The_Games_Affair

<i>The Games Affair</i>

The Games Affair

New Zealand TV series or programme


The Games Affair (1975), directed by Bruce Clark,[1] was New Zealand's first children’s television series. The Games Affair was a six-part fantasy-thriller series broadcast by the New Zealand Broadcasting Corporation where 3 teenagers unintentionally become involved with exposing the no-good antics of a professor and his two assistants during the Christchurch Xth Commonwealth Games.[2]

Quick Facts The Games Affair, Genre ...

The show begins with Henry Ropata and his son Chris arriving at Harewood Airport to pick up Australian teenager Alley Jones and Canadian Paul Chapman whom they are housing during the Commonwealth Youth Conference, held in conjunction with the Games. They stumble upon a mad professor who, along with his two assistants, attempt to shoot athletes with powerful performance enhancing drugs during the Games.

Cast

Heroes
  • Brent Bullis
  • Debbie Gowland
  • Dominic Solia
Villains
Others

Episodes

  1. "A Question of Possibility"
  2. "The Porcelain Runner"
  3. "A Rude Awakening"
  4. "This Time We Have Them"
  5. "Day of Triumph"
  6. "Back to the Beginning"

Notable moments

  • An elderly lady watching the athletic events is inadvertently hit with the enhancer when the assistant wielding the dart gun is distracted. As a result, the elderly lady ends up running and winning the 100-meter sprint.
  • A traffic officer stopping the scientist's car due to it being unregistered and unsafe is shot with the enhancer. After doing several super fast star jumps, the officer frantically runs away from the scene faster than his motorcycle.
  • A high diver shot with the enhancer breaks through the ceiling and flies quite a distance, surprising the passengers of an NAC Boeing 737 before landing in a river some miles away from the stadium.

References

  1. "Bruce D. Clark | Director, Writer, Producer". IMDb. Retrieved 2024-03-25.
  2. Daza. "Games Affair, the (1975)". Kiwi-TV. Retrieved 2024-03-25.
  3. Whittaker, Emma (9 August 2013). "Elizabeth only dotty on the job". Stuff. Stuff. Retrieved 15 April 2022.

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