| Sylvia Anderson | ... | Herself - Interviewee / Lady Penelope | |
| Arthur Provis | ... | Himself - Interviewee | |
| Gerry Anderson | ... | Himself - Interviewee (archive footage) | |
| David Elliott | ... | Himself - Interviewee | |
| Mary Turner | ... | Herself - interviewee | |
| Roger Woodburn | ... | Himself - Interviewee | |
| Jamie Anderson | ... | Himself - interviewee | |
| Desmond Saunders | ... | Himself - Interviewee | |
| Judith Shutt | ... | Herself - interviewee | |
| Denise Bryer | ... | Herself - Interviewee | |
| Nicholas Parsons | ... | Himself - Interviewee | |
| Alan Pattillo | ... | Himself - interviewee | |
| Hugh Woodhouse | ... | Himself - interviewee (archive footage) | |
| Keith Wilson | ... | Himself - interviewee (archive footage) | |
| Elizabeth Morgan | ... | Herself - Interviewee |
| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| News articles | IMDb Documentary section | IMDb UK section |
This is a great documentary showing the work of the talented people at AP films. It covers just about all the series the teams created from twizzle, supercar, and Thunderbirds. I Bought this on Blu-ray for a chance to see behind the camera at the various ways the episodes, models and effects were produced. It doesn't disappoint and goes into quite a bit of detail in most aspects of production. A surprise for me was four feathers fall which I was unaware of, it looks great but being black and white didn't get the repeats it probably deserved. Overall its a great story of a wonderful time in TV production and will probably leave a tear in the eye of most fans. With Thunderbirds getting a CGI reboot in 2015, all I can think is long live supermarionation.