Posts Tagged ‘Fiction Factory’

The Satellite City DVD…making it happen!

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Well here it is, Merry Christmas everyone, I hope you’re all happy you got what you wanted! I thought I’d write a bit about how this site single handedly got the DVD of Satellite City finally on our shelves.

Since 1999 questions have been asked as to why Satellite City got cancelled, considering its popularity in Wales it would seem that BBC Wales had a good thing going. Similar questions were asked as to why it never got a DVD release considering that the BBC had released, in our (the fans) opinion, somewhat inferior shows. When asked about these conundrums, the talent behind the shows put it down to maybe politics and just not enough interest, but I wasn’t convinced that we’d never get to see it get a release.

I’ve been a big DVD collector for four years now, gathering a sizeable collection and have always had a passion for collecting releases of the nostalgic television and cinema from my childhood and teens. As you’ll appreciate, not everything has come my way and there’s still a lot more I’d love to see on DVD but with Satellite City it seemed like I was the only person who was willing to do anything about it. I had been a big fan when I was in secondary school and had enjoyed it immensely.

Back in 2006 Boyd Clack, the writer and star of the show was doing an evening of interviews and Satellite City screenings at my University, I managed to attend the first half hour but had to go, luckily I caught him before the event and asked if he’d be willing to help me get some insight into the show so I could design a website for it. After learning of the seminar, I’d tried to do some research across the internet for Satellite City and Boyd Clack, to no avail, it seemed they’d either fallen off Google’s map or nobody had tried to raise more awareness of them or give them a web presence. I did however, come across another dedicated fan’s work and commitment to Satellite City and High Hopes through a number of sites like IMDB and TV.com, with similar intent, he’d been building show guides etc for a number of years, and with his advice, I set about designing a website for Boyd’s work and the shows. In due course, I learned that neither of the shows had had the DVD release they so richly deserved, so I set out to change that too.

I set up petitions for Satellite City and High Hopes DVDs, after realising a website solely based on Satellite City may not have as wide an appeal as one which covered other Clack projects. At the start of the campaign I approached the BBC about both programs, they offered very little and gave me the same generic email and telephone responses – “I’ve passed on your feedback to the higher powers and your request has been noted”. However, I had a breakthrough in mid 2007 when I learned that the DVD distribution rights did not lie in the BBC’s hands but rather in the South Wales production company that made Satellite City – Fiction Factory. This did not mean I’d get any luck, but it meant that a Satellite City DVD was most definitely a bleak possibility!

A year and a few hundred phone calls later, no developments and very little positive feedback on the matter, things started to look grim. After contacting a number of DVD production companies and coming to no suitable conclusion, I decided that maybe it just wasn’t meant to be. The guys at Fiction Factory were busy with other projects and the financial obligations to the project seemed to outweigh any positive outcome a DVD would give.

In November 2008 I decided it was time for one last gamble and decided that I would make my last phone call to Fiction Factory. They’d always been very polite and positive on the phone but as it is everywhere these days, people were always very busy and time is not always a luxury they had to play with, plus a DVD is a very expensive risk to take. However, both the producers and I knew that Satellite City was worth taking a risk on. From that phone call I didn’t get much, but I managed to put into the conversation that the DVD petition had reached almost 1,000 signatures and it turned out that by December 5th 2008, that goal of 1,000, over two years later, was a reality.

You may think this is a long time for a petition for a much loved TV show to reach a thousand, but considering it’s limited audiences and it being confined to Wales, subtracting from that the number of fans that actually have an internet connection and can be bothered to log on to search for Satellite City, 1,000 is quite a significant number, and to this day, I don’t believe that even a small percentage of the people who loved and watched Satellite City on a weekly basis have signed the petition.

Fittingly, on my birthday, about two weeks after my phone call in November 2008, I received a phone call from saying that they’d called in another producer of the show, Mike Parker, who would work alongside Fiction Factory Artistic Director and fellow Satellite City producer Ed Thomas, on making the DVD a reality. Needless to say, with that news, I hit the roof with overwhelmed excitement!

They called me in to gain some knowledge on the feasibility and how best to market the DVD, and also for a chance to listen to the fans before any solid foundations for the DVD release were set in stone. Now, a year later, we have a full blown DVD box set worth of Satellite City goodness – 3 series, plus specials and pilot!

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The Complete Satellite City DVD Box Set Released TODAY!
DVD Releases
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The Complete Satellite City DVD Box Set Released TODAY!

