andersons TV shows all the way back to Supercar!
The Eagle, the millenium falcon and perhaps the Liberator.
All childhood favourites.
Thank you for your beautiful and thoughtful insights on this iconic tv series that leaves us all inspired even decades after we saw our first Eagle 😊
This is a big chunk of my childhood, can't wait to see it :)
This looks great - the Eagle is a superb, iconic design
I can't believe you got to meet Nick Tate! One of my favorite SF moments of all time is Alan Carter's choice to return to Alpha rather than head back to Earth during 'Break-Away.' I'm very excited to watch this documentary! I'm a 55-year-old American who remembers watching Space: 1999 on public television in Western Massachusetts on PBS in the early '70s.
Thank you! Many good memories of making my big 70's Eagle more accurate by drilling out the RCS thrusters, putting in extra doorways, and lights, and putting in proper windows, etc.
The Eagle has always been one of my favourite science fiction spacecraft.
The reason, it just looks right, function over form if you like. No flashy design elements just everything that would be needed to carry out the required task, similar to the original lunar modules of the Apollo missions.
I'm a 56 year old Italian and I was madly in love with Space1999 when I was a child especially because it was an English/Italian production (the first season). I still have with me my Dinky Toys Eagle Freighter gifted by my late father. I earned a degree in architecture with a space thesis in 1996 about the design lauout of a Lunar Transportation System heavily based upon the awesome Brian Johnston's design.
I still have mines too. The blue freighter one and the green one with a white passenger pod. Awesome memories kept alive.
The eagle is what anyone with even a modicum of mechanical interest would think a REAL working spaceship would look like , as others have said it just looks like an evolution of the lander . I loved that program as a child .
Excellent video. Appreciate the trip through time and seeing all of this iconic history.
Lovely to see Brian Johnson again. I first met him on the set of "Empire Strikes Back" at Elstree in 1978, long after his great work with Gerry Anderson.
The Eagle is iconic in many ways. I'd love to see a full-sized mockup sitting in a parking lot somewhere. I'm sure it can't be that difficult. ;)
A few years ago I have build the newly released Eagle model kit (since the one I have build as a child was long gone). I just looks beautiful - much better than the model kit of the seventies. What an iconic, ever lasting design!
Wow! Simply wow. So many wonderful memories. Gonna watch this project. Thank you.
I understand this obsession.. i was 8yrs old when i saw Space 1999 and remains one of my fav sci fi TV/Movies ever.
When I was a kid my parents bought me a pair of walkie-talkies based on the communicators of this show... years after the show was cancelled I found a model of the Eagle and I built it and loved it. I wish I kept them now...
I am an Aerospace Engineer because of Gerry Anderson, but I am a downcast one because of the way our culture and political will left so much promise behind. The Eagle was a glimmer of hope in a world that continues down a bad path. I first saw Space: 1999 nearly 50 years ago and like many others, we saw The Eagle and thought, that's where we're going! But we never got there. Oh well, at least we still have those memories. In my living room, a small Eagle model sits atop of a box containing a bottle of Dom Perignon 1999. I'll either drink it on my 70th birthday or when I get to The Moon. I'm betting on 70. Hats off to Gerry Anderson, Brian Johnson, Derek Meddings and the modelers who showed us what the future could hold. Yes, it is an "obsession."
As an Aussie kid in the 1970s, Space 1999 was my favourite show, with a great cast and of course I was thrilled an Aussie had a major part. I too was totally obsessed with the Eagle.
Best sci-fi space ship that looked like it could actually be real.
Then at the end of the video when you said there’s more to come - omg, yes - sub!
This looks wonderful, Jeffrey! Fascinating detail, done with the heart of a true fan. Yet also totally professional. Can't wait for the release.
Eagles and Hawks were SWEET.
I still have my Eagle Model I received as a gift from my grandparents in 1978
The Eagle is such a cool concept, it was the coolest thing on Space 1999
Nice!
I was 12 when Space 1990 debuted, and was instantly and forever hooked.
I was abit younger, but same thing. Hooked for life on Space: 1999 in particular but also on sci-fi in general. It was the show that literally opened the door to a whole universe for me. The universe of awesome sci-fi shows, spaceship designs etc.
WOW !!!!!!! AWESOME GUYS !!!!!!!!! At the time Space, 1999 was broadcast... I drew Eagles everywhere, all the time!!!
Ha! You and me both. It was one of the first ship I ever drew, going WAY back (I was 7 when I first saw it). Glad you liked the preview.
Wow, after watching that promo, I can't wait for the full movie!
So glad you’re giving the Eagle the respect it deserves. Been a fan of Space:1999 since 1975.
I am 61 years old as well living in Ireland 🙂🇮🇪☘️ I cannot believe this has not be done sooner. Cannot wait.
Thank you ever so much now looking forward to this an awful lot. Brought me back to Essex England 1976 Sunday mornings sitting in my bed clothes eating cerial and watching Space1999.
Thank you for helping me live the best parts of my childhood again.
The Eagle and B5 Starfury, are my two favourite Sci-Fi models.
Can't wait to see this! I still have my big Eagle toy from the 70's.
What a wonderful glimpse of things to come!
What a great project!!
Love Space:1999 (particularly Season 1). It was so different from all the other sci-fi out then. It was closer to science fact, not science fiction where concepts like a lunar base, hydroponics, nuclear energy, decompressive explosions and the vacum of space and of course, the Eagle and it's reusability, adaptability and VTOL capabilities, featured prominently.
I built so many as a child and thankfully kept them all, including a fleet of 18 tiny Eagles that came with the Moonbase Alpha model. Actually only 6 came with it but I wrote AMT a letter saying my kit was missing the Eagles and they sent me 6 more. :D I then asked my best friend to do the same and they sent him 6 as well. :)
My love undiminished even after 49 years, I am very excited to see this project and looking forward to seeing more. The fact that you feature one of my own childhood heroes, Brian Johnson, is amazing. Keep up the amazing work!
I had to search high and low, but I finally found my nearly 24" inch model still needing put together. I had forgotten all about it until this video. I loved this show when I was a child.
You could go with the Sixteen12 die-cast Eagles. They are of awesome quality. Top-notch quality and details. They even re-released the old Dinky-Toy looking ones, just a bit larger, but I prefer the ones that looks like in the show. Of course with Round 2 MPC plastic model kit you can also chose to lit up the cockpit, like it was in the shows, which the die-cast ones are not.