

謎の円盤UFO
7.994%7.7
1980年、人類は謎の円盤UFOによる異星人の地球侵略に対し、秘密裏に地球防衛組織「SHADO(Supream Headquarter Alien Difence Organization)」を結成。SHADOの司令部はイギリスにある映画会社の地下深くに建設され、ストレイカー司令の下、月面に建造されたムーンベースと、核弾頭を搭載したインターセプター。衛星軌道上に配置された早期警戒コンピュータ衛星S.I.D。世界で最も進んだ潜水艦で、前部に超音速戦闘機スカイ1を搭載した潜水艇スカイダイバーなどの数々の防衛兵器で日夜謎の円盤UFOによる地球侵略に対抗していた。
- EnochLight2025年7月15日In the wild, mod-tinged universe of UFO—Gerry and Sylvia Anderson’s delightfully paranoid slice of 1970s British sci-fi—Lieutenant Gay Ellis stands out like a silver-blue bob in a sea of gray-flannel heroes. Played by the mesmerizing Gabrielle Drake, Ellis commanded Moonbase with a cool efficiency and a catwalk poise that made her look like she could zap aliens with a side glance and still be on time for a Rudi Gernreich photo shoot. And yet, beneath the gleam and glam, Ellis was more than just a pretty face in a purple wig—she was one of the earliest examples of a woman in science fiction television who held command, authority, and purpose… even if the scripts didn’t always know what to do with her. Let’s get one thing straight: UFO was never subtle. This was a show where shiny Interceptors blasted extraterrestrials out of the sky while Earth’s best hope for survival wore silver catsuits and eyeliner sharp enough to slice through alien hulls. But within that bubble of Cold War paranoia and mod aesthetics, SHADO’s Moonbase—fronted by Ellis—was a strangely progressive outpost. When most genre shows were still slotting women into “space secretary” roles, Ellis was running tactical responses and giving orders to male subordinates without batting a false eyelash. It was quietly radical. She wasn’t the sidekick, the love interest, or the screaming victim. She was the boss. Gabrielle Drake brought a curious mix of discipline and detachment to the role, which made Ellis feel enigmatic in the best way. She wasn’t written with deep emotional arcs—let’s be honest, UFO rarely indulged in character depth—but Drake’s performance hinted at a vast inner life just below the silver surface. You got the sense that Ellis had stories, regrets, private triumphs, and maybe the occasional lonely night staring back at Earth and wondering if she’d ever be anything but a line officer against an unseeable enemy. And then… she vanished. Not literally, but narratively. Despite her prominence early in the series, Ellis quietly disappears from several of the later episodes, a casualty of the show’s shift from Moonbase-centric plots to earthbound melodrama. SHADO HQ took the spotlight, and with it came Commander Straker’s brooding family drama and Alec Freeman’s suave deflections. Meanwhile, Ellis—arguably one of the most visually iconic and thematically rich characters—was left in lunar limbo. She deserved better. Behind the scenes, it wasn’t exactly scandal—it was scheduling. UFO’s production was notoriously nonlinear. Episodes were shot out of order, and the Andersons retooled the focus midseason based on feedback from American markets, which preferred more human drama and less Moonbase abstraction. But let’s call it what it was: a mistake. Because losing Gay Ellis was like ejecting Uhura from the bridge to make room for another white guy with a clipboard. You could feel her absence. Looking back, Ellis occupies a strange but essential place in the canon of sci-fi women. She predates Space: 1999’s Dr. Helena Russell, comes years before Ripley in Alien, and offers a kind of proto-Starbuck energy long before Battlestar Galactica ever rebooted. She was competent, commanding, stylish as hell—and tragically underwritten. In a better universe (or maybe an HBO reboot), Lt. Gay Ellis would’ve had entire episodes devoted to her background, her challenges, her fears. We’d know where she trained, what music she listens to, and who she trusted in SHADO. But even with just a handful of appearances, she remains unforgettable. It’s time we stop viewing characters like Ellis as relics and start recognizing them as pioneers—women in science fiction who held their ground, looked the future in the face, and didn’t blink. Gabrielle Drake gave us a Moonbase commander with poise, mystery, and a quiet ferocity. She deserved more. But what we got was still a shimmering glimpse of what sci-fi could be, if it had only been brave enough to keep her in the command chair.
お使いのデバイス向けのPlexを入手
20種類以上のプラットフォームで無料で使えます。お手持ちのデバイスをお選びください。謎の円盤UFOに関するトリビア
謎の円盤UFOは、全1シーズンです。
謎の円盤UFOは、全26話です。
謎の円盤UFOの主要人物はEd Straker (Ed Bishop), Nina Barry (Dolores Mantez), Paul Foster (Michael Billington)です。
謎の円盤UFOはDavid Lane, Ken Turner, Alan Perry, David Tomblin, Jeremy Summers, Gerry Anderson, Ron Appleton, Cyril Frankelが監督を務めました。
謎の円盤UFOはGerry Anderson, Reg Hillがプロデューサーを務めました。
1980年、人類は謎の円盤UFOによる異星人の地球侵略に対し、秘密裏に地球防衛組織「SHADO(Supream Headquarter Alien Difence Organization)」を結成。SHADOの司令部はイギリスにある映画会社の地下深くに建設され、ストレイカー司令の下、月面に建造されたムーンベースと、核弾頭を搭載したインターセプター。衛星軌道上に配置された早期警戒コンピュータ衛星S.I.D。世界で最も進んだ潜水艦で、前部に超音速戦闘機スカイ1を搭載した潜水艇スカイダイバーなどの数々の防衛兵器で日夜謎の円盤UFOによる地球侵略に対抗していた。
謎の円盤UFOはTV-14と評価されています。
謎の円盤UFOは、Action, サイエンスフィクション, ドラマの番組です。
謎の円盤UFOは、視聴者によって10点満点中9.4点をつけられています。
謎の円盤UFOの話の長さは、50mです。
いいえ、1シーズンでこの番組は打ちきりになっています。





