Friday, December 4th, 2009
Satellite City - The Complete Series on DVD

Satellite City - The Complete Series on DVD

On the 4th December 2009, after years of trying to get our hands on a DVD of pure Welsh television gold, 10 years after it’s final broadcast, Satellite City is here!

Over 1,000 signatures and almost four years later, Fiction Factory Films have given us fans the opportunity to own a piece of Welsh history, and can have something that we can all be proud of on our shelves, in time for Christmas too!

At this point, I’d like to say a personal thank you to all who helped by signing the petition, and to those who created facebook groups and spread the word. It was indeed a tremendous success and we can all now say, “We made it happen! We got Satellite City out on DVD”, who’d have thought it was possible! It was hard work but it’s certainly nice to have something to show for it.

So, don’t hesitate, put your money where your mouth is and go and get what you’ve been waiting for for all these years!

Only £29.99 + P&P

Available, only at www.satellitecitystore.com

Set includes:

  • 10 ½ hours of Satellite City spread over six DVDs
  • Includes all three series (18 Episodes)
  • Never before seen photos from the show
  • Also includes the one hour special, From Here to Maternity
  • And the rarely seen one hour pilot episode!

Enjoy!

Satellite City DVD – Official Press Release

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Cult Welsh TV sitcom Satellite City is now available to buy for the first time since the popular BBC show ended 10 years ago. Satellite City, which won two BAFTA Cymru awards during the late 1990s will be released on December 4 2009 as a special DVD box set.

The show was based on the life of a family in Pen-y-Ceffyl, an imaginary Rhondda town, and ran from 1996 to 1999.

Young American Randy arrived in Satellite City – the town’s high number of satellite dishes marked it out as working class – and was taken in by the Price family who quickly initiated him into ‘the Welsh way’. Randy and his new friends may have spoken the same language but plenty was lost in translation as he had to share a bed with pensioner Idris and negotiate a turbulent romance with local girl Mandy.

Co-written by Boyd Clack, who played Idris’ son Gwynne, and produced by Welsh film company, Fiction Factory, Satellite City featured much loved characters such as Moira who enjoyed being ‘unhappily’ married to Gwynne, nymphomaniac Mandy and nice but dim Dai the Barman.

Fiction Factory director Ed Thomas, who co-produced the show with Mike Parker said: “One afternoon in 1994 I bought Boyd an apple tart, he ate all of it while reading out all the parts of six episodes of a series he called Satellite City. Our ethos as a company then was ‘good as gold, mad as hell,’ which Boyd thought suited him well. Two radio series and nearly 20 hours of television later, we’re still waiting for him to say thank you and he still owes me for the tart.”

Satellite City debuted as a play in 1991 at Chapter Arts Centre and ran for two series on BBC Radio Wales before evolving into the TV sitcom.

The box set will delight Satellite City fans, who have campaigned for years with online petitions for a DVD issue. Co-producer Mike Parker added: “From the Welsh often being the butt of jokes on TV, in Satellite City we were able to make fun of ourselves and enjoy it. I think that’s why people loved it.”

The DVD can be purchased at www.satellitecitystore.com and includes the pilot; all three series; the 1999 hour-long special; signed postcards from the cast, plus stills.

  • Satellite City debuted as a live play in 1991 at Chapter Arts Centre in Cardiff before becoming a series for BBC Radio Wales.
  • Satellite City’s television pilot episode was aired in December 1995; the series ran for three series from 1996 to 1999. The sitcom ended with an hour-long special, From Here to Maternity in 1999.
  • Although Satellite City has been aired several times on BBC 2 Wales since its end, it has never been released on DVD.
  • In 1997 the series won a BAFTA Cymru for Best Graphics and another in 1998 for Best Light Entertainment.

Written by Kelly Salter

Satellite City – Memories of Filming

Tuesday, October 31st, 2006

by Peter Dixon

A long time ago in a galaxy far far away, I was one of those lucky buggers who got to see an episode of Satellite City being filmed. For a while I had been in touch with the Fiction Factory, SC’s production company, as even then I was trying to get the series released officially. (Part of the reason for this was that I had then recently moved to Essex, and was feeling very sad that I wouldn’t be able to see Series 3 – no BBC Wales in Essex!) The person I was communicating with told me that I could come along and be part of the live studio audience, so I bestowed eternal gratitude on her and booked 6 tickets. They landed on my door mat 3 days before the filming of the show, and so it was that, on Friday 7th August 1998, I travelled all the way to Studio 1, TV Centre, Culverhouse Cross in Cardiff (where they eat people’s ‘eads), to witness the filming of the first episode of the third series.

