Treasure Hunt (2)
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<div class="box"> | <div class="box"> | ||
+ | |||
== Host == | == Host == | ||
- | [[Kenneth Kendall]] | + | [[Kenneth Kendall]] (1982-89) |
- | [[Ned Sherrin]] ( | + | [[Ned Sherrin]] (5 April 1985) |
- | [[Dermot Murnaghan]] (2002) | + | [[Dermot Murnaghan]] (2002-03) |
== Co-hosts == | == Co-hosts == | ||
- | Skyrunner: [[Anneka Rice]] ( | + | Skyrunner:<br> |
+ | [[Anneka Rice]] (1982-88)<br> | ||
+ | Gemma Craven, Kenny Lynch, Wayne Sleep (5 April 1985)<br> | ||
+ | [[Annabel Croft]] (1989)<br> | ||
+ | [[Suzi Perry]] (2002-03) | ||
- | Adjudicator: | + | Adjudicator:<br> |
+ | [[Ann Meo]] (1982-83)<br> | ||
+ | Annette Lynton (1984)<br> | ||
+ | Wincey Willis (1985-89) | ||
Cameraman (on location): Graham Berry | Cameraman (on location): Graham Berry | ||
Line 20: | Line 28: | ||
== Broadcast == | == Broadcast == | ||
- | Chatsworth for Channel 4, | + | Chatsworth Television for Channel 4, 28 December 1982 to 18 May 1989 (91 episodes in 7 series + 6 specials) |
- | Chatsworth for BBC | + | Chatsworth Television for Thames (regional), 30 October 1985 (as part of ''Thames Telethon'') |
+ | |||
+ | Chatsworth Television for ITV, 29 to 30 May 1988 (as part of ''ITV Telethon'') | ||
+ | |||
+ | Chatsworth Television for BBC Two, 16 December 2002 to 2 August 2003 (15 episodes in 2 series) | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
+ | |||
== Synopsis == | == Synopsis == | ||
- | If someone came up to you and said that Treasure Hunt was an hour of complete arse, | + | If someone came up to you and said that Treasure Hunt was an hour of complete arse, they would be almost completely right. |
+ | |||
+ | <div class="image">[[File:Treasure_hunt_001.jpg|400px]]''Golden girl Anneka Rice with her lightweight (for 1985) radio pack.''</div> | ||
That's because the show is infamous for Graham the Cameraman's need to film [[Anneka Rice]]'s bottom. In jump-suit as well! However, it was a groundbreaking game too, and one of Channel 4's most popular shows of the era, regularly clawing in 7-8 million viewers. | That's because the show is infamous for Graham the Cameraman's need to film [[Anneka Rice]]'s bottom. In jump-suit as well! However, it was a groundbreaking game too, and one of Channel 4's most popular shows of the era, regularly clawing in 7-8 million viewers. | ||
- | <div class="image">[[ | + | <div class="image">[[File:Treasure_hunt_002.jpg|400px]]''A lucky young thing gets to spend quality time with Anneka, thanks to Jim'll Fix It.''</div> |
- | + | The game, then. Former BBC newsreader [[Kenneth Kendall]] helps two ordinary rich people (the first two contestants were fish farmers from Cornwall) to solve five devious cryptic clues in order to guide "Skyrunner" Anneka, transported by helicopter, around the five places of interest, usually on a 20x20 km map, within 45 minutes. | |
- | + | <div class="image">[[File:Treasure_hunt_003.jpg|400px]]''Come on Penny. Give me the clue.''</div> | |
Part of the game was that although they could communicate with Anneka via a two-way radio link, they couldn't actually see her. An unintentional difficulty factor was that the radio communications would sometimes break up, completely by accident, at unfortunate times. | Part of the game was that although they could communicate with Anneka via a two-way radio link, they couldn't actually see her. An unintentional difficulty factor was that the radio communications would sometimes break up, completely by accident, at unfortunate times. | ||
Line 41: | Line 56: | ||
In the studio, the players have access to lots of reference works and they'll need them because the clues are somewhat cryptic. For example, one clue once was: ''"In a Seahawk, in a Seahawk, in a Seahawk."'' the contestants had to work out that an airbase in the area was known as the HMS Seahawk, and at that place was an actual Seahawk plane and inside that was a small model of a Seahawk plane, and the clue was in that. Often homonyms, anagrams, double meanings and other connotations needed to be solved, with a bit of quick research each time, to solve the clues. | In the studio, the players have access to lots of reference works and they'll need them because the clues are somewhat cryptic. For example, one clue once was: ''"In a Seahawk, in a Seahawk, in a Seahawk."'' the contestants had to work out that an airbase in the area was known as the HMS Seahawk, and at that place was an actual Seahawk plane and inside that was a small model of a Seahawk plane, and the clue was in that. Often homonyms, anagrams, double meanings and other connotations needed to be solved, with a bit of quick research each time, to solve the clues. | ||
- | <div class="image"> | + | <div class="image">[[File:Treasure_hunt_005.jpg|400px]]''The plans before the show began.''</div> |
