The third and last part of my Survivors retrospective where I compare the 2008 re-make with the original show. Which is best? Read on to find out…
Follow the links for Part 1: Survivors 1975-77 and Part Two: The Novel of Survivors
Perhaps the only surprise in Survivors returning to the small screen is the fact that it took over 30 years for it to do so. Despite it’s one off broadcast on terrestrial TV, the influence of Survivors can be seen in many later screen apocalypses, from 28 Days Later to The Last Train. Yes, that’s right: no repeats back in the good old days of British TV. Of course it had a video release and in its day the show was inexplicably successful in Italy for some reason. However the success of 28 Days Later lead to the much anticipated DVD release of the original show and a few years down the line we see a new look Survivors back on our screen. Now, it would be all too easy for me to do the grumpy old man thing and lay into it, saying ‘the original is better’ and how ‘television today is a load of crap,’ but I’m afraid the original is better and television today is a load of crap. Sorry kiddies but its true! Still, the new Survivors isn’t terribly bad in the cold light of day. Just a little bland maybe. Possibly the original too was a little bland in its day. Certainly compared to post-apocalypses in literature the original Survivors wouldn’t score particularly well in man-to-man combat with Triffids or The Drowned World. But this is television not literature and to compare television dramas to novels, no matter how good the drama, is like comparing instant coffee with freshly ground coffee.
Still, the original Survivors would have seemed pretty fresh compared to other science fiction series on the goggle-box in its day. For a start, it really wasn’t for the kids. I’m sure kids liked it but it’s not Dr Who. True, its no Prisoner either, but neither is it as kitsch or inaccessible as The Prisoner.
Survivors was also highly topical in its day. While I suppose the current Swine Flu scare (and past Bird Flu scares) might make the new Survivors seem more probable than the old show, it hardly condenses so many of the issues of its age as the old one did. The Survivors 2008 basically stays fairly true to the premise of the old show (although judging by the number of characters there seems to be a higher survival rate), yet it doesn’t share the original show’s philosophy. It seems to pay only lip-service to Terry Nation’s old query ‘how would you make a candle from scratch?’ Although it does briefly pose the question in passing.
No, the new show is more interested in action and melodrama, two things sadly lacking at times from many of the original shows episodes. Now action and melodrama aren’t necessarily bad things per se, but action and drama are pretty common occurrences on the telly these days, while thoughtful speculation is sadly a comparative rarity in TV or indeed in any medium. Not that the new show is bad. It’s okay. More a post-apocalypse Eastenders than the post-apocalypse Archers.
Like all television programs today the dialogue lacks the naturalistic pacing and theatrical expansiveness of classic British television: the insidious influence of Hollywood I’m afraid. The directing and editing is also much more frenetic and cinematic, although for all its jump cuts and bombastic sound tracking (and I won’t pretend that it is in any way the worst offender on the screens in this regard) it fails to archive what the original show managed with its longer cuts and – almost unheard of today – no soundtrack.
I find it amazing how well the old show depicts the aftermath with almost no on screen physical evidence of the actual apocalypse. While the new Survivors regularly shows us empty motorways and looted shops, yet it totally fails to evoke a feeling of emptiness, loss and loneliness. A classic scene in the original Survivors shows Abby’s awakening into the post-plague world. We get a high lingering shot of her walking down her road, a few close ups on her face as she explores the dead village and an ever present silence as she realises that she is on her own, before the extreme high shot of her leaving the church when she softly asks the heavens “Dear God, don’t let me be the only one.” I stumbled across this scene and its 2008 equivalent on YouTube which perfectly illustrates the difference in style and quality. While both scenes don’t correlate exactly, they both cover Abby’s first steps outside the house.
Press ‘play’ below and see what you think…
Good isn’t it? We don’t need to be told what she is thinking and feeling through opvious cinematic sign-postings: the director has faith in the power of his material and he lets the scene play out slowly and naturally. Okay the final “Please God” bit is a little hackneyed (maybe), but still the scene does a lot, while not trying too hard to do too much.
Now play the following clip showing the same scene 2008 stylee…
Now if you think that is aesthetically better than the first clip you are a plebeian idiot!
It’s a pity the first clip doesn’t also show Caroline Seymour finding her husband’s body, as that is beautifully done in comparison to Julie Graham’s shouting and screaming in the 2008 version. Indeed shouting, screaming and hair-pulling seem to define the whole clip. Instead of the cold silence of the street, we get in-your-face rapid-fire jump-cuts, danger-music, screaming and spinning close-ups. By the time we get the final plea to God there is no power left in the scene because the idiot director has bled all the meaning out of the scene by throwing every trick at it in one go. Instead of capturing my attention I feel sick and bored and I want to die – much like travelling on the National Express coach!
And this scene is fairly typical of the series as a whole.

Fans of the, once, excellent Peep Show will be pleased to see The Johnson, aka. Paterson Joseph, playing Greg in the new-look Survivors, until they realise that he is an even weaker replacement than Julie Graham is as Abby. At least most of the survivors are good-looking this time around if Robyn Addison is anything to go buy, although Greg seems less than impressed?
Unlike the original Survivors, the acting is fairly mediocre in general, despite having the amazing Zoe Tapper in it (who, alas, keeps her clothes on for a change) and I doubt if any of the actors will express the same enthusiasm and fondness for the show as the original cast do in 30 years time. Despite its difficulties the original being an obvious labour of love for all concerned, while this being little more than another gig and a labour to watch.

Not even the classy British actress Zoe Tapper (left) can save this show. Here she helps the new, soon to be dead, Jenny (Freema Agyeman) with here dying pal.
The new opening credits state that it is based on the novel (a strange claim seeing as the novel was a novelization of a TV show), but as the show progresses it’s interesting to note that the Abby story-arch again diverges from that of Terry Nation’s original idea. Although unlike the original series there are no signs that the producer intends to write this key character out of any future series. Instead they seem to be sowing the seeds for further, and increasingly unlikely, adventures regarding her child and a sinister government research lab… Ho, hum… Still, the new Survivors probably shouldn’t offend too many fans of the old show, it just won’t thrill them too much either.
The show probably owes more to ITV’s melodramatic adventure-focused asteroid-impact post-apocalyptic mini-series The Last Train than it does to the more thoughtful original Survivors and in fairness it’s probably of just about the same quality, i.e. watchable low-brow entertainment with little real depth and little to no aesthetic charm. It’s unlikely to score the same fanatical fan-base as the original show because, frankly, there’s much more ambitious stuff around on television these days, from Lost to The Wire…
It’s not terribly bad, I suppose, but it’s not good either – not even a little bit good. So, which is best? If you even have to ask such as question then there’s no hope for you…
NOTE: When I found the two same scenes on YouTube I thought ‘brilliant, this really shows the difference between the two shows,’ hence I structured this piece around them. Anyway that was a month or so ago, so when I was looking for a scan of the original book cover I found a web-review which does exactly the same thing and (to make matters worse) who I imagine must have been responsible for ripping the respective video clips to YouTube in the first place. Of course it should have been obvious to me that for these two clips to exist like that, someone else must have done the same comparison somewhere. D’oh! Well rather than re-write, I thought I’d just acknowledge my unconscious plagiarism and post a link to the original review here, which does a far better and more detailed job in deconstructing these scenes than I ever could. Anyway, if you want to know more about the first episode of Survivors 2008 and read a superb rant about how shit it is then check it out!




















