American television science fiction American television science fiction has produced
Lost in Space,
Star Trek,
The Twilight Zone, and
The X-Files, among others.
British television science fiction British television science fiction began in 1938 when the broadcast medium was in its infancy with the transmission of a partial adaptation of
Karel Čapek's play
R.U.R.. Despite an occasionally chequered history, programmes in the genre have been produced by both the
BBC and the largest commercial channel,
ITV.
Nigel Kneale's
The Quatermass Experiment (1953) and its sequels have been called "one of BBC Television's earliest audience successes" and Kneale became "one of the most influential television and film writers to emerge in the 1950s".
Doctor Who, which launched in 1963 and ran until 1989, then was revived in 2005, was listed in the
Guinness World Records in 2006 as the longest-running
science fiction television show in the world and as the "most successful" science fiction series of all time. Other cult British series in the science fiction genre include
The Tomorrow People,
Space: 1999, ''
Blake's 7, Star Cops and Red Dwarf''.
Canadian science fiction television Science fiction in
Canada was produced by the
CBC as early as the 1950s. In the 1970s,
CTV produced
The Starlost. In the 1980s, Canadian animation studios including
Nelvana, began producing a growing proportion of the world market in animation. In the 1990s, Canada became an important player in live action speculative fiction on television, with dozens of series like
Forever Knight,
Robocop, and most notably
The X-Files and
Stargate SG-1. Many series have been produced for youth and children's markets, including
Deepwater Black and
MythQuest. In the first decade of the 21st century, changes in provincial tax legislation prompted many production companies to move from Toronto to
Vancouver. Recent popular series produced in Vancouver include
The Dead Zone,
Smallville,
Andromeda,
Stargate Atlantis,
Stargate Universe,
The 4400,
Sanctuary and the reimagined
Battlestar Galactica. Because of the small size of the domestic television market, most Canadian productions involve partnerships with production studios based in the United States and Europe. However, in recent years, new partnership arrangements are allowing Canadian investors a growing share of control of projects produced in Canada and elsewhere.
Australian science fiction television Australia's first locally produced Science Fiction series was
The Stranger (1964–65) produced and screened by the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Later series made in the 1960s included
The Interpretaris (1966)
Vega 4 (1967), and
Phoenix Five (1970). The country's best-known science fiction series was
Farscape; an American co-production, it ran from 1999 to 2003. A significant proportion of Australian produced Science Fiction programmes are made for the teens/young Adults market, including
The Girl from Tomorrow, the long-running
Mr. Squiggle,
Halfway Across the Galaxy and Turn Left,
Ocean Girl,
Crash Zone,
Watch This Space and
Spellbinder. Other series like
Time Trax,
Roar, and
Space: Above and Beyond were filmed in Australia, but used mostly US crew and actors.
Japanese television science fiction Japan has a long history of producing science fiction series for television. Some of the most famous are
anime such as
Osamu Tezuka's
Astro Boy, the
Super Robots such as
Mitsuteru Yokoyama's
Tetsujin 28-go (
Gigantor) and
Go Nagai's
Mazinger Z, and the
Real Robots such as
Yoshiyuki Tomino's
Gundam series and
Shōji Kawamori's
Macross series. Other primary aspects of Japanese science fiction television are the
superhero tokusatsu (a term literally meaning
special effects) series, pioneered by programs such as
Moonlight Mask and
Planet Prince. The
suitmation technique has been used in long running franchises include
Eiji Tsuburaya's
Ultra Series,
Shotaro Ishinomori's
Kamen Rider Series, and the
Super Sentai Series. In addition, several
dramas utilize science fiction elements as framing devices, but are not labeled as "tokusatsu" as they do not utilize actors in full body suits and other special effects.