- | + | ||
- | '' | + | |
For most of the run of the series, back at the base was TV-AM weather girl and zoologist (a combination you tend to see everyday) Wincey Willis who gave absolutely no help whatsoever save for time checks, giving out the clues in the studio and giving the hint to the Treasure at the top of the show. Part of her job was to track what the helicopter was doing on her big board which seemed fairly pointless, truth be told. | For most of the run of the series, back at the base was TV-AM weather girl and zoologist (a combination you tend to see everyday) Wincey Willis who gave absolutely no help whatsoever save for time checks, giving out the clues in the studio and giving the hint to the Treasure at the top of the show. Part of her job was to track what the helicopter was doing on her big board which seemed fairly pointless, truth be told. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div class="image">[[File:Treasure_hunt_006.jpg|400px]]''Anneka and her crew.''</div> | ||
What made the show entertaining were the things Anneka had to do to earn the clues and the treasure. Most of the time they just had to go to a certain place, but sometimes the clue is on a character on stage at a packed performance, under the water, in the middle of an Army Assault Course obstacle - that kind of malarkey. | What made the show entertaining were the things Anneka had to do to earn the clues and the treasure. Most of the time they just had to go to a certain place, but sometimes the clue is on a character on stage at a packed performance, under the water, in the middle of an Army Assault Course obstacle - that kind of malarkey. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div class="image">[[File:Treasure_hunt_007.jpg|400px]]''We all deserve a well earned break now and then.''</div> | ||
Even when the contestants were stuck on clues, there was always plenty to look at. The view from the helicopter was interesting (Graham the cameraman always doing his "low shot" to perk up the proceedings), and Anneka tried her best to chip in with solving the clues wherever possible. Bless her. | Even when the contestants were stuck on clues, there was always plenty to look at. The view from the helicopter was interesting (Graham the cameraman always doing his "low shot" to perk up the proceedings), and Anneka tried her best to chip in with solving the clues wherever possible. Bless her. | ||
- | + | The main problem with the format was that if there was only 3 minutes on the clock, and that the next location was miles away, we just knew they weren't going to make it. This was a bug that was solved in the next similar show in the genre, ''[[Interceptor]].'' That said, ''Treasure Hunt'' got seven series, ''Interceptor'' got one. There's no justice. | |
- | ''Skyrunner in the helicopter, [[Anneka Rice]]''</div> | + | <div class="image">[[File:Treasure hunt2 anneka chopper.jpg]]''Skyrunner in the helicopter, [[Anneka Rice]]''</div> |
- | + | In the final series of the original run, [[Anneka Rice]] was replaced by tennis-player [[Annabel Croft]], who went on to do the afore-mentioned ''Interceptor'' with the same production team/helicopter crew combo (''Chatsworth Television'' and ''Castle Air''). | |
- | In the | + | <div class="image">[[File:Treasure_hunt2_annabel.jpg]]''Annabel Croft, with no Interceptors in sight''</div> |
+ | |||
+ | === Bonus clues === | ||
+ | |||
+ | It seemed like a few days since Annabel Croft ended the last run of ''Treasure Hunt'' by picking a rubber duck out of a reservoir in Derbyshire. After almost fourteen years in abeyance, the format has been revived for the BBC. In a pilot week, the show based itself in a Kent manor house, with five different routes being plotted around that region. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Suzi Perry]] was the new skyrunner. They can't see her in the studio, but they can hear her, and follow her progress via GPS. Perhaps the most visible change is that there are a lot more shots from the helicopter. Gun cameras to show Suzi and Keith, and new cameraman Guy and soundman Simon get more angles than Frank and Graham got in seven years on C4, though there's still the obligatory following-from-behind shot. There's a funky split screen effect, showing what's happening in the studio, and what's happening in the chopper. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Dermot Murnaghan]] is the host, furthering his claims to be taken as the new [[Kenneth Kendall]]. He's in a studio with lots of reference books and lots of good-looking but useless props but, in the one concession to new technology, there are CD-ROMs and a multimedia computer. As well as trying to help out the contestants, Dermot also confirms the location of the clue - a role Kenneth took in the initial C4 series, which acted without an on-screen adjudicator. And we're assured that, no, Dermot *hasn't* been given the answers beforehand. He does have an earpiece so that the producers can shout out if the contestants are (literally) miles off course, but that's all. