List of Danger Mouse episodes

The following is an episode list for the children's animated television series Danger Mouse. The show is about the title character of the same name (David Jason) and his sidekick Ernest Penfold (Terry Scott) defeating villains who attempt to cause havoc around the planet.

The show was made by Cosgrove Hall Films and first shown on ITV during its weekday lunchtime or afternoon children's programming. 161 episodes were made which were broadcast between 1981 and 1992. Later, VHS and DVD releases edited the 5-part stories together as single episodes, to total 89 episodes. The episode order is controversial because stories were often initially transmitted some years after the rest of the season to which they theoretically belonged, often forming part of a 'repeats season'. The US Region 1 DVD releases present the episodes in the UK broadcast order.

Series overview

Series Episodes Originally aired
First aired Last aired Network
Pilots 2 N/A (N/A)
1 11 28 September 1981 (1981-09-28) 14 December 1981 (1981-12-14) ITV
2 30 4 January 1982 (1982-01-04) 12 February 1982 (1982-02-12) ITV
3 17 4 October 1982 (1982-10-04) 1 November 1982 (1982-11-01) ITV
4 45 3 January 1983 (1983-01-03) 23 March 1983 (1983-03-23) ITV
5 10 20 February 1984 (1984-02-20) 30 April 1984 (1984-04-30) ITV
6 27 25 December 1984 (1984-12-25) 26 December 1985 (1985-12-26) ITV
7 6 13 November 1986 (1986-11-13) 18 December 1986 (1986-12-18) ITV
8 2 20 February 1987 (1987-02-20) 27 February 1987 (1987-02-27) ITV
9 6 3 January 1991 (1991-01-03) 7 February 1991 (1991-02-07) ITV
10 7 6 February 1992 (1992-02-06) 19 March 1992 (1992-03-19) ITV

Episodes

Pilot episodes (1979–80)

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
1N–A"The Beginning"Brian CosgroveJohn Hambleyunaired (unaired)
The 2001 UK DVD Tower of Terror includes the second pilot episode "The Mystery of the Lost Chord" and states there is a first pilot episode which is "yet to be found". However, there are no further details known as to whether this pilot was a different story, or earlier version of "The Mystery of the Lost Chord", which itself later became the episode, "Who Stole the Bagpipes?".
2N–A"The Mystery of the Lost Chord"Brian CosgroveJohn Hambleyunaired
(first commercially released
15 October 2001) (unaired
(first commercially released
15 October 2001)
)
The 15-minute pilot was later shortened to 10 minutes and aired (with changes) as the second episode of series 1, "Who Stole the Bagpipes?". This pilot features no narration, William Franklyn plays Danger Mouse and Penfold has a Welsh accent. Ernest Penfold was voiced by Peter Hawkins. Baron Greenback is here named Baron Greenteeth (although, the DVD release erroneously lists him as Greenchief). Stiletto has an assistant henchman too. Although unaired, it was commercially released for the first time as a bonus feature on the 2001 UK DVD Tower of Terror. The DVD feature states it to be the second pilot episode, as the first pilot is "yet to be found".

Series 1 (1981)

Series 1 episodes are 11 minutes each, and originally aired on Mondays and Wednesdays with no commercial breaks.

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
11"Rogue Robots"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman28 September 1981 (1981-09-28)
Danger Mouse discovers that Baron Greenback is behind a wave of attack robots that have been going after agents that work with DM.
22"Who Stole the Bagpipes"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman30 September 1981 (1981-09-30)
Danger Mouse and Penfold travel to Scotland to keep Greenback from destroying the world with music from all the bagpipes in the world. This episode was the modified version of the 2nd pilot.
33"Trouble with Ghosts"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman5 October 1981 (1981-10-05)
Greenback captures Colonel K and has the Colonel send Danger Mouse and Penfold on holiday to a haunted castle in Transylvania.
44"Chicken Run"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman7 October 1981 (1981-10-07)
Greenback steals a growth serum from Professor von Squawkencluck and with it creates giant chickens to take over the world once and for all. And for once, Penfold saves the day!
55"The Martian Misfit"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman12 October 1981 (1981-10-12)
Greenback creates a 'Martian' to keep Danger Mouse busy while he sets out on a crime spree which doesn't last very long!
66"The Dream Machine"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman14 October 1981 (1981-10-14)
Greenback puts Danger Mouse and Penfold in his dream machine, where Penfold's random thoughts become reality, usually to the detriment of Danger Mouse.
77"Lord of the Bungle"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman19 October 1981 (1981-10-19)
During an investigation where Danger Mouse and Penfold try to find out why elephants are being turned into sugar cubes, a fall causes Penfold to act weird and do a Tarzan yell that summons elephants to stampede the area.
88"Die Laughing"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman21 October 1981 (1981-10-21)
Greenback uses a spray on the world's leaders to cause them to laugh.
99"The World of Machines"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman26 October 1981 (1981-10-26)
Greenback kidnaps Penfold to lure Danger Mouse into a spaceship and send both of them to a planet ruled by old fashioned looking machines.
1010"Ice Station Camel"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman28 October 1981 (1981-10-28)
Danger Mouse must stop Greenback who has placed a device at the North Pole to stop the Earth's rotation and cancel gravity. Title reference: Ice Station Zebra
1111"A Plague of Pyramids"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman14 December 1981 (1981-12-14)
Greenback has placed a large number of sand pyramids all over England, threatening to sink the island Danger Mouse travels to the Sahara Desert to stop him.

