Stark (TV miniseries)

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Stark
Genre Miniseries
Directed by Nadia Tass
Produced by David Parker
Michael Wearing
Written by Ben Elton
Starring Colin Friels
Ben Elton
Derrick O'Connor
Jacqueline McKenzie
Deborra-Lee Furness
Bill Wallis
Bill Hunter
Music by Colin Towns
Country United Kingdom
Australia
Language English
Original channel BBC1 (UK)
ABC TV (Australia)
Release date 11–12 August 1993 (Australia)
8–22 December 1993 (UK)
Running time 158 mins
No. of episodes 3

Stark is a 1993 British-Australian television miniseries, based on the bestselling novel Stark by comedian Ben Elton. The three-episode series, directed by Nadia Tass, was an international coproduction between the British Broadcasting Corporation and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

Production

The budget for the series was A$7 million, with most of the money coming from the BBC. Elton wrote the script adapted from his own novel, as well as taking the starring role as "whinging Pom" CD.[1]

Principal cast

Locations

Although Stark is primarily set in Western Australia, the series was filmed in two other Australian states: Victoria and South Australia. Desert scenes, which make up much of the later episodes, were filmed in and around Coober Pedy.

Broadcast

Stark was first aired by the ABC in Australia over two nights on 11 and 12 August (the second and third episodes were edited together into one movie-length episode). The series did not air in the United Kingdom until it appeared on BBC1 on Wednesday nights from 8–22 December.

Differences between the series and the novel

The main changes from the plot of the novel were the extent of the Stark Consipiracy's plan, and the ending. In the novel, Rachel escapes from Stark just prior to the launch, the Star Arks land at their moonbase and the conspirators are quickly consumed by their own greed, selfishness and hatred, with Sly eventually committing suicide. In the series, Lord de Quincy intends to scuttle a fleet of 'leper ships' carrying toxic waste, to actually hasten the extinction of the human species. Sly boards the rocket with Rachel, who has fallen in love with him, and the pair stage a mutiny, although they are killed when the Star Arks are shot down by the United States Air Force. In an interview included on the DVD edition, Elton states that this change was suggested by producer Michael Wearing, who was concerned that the novel lacked a "jeopardy point".[1]

Several of the main characters' names are also changed in the series: Sly Moorcock was renamed Sly Morgan, and Lord Playing is renamed Lord De Quincey.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 An Interview with Ben Elton, Stark DVD, July 2007.

External links

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