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Very usefully, bits of the clue disappear as they're solved, so to admire that handiwork, you've got to be watching carefully. The effect is similar to the way [[Pete McCarthy]] explained the clues on radio's [[X Marks the Spot]]. And once Suzi has her hands on clues one and three, she gets to shout "Stop The Clock!" and use the break to reposition back at the helicopter. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Clue one is worth £100, clue two another £200. £300 for the third, £400 for the fourth, and £1000 for the last clue. Hmm, that would be exactly double the prizes on the old C4 version. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In many ways, this is perhaps a stronger show than C4's. We tend to forget the long transits and transfers between clues that Anneka suffered. The game is now five minutes shorter, which means five minutes less travelling time, which means less time filling in or looking out of the window, and no chopper work between clues four and five. The clues are also far less absurdly cryptic than on the C4 version. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The good news is that the sound problems between the studios and the skyrunner have mostly been ironed out, though that might be because the studio is within striking distance of the course. The bad news is that Zack Lawrence's memorable "Peak Performance" has vanished down the back of the BBC sofa, to be replaced by something far less memorable. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Dermot is dressed in a black jumper, not quite the learned schoolmaster of Kenneth, but still smart. Suzi is loud and talks a bit too much, but is nowhere near as annoyingly squeaky as Annabel Croft, and we have to remember that it took Anneka two or three years to really get her teeth into the skyrunner role. | ||
+ | |||
+ | There are some cute set-pieces - Dermot leaning out of the window to wave at the passing helicopter wouldn't have happened on C4. There's also indisputable evidence that Suzi does have a brain, and can solve these clues on her own bat. Quite where the obsession with pigs comes from remains to be seen - twice this week, Suzi went in search of some good porkers bearing canisters of fun. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Another good feature is the occasional screen of information on the places they've been, though ''bbc.co.uk/treasurehunt'' redirects to Auntie's attempts to recover tapes she wiped in the 70s. Very poor is the signal to indicate time has expired - Dermot counting "three ... two ... one ... oh dear" doesn't have the crashing certainty of the trusty old gong. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Oh, and the role of Wincey Willis? It's been taken by technology in general, and a GPS link to the helicopter (G-ONTV) instead. | ||
+ | |||
+ | While somewhat subdued, the show had a lot of promise, and surely a full series was in order... | ||
+ | |||
+ | === An Englishwoman Abroad === | ||
+ | |||
+ | And so there we were in the hot Summer of 2003 with some (extremely expensive) international specials hindered by the fact that it was an abnormally warm week for the time of year so nobody was in to watch it. Furthermore, it was Wimbledon and some Tim Henman matches went on so long that the show got jostled around the schedules. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div class="image">[[File:Treasure_hunt_new_suzidermot.jpg|400px]]''Treasure Hunt in Kent''</div> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In one week viewers went to far flung places such as San Francisco on Monday, Mexico City on Tuesday, New Zealand on Wednesday, Alice Springs on Thursday and Melbourne on Friday. All very beautiful to look at and happily, the show's still as much fun as it always was; some felt as if there was too much flying and not enough terra ferma hi-jinks early in the week. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div class="image">[[File:Treasurehunt_suzi_large1.jpg|400px]]''Suzi Perry in the outback.''</div> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The single biggest addition the new version of the show has bought along is that of having the treasure in the vicinity of the final clue. One of the biggest problems with the original of course was that if they get the fifth clue with only a few minutes to go you knew there would be no chance of them winning because the helicopter wouldn't get there in time. Now there is always a chance. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div class="image">[[File:Treasurehunt_suzi_large2.jpg|300px]]''Suzi Perry in San Fransisco.''</div> | ||