Series 2 (1982)

Series 2 stories were originally each aired in five 5-minute segments over five consecutive days. VHS and DVD releases usually see these episodes edited together as one 25-minute episode, although in reality, these omnibus episodes run closer to 17—19 minutes as they lose David Jason's 'cliffhanger' narration over the "To be continued..." captions. On the VHS and DVD releases, the "Episode 1" suffix in the title card after the opening credits has often been left unaltered. The US DVD releases retain the original 5-min segment format.

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
121Custard
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman4 January 1982 (1982-01-04)
132"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman5 January 1982 (1982-01-05)
143"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman6 January 1982 (1982-01-06)
154"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman7 January 1982 (1982-01-07)
165"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman8 January 1982 (1982-01-08)
The Earth is flooded with instant custard. Danger Mouse and Penfold travel to outer space to find the Custard Mite of Glut, a small creature that can eat up the custard, but the planet that houses the Mite is controlled by armoured aliens.
176Close Encounters of the Absurd Kind
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman11 January 1982 (1982-01-11)
187"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman12 January 1982 (1982-01-12)
198"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman13 January 1982 (1982-01-13)
209"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman14 January 1982 (1982-01-14)
2110"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman15 January 1982 (1982-01-15)
When Baron Greenback threatens to take down a tracking station, Danger Mouse and Penfold head to the Bermuda Triangle to stop him. But space aliens abduct them, hoping to probe them for further research. The episode title is a reference to the film Close Encounters of the Third Kind
2211The Duel
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman18 January 1982 (1982-01-18)
2312"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman19 January 1982 (1982-01-19)
2413"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman20 January 1982 (1982-01-20)
2514"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman21 January 1982 (1982-01-21)
2615"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman22 January 1982 (1982-01-22)
Baron Greenback challenges Danger Mouse to a duel, where if Danger Mouse wins, Greenback will go straight and be good, but if Greenback wins, Danger Mouse has to quit his job. The duel consists of a series of challenges including a vehicle race, a dark ride / haunted house, a shooting gallery, a high striker carnival game, and a roller coaster. But many of the challenges are rigged with booby traps in Greenback's favor.
2716The Day of the Suds
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman25 January 1982 (1982-01-25)
2817"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman26 January 1982 (1982-01-26)
2918"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman27 January 1982 (1982-01-27)
3019"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman28 January 1982 (1982-01-28)
3120"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman29 January 1982 (1982-01-29)
Washing machines from all over London have busted out of their residences and are now under the control of Baron Greenback, who orders them to assemble and to attack Danger Mouse. As Danger Mouse and Penfold evade the washers, they hide out at a junkyard and discover that the washers can be disabled by activating a large electromagnet to attract and drop them into a pit. However, the mass amounts of washers then transform into a large sudsy monster.
3221The Bad Luck Eye of the Little Yellow God
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman1 February 1982 (1982-02-01)
3322"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman2 February 1982 (1982-02-02)
3423"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman3 February 1982 (1982-02-03)
3524"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman4 February 1982 (1982-02-04)
3625"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman5 February 1982 (1982-02-05)
Baron Greenback has stolen a gem that is used to shoot a ray beam at people which results in them having extremely bad luck. Danger Mouse manages to get it and attempts to give it back to the original owners who don't really want it back.
3726The Four Tasks of Danger Mouse
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman8 February 1982 (1982-02-08)
3827"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman9 February 1982 (1982-02-09)
3928"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman10 February 1982 (1982-02-10)
4029"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman11 February 1982 (1982-02-11)
4130"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman12 February 1982 (1982-02-12)
Greenback kidnaps Penfold to get Danger Mouse to bring him four ingredients needed for an evil spell to take over the world: The hair of a yeti, straw from a witch's broom, a piece of the London fog monster, and the tail feathers of Count Duckula.

