
They decide to reveal their theory of alien invasion on national television.īlake is denounced as a terrorist responsible for the explosion at Sizewell power station, and goes on the run with Melissa.When Mimi Shapiro has to escape New York and an obsessed professor, she flees to her dads cottage in Canada. Melissa survives the car crash, but Blake worries that she might have been renewed like the Sweethorpe victims. Melissa Gates falls foul of the local M.P. Investigating further, he finds several similar cases, and uncovers the village of Sweethorpe, which fell into the sea five years earlier, with no loss of life.īlake, investigating the highly successful careers of the Sweethorpe survivors, gets a job at a software plant owned by another Sweethope survivor but is soon uncovered. Photographer Steve Blake witnesses a fatal car crash but is surprised to find the victim alive and well the next day.


Blake discovers a connection to the village of Sweethope, which collapsed into the sea following a chemical explosion. However, the next day, Wilson turns up alive and well. Steve Blake ( Douglas Hodge), a photographer and former journalist, witnesses the head of British Nuclear Power, James Wilson (David Allister) killed in a horrific car crash. The DVD combines the four fifty-minute episodes into two feature-length episodes of 100 minutes each. The complete series was first released on VHS on 26 January 2000, followed by a DVD release on 28 July 2003.


Cornell, a huge fan of the BBC science fiction television series Doctor Who (who at that point had written several licensed novels based on the programme), cheekily included a cameo appearance at the end from Doctor Who character Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart, although the character is unnamed in the book.Ī soundtrack album accompanying the series, with music composed by Martin Kiszko, was released on 6 October 1997 via Ocean Deep Records. The series was novelised by Paul Cornell and published by Virgin Books. The series was filmed in and around Norwich, with scenes filmed at the University of East Anglia, Norwich Magistrate's Court and the offices of the Eastern Daily Press in Norwich city centre. The series was co-produced by Zenith Entertainment and Anglia Television. The Uninvited is a British television science fiction mystery thriller mini-series, created by Leslie Grantham and written by Peter Bowker, first broadcast on ITV between 25 September and 16 October 1997.