+ | |||
+ | However, whilst in the original pilot week many of these final clues required a short run but needing to know an exact thing in order to win, a few too many of the final clues this time round have revolved around "Is Suzi fit enough to run from point A to point B, up a hill in time?" (the best example of this being on Alcatraz on Monday where she had to run up a large hill but Guy and Simon the technical blokes got to ride in a truck). | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div class="image">[[File:Treasurehunt_suzi_large3.jpg|300px]]''Suzi on tour''</div> | ||
+ | |||
+ | There is also a rather pointless addition of sound stings for when they light up the map, when they start the clock, when they stop the clock and when time runs out. Fine normally, except they're barely audible (so they're seen as irritants) and generally a bit pathetic. And there's no way the current time's up signal (a sort of wheeeeeeeee-[wind chimes]) conveys the same authority as the gong. Silly silly silly. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div class="image">[[File:Treasurehunt_suzi_large4.jpg|300px]]''Suzi on tour (Part 2)''</div> | ||
+ | |||
+ | We like Treasure Hunt. But it never quite got there. And nobody saw it. Why the show never got a try out on Saturday early evening BBC 1 we don't know - it had enough production values for it. It was purely a question that BBC 2's loss of ''The Simpsons'' was the overriding factor to find something to plug the gap, and hang the cost. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div class="image">[[File:Treasurehunt_suzi_large5.jpg|300px]]''Suzi in Blue.''</div> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In some ways the low-key nature of the failure may see it return again one day. We shall see. | ||
== Key moments == | == Key moments == | ||
The spectacular seasonal specials, set in foreign countries. | The spectacular seasonal specials, set in foreign countries. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Ned Sherrin's 1985 end of series special in which he was the host and Kenneth and Anneka were the contestants. Three special celebrity "Skyrunners" took on Anneka's role in the helicopter. Gemma Craven started off at Chelsea, Wayne Sleep then took over. The final runner was Kenny Lynch and the final clue brought Kenny to the Limehouse Studios where Chatsworth made the show. When Kenny made it to Kenneth and Anneka at the map table, the clock was stopped. | ||
== Catchphrases == | == Catchphrases == | ||
Line 73: | Line 146: | ||
== Theme music == | == Theme music == | ||
- | The famous theme tune was called ''Peak Performance'', composed by Zack Lawrence. The | + | The famous theme tune was called ''Peak Performance'', composed by Zack Lawrence. |
+ | |||
+ | <div class="video"><object width="480" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/8KON3jFr7dg?fs=1&hl=en_US"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/8KON3jFr7dg?fs=1&hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></embed></object><br/>''The original opening titles from all 7 series''</div> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The 2002-3 edition was composed by Francis Haines (of ''Another 9 1/2 Weeks'', no less). It was tweaked slightly between the pilot week and the full international series because Lawrence felt that they used a similar riff. | ||
== Trivia == | == Trivia == | ||
Line 82: | Line 159: | ||
A best-of programme in 1983 called ''Treasure Hunt: A Second Look'' featured Kenneth (in the chopper) and Anneka (in the studio) presenting highlights from the first series. In 1986, a behind-the-scenes doc ''The Making of Treasure Hunt'' was produced. | A best-of programme in 1983 called ''Treasure Hunt: A Second Look'' featured Kenneth (in the chopper) and Anneka (in the studio) presenting highlights from the first series. In 1986, a behind-the-scenes doc ''The Making of Treasure Hunt'' was produced. | ||
+ | |||
+ | A Welsh-language pilot, ''[[Helfa Drysor]]'', was produced for S4C. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Anneka Rice on the Dermot-era remake: ''"I only saw a tiny bit of one of them, because it was on at a really random time on BBC - which was confusing. I don't know... it didn't feel messy enough. It looked a bit edited and it had screens within a screen and things going on. I think when they brought it back it should have been as it used to be - wobbly cameras and not any clever editing techniques or presentation techniques. You don't want split-screen. You so don't want that. I think if you bring something back, you've got to be loyal to how it was, otherwise don't bother."'' | ||