Series 3 (1982)

The first three stories were originally each aired in five 5-minute segments over five consecutive days. The US DVD releases retain the original 5-min segment format. The fourth and fifth stories were single 11-minute segments and aired on Mondays; some sources (including iTunes UK and The Guinness Book of Classic British TV) list these episodes as belonging to the first series. This would appear to be supported by the fact that these final two episodes have the series 1 credit sequence with its original title card and the same series 1 animation. (The title card was changed to the more familiar logo from series 2 onwards.)

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
421The Invasion of Colonel 'K'
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman4 October 1982 (1982-10-04)
432"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman5 October 1982 (1982-10-05)
443"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman6 October 1982 (1982-10-06)
454"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman7 October 1982 (1982-10-07)
465"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman8 October 1982 (1982-10-08)
Baron Greenback uses a shrink ray to enter Colonel K's body to learn all of the Colonel's secrets. Danger Mouse and Penfold follow, but they get diverted because Greenback changed some of the signs. They also have to deal with the body guarding cells.
476Danger Mouse Saves the World... Again
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman11 October 1982 (1982-10-11)
487"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman12 October 1982 (1982-10-12)
498"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman13 October 1982 (1982-10-13)
509"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman14 October 1982 (1982-10-14)
5110"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman15 October 1982 (1982-10-15)
Danger Mouse and Penfold try to stop Baron Greenback from destroying all the world's signposts. They travel to an island in the Pacific Ocean where Greenback is holding his annual conference of evil-doers. The villains thwart Danger Mouse's every move at the touch of a button. Danger Mouse gets captured and placed on a table where a machine is going to drain his brain's thoughts. Penfold is captured as well. Just as Danger Mouse is about to lose for good, he wakes up as the whole thing was a dream, but then knows exactly what will happen next.
5211The Odd Ball Runaround
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman18 October 1982 (1982-10-18)
5312"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman19 October 1982 (1982-10-19)
5413"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman20 October 1982 (1982-10-20)
5514"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman21 October 1982 (1982-10-21)
5615"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman22 October 1982 (1982-10-22)
Danger Mouse and Penfold travel to Australia where they pick up top secret plans from an agent rat in the form of a rugby ball. Penfold gets distracted by a boomerang and is later picked up by large bird of prey. Penfold drops the ball into a castle, which happens to be controlled by Baron Greenback. Danger Mouse attempts multiple times to get into the castle but fails, leaving Penfold to dramatically grieve at the supposed loss. They get into the castle but Penfold is captured and Danger Mouse is shot out to a mountain top. Eventually Danger Mouse is able to rescue Penfold and secure the ball, only to find out later from Colonel K that the ball was actually a decoy meant to be given to Greenback.
5716"The Strange Case of the Ghost Bus"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman25 October 1982 (1982-10-25)
Danger Mouse and Penfold head to the Indian Ocean to investigate several ship sinkings caused by "ghost buses". The buses turn out to be ice blocks shaped like a London bus created by Baron Greenback.
5817"The Trip to America"Brian CosgroveMike Harding and Brian Trueman1 November 1982 (1982-11-01)
Historic buildings such as Tower of London, Eiffel Tower, Kremlin and the Empire State Building have disappeared. Danger Mouse and Penfold travel to the United States and meet a cowboy named Texas Jack McGraw who got the Tower of London as a result of Baron Greenback's shrink ray. Danger Mouse and Penfold are zapped by Greenback's shrink ray and captured by Nero. Native Americans have captured Greenback, Nero, and Stiletto. Jack rescues Danger Mouse and Penfold, and they in turn rescue Greenback and friends.

