Ocean Girl
Ocean Girl | |
---|---|
| |
Also known as | Ocean Odyssey |
Format | Sci-fi drama adventure |
Created by | Jonathan M. Shiff |
Starring |
|
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 4 |
No. of episodes | 78 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Running time | 24 minutes |
Production company(s) |
|
Distributor | ZDF Enterprises |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | Network Ten |
Original run | 29 August 1994 – 22 December 1997 |
Chronology | |
Related shows | The New Adventures of Ocean Girl |
Ocean Girl (titled Ocean Odyssey in the UK) is an Australian science fiction TV series aimed for family audiences and starring Marzena Godecki as the lead character. The show is set in the near future, and focuses on an unusual girl named Neri who lives alone on an island, and the friendships she develops with the inhabitants of an underwater research facility called ORCA (Oceanic Research Centre of Australia). The show is an example of deep ecology science fiction.
Ocean Girl inspired an animated series, The New Adventures of Ocean Girl, which ran from 2000 to 2001, and has since been released on DVD. The animated series is in a distinct reboot separate from the original live-action show.
Plot
Neri — the title character — is a young girl with an affinity for water, super-human strength, the ability to swim long distances, and super-human lung capacity. She lives alone on an otherwise deserted island. Early in the first season, Neri befriends two Australian boys: Jason and Brett Bates. This friendship is at first a highly-guarded secret due to Neri's fear of other humans. The Bates brothers live in an elaborate underwater research and environmental protection facility called ORCA, located near Port Douglas, Queensland. At the beginning of the series, they move to ORCA in order for their mother, Dr. Dianne Bates, to study whale song. A significant portion of the series takes place on ORCA itself, and looks at the activities of its inhabitants, many of whom are school-aged children, just as Jason and Brett.
As the series progresses, it is explained that Neri came to Earth on a spaceship with her father when she was young, though his death soon after leaves Neri to fend for herself. Prior to meeting Jason and Brett, Neri's only friend was a humpback whale (called jali in Neri's native tongue), whom she names "Charley", and with whom she can communicate. Later in the series, Neri's curiosity leads her to explore ORCA, while Dr. Bates's study of Charley's whale song helps her identify Neri as the intended recipient of that song. Eventually, Dr Bates and her assistant, Dr. Winston Seth, become embroiled in Jason and Brett's effort to keep Neri a secret, while also performing numerous tests on Neri to understand how she's able to communicate with whales.
At the same time that the Bates family learn about Neri, a rival research organisation, the UBRI Corporation, are introduced. Headed by the sinister Dr. Hellegren, UBRI have learned that a spacecraft landed somewhere in the vicinity of ORCA, and begin their own search for any personnel that may have survived. Simultaneously, they work on other projects which threaten the natural ecology of the ocean around ORCA. Eventually, they put in play an effort to build the so-called "ORCA City", an elaborate underwater construction that will likely eradicate much of the natural life on the seabed. In response, Dr. Bates's mission changes over the course of the series from cetologist to environmental protectionist. This role becomes more prominent beginning with the third season, when UBRI representatives establish themselves on board ORCA. Accordingly, the series shifts to a more serious tone in its later seasons.
As Neri gradually discovers more of her island and ORCA, she also begins to understand her greater purpose. This self-awakening is particularly enhanced by encounters with others of her kind. In the second season, she discovers her sister, Mera, and the two are given the opportunity to return to their home planet. Mera avails herself of this option, but Neri stays, feeling that she must discover what her father was trying to do on Earth. In the third season, she gains entry into the downed spacecraft that originally brought her to Earth. There, she finds another of her people in suspended animation. The new character, Kal, proves to be the son of the pilot of the vessel, and helps her tap into the ship's memory core. She finds the ship's log, which explains that her father was trying to find a substance that would revitalize Earth's oceans. She then dedicates her life to her father's cause, giving her a genuine sense of purpose that she had perhaps lacked earlier in the series. Kal grows jealous of the strong bond between Neri and Jason Bates, and begins hating Neri's friends on ORCA. As protest, Kal leaves the island, and cannot be found by Neri and her ORCA mates, and had been captured by UBRI. UBRI tricks Kal into believing that the male should lead, and he creates an alliance with Dr. Hellegren to steal the pieces of uncrainium that Neri and Mera have hidden in their secret cave.
While the primary cast gets new motivations by UBRI's move to ORCA and Kal's appearance on the island, the secondary cast radically changes at the outset of the third season. All of the original kids are replaced by a new crew, and more adults are added to the ORCA staff.
As Neri begins her father's mission, she is drawn farther and farther away from her island. Beginning in the middle of the third season, some episodes are primarily based on land. By the fourth season, some episodes are set in Egypt, and her father's quest eventually leads her back to the "Ocean Planet", her home planet. Most of the plots involving the secondary kids on ORCA are reduced in the final season, in order to allow for greater exploration of Neri's homeworld. Several new characters of Neri's species are introduced. Likewise, the threat of UBRI fades, to be replaced by a new organization, PRAXIS (Preventative Response And eXtraterritorial Intelligence Service) and by rebels on the Ocean Planet. This group is dedicated to protecting against any threats posed by extraterrestrial life, and its agents comes to believe Neri and her people are a problem for Earth. They thus chased Neri and the Bates boys around the world. When a mysterious underwater pyramid is discovered in the ocean, Neri and the Bates boys enter it and discover more about the Ocean Planet, and Neri's mission on Earth.
