Dragon's Domain
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox television episode
| series = Space: 1999
| series_no = 1
| episode = 8
| writer = Christopher Penfold
| director = Charles Crichton
| editor = Alan Killick
| production = 23
| airdate = {{Start date|1975|10|23|df=yes}}Fanderson – The Official Gerry Anderson Website. Original ATV Midlands broadcast date
| episode_list = List of Space: 1999 episodes
| image = Dragons Domain.jpg
| prev = Alpha Child
| next = Mission of the Darians
| guests =
- Gianni Garko as Captain Tony Cellini
- Douglas Wilmer as Commissioner Dixon
- Barbara Kellerman as Dr Bouchere
- Michael Sheard as Dr King
- Susan Jameson as Professor Mackie
- James Fagan as Pete Johnson
- Bob Sherman as Newsreader
- Gwen Taylor as Hospital Nurse
- Sarah Bullen as Kate
}}
"Dragon's Domain" is the eighth episode of the first series of Space: 1999. The screenplay was written by Christopher Penfold; the director was Charles Crichton. The final shooting script was dated 21 January 1975, with blue-page amendments dated 29 January 1975 and yellow-page amendments dated 30 January 1975. Live-action filming took place Monday 27 January 1975 through Monday 10 February 1975.Destination: Moonbase Alpha, Telos Publications, 2010
Plot
On Moonbase Alpha, Captain Tony Cellini experiences a vision of a nameless enemy that he perceives as a mass of light and piercing sound. He attempts to take off in an Eagle Transporter but his old friend Commander Koenig stuns him with a laser gun before he can launch.
Dr Russell believes that Cellini is dealing with unresolved trauma from a mission to the exoplanet Ultra in 1996, before the Moon was ejected from the Solar System. On reaching their destination, the crew of the Ultra Probe, piloted by Cellini, encountered a collection of derelict alien spacecraft. When they docked with one of the craft, they were set upon by an enormous, shrieking, tentacled creature with a single luminous eye and a fiery maw. The monster hypnotised Cellini's shipmates, devoured them alive, and regurgitated their charred remains. Laser guns had no effect on it and Cellini was forced to flee, blasting the command module free of the probe ship to use as an escape pod.
After a six months alone in space, Cellini reached Earth. His accomplishment was quickly overshadowed by mass disbelief of his horrific story. The World Space Commission ruled that there had been no creature and that the other crewmembers had been killed in a decompression accident. Cellini remained in Russell's psychiatric care until Koenig was made commander of Alpha and gave him a position at the Moonbase.
Cellini tells Koenig and Russell that his attempt to leave Alpha was in response to a feeling that the creature is near and he needs to face it again. Soon enough, the Moon reaches the spacecraft graveyard, where Ultra Probe is still docked.
Koenig prepares to investigate in an Eagle. Determined to face the creature alone, Cellini hi-jacks the Eagle and docks with the probe. The creature re-appears. Cellini attacks it with a fire axe but it grabs him with its tentacles. Reinforcements from Alpha, led by Koenig in a second Eagle, arrive to witness Cellini being swallowed up and his corpse spat out. Koenig infers that the creature's weakness is its eye and destroys it with Cellini's axe, killing the creature.
As the Moon leaves the graveyard, Russell closes Cellini's medical file. While talking with Koenig, she muses that when the Alphans eventually find a new home, they will need to reinvent humanity's mythology. She suggests a new fairytale: Tony Cellini and the Monster, akin to Saint George and the Dragon.
Regular cast
{{Cast listing|
- Martin Landau as Commander John Koenig
- Barbara Bain as Dr Helena Russell
- Barry Morse as Professor Victor Bergman
- Prentis Hancock as Controller Paul Morrow
- Clifton Jones as David Kano
- Zienia Merton as Sandra Benes
- Anton Phillips as Dr Bob Mathias
- Nick Tate as Captain Alan Carter
- Suzanne Roquette as Tanya Alexander (uncredited)
}}
Production
The story, a take on Saint George and the Dragon, was originally conceived as a vehicle for Nick Tate with Alan Carter having commanded the Ultra Probe and vindicating himself in this story by slaying the beast."Dragon's Domain" episode guide; Space: 1999 website 'The Catacombs', Martin Wiley Reports indicate that Martin Landau (always cautious of his male castmates—especially Tate—receiving any significant exposure) influenced the production staff to rewrite the part as a one-off guest role. Script editor Johnny Byrne has suggested the rewriting was performed by Landau and executive producer Gerry Anderson; Byrne himself did not do it, and story consultant Christopher Penfold had already resigned from the show.