== Merchandise == | == Merchandise == | ||
- | A ''Treasure Hunt'' book | + | A ''Treasure Hunt'' book was published. |
- | = | + | <div class="image">[[Image:Treasurehunt boardgame.jpg]]A board game was also produced.</div> |
- | [ | + | <div class="image">[[Image:Treasurehunt computergame.jpg]]There was also a computer game for the ZX Spectrum.</div> |
+ | |||
+ | == Web links == | ||
[http://www.chatsworth-tv.co.uk/ Chatsworth TV] | [http://www.chatsworth-tv.co.uk/ Chatsworth TV] | ||
- | [http:// | + | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treasure_Hunt_%28UK_game_show%29 Wikipedia entry] |
- | [http://www. | + | [http://www.ravensbourne.ac.uk/bbc-motion-graphics-archive/treasure-hunt-2003 Opening titles from the BBC Motion Graphics Archive] |
- | [http://www. | + | [http://www.martinunderwood.f9.co.uk/Treasure%20Hunt/ Martin Underwood's episode list] |
+ | |||
+ | [http://www.expand.fr Expand Images] (makers of the original French show and a spin-off called ''La Carte aux Trèsors''). | ||
- | [http:// | + | [http://www.offthetelly.co.uk/oldott/www.offthetelly.co.uk/index11fa.html?page_id=985 Off the Telly review of original series] |
- | = | + | [http://www.offthetelly.co.uk/oldott/www.offthetelly.co.uk/indexc736.html?page_id=968 Off the Telly article of the come-back series] |
- | + | == Videos == | |
- | + | <div class="video"><object width="480" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Uhbt3nznO5s?fs=1&hl=en_US"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Uhbt3nznO5s?fs=1&hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></embed></object><br/>''First few minutes of the very first episode''</div> | |
[[Category:Action and Adventure]] | [[Category:Action and Adventure]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Chatsworth Television Productions]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Channel 4 Programmes]] | ||
[[Category:French Formats]] | [[Category:French Formats]] |
Current revision as of 20:36, 12 October 2023
Contents |
Host
Kenneth Kendall (1982-89)
Ned Sherrin (5 April 1985)
Dermot Murnaghan (2002-03)
Co-hosts
Skyrunner:
Anneka Rice (1982-88)
Gemma Craven, Kenny Lynch, Wayne Sleep (5 April 1985)
Annabel Croft (1989)
Suzi Perry (2002-03)
Adjudicator:
Ann Meo (1982-83)
Annette Lynton (1984)
Wincey Willis (1985-89)
Cameraman (on location): Graham Berry
Video recordist (on location): Frank Meyburgh
Broadcast
Chatsworth Television for Channel 4, 28 December 1982 to 18 May 1989 (91 episodes in 7 series + 6 specials)
Chatsworth Television for Thames (regional), 30 October 1985 (as part of Thames Telethon)
Chatsworth Television for ITV, 29 to 30 May 1988 (as part of ITV Telethon)
Chatsworth Television for BBC Two, 16 December 2002 to 2 August 2003 (15 episodes in 2 series)
Synopsis
If someone came up to you and said that Treasure Hunt was an hour of complete arse, they would be almost completely right.
That's because the show is infamous for Graham the Cameraman's need to film Anneka Rice's bottom. In jump-suit as well! However, it was a groundbreaking game too, and one of Channel 4's most popular shows of the era, regularly clawing in 7-8 million viewers.
The game, then. Former BBC newsreader Kenneth Kendall helps two ordinary rich people (the first two contestants were fish farmers from Cornwall) to solve five devious cryptic clues in order to guide "Skyrunner" Anneka, transported by helicopter, around the five places of interest, usually on a 20x20 km map, within 45 minutes.
Part of the game was that although they could communicate with Anneka via a two-way radio link, they couldn't actually see her. An unintentional difficulty factor was that the radio communications would sometimes break up, completely by accident, at unfortunate times.
In the studio, the players have access to lots of reference works and they'll need them because the clues are somewhat cryptic. For example, one clue once was: "In a Seahawk, in a Seahawk, in a Seahawk." the contestants had to work out that an airbase in the area was known as the HMS Seahawk, and at that place was an actual Seahawk plane and inside that was a small model of a Seahawk plane, and the clue was in that. Often homonyms, anagrams, double meanings and other connotations needed to be solved, with a bit of quick research each time, to solve the clues.
For most of the run of the series, back at the base was TV-AM weather girl and zoologist (a combination you tend to see everyday) Wincey Willis who gave absolutely no help whatsoever save for time checks, giving out the clues in the studio and giving the hint to the Treasure at the top of the show. Part of her job was to track what the helicopter was doing on her big board which seemed fairly pointless, truth be told.