Series 4 (1983)

Series 4 stories were originally each aired in five 5-minute segments over five consecutive days. This series was the longest-lived with 45 episodes. VHS and DVD releases usually see these episodes edited together as one 25-minute episode, although in reality, these omnibus episodes run closer to 20 minutes as they lose David Jason's 'cliffhanger' narration over the "To be continued..." captions. On the VHS and DVD releases, the "Episode 1" suffix in the title card after the opening credits has often been left unaltered. The US DVD releases retain the original 5-min segment format.

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
591The Wild, Wild, Goose Chase
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
3 January 1983 (1983-01-03)
602"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
4 January 1983 (1983-01-04)
613"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
5 January 1983 (1983-01-05)
624"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
6 January 1983 (1983-01-06)
635"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
7 January 1983 (1983-01-07)
Danger Mouse and Penfold are in Hong Kong where they are trying to arrest Baron Greenback. They find a voice-activated computerised device that gives them directions to Greenback's hideout, but in order to get there they have to evade the Hong Kong Tong gang. They then head to a desert pyramid but are chased away by a large mummy. Danger Mouse gets stuck in quicksand while Penfold chases desert mirages. They follow the locator to a jungle and later to the North Pole. It turns out Greenback has used the locator to send the heroes on a wild goose chase all over the world.
646The Return of Count Duckula
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman10 January 1983 (1983-01-10)
657"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman11 January 1983 (1983-01-11)
668"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman12 January 1983 (1983-01-12)
679"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman13 January 1983 (1983-01-13)
6810"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveBrian Trueman14 January 1983 (1983-01-14)
Baron Greenback gets Count Duckula to use his hypnosis powers to turn members of the British Parliament into show-biz crazy entertainers. In exchange, Count Duckula will get a television show. Danger Mouse and Penfold try to foil his plans, at first by repelling him with bad eggs and rotten cabbage, but Duckula eventually captures the two and forces them to watch his variety television show. Agent 57 disguises as an American talent scout to finally give Duckula his big break.
6911Demons Aren't Dull
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
17 January 1983 (1983-01-17)
7012"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
18 January 1983 (1983-01-18)
7113"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
19 January 1983 (1983-01-19)
7214"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
20 January 1983 (1983-01-20)
7315"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
21 January 1983 (1983-01-21)
Danger Mouse and Penfold must face the demon of the fourth dimension. Danger Mouse is transported onto a This Was Your Life television show, where they highlight several clips from previous episodes that show him in embarrassing and incompetent situations. Danger Mouse is distressed and wants to resign, but Colonel K. assures him that the show never transmitted. When the demon transports the famous buildings to his own dimension using a time corridor, Danger Mouse and Penfold head back to the fourth dimension and deal with the surreal weirdness there. They eventually trick the demon into entering between two gateway doors, and have him shipped to Alpha Centauri.
7416150 Million Years Lost
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
11 April 1983 (1983-04-11)
7517"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
12 April 1983 (1983-04-12)
7618"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
13 April 1983 (1983-04-13)
7719"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
14 April 1983 (1983-04-14)
7820"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
15 April 1983 (1983-04-15)
Professor Squakencluck shows off his time machine. However, when Penfold gets too close to the machine's targeted area, he is sucked into the past, 150 million years ago, in exchange for a dinosaur egg. Danger Mouse heads back to look for him. While Squakencluck tries to fix his machine, a Diplodocus who got swapped for Danger Mouse becomes impatient and busts out of the lab. Penfold encounters his ancestors. The prehistoric age gets mixed with the middle ages, causing Danger Mouse to meet an armoured knight. Eventually Danger Mouse is able to return to the present and uses the time machine ray to bring Penfold back to the present but instead of sending the dinosaur back he sends back Nelson's Column.
7921Planet of the Cats
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
18 April 1983 (1983-04-18)
8022"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
19 April 1983 (1983-04-19)
8123"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
20 April 1983 (1983-04-20)
8224"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
21 April 1983 (1983-04-21)
8325"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
22 April 1983 (1983-04-22)
While transporting an unstable serum taken from the Germans, Danger Mouse and Penfold are caught up in lightning storm that causes Penfold to spill the test tube's contents and transports them to the future where the world is ruled by cats who are taking orders from Big Leo, who turns out to be a descendant of Baron Greenback.
