Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Thunderbirds are go!

Thunderbirds was a 1960s British children's series focusing on the exploits of the Tracy family and their quasi-military aid organization, International Rescue. The team uses high-tech machines to help solve big problems and basically save the world in every episode. And it's all created with scale models and marionettes. Pure genius.

FW is always interested in aircraft and any kind of complex, futuristic engineering, so I knew he would love this show. Series creator Gerry Anderson may not have Asperger Syndrome, but let's just say he's close enough. This show is a joy for anyone who loves minutiae, especially regarding aircraft and the effort to make toys act out real life adventure. It's kid safe (although it does feature no-longer-acceptable 1960s stuff like cigarette smoking, cocktail drinking, and swarthy/"foreign" bad guys), yet still has James Bond kinda stuff and fairly decent action. Some of the episodes are long on dialog and short on machines, but they're still 100 times better and more appropriate than any adventure show being made for kids today. You can buy the DVDs on Amazon, or rent them via Netflix.

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