What made the show entertaining were the things Anneka had to do to earn the clues and the treasure. Most of the time they just had to go to a certain place, but sometimes the clue is on a character on stage at a packed performance, under the water, in the middle of an Army Assault Course obstacle - that kind of malarkey.
Even when the contestants were stuck on clues, there was always plenty to look at. The view from the helicopter was interesting (Graham the cameraman always doing his "low shot" to perk up the proceedings), and Anneka tried her best to chip in with solving the clues wherever possible. Bless her.
The main problem with the format was that if there was only 3 minutes on the clock, and that the next location was miles away, we just knew they weren't going to make it. This was a bug that was solved in the next similar show in the genre, Interceptor. That said, Treasure Hunt got seven series, Interceptor got one. There's no justice.
In the final series of the original run, Anneka Rice was replaced by tennis-player Annabel Croft, who went on to do the afore-mentioned Interceptor with the same production team/helicopter crew combo (Chatsworth Television and Castle Air).
Bonus clues
It seemed like a few days since Annabel Croft ended the last run of Treasure Hunt by picking a rubber duck out of a reservoir in Derbyshire. After almost fourteen years in abeyance, the format has been revived for the BBC. In a pilot week, the show based itself in a Kent manor house, with five different routes being plotted around that region.
Suzi Perry was the new skyrunner. They can't see her in the studio, but they can hear her, and follow her progress via GPS. Perhaps the most visible change is that there are a lot more shots from the helicopter. Gun cameras to show Suzi and Keith, and new cameraman Guy and soundman Simon get more angles than Frank and Graham got in seven years on C4, though there's still the obligatory following-from-behind shot. There's a funky split screen effect, showing what's happening in the studio, and what's happening in the chopper.
Dermot Murnaghan is the host, furthering his claims to be taken as the new Kenneth Kendall. He's in a studio with lots of reference books and lots of good-looking but useless props but, in the one concession to new technology, there are CD-ROMs and a multimedia computer. As well as trying to help out the contestants, Dermot also confirms the location of the clue - a role Kenneth took in the initial C4 series, which acted without an on-screen adjudicator. And we're assured that, no, Dermot *hasn't* been given the answers beforehand. He does have an earpiece so that the producers can shout out if the contestants are (literally) miles off course, but that's all.
Very usefully, bits of the clue disappear as they're solved, so to admire that handiwork, you've got to be watching carefully. The effect is similar to the way Pete McCarthy explained the clues on radio's X Marks the Spot. And once Suzi has her hands on clues one and three, she gets to shout "Stop The Clock!" and use the break to reposition back at the helicopter.
Clue one is worth £100, clue two another £200. £300 for the third, £400 for the fourth, and £1000 for the last clue. Hmm, that would be exactly double the prizes on the old C4 version.
In many ways, this is perhaps a stronger show than C4's. We tend to forget the long transits and transfers between clues that Anneka suffered. The game is now five minutes shorter, which means five minutes less travelling time, which means less time filling in or looking out of the window, and no chopper work between clues four and five. The clues are also far less absurdly cryptic than on the C4 version.
The good news is that the sound problems between the studios and the skyrunner have mostly been ironed out, though that might be because the studio is within striking distance of the course. The bad news is that Zack Lawrence's memorable "Peak Performance" has vanished down the back of the BBC sofa, to be replaced by something far less memorable.
Dermot is dressed in a black jumper, not quite the learned schoolmaster of Kenneth, but still smart. Suzi is loud and talks a bit too much, but is nowhere near as annoyingly squeaky as Annabel Croft, and we have to remember that it took Anneka two or three years to really get her teeth into the skyrunner role.
There are some cute set-pieces - Dermot leaning out of the window to wave at the passing helicopter wouldn't have happened on C4. There's also indisputable evidence that Suzi does have a brain, and can solve these clues on her own bat. Quite where the obsession with pigs comes from remains to be seen - twice this week, Suzi went in search of some good porkers bearing canisters of fun.
Another good feature is the occasional screen of information on the places they've been, though bbc.co.uk/treasurehunt redirects to Auntie's attempts to recover tapes she wiped in the 70s. Very poor is the signal to indicate time has expired - Dermot counting "three ... two ... one ... oh dear" doesn't have the crashing certainty of the trusty old gong.
Oh, and the role of Wincey Willis? It's been taken by technology in general, and a GPS link to the helicopter (G-ONTV) instead.
