Through the Dragon's Eye explained

Genre:Children's fantasy
Starring:David Collings
Simon Fenton
Nicola Stewart
Marlaine Gordon
Carolyn Pickles
Voices:Sean Barrett
Charles Collingwood
Composer:Roger Limb
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Num Episodes:10
List Episodes:List of Through The Dragon's Eye episodes
Producer:Sue Weeks
Runtime:10 x 20 mins episodes
Network:BBC

Through the Dragon's Eye is an educational BBC Look and Read production, which was first aired on BBC2 from 19 September to 28 November 1989. It was repeated several times until 2000 and then shown on digital television between 2002 and 2008.[1] Its plot follows three schoolchildren who are transported to a magical land, which they must save by using their reading skills.[2] The television show was also adapted into a video game for the BBC Micro.[3] A resource pack for the series was released in 1989[4] with a novel published in 1991.[5]

Plot

The story involves three children, named Jenny, Amanda and Scott, who are painting a mural on a school wall in Acton, London (Through the Dragon's Eye was filmed at Derwentwater Primary School, Shakespeare Road in Acton, London).[6] The dragon in the mural winks at the children and they are transported to a land called Pelamar, where the dragon, named Gorwen, asks the children to undertake a task to save the magical land.

In order to save Pelamar, the children, with Gorwen's help, must recover the pieces of the Veetacore (the life source of Pelamar), which recently exploded. Until they succeed, the land of Pelamar turns increasingly barren and its inhabitants start to fade away. The instructions for the reconstruction of the Veetacore are written in a book, and the children must use their reading skills to help the Veetacore keepers, thus showing the young audience the importance of reading. The art of reading has been lost in Pelamar – this is a sore point with Doris, but the Veetacore keepers do start learning to read as the series progresses.

Unfortunately, three of the pieces have been thrown into the distant land of Widge, forcing Amanda and Scott to travel to Widge with Gorwen, Boris, and the giant mouse Rhodey in order to find them, leaving Jenny to help determine how to reassemble the Veetacore (made harder both by her own lack of confidence at reading and the fact that the pet caterpillar of Morris, the third keeper, has eaten at some of the pages in the book). The "baddie" of the story is Charn, "The Evil One", who wants to hijack the Veetacore for his own evil purposes, and who is implied to have triggered the original 'explosion' of the Veetacore in the first place.

Fortunately, the inability to read also afflicts Charn, allowing Jenny to display a written message to her friends when Charn forbids her to divulge his presence (She tricked Charn into allowing her to knit a scarf due to the cold of Pelamar, drawing out a pattern that actually spelled out "HELP! CHARN!" without him knowing, which she could then show to the others over a video phone). Although Gorwen is able to defeat Charn, he is dangerously weakened, nearly killing himself before the last Veeton is discovered and the Veetacore restored. Although the show ends with the children returning to their school at apparently the moment they left, the presence of their notebooks and three miniature versions of the Veetons they recovered proves that the experience was genuine.

Characters and cast

Theme tune

During the series, three different sets of lyrics (sung to the same theme tune by Derek Griffiths) were used - one at the start of episodes 2-10, another at the end of episodes 2-10 (as well as the end of episode 1), whereas the start of episode 1 used a completely different song.

Computer game

Through the Dragon's Eye was also available as an educational computer game on the BBC Micro System.[11] The game took the player through various stages of the story, whereby the user was required to use literacy and numeracy skills to solve puzzles.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Look and Read: Through the Dragon's Eye. 2021-08-17. Broadcast for Schools.co.uk. en.
  2. Web site: Look and Read/Through the Dragon's Eye - BroadcastForSchools.co.uk. broadcastforschools.co.uk.
  3. Web site: Through the Dragon's Eye - Computing History. computinghistory.org.uk.
  4. Book: Through the Dragon's Eye. Russell, Christopher and Russell, Christine. 1989. 0563343788. 1042841341.
  5. Book: Russell, Christine.. Through the dragon's eye. 1991. BBC. Russell, Christopher., Burke, Chris.. 0-563-34771-6. 27895084.
  6. Web site: IMDb . 2004 . "Through the Dragon's Eye" (1989) . 11 April 2008.
  7. List of cast Web site: Through the Dragon's Eye (TV Series 1989). . 11 September 2011.
  8. Web site: moosey88888888. Through the Dragon's Eye: Episode 1, part 1. 24 December 2008. YouTube.
  9. Web site: moosey88888888 . 2008 . Youtube: Through the Dragon's Eye - Episode 2 part 1 . . Video . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211214/7LO5svfU-a0 . 2021-12-14 . live. 11 April 2008.
  10. Web site: moosey88888888 . 2008 . Youtube: Through The Dragon's Eye Episode 2, part 2 . . Video . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211214/3WV0iqGgY_c . 2021-12-14 . live. 11 April 2008.
  11. Web site: Looking back at Through The Dragon's Eye . Den of Geek. 31 July 2014 .