I took with me my wife to be, and collected four friends from Chepstow on the way, none of whom had ever seen the show before. After stopping for pizza in Cardiff, we made our way to a very ordinary looking small factory building. We arrived at 6.30pm, when the doors were due to open, and the place was already buzzing with people, most of whom looked like what you’d expect Mandy’s friends to look like! I remember feeling insanely jealous of them, as, from the conversations I overheard, it sounded like a lot of them came to see the show filmed on a regular basis. Presumably they were a bit more local than me! Anyway, it wasn’t long before we filed into a long but fairly compact studio, and took up our seats behind the cameras.

The first thing that struck me was how small the set was! I was to the right of the set, directly opposite the bedroom set. To the left of that, with only a thin wall between them, was the main house/kitchen set and the Cosmo set. Hung above our heads were microphones, to pick up our laughter, and TV monitors, so we could watch what the cameras were picking up too.

There were cameramen and sound guys buzzing around right from the start, and other people, like (presumably) the director, producer, floor manager, etc. It wasn’t long before a warm up man appeared too. It was his job to welcome us, to get us in the mood to laugh (as if we needed it!), and to inform us what was going on between takes. Then the cast appeared, to great applause, and it all started. The cast were fairly subdued, but I imagine that was because they had a few hours worth of work ahead of them, and were busy concentrating on the acting they had to do.

It was very interesting to watch the scenes being filmed. Between takes you could have heard a pin drop, as whenever the bloke said “silence please” the audience obeyed and leaned forward to soak in every detail. (We were mostly fans, after all.) The actors would take up their positions, and then as soon as the clapperboard snapped, the characters came to life.

Unlike some shows, where they film bits and bobs out of order, this one was filmed more or less in sequence, to give the audience some continuity. There were also some scenes which had already been filmed (outside and linking shots, and the scenes in the cellar) which were relayed to us on the TV monitors, so that they could record us laughing as we watched. Some of these scenes were shown more than once, presumably because the recordings of our laughter weren’t good enough. Similarly, there were several takes of the acted scenes (I don’t remember any being nailed in one take). To me, a lot of the scenes looked perfect first time – except when lines were fluffed, obviously – but the producers would watch them on their screens and ask for them to be shot again. Perhaps they could see boom mikes, or the actors were in the wrong places, or something – I don’t know. I didn’t mind watching things over and over again though. It was particularly interesting to look out for differences in acting between takes, and to watch how closely the actors hit their marks (very well indeed).

Something else was very interesting about that night. It was Donna’s first appearance. Fworrr…! That’s all I’m going to say on that subject. I have a wife and child, you know.

When filming finally wrapped (around 10 o’clock), we applauded again, and there were visible signs of relief amongst the cast, who looked both knackered and relaxed (at last!) at the same time! Particularly old Idris, who I was particularly in awe of for some reason (pleaaaassse let me meet him!). I was keen to hang around and meet the cast, but the most elderly of my companions was not in the best of health and keen to be off, so I had to be content with quick smiles and waves, and then we were on our way.

The evening passed remarkably quickly, and I was in a daze all weekend as I replayed it over and over in my head. (Fortunately we all got out of Cardiff with our heads intact!) I have very fond memories of that night, still have my ticket and the letter that accompanied it. I even have Idris’s autograph now too. My communication with the Fiction Factory continued for a while, and by way of thanking me for my support they said they would see if they could get series 3 taped for me, since I was nowhere near Wales. Sadly I never did see a tape – I moved house again shortly afterwards, and like to think that they didn’t forget me, but sent a tape to the old address. Since then I have moved back to Wales (to a place where, ridiculously, I couldn’t receive Welsh TV!) and away again (I’m now in Warwickshire) and to this day I still haven’t seen Series 3!!! I have worn my video tapes of the first two series to death, though. And my love for the series has only grown with time, and now that this site is up, and now that I’ve “met” you guys, and we have repeats of High Hopes on Satellite TV, I have High Hopes of being able to see Series 3 at last….!?!

This article was written by Peter Dixon, and was originally posted on the forum, Peter has kindly given us his permission to use the article for your enjoyment.