Kinvig
Kinvig
| 04 September 1981 (USA)
SEASON & EPISODES
  • 1
  • Reviews
    ShadeGrenade

    U.F.O. buff Des Kinvig ( Tony Haygarth ) runs a shabby electrical shop somewhere in London. He is married to the dog-loving Netta ( Patsy Rowlands ), and his best friend is Jim Piper ( Colin Jeavons ), a wild-eyed loon who thinks the Government are covering up the existence of extra-terrestrial beings. One of Des' regular customers is the beautiful but bad tempered Miss Griffin ( Prunella Gee ).Unable to sleep one night, he takes his dog 'Cuddly' for a walk, and encounters a flying saucer on the common. Aboard are weird-looking aliens along with - surprise, surprise - Miss Griffin, clad in sexy futuristic clothes. The ship has come from Mercury, the interior of which is hollow. The people there are descended from inhabitants of the lost city of Atlantis.Des helps them fix their ship, and it lifts off. So begins the first in a series of bizarre adventures for the electrician...'Kinvig' was the creation of Nigel Kneale, renowned as the author of the legendary 'Quatermass' sci-fi serials for the B.B.C. In 1981, he tried his hand at comedy - with somewhat patchy results. The idea for 'Kinvig' was good, but alas he was not too hot at writing funny lines for the characters. The canned laughter did not help matters either.The series was shown on I.T.V. a few months after the B.B.C.'s 'Hitch-Hiker's Guide To The Galaxy'. But whereas that programme already had an established fan base, 'Kinvig' was left to sink or swim. It was screened on Friday evenings, directly after a U.S. import called 'Spider-Man' starring Nicholas Hammond. The 'Spider-Man' audience could not get its head around 'Kinvig', while the kind of viewers appreciative of cult comedy would not have been watching at that time. One or two I.T.V. regions yanked the show from peak-time and dumped it in a graveyard slot. It was never repeated, but came out on D.V.D. a while back. I suspect that had Kneale not written it, it would not have seen the light of the day.The cast are wonderful, particularly Tony Haygarth ( remember him as the ball-scratching 'P.C. Wilmot' from 'Rosie'? ) as 'Kinvig', with dear Patsy Rowlands as 'Netta', and the splendid Colin Jeavons ( hilarious as 'Mr.Shadrach in 'Billy Liar' ) as 'Jim'. Prunella Gee, one of the sexiest ladies ever to grace the television screen, looked fabulous in her revealing sci-fi outfits. Patrick Newell, 'Mother' from 'The Avengers', popped up as 'Mr.Horsley' of the Bingleton Borough Council, whom Kinvig and Jim suspect of being an alien called a Xux. Simon Williams, of 'Upstairs Downstairs', is virtually unrecognizable as 'Buddo'.It was never made clear whether Kinvig's close encounters with Miss Griffin were real or imaginary, but I do not think it seriously hurt the show. Kneale's hidden agenda was to poke fun at sci-fi buffs and U.F.O. freaks. He was only partially successful. Watching the show again recently, I found it amusing rather than funny. Nevertheless, its a pity that it did not get a second season. 'Red Dwarf' was not much better in its first year, but improved over time. Michael Grade - no lover of sci-fi as his axing of 'Dr.Who' a few years later proved - was not prepared to give 'Kinvig' a chance.A quick mention of Nigel Hess' superb music, he also worked on 'End Of Part One' and 'Whoops Apocalypse'.

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    Sandra Quinn

    I am really glad to see some comments about Kinvig. I loved the programme and now have the DVD. I also love Tony Haygarth so that helps. Sci fi in those days used to get a very raw deal from the programme makers. Prunella Gee's teeth at the beginning of the series were so awful! She must have watched the programme herself because she soon got them fixed. The shop set was terrific, exactly the sort of shop that used to be found in most small towns, in some back street with things in the windows whose purpose could only be guessed at. And Des Kinvig was just the sort of chap that would own the shop. I spent some time trying to remember the name of the programme, and for some reason I always associated it with a triangle that had some sort of mystic meaning, but unless anyone knows differently I must have got it mixed up with another programme.

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    dstephenson-3

    It's sad that so few people remember this program. Maybe because there were only seven episodes -it was canceled and as I remember the final episodes were moved to a very late slot. So many comedies rely on the same formula that the odd ones out stick in the mind even decades after they were shown. The depiction of the electrical repair shop was very realistic and the scenery on the alien planet was OK despite the obviously low budget. I remember the program with affection perhaps at some stage it would have had to be revealed whether Kinvig was actually being abducted or it was in his mind and that would have effectively been the end of the joke.

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    fergus-stewart

    First of all, Kinvig was a TV series, not a movie. It ran for one series of seven episodes and disappeared without trace. Presumed lost and forgotten, it recently resurfaced on DVD in the summer of 2006. Kinvig appeared around the same time as the 'Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy' with which it shares only a comedic approach to science fiction. Kinvig is perhaps the more dated of the two and while not really in the same league I remember it with great affection and also recall that no-one else I knew ever watched it. Their loss. The best things about it were Prunella Gee as a very shapely alien (and/or customer of Kinvig's shop,) Tony Haysgarth as the eponymous 'hero,' Colin Jeavons as his UFO-obsessed sidekick played and the fact that it was (deliberately) never made clear whether the sci-fi goings on were really happening or whether they were happening only in the mind of the eponymous character. How it will stand up to 21st century viewing remains to be seen but as an example of gentle British humour depicting strange things happening to (or in the mind of?) a very ordinary man it is an interesting curiosity from simpler times. Shades of HG Wells? Yes, but it's more 'History of Mr Polly' than 'War of the Worlds.' Perhaps the most surprising thing of all about it is that it was written and conceived by the British sci-fi pioneer, Nigel Kneale, more famous for the likes of serious sci-fi work like 'Quatermass and the Pit.' Certainly an aberration for him, it was critically panned and ranks pretty low on his long list of notable achievements but for me it has that unique British charm of poking fun at two somewhat disappointed men while simultaneously celebrating their spirit of 'getting by.'

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