’s flashback episode (the one that actually made it to air back in 1965, at least!) is another mix of a genuinely entertaining framing sequence set to a bizarre choice of episodes to pull clips from. After being declared Aquanaut of the Year Troy Tempest is thrown an epic party by his friends at Marineville – so the last thing he needs the following morning is to find a television interviewer at the door ready to start a live broadcast of
It’s a memorable setup for a clip show, but where the episode falls down is in its choice of episodes to pull those clips from.
? A dream episode? Presumably the moment Troy started talking about one of his many many odd dreams was the same moment the producer started yelling into the interviewer’s earpiece to wrap the whole thing up as quickly as possible – and then to end with the relatively unremarkable
The framing sequence keeps up your interest throughout as more and more of Troy's friends and colleagues arrive, and we even get a tease of some big announcement relating to the long-simmering Troy and Atlanta romance – only for it to be instantly forgotten as the flurry of activity as Marineville goes to battlestations! Unfortunately, this promise of exciting action that we’re not going to get to see ends the episode on a rather odd note.
And speaking of…
#2 – Captain Scarlet – The Inquisition
Captain Scarlet’s attempt at a clip show starts off well, possibly stronger than any other Anderson clip show, with Captain Blue finding himself on a seemingly empty Cloudbase being interrogated by a man who claims to be a Spectrum Intelligence agent but is curiously insistent that Blue tell him classified Spectrum codes in order to prove his own identity. Instead, Blue provides examples of previous Spectrum missions he was involved with in the form of clips from
Big Ben Strikes Again,
Crater 101, and
The Trap. This framing device holds the viewer’s interest more than most clip shows by providing a series of mysteries; is this man really a Spectrum agent – or a Mysteron? What exactly are the Spectrum codes that he’s so interested in? Is Captain Blue a traitor? And where are Colonel White and the rest of the Cloudbase crew?
Unfortunately, the episode then falls apart rather spectacularly in the last few minutes. Finally realising that his interrogator is not who he claims to be Blue decides to take his secrets to the grave by hurling himself from the window of the observation tube, which at least gives us a chance to see someone other than Scarlet being brave for a change. However, this is the moment where the wheels completely fall off as a real human hand unceremoniously shoves the Captain Blue puppet through the glass – but instead of plunging to his death Blue lands on a sky backdrop in a warehouse, looking up at the replica Cloudbase he’s just escaped from. The sudden reveal that Blue has been held in a mock-up of Cloudbase’s control room would perhaps be much less jarring in a live action series than it is here. It would be still be a shock, much like in
UFO’s
Mindbender, but in Supermarionation form it rather gives the unintended impression that Captain Blue has just discovered that he’s really just a puppet in a lacklustre final episode of an otherwise fantastic show.

Also that right ankle's going to need some attention.
The fact that he just lays there silently, unblinking, not moving a muscle, makes it seem like the character is having a sudden existential crisis; has Captain Blue just realised that his entire world is a lie? The sequence drags on in awkward silence for just slightly too long that it almost feels for a moment or two like the show has permanently broken the fourth wall. Thankfully this extremely uncomfortable moment is ended by the arrival of Captain Scarlet, who somehow uncovered this plan offscreen, and the warehouse and its contents are blown to pieces with a minimum of fuss, The End.
In addition to the surprisingly poorly-executed resolution to the framing device,
The Inquisition also isn’t helped by the fact that two of the three episodes revisited here feel unsuited to the clip show format;
Crater 101 requires a flashback
within the flashback to make sense of it, while Captain Blue starts telling the story of
Big Ben Strikes Again then just sort of stops after the exciting opening. Cos, y’know, we didn’t need to know how that ended. One thing we would like to know though - how did the Mysterons get Captain Blue out of the restaurant in the ten seconds that Scarlet’s back was turned?

We're guessing he had to be in either in the piano or the suit of armour, but still...
#1 – Thunderbirds – Security Hazard

The final episode of the first season of
Thunderbirds serves up a double whammy of potential pain on top of being a clip show – it’s also got a little kid as the primary guest star! Thankfully the flashback sequences mean we don’t have to spend too long in the company of little Chip, after he stows away aboard Thunderbird 2 and returns with it to Tracy Island following a rescue. At a loss as to how to return him home undetected, Jeff is insistent that his sons tell Chip absolutely nothing about the island or the Thunderbirds machines…which lasts for about five minutes as each of the Tracys (ultimately including Jeff himself) spill the beans.
Thankfully, all the flashback clips featured here (
Trapped in the Sky,
End of the Road,
Sun Probe and
Day of Disaster) are well chosen, offering another look at many classic
Thunderbirds moments, and the fifty minute running time makes them feel less rushed – even if Virgil and Alan choose to omit the
‘and then it all went wrong’ endings from their stories!

"But Alan, I thought Thunderbird 3 almost crashed into the Sun too after you saved the Sun Probe?...Alan?"
Security Hazard plays out rather like how a young fan would hope a visit to International Rescue’s secret headquarters might go. While we’re certainly glad this wasn’t the end of
Thunderbirds the charming framing device coupled with the classic selection of clips mean it certainly wouldn’t have been a bad note to go out on.

Would have been even better if they'd stuck with the original ending of getting rid of Chip by sending him to TB5 to meet John and then conveniently forgetting he ever existed. Much like they did with...well, John.
Do you agree that Security Hazard was the best of the Gerry Anderson clip show episodes, or do you feel this list itself could do with being chopped up into smaller bits? Let us know in the comments below!