"Cry Wolf" is an episode of Thunderbirds, a British Supermarionation television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and filmed by their production company AP Films for ITC Entertainment. Written by Dennis Spooner and directed by David Elliott, it was first broadcast on 27 January 1966 on ATV Midlands as the 18th episode of Series One. In the official running order, it is the 21st episode.[1] The episode had its first UK‑wide network broadcast on 31 January 1992 on BBC2.[2]
Set in the 2060s, Thunderbirds follows the missions of International Rescue, a secret organisation which uses technologically-advanced rescue vehicles to save human life. The lead characters are ex-astronaut Jeff Tracy, founder of International Rescue, and his five adult sons, who pilot the organisation's main vehicles: the Thunderbird machines. International Rescue's work is repeatedly disrupted by master criminal The Hood. In "Cry Wolf", two young Australian brothers who hero-worship the Tracy brothers get carried away during a game of "International Rescue" and transmit a false distress call. Thunderbird 1 is dispatched to their location in the Outback and pilot Scott Tracy discovers that no one needs rescuing. The misunderstanding is amicably resolved, but when The Hood traps the brothers in a collapsing mine and steals satellite reconnaissance from their father – a tracking station controller – the boys call International Rescue to report a real emergency, only to find that the Tracys do not believe them.
Plot
Thunderbird 5 receives a call from Bob Williams, a young Australian boy who claims to have fallen from a cliff. Thunderbird 1 is launched, but on reaching Bob's location in the Northern Territory,[1] pilot Scott Tracy witnesses the boy being "rescued" by his brother Tony. Realising that the call was part of a children's game, Scott takes the boys home and demands an explanation from their father, a weather station operator. Mr Williams explains that his sons idolise International Rescue and enjoy role-playing as the Tracy brothers. Their mother is deceased, and Williams is too busy to keep a close eye on them, so he made them walkie-talkies to keep them entertained. Taking pity on the boys, Scott flies them to Tracy Island to show them the trouble false alarms cause. Tony and Bob tour the base before returning home aboard Thunderbird 2.
The Hood comes across a newspaper article on the story. Believing the weather station to be a cover for a government project, he sets off to track down the Williamses and steal classified information. His suspicions are well founded: the station is actually Dunsley Tracker, a spy satelliteground station where Mr Williams processes photographs of enemy military installations for Colonel Jameson of Satellite HQ.
Later, Tony and Bob are playing another game of "International Rescue". Disguised as a surveyor, the Hood tricks Tony into hiding in an abandoned mine. After Bob ventures in to "rescue" Tony, The Hood detonates a bomb, triggering a cave-in that traps the brothers under a beam. With the boys out of the way, the Hood drives his off-road vehicle to the Williams homestead to steal the Dunsley Tracker surveillance. Almost succumbing to the Hood's hypnotic powers, Williams locks himself in the control room with the photographs and radios Satellite HQ for help. Jameson says that it will be hours before they can reach him, but Williams points out that International Rescue are faster.
With the mine roof set to collapse, Tony and Bob call International Rescue. The Tracys ignore the boys, thinking that they are just playing again, realising the emergency only when Jameson calls on Williams' behalf. Scott blasts off in Thunderbird 1 to help Williams while Virgil and Alan take Thunderbird 2 to rescue the boys.
The Hood uses a cutting torch to burn through the control room door. He hypnotises Williams and seizes the photographs before Williams can destroy them. Landing nearby and proceeding on hoverbike, Scott confronts the Hood just as the villain is driving away. The ensuing chase ends when the Hood inadvertently goes over a cliff and is thrown out of his vehicle and into a lake. While Scott recovers the photographs from the crashed vehicle, Virgil and Alan reach the mine and extract Tony and Bob moments before the roof falls. The episode ends light-heartedly as the boys invite Scott to try their bedroom's "emergency exit", which deposits Scott on a go-kart painted to resemble Thunderbird 2.
The miniature model representing the satellite Mr Williams is monitoring originally appeared as Space Observatory 3 in "The Impostors".[1] The Satellite HQ building, interiors and characters were also re-used from that episode, with the puppet that played General Lambert returning as Colonel Jameson.[3] Tony and Bob traverse Thunderbird 2's pod vehicle hangar in a monorail car adapted from an earlier appearance in "The Uninvited".[3] The model representing the Williams homestead previously appeared as Grandma Tracy's cottage in "Move – and You're Dead", while the prop serving as Mr Williams' desk was originally Professor Matic's desk in Fireball XL5.[3]
Reception
Fran Pheasant-Kelly, an academic who has studied Thunderbirds from a sociological perspective, notes that in its depiction of Tony and Bob, the episode "perhaps sends a message about the dangers of talking to strangers and about 'crying wolf'".[4] Richard Farrell writes that the story and choice of title are influenced by the Aesop's FableThe Boy Who Cried Wolf, adding that the episode "plays a bit like a public information film".[5]
Rating "Cry Wolf" three out of five, Tom Fox of Starburst magazine argues that the moral of the story is well worn and the episode "never feels very well fleshed out." He praises the Hood's strategy for its entertainment value but finds Tony and Bob "fairly annoying".[6] Marcus Hearn, who describes the episode as a "sentimental tale", suggests that the scenes of the Hood tricking the boys into the mine would make a 21st-century audience uneasy. He compares the episode to Stingray's "A Christmas to Remember", also written by Spooner, in which the regular characters of that series host an orphan boy for Christmas.[7]
For screenwriter Peter Briggs, "Cry Wolf" is one of three Thunderbirds episodes (the others being "Security Hazard" and "Give or Take a Million") which can be classed as "kid wish fulfilment shows": all three episodes depict young fans of International Rescue being granted the opportunity to visit their heroes on Tracy Island.[8]
References
^ abcBentley, Chris (2008) [2001]. The Complete Gerry Anderson: The Authorised Episode Guide (4th ed.). Reynolds & Hearn. p. 107. ISBN978-1-905287-74-1.
^ abcJones, Mike (2015). Thunderbirds: Close-Up. Fanderson. p. 45.
^Pheasant-Kelly, Fran (2022). "Thunderbirds Are Go! Ideology and Representation in the Cold War Era". In Olson, Debbie; Schober, Adrian (eds.). Children, Youth, and International Television. Routledge Advances in Television Studies. Routledge. ISBN9781000541830.
^Farrell, Richard (September 2015). Hearn, Marcus (ed.). Thunderbirds – A Complete Guide to the Classic Series. Tunbridge Wells, UK: Panini UK. p. 74. ISBN978-1-84653-212-2.
^Hearn, Marcus (September 2015). "Between The Lines". In Hearn, Marcus (ed.). Thunderbirds – A Complete Guide to the Classic Series. Tunbridge Wells, UK: Panini UK. p. 16. ISBN978-1-84653-212-2.