As with Thunderbirds Are GO, Techniscope cameras were used instead of Panavision cameras because the latter couldn't cope with special effects shots (at the time).

At one point in the film, Virgil says, "I've got a tiger in my tank." This was the slogan of an ESSO advertising campaign in the UK ("Put A Tiger In Your Tank") at the time the film was being scripted.

During the evacuation of the missile base, one of the cars driving through shot is Sam Loover's car from Joe 90. Footage of the destruction of the missile base also appears in the opening episode of Joe 90.

Following filming of a flying stunt on M40 motorway in Buckinghamshire (which was newly completed but not yet open to traffic) Joan Hughes (pilot of the Tiger Moth) was charged but later acquitted of seven counts of dangerous flying when the 'plane failed to make contact with the surface of the while passing under a bridge. A crosswind had prevented Hughes from landing the plane on the road before passing under the bridge as stipulated as a condition of permission to use the location. Norman Foster (who supervised the shooting of this scene) was also charged but acquitted of three counts of aiding and abetting. In addition to the court case filming permission was revoked immediately, leading to the sequence being completed with a miniature set of the site and the model aircraft used for other flying sequences.

In the first scene when all the men in the meeting room are laughing (which is the only time in any of Gerry Anderson's puppet series that this happens), you can see fillings in the teeth of one of the puppets.



It can be inferred that FAB 1 is completely destroyed in the climax of the film, since the car is still in the hold of Skyship One when it crashes into the missile base.

Production on this film began after Gerry Anderson began work on Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, a series that used far more realistic-looking Supermarionation puppets. Anderson reportedly considered making Thunderbird Six in the same style, but decided for reasons of continuity to retain the big-head style of puppets for the film. Apparently, some of the new style puppets are visible in some scenes.

The "Ball Room" set on Sky Ship 1 included over 600 painted ping pong balls. The set caught fire under the hot studio lights and had to be completely rebuilt.

The Black Phantom is actually the Hood puppet with a black wig on his head.

The delivery of meals by toy train in the restaurant scene was copied by numerous Japanese restaurants.

The International Rescue passengers on Sky Ship One overfly and visit numerous locations previously visited by IR in the TV series - they overfly the Atlantic Ocean (Operation Crash-Dive and Atlantic Inferno); have breakfast over the now-Empire State Building-less Manhattan (Terror in New York City); fly over the Grand Canyon (Brink of Disaster); hunt in Africa (Pit of Peril, complete with a few music cues from the episode); visit Egypt (Desperate Intruder) and (The Uninvited) and have dinner at a hotel in the Swiss Alps (The Cham-Cham).

The newspaper that Penelope reads on the morning of Skyship One's arrival in Egypt clearly shows the date as 11 June 2068.

The puppet of Cliff Richard (used in the film Thunderbirds Are GO makes a cameo appearance, disguised with thick-rimmed glasses and a mustache, sitting behind Lady Penelope at the Whistle Stop Inn.

The scene with FAB1 and Alan and Tin Tin skiing was made on the largest set ever constructed for Thunderbirds, around 50 feet long, with the car and skiers was only 1 inch high. The "snow" was made from salt.

The Thunderbirds puppets are famous for their disproportionate appearance in both the TV series and the first film (Thunderbirds Are GO). For this, their final outing, the puppets were redesigned with closer to normal proportions.


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