The Lost Islands

This article is about the 1976 television series. For the 2008 film, see Lost Islands (film).
The Lost Islands

Main title screen
Starring Tony Hughes
Jane Vallis
Robert Edgington
Amanda Ma
Chris Benaud
Margaret Nelson
Rodney Bell
Ric Hutton
Ron Haddrick
Ron Blanchard
Wallas Eaton
Willie Fennell
Cornelia Frances
Frank Gallacher
Michael Howard
Don Pascoe
Country of origin Australia
Production
Running time 26 x 30 minute episodes
Distributor CBS Television Distribution (syndication)
Release
Original network 0-10
Original release 1 January – 1 December 1976

The Lost Islands is an Australian television series. It first aired in Australia on 1 January 1976, and was later screened around the world, including the United Kingdom, France, Italy, The Netherlands (and various other parts of Europe), as well as Israel, New Zealand, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Canada and the United States.

Plot

A hurricane nearly sinks the United World, a sailing ship holding 40 teenagers from all around the world. Most of them flee the ship in lifeboats, however the evacuating children are not counted and five are left behind. The storm blows the battered ship across a reef into the lagoon of an island.

The island, Tambu, is ruled by a supposedly 200-year-old immortal tyrant called "Q", who came to the island on one of several ships originally bound for New Holland. In the center of the island is a valley in which the descendants of the original ship still live, in the manner of an 18th-century colonial community. Adjacent to Tambu is a smaller island, Malo, which is a barren wasteland. It is noteworthy because of a lagoon where prisoners are forced to dive for a "blue weed" which, according to the people of Tambu, is refined into a powder which the Q uses to extend his life.

The children befriend a local family, the Quinns, who help them remain hidden on the island in a swamp avoided by locals because it is, according to local myth, inhabited by the ghosts of the dead. Most of the episode storylines pit the children against the Q, who fears their knowledge of the outside world is a threat to his dominion of Tambu.

Production history

Unlike most Australian television series of the time, which were either entirely produced by a TV network, or a TV network in association with a local production company, The Lost Islands was a co-production between the Australian Ten Network and a US studio, Paramount.

Feature film

Three early episodes were edited together to make a 35mm feature film released in Australia in December 1975.[1]

Cult status In Israel

The series was aired constantly in Israel during summer vacations in the 70s and 80s on what was then the country's only television channel, helping it reach cult status among the Israeli generation which grew up at those times.[2]

Cast

References

  1. Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, p 296
  2. http://www.23tv.co.il/413-he/Tachi.aspx - Israeli Educational Television site (Hebrew, retrieved 19.4.2015)
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