Continental European science fiction series German series Among the notable German language productions are: •
Raumpatrouille, a German series first broadcast in 1966, • The miniseries
Das Blaue Palais by
Rainer Erler, •
Star Maidens (1975, aka "Medusa" or "Die Mädchen aus dem Weltraum") was a British-German coproduction of pure SF. •
Der Androjäger (1982/83) was a sci-fi comedy produced by Bavaraia Filmstudios in cooperation with Norddeutscher Rundfunk. •
Lexx, a German-Canadian co-production from 2000.
Danish series Danish television broadcast the children's TV-series
Crash in 1984 about a boy who finds out that his room is a space ship.
Dutch series Early Dutch television series were ''
(Tomorrow it will happen), broadcast from 1957 to 1959, about a group of Dutch space explorers and their adventures, De duivelsgrot'' (The devil's cave), broadcast from 1963 to 1964, about a scientist who finds the map of a cave that leads to the center of the Earth and
Treinreis naar de Toekomst (Train journey to the future) about two young children who are taken to the future by robots who try to recreate humanity, but are unable to give the cloned humans a soul. All three of these television series were aimed mostly at children. Later television series were
Professor Vreemdeling (1977) about a strange professor who wants to make plants speak and '''' (1997) a nationalistic post-apocalyptic series where the Netherlands has been built full of housing and the highways are filled with traffic jams. The protagonist, a female superhero, wears traditional folkloric clothes and tries to save traditional elements of Dutch society against the factory owners.
Italian series Italian TV shows include
A come Andromeda (1972) which was a remake of 1962
BBC serial,
A for Andromeda (from the novels of Hoyle and Elliott),
Geminus (1968),
Il segno del comando (1971),
Gamma (1974) and
La traccia verde (1975).
French series French series are
Highlander: The Series,
French science-fiction/fantasy television series (both co-produced with Canada) and a number of smaller fiction/fantasy television series, including
Tang in 1971, about a secret organization that attempts to control the world with a new super weapon, "Les atomistes" and 1970 miniseries "La brigade des maléfices". Another French-produced science fiction series was the
new age animated series ().
Anime-influenced animation includes a series of French-Japanese
cartoons/
anime, including such titles as
Ulysses 31 (1981),
The Mysterious Cities of Gold (1982), and
Ōban Star-Racers (2006).
Spanish series The first Spanish SF series was
Diego Valor, a 22 episode TV adaption of a radio show hero of the same name based on
Dan Dare, aired weekly between 1958 and 1959. Nothing has survived of this series, not a single still; it is not known if the show was even recorded or just a live broadcast. The 60s were dominated by
Chicho Ibáñez Serrador and
Narciso Ibáñez Menta, who adapted SF works from Golden Age authors and others to a series titled
Mañana puede ser verdad. Only 11 episodes were filmed. The 70s saw three important television films,
Los pajaritos (1974),
La Gioconda está triste (1977), and (1972), this last one, about a man who becomes trapped in a telephone booth, while passersby seem unable to help him, won the 1973
International Emmy Award for Fiction. The series
Plutón B.R.B. Nero (2008) was a brutal SF comedy by
Álex de la Iglesia, in the line of ''
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Red Dwarf, or Doctor Who, with 26 episodes of 35 minutes. Other series of the 2010s were Los protegidos (2010–2012), El barco (2011–2013), and El internado'' (2007–2010), all three inspired by North American productions, with minor SF elements. The latest success is
El ministerio del tiempo (
The ministry of time), premiered on February 24, 2015, on
TVE's main channel
La 1. The series follows the exploits of a patrol of the fictional Ministry of Time, which deals with incidents caused by time travel. It has garnered several national prizes in 2015, like the
Ondas Prize, and has a thick following on-line, called
los ministéricos.
Eastern European series Serbia produced
The Collector (), a science fiction television series based upon
Zoran Živković's story, winner of a
World Fantasy Award.
Návštěvníci (The Visitors) was a Czechoslovak (and Federal German, Swiss and French) TV series produced in 1981 to 1983. The family show aired in a larger number of European countries. ==Significant creative influences==