In the final shooting script dated 21 January 1975, the Tony Cellini character is named 'Jim Calder' and Doctor Monique Bouchere is 'Olga Vishenskaya'. This draft contains no reference to Koenig, Bergman and Dixon mentioning evidence about the spaceship graveyard or the Ultra Probe's docking with the alien ship apart from the scanner contacts and Cellini's testimony. This dialogue must have been part of the last-minute script amendments: in the final cut, it seems a little odd that Dixon says they have only a series of unidentifiable bleeps on the scanner, but then Koenig states that the black box recorded a tight docking seal and a breathable atmosphere inside the alien spaceship."Dragon's Domain" final shooting script dated 21 January 1975
Fulfilling their agreement with RAI, the Italian production company co-funding the first series, Italian actor Gianni Garko would be cast in the role of the tortured astronaut; Jim Calder would be re-christened Tony Cellini. Garko, though a talented actor, was not a fluent speaker of the English language and, in an ironic twist, asked Nick Tate to help teach him his lines in English.
Many of the spacecraft miniatures seen in the graveyard sequences had been used before in the series: the Sidon ship from "Voyager's Return", the Atherian ship from "Collision Course", the battleship used in "Alpha Child" and "War Games" and the front piece used to transform the battleship into the Deltan gunship in "The Last Enemy". Reports indicated that the visual effects crew shot a sequence including Star Trek's USS Enterprise and Doctor Who's TARDIS, but the footage was never used.
The blue quilted nylon jacket worn by Bergman would be used in the second series as Alan Carter's excursion jacket. The orange versions of the jacket seen on Koenig and Cellini would be worn next episode by Security personnel and later, in series two, by Maya and a variety of guest artists. The computer banks seen in the main module of the Ultra Probe ship originated in SHADO Control from the Andersons' previous science-fiction series UFO. Commissioner Dixon's office on Earth was a redress of M's office from the James Bond film series. The signature red-leather padded door can be seen at the top of the scene.
Music
In addition to the regular Barry Gray score (drawn primarily from "Matter of Life and Death" and "Another Time, Another Place"), Remo Giazotto's composition 'Adagio in G Minor for Strings and Organ in G Minor' is played over the flight sequences of the Ultra Probe"Dragon's Domain" episode guide; Fanderson – The Official Gerry Anderson Website and the 'space horror music' composed by Vic Elms and Alan Willis for "Ring Around the Moon" is used during the encounters with the monster.
Reception
A retrospective by Nerdist calls "Dragon's Domain" the best episode of the series.{{Cite web |url = https://nerdist.com/article/space-1999-gerry-anderson-blu-ray-sci-fi/ |title = Space: 1999 Bridged the Gap from Trek to Wars |website = nerdist.com |date = 9 July 2019 |access-date = 21 January 2024 |first1 = Kyle |last1 = Anderson }}
TV Zone magazine rated the episode the best of Year One, stating: "[...] 'Dragon's Domain' scores for one simple reason – it scares you rigid." As well as the horror and Crichton's "dark direction", the magazine praised the episode's "solid drama" and the performances of Garko and Landau.{{Cite magazine |title = The Anderson Files |magazine = TV Zone Special |issue = 57 |date = Summer 2004 |editor1-last = Payne |editor1-first = Stephen |publisher = Visual Imagination |location = London, UK |issn = 0960-8230 |oclc = 438949600 |page = 55 }}
John Kenneth Muir comments that besides George and the Dragon, the story evokes Homer's Odyssey and the 19th-century novels Moby-Dick and Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas in its portrayal of Cellini's quest to destroy the monster. He also argues that the episode "feels like a direct precursor" to the science-fiction horror film Alien (1979) and its sequel, Aliens (1986).{{Cite web |url = https://reflectionsonfilmandtelevision.blogspot.com/2011/09/from-archive-space1999-dragons-domain.html |title = From the Archive: Space: 1999: "Dragon's Domain" (1975) |date = 13 September 2011 |website = reflectionsonfilmandtelevision.blogspot.com |first1 = John Kenneth |last1 = Muir |author1-link = John Kenneth Muir |access-date = 29 August 2023 }}
Adaptations
The episode was adapted in the sixth Year One Space: 1999 novel Astral Quest by John Rankine, published in 1975. In the novel, the characters Tony Cellini and Monique Bouchere retain their original names Jim Calder and Olga Vishenskaya.Space: 1999 – Astral Quest, Futura Publications, 1975
In the Italian AMZ comic counterpart of the episode (titled "Nel regno del mostro", literally translated "Into the Monster's kingdom"), the moon arrives in an unidentified system of the Ultra galaxy and Koenig sends the Ultra Probe to explore the system.[http://catacombs.space1999.net/comics/amz/62/w2amz62.html "Nel regno del mostro"] in space1999.net.
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb episode|0706323}}
- [http://www.space1999.net/catacombs/main/epguide/t23dd.html Space: 1999 – "Dragon's Domain" – The Catacombs episode guide] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110607032757/http://www.space1999.net/catacombs/main/epguide/t23dd.html |date=7 June 2011 }}
- [http://moonbase99.space1999.net/dragon.htm Space: 1999 – "Dragon's Domain" – Moonbase Alpha's Space: 1999 page]
{{Space: 1999}}