8426Four Heads Are Better Than Two
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
25 April 1983 (1983-04-25)
8527"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
26 April 1983 (1983-04-26)
8628"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
27 April 1983 (1983-04-27)
8729"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
28 April 1983 (1983-04-28)
8830"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
29 April 1983 (1983-04-29)
In order to improve productivity, Colonel K teams Danger Mouse up with a robot Penfold, and Penfold with a robot Danger Mouse. The robots prove to be a lot of trouble for the real ones, taking instructions too literally or getting stuck running in circles. Danger Mouse and robot Penfold infiltrate a pinball amusement arcade where they try to find Agent 57 and learn of Baron Greenback's latest plans. But Greenback and Stiletto have been using the place as a secret base. They capture and reprogram robot Penfold, and plan to use the slot machine to hypnotize people so they can take over the world.
8931Tower of Terror
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
9 May 1983 (1983-05-09)
9032"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
10 May 1983 (1983-05-10)
9133"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
11 May 1983 (1983-05-11)
9234"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
12 May 1983 (1983-05-12)
9335"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
13 May 1983 (1983-05-13)
Danger Mouse and Penfold track Greenback down to a New York City skyscraper run by International Oddbods and a guy who wears a bag over his head. Inside, there are all sorts of bizarre things going on. Baron Greenback controls some of it, but then he and Stiletto must flee when they meet a giant gorilla. Danger Mouse gets caught in the gorilla's shenanigans but then the gorilla's day shift ends and they have to deal with the gorilla's replacement.
9436The Great Bone Idol
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
16 May 1983 (1983-05-16)
9537"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
17 May 1983 (1983-05-17)
9638"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
18 May 1983 (1983-05-18)
9739"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
19 May 1983 (1983-05-19)
9840"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
20 May 1983 (1983-05-20)
Count Duckula and Greenback team to find the bone idol, an artifact that supposedly has the spirit of Cerberus and that can control all the dogs in the world. Danger Mouse and Penfold follow Duckula to the Himalayas, but have trouble when they are hanging off a cliff. Duckula buys the mystic stick from a guru. Danger Mouse and Penfold steal the stick from Duckula in the Sahara desert and use it to locate the well that has the treasure but guarded by a herd of elephants. Duckula nabs the treasure box with the bone; Danger Mouse tries to take it back but is unsuccessful. Duckula and Greenback activate the bone, summoning all the dogs in the area, but when Duckula accidentally throws the bone back in the box, it locks itself for another thousand years.
9941Public Enemy No. 1
"Episode 1"
Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
23 May 1983 (1983-05-23)
10042"Episode 2"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
24 May 1983 (1983-05-24)
10143"Episode 3"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
25 May 1983 (1983-05-25)
10244"Episode 4"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
26 May 1983 (1983-05-26)
10345"Episode 5"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
27 May 1983 (1983-05-27)
Danger Mouse and Penfold are pursuing Baron Greenback when Danger Mouse hits his head and suffers amnesia. Greenback and Stiletto convince Danger Mouse that he is actually a Robin Hood-type vigilante known as the White Shadow and Danger Mouse takes up a life of crime. Penfold tries to catch White Shadow using a pill that allows him to move at extraordinary speed, but it wears out. Since White Shadow has beaten Greenback to doing all the major crimes, Greenback and Stiletto also try to stop White Shadow, but fail. Penfold tries to whack White Shadow in the head with a mallet to break the latter's amnesia.

Series 5 (1984)

Series 5 episodes are about 10 minutes each, and originally aired on Mondays with no commercial breaks.

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
1041"The Long Lost Crown Affair"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
20 February 1984 (1984-02-20)
Danger Mouse and Penfold have a day off, but they use it to go through the Amazon jungle to look for the long-lost crown of Questzebottle, an Aztec king who is known for inventing the practical joke. As they enter the ruin, Greenback and Nero wait for them, so they can ambush them. Danger Mouse and Penfold must navigate the ruin's traps. The episode title is a reference to The Thomas Crown Affair
1052"By George, It's a Dragon!"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
27 February 1984 (1984-02-27)
Danger Mouse and Penfold travel to Wales where they must deal with a fire-breathing dragon. It turns out to be a dragon named Jones who is about the same size as them. As per the customs, Jones abducts the damsel in distress (Penfold) and hides in a nice big castle that was offered by Baron Greenback while Danger Mouse strives to be the rescuer knight. When Jones discovers that Greenback was going to take over and enslave Jones, he goes after Greenback instead.
1063"Tiptoe Through the Penfolds"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
5 March 1984 (1984-03-05)
Inside the Royal Albert Hall, Greenback reveals his new invention: a