SFX

THE CHANGES

The text said: “A number of issues are raised. How do people cope when everything they take for granted disappears? How thin is the veneer of civilisation we all accept? Is modern technology a good thing or not? Is a back-to-nature type of existence desirable?”

This might sound like the mission statement of Terry Nation’s famously bleak 1970s post-apocalyptic series Survivors, but was in fact a briefing paper written by Monica Sims, Head of BBC Children’s Programmes, to fend off expected parental complaints following the broadcast of her department’s hard-hitting fantasy serial The Changes.

The better-known Survivors wouldn’t begin until a month after The Changes ended; clearly there was something in the water back then, as ecological questions raised over pollution and self-sufficient living during the flower-power 1960s reached the mainstream.

The central idea of – modern Britons are compelled to smash machinery and technology in a wave of mass hysteria, before reverting to unenlightened superstition – came to Peter Dickinson in a nightmare. A literary reviewer on humour magazine, Dickinson’s dream came while struggling with writer’s block on an abortive detective story.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from SFX

SFX2 min read
Monster Mash-up
MARKING THE 70TH anniversary of the King of the Monsters’ first appearance in 1954’s Godzilla, IDW is releasing a special 100-page one-shot featuring nine stories by creators such as EJ Su, Danny Lore and Liana Kangas. James Stokoe previously wrote a
SFX13 min read
Boxing Clever
THE GLOBAL LAUNCH OF DOCTOR Who has been rumbling along for quite some time. Today it’s mid-March and SFX is in yet another fancy London hotel (no biscuits, tell the Mouse) to catch up with showrunner Russell T Davies and lead cast Ncuti Gatwa and Mi
SFX3 min read
Earth’s Deathliest Heroes
NOT ONLY MARVEL’S biggest summer crossover for several years, Blood Hunt is also set to be the goriest ever, with writer Jed MacKay and artist Pepe Larraz producing not only the standard five-parter but also expanded, polybagged Red Band editions, wh

Related