Trapped
Revision as of 12:05, 4 October 2007
Contents |
Host
Simon Greenall as "The Caretaker"
Co-hosts
Eve Karpf as "The Voice"
Olly Pike as "Wiley Sneak"
Broadcast
CBBC for BBC One, 2007
Synopsis
The Geordie of I'm Alan Partridge wears enough facial creosote to pass as some kind of goblin in this very odd and surprisingly complex game from the CBBC stable.
Set in a gothic fairytale, a group of six children called "the Unfortunates" are winched up in a not-terribly-convincing CGI cage to the sixth floor of a tower looked over by Greenall's Caretaker character. He's looking after the gaff on behalf of the omnipresent being known only as the Voice.
On each floor, the children are challenged to complete a game except that one of them is instructed by the Voice to sabotage the game. The saboteur is nominated at random by the Voice, and fed this information plus hints on how to mess up them game via a weird shell-like earpiece (is this where "a word in your shell, like?" comes from?) We see a child known as Wiley Sneak demonstrating the games before they're played. The games range from ingenious to half-baked, and many are too imbalanced one way or the other, i.e. for or against the saboteur.
If the task is won, the saboteur is knocked out and must remain trapped on this level. If the task is lost, everyone votes on who they thought the saboteur was and the person with the most votes is trapped instead - which may or may not be the real saboteur. (A vote is taken even if the task is lost, for interest's sake only.) The dynamics here are complex but not entirely balanced: the non-saboteurs can guarantee a route into the next round by winning the task, but the saboteur must make the task fail and without suspicion of the others. The players, minus the loser, make their way down a hole in the floor to the level.
When two players remain on the second floor, they have to answer straightforward observation questions against the clock based on their journey through the tower to date. The one who answers the most correctly wins the Big Gold Key O'Freedom (TM) and leaves the tower. This appears to be the only prize, for shame.
Not satified with putting kids in jail, locking kids in a tower is probably guaranteed to raise at least a complaint or two from parents of timid 7-year-olds. However, Greenall's character is genuinely funny, if a little bit overchatty in places, which soothes over the worst of the nastiness and backstabbing.
Catchphrases
The Voice: "You're... trapped!"
Inventor
To be completed
Theme music
To be completed