Amazon | |
---|---|
Also known as | Amazonas – Gefangene des Dschungels |
Created by | Peter Benchley |
Developed by | Malcolm MacRury |
Written by | Alison Lea Bingeman Paul Aitken |
Directed by | Milan Cheylov T.W. Peacocke |
Starring | C. Thomas Howell Carol Alt Chris William Martin Fabiana Udenio Tyler Hynes Rob Stewart |
Composer | Guy Zerafa |
Country of origin | Canada Germany |
Original languages | English German |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 22 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Seaton McLean Peter Sussman Peter Benchley |
Producer | Jan Peter Meyboom |
Running time | 44 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | Syndication |
Release | 25 September 1999 20 May 2000 | –
Amazon (also known as Peter Benchley's Amazon) was a syndicated adventure drama series created by Peter Benchley. It was developed by Canadian production companies Alliance Atlantis Communications & WIC Entertainment and German company Beta Film GmbH. The 22 episodes of the series were in first-run syndication between 1999 and 2000.
The drama series focused on the six survivors of a crashed airline flight in the Brazilian Amazon jungle. The group soon comes into contact with a hostile indigenous tribe, the Fierce Ones. They are taken in by a mysterious tribe called the Chosen, who are descended from 16th century British colonists who were lost in the rainforest. Relations with the Chosen are tenuous at best. Most of the group escapes the Chosen only to stir up a hornets' nest with the cannibalistic Jaguar People, led by an insane Canadian woman bent on domination of all the local tribes. The first season ended in a cliff-hanger, and a second season was never produced. The series retained sufficient interest that it was released on DVD in 2011. This was most likely to capitalize on the cult-popularity of Lost, with which it could all too easily be confused .
A novelization of the 2-hour pilot was written by Rob MacGregor, and a mass-market paperback was released by Harper (publisher) on 8 Aug 2000.[1]
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Fallen Angels" | Jon Cassar | Peter Benchley | September 25, 1999 |
2 | "Nightfall" | Jon Cassar | Story by : Malcolm MacRury & Paul Aitken Teleplay by : Malcolm MacRury | October 2, 1999 |
3 | "Suffer the Little Children" | Ron Oliver | Malcolm MacRury | October 9, 1999 |
4 | "Exodus" | Ron Oliver | Paul Aitken | October 16, 1999 |
5 | "The Chosen" | Jon Cassar | Heather Conkie | October 23, 1999 |
6 | "The End of the World" | Jon Cassar | Heather Conkie & Malcolm MacRury | October 30, 1999 |
7 | "The Lost Words" | Terry Ingram | Paul Aitken | November 6, 1999 |
8 | "Resurrection" | Holly Dale | Heather Conkie | November 13, 1999 |
9 | "The Blood Angel" | Terry Ingram | Malcolm MacRury | November 20, 1999 |
10 | "War" | Milan Cheylov | Paul Aitken | November 27, 1999 |
11 | "Eyes in the Dark" | John Bell | Heather Conkie | January 22, 2000 |
12 | "The First Stone" | Unknown | Alison Lea Bingeman | January 29, 2000 |
13 | "The Devil's Army" | John Bell | Unknown | February 5, 2000 |
14 | "The Finding" | Unknown | Unknown | February 12, 2000 |
15 | "Escape" | Clay Borris | Paul Aitken | February 19, 2000 |
16 | "Home" | T.W. Peacocke | Malcolm MacRury | February 26, 2000 |
17 | "The Pale Horseman" | Steven Luppino | Unknown | April 15, 2000 |
18 | "The White Witch" | Steven Luppino | Unknown | April 22, 2000 |
19 | "Circle of Fire" | T.W. Peacocke | Heather Conkie | April 29, 2000 |
20 | "Babel" | Ross Clyde | Unknown | May 6, 2000 |
21 | "Wild Child" | Steven Luppino | Unknown | May 13, 2000 |
22 | "A Bible and a Gun" | Ross Clyde | Unknown | May 20, 2000 |
Each episode of the series cost $1.2 million.[2] The total cost of the series was $26 million.[3]
Alliance Home Entertainment released the complete series on DVD in Canada only on 22 February 2011.[4] This was soon followed by the release to the rest of the North American market.[5]