Quatermass
Hello and welcome back to season 2 episode 7 of Nerdist Camp.
Today we have all our usual features, a deep dive into our main topic, updates on the world of tech and geekdom, and of course Grainger Things, where we look at the unusual, unexplained or declassified from history.
The barracks of the nerdist camp has a sealed perimeter, because we’re deploying into one of the most influential broadcasts in British science-fiction history. Before Doctor Who, and well before the modern era of televised space horror, there was a transmission that rattled living rooms, redefining what science fiction could do on screen: The Quatermass Experiment.
First broadcast in 1953, Nigel Kneale’s story follows Professor Bernard Quatermass and his rocket research team as they recover a spacecraft that returns from orbit… and it is not empty. What comes back instead is a cosmic contamination that slowly turns the single survivor into something no longer human.
Today we are raiding the archives and inspecting this early Cold War-era nightmare. We’re asking what made this serial so unsettling for its time, how it shaped decades of British genre storytelling, and why its influence still echoes through modern sci-fi and horror. So fall in and keep your comms open—and welcome to Nerdist Camp.
We’ll look at how it moved from TV to film, from B&W to colour, and why it’s still one of the best British Science Fiction franchises.
RELATED MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE
* The Stone Tape (BBC, 1972) — Kneale's other masterpiece, ghosts as recordings in stone
* Beasts (ATV, 1976) — Kneale anthology, includes the brilliant "Baby"
* Threads (1984) — not Kneale, but the natural endpoint of British apocalyptic TV
* Ghostwatch (1992) — owes its DNA to Kneale's mockumentary instincts
* Atomfall (2025) — Rebellion's post-apocalyptic videogame, openly Kneale-influenced
* Mark Gatiss's various documentaries on British horror and ghost stories
LINKS TO THINGS WE TALKED ABOUT:
* The Cold War Nuclear Tower [https://youtu.be/7ed2geKcVyc?si=Zza-F3N5QklnfJRH]
* Quatermass — Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quatermass]
* Nigel Kneale — Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigel_Kneale]
* The Quatermass Experiment (1953) — Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Quatermass_Experiment]
* Quatermass and the Pit — Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quatermass_and_the_Pit]
* BFI Nigel Kneale collection [https://www.bfi.org.uk/]
* EDC Belt Pouch [https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07PTZGJ4N?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title&th=1] (various colours)
* Spitfire notebook [https://manninc.co.uk/products/endless-spitfire-explorer-refillable-leather-regalia-paper-journal?shop_consented_scopes=email%3Averified+openid+pay%3Asession_token+profile+shop%3Aaccount_uuid&shop_sign_in=true&variant=47964548497683]
* Swan Nordic air cooler [https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0D224PWGH?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title&th=1]
THIS FORTNIGHT WE ARE RECOMMENDING
Kris:
* This is a Bomb: The Nevada Casino Heist (BBC iPlayer)
* Nuclear War: A Scenario, by Annie Jacobson (Penguin)
* Once Upon a Time in the West…Country, by Tony Hawks (Audible)
Andi:
* The Pitt - HBO Max
* For All Mankind season 5 - Apple TV
* Project Hail Mary - home release
* The Expanse [https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/video/detail/B08B49F1LK/ref=atv_dp_share_cu_r] (Prime Video)
* Quatermass and the Pit - JustWatch [https://www.justwatch.com/uk/movie/quatermass-and-the-pit-1967]
* War of the worlds
Thanks for listening, see you next time, under the canvas!
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If you'd like to suggest topics for the show, or even if you think you might be geeky enough to be a guest, then please contact the show at:
nerdistcamp@gmail.com [nerdistcamp@gmail.com]
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