While somewhat subdued, the show had a lot of promise, and surely a full series was in order...
An Englishwoman Abroad
And so there we were in the hot Summer of 2003 with some (extremely expensive) international specials hindered by the fact that it was an abnormally warm week for the time of year so nobody was in to watch it. Furthermore, it was Wimbledon and some Tim Henman matches went on so long that the show got jostled around the schedules.
In one week viewers went to far flung places such as San Francisco on Monday, Mexico City on Tuesday, New Zealand on Wednesday, Alice Springs on Thursday and Melbourne on Friday. All very beautiful to look at and happily, the show's still as much fun as it always was; some felt as if there was too much flying and not enough terra ferma hi-jinks early in the week.
The single biggest addition the new version of the show has bought along is that of having the treasure in the vicinity of the final clue. One of the biggest problems with the original of course was that if they get the fifth clue with only a few minutes to go you knew there would be no chance of them winning because the helicopter wouldn't get there in time. Now there is always a chance.
However, whilst in the original pilot week many of these final clues required a short run but needing to know an exact thing in order to win, a few too many of the final clues this time round have revolved around "Is Suzi fit enough to run from point A to point B, up a hill in time?" (the best example of this being on Alcatraz on Monday where she had to run up a large hill but Guy and Simon the technical blokes got to ride in a truck).
There is also a rather pointless addition of sound stings for when they light up the map, when they start the clock, when they stop the clock and when time runs out. Fine normally, except they're barely audible (so they're seen as irritants) and generally a bit pathetic. And there's no way the current time's up signal (a sort of wheeeeeeeee-[wind chimes]) conveys the same authority as the gong. Silly silly silly.
We like Treasure Hunt. But it never quite got there. And nobody saw it. Why the show never got a try out on Saturday early evening BBC 1 we don't know - it had enough production values for it. It was purely a question that BBC 2's loss of The Simpsons was the overriding factor to find something to plug the gap, and hang the cost.
In some ways the low-key nature of the failure may see it return again one day. We shall see.
Key moments
The spectacular seasonal specials, set in foreign countries.
Ned Sherrin's 1985 end of series special in which he was the host and Kenneth and Anneka were the contestants. Three special celebrity "Skyrunners" took on Anneka's role in the helicopter. Gemma Craven started off at Chelsea, Wayne Sleep then took over. The final runner was Kenny Lynch and the final clue brought Kenny to the Limehouse Studios where Chatsworth made the show. When Kenny made it to Kenneth and Anneka at the map table, the clock was stopped.
Catchphrases
"Stop the clock!"
Inventor
Based on the French show La Chasse aux Trèsors.
Theme music
The famous theme tune was called Peak Performance, composed by Zack Lawrence.
The original opening titles from all 7 series
The 2002-3 edition was composed by Francis Haines (of Another 9 1/2 Weeks, no less). It was tweaked slightly between the pilot week and the full international series because Lawrence felt that they used a similar riff.
Trivia
The skyrunner's helicopter had the registration G-BHXU (pilot: Keith Thompson). The communications helicopter that flew alongside was G-SPEY (pilots: Geoff Newman and Michael Malric-Smith - see Interceptor).
The 1984 adjudicator, Annette Lynton, is married to Nick Mason from the group Pink Floyd. She still appears in various film and TV productions as an actress.
A best-of programme in 1983 called Treasure Hunt: A Second Look featured Kenneth (in the chopper) and Anneka (in the studio) presenting highlights from the first series. In 1986, a behind-the-scenes doc The Making of Treasure Hunt was produced.
A Welsh-language pilot, Helfa Drysor, was produced for S4C.
Anneka Rice on the Dermot-era remake: "I only saw a tiny bit of one of them, because it was on at a really random time on BBC - which was confusing. I don't know... it didn't feel messy enough. It looked a bit edited and it had screens within a screen and things going on. I think when they brought it back it should have been as it used to be - wobbly cameras and not any clever editing techniques or presentation techniques. You don't want split-screen. You so don't want that. I think if you bring something back, you've got to be loyal to how it was, otherwise don't bother."
Merchandise
A Treasure Hunt book was published.
Web links
Opening titles from the BBC Motion Graphics Archive
Martin Underwood's episode list
Expand Images (makers of the original French show and a spin-off called La Carte aux Trèsors).
Off the Telly review of original series
Off the Telly article of the come-back series
Videos
First few minutes of the very first episode