When the rebellion in the Ocean World is growing, Mera escapes to Earth and is reunited with Neri. But PRAXIS sees this pyramid as a danger to the Earth. Much of the final season is thus concerned with PRAXIS' attempt to attack the pyramid, as well as with a "Red Virus" which is spreading in the oceans of Neri's homeworld, the Ocean Planet. Eventually, in the series finale, Jason, Brett, and Neri are able to repulse PRAXIS' efforts and the rebellion, and Earth is saved. Neri remains on Earth as the ambassador of the Ocean Planet, and she and Jason finally become a couple.
The Bates family, Winston, Neri, Charley, and the ORCA computer H.E.L.E.N. (Hydro Electronic Liaison ENtity) are the only constant characters for the show's entire run. However, the part of Dr. Bates is recast with Liz Burch after the second season — Kerry Armstrong being committed work-wise — and H.E.L.E.N. is "upgraded" in the fourth and final season.
Main cast
- Marzena Godecki as Neri
- David Hoflin as Jason Bates
- Jeffrey Walker as Brett Bates
- Kerry Armstrong as Dr Dianne Bates (Season 1 and 2)
- Liz Burch as Dr. Dianne Bates (Season 3 and 4)
- Alex Pinder as Dr. Winston Seth
- Nicholas Bell as Dr. Hellegren (Season 1, 2, and 3)
- Lauren Hewett as Mera (Season 2, 3, and 4)
- Gregory Ross as Paul Bates (Season 4)
While Ocean Girl featured the ensemble cast listed above, there were several characters who appeared for one season each, with four children appearing in two seasons each (three in Seasons 1 and 2, one in Seasons 3 and 4), as well as a few adults appearing in more than one season. Most of the cast changes were explained by their "friends" (or rather, their parents) having been transferred back to shore, with the exception of Season 4, where it was not noted at all.
Broadcast history
The original Ocean Girl series ran on Australia's Network Ten between 1994 and 1997. Internationally, it was broadcast by The Disney Channel in the United States,[1] Discovery Kids in the United Kingdom, YTV in Canada, Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation in Sri Lanka, TSI in the Italian part of Switzerland, ZDF and KI.KA in Germany, on RTÉ Two in Ireland, on RTL 4 in the Netherlands, on (TV2) in Denmark, on NRK in Norway, on Fox Kids in Latin American, on TVP 1 (Poland), on TV4 in Sweden on Canal Panda in Portugal and on Arutz HaYeladim in Israel. The Disney Channel began airing the series on 3 October 1994,[1] but only aired the first three seasons; the last was not broadcast. Discovery Kids regularly broadcast all four seasons in continuous loops until 2003. The first two series were also broadcast in South Africa by the SABC at the same time as in Australia.
In the UK, the show was broadcast under the title Ocean Odyssey on BBC Two. It was aired in 1996, with a subsequent re-airing in 2002, although for unknown reasons this airing halted before Season 4 was complete. In 2004, the entire series was re-aired in full.
In Vietnam, it was aired on VTV3 twice through from 1998 to 1999 and had a total 81 episodes (instead of 78). It is unknown why this was done, but presumably scenes from several episodes were edited out and made into extra installments.
In recent years, the show was repeated on the ABC in Australia, as part of their ABC Kids afternoon block of children's programs. The series began airing in 2011 on children's channel ABC3.
In Perth, the series screens on West TV on Sundays at 5:30pm, with encore screenings the following Saturday at 11:30am.
DVD releases
Umbrella Entertainment began releasing the series, starting with Season 1, on 7 November 2005 with Season 2 following on 3 March 2007. Season 3 was released on 30 June 2008, and Season 4 was released on 27 June 2009.
The DVD sets are in the PAL format, and will only play on set-top DVD players that support this playback mode. (This limitation does not apply to DVD players in computers.) The discs from all four seasons were released supporting all six main DVD region codes, which effectively allows the discs to be played in any region.
Episodes
Dr. Dianne Bates accepts a job on a new underwater science laboratory called ORCA (Oceanic Research Centre of Australia). She is going to study whales as part of her research. Recently divorced, she and her two boys, Jason and Brett, set out to start a new life. What they do not know is that their life is about to change. After boarding ORCA, they soon discover irregular patterns in the whale song. As the story unfolds, it appears that the whale is communicating with another being—a human girl. This girl can not only talk to whales, but is also able to breathe underwater. The story continues as the girl, Neri, discovers a sister and her origins—a planet far from Earth. She is from an advanced civilization referred to as "The Planet of the Oceans", and it is revealed that she has been sent on a mission to try to save her home as well as Earth.
Critical reception
Common Sense Media gave the show a rating of 4 out of 5 stars, saying "The plot is almost as complex and twisty [as Lost]...the action is crackling and nonstop, the mysteries are many, and the lead character, Neri, is enchanting. Any scenes where she appears are pretty much guaranteed to be cool."[2] The show was given a user rating of 8.2 out of 10 on TV.com based on 132 votes.[3]
Ocean Girl: A New Generation
It was announced in 2013 among Johnathan M. Shiff Productions' upcoming series projects included a Series titled Ocean Girl: A New Generation. No further information is known as to how it will relate to the original series.[4]
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 The Disney Channel Magazine, Vol. 12, no. 6, October/November 1994: p. 32-33, 36, 45, 48.
- ↑ "Ocean Girl - Television Review". Commonsensemedia.org. Retrieved 16 January 2014.
- ↑ TV.com. "Ocean Girl". TV.com. Retrieved 16 January 2014.
- ↑ "Australia Miptv 2013". Screenaustralia.gov.au. Archived from the original on 10 August 2013. Retrieved 16 January 2014.
External links
- Ocean Girl at the Internet Movie Database
- Ocean Girl at TV.com
- Jonathan M. Shiff Productions, includes an Ocean Girl section
- Fansite
- Ocean Girl at the National Film and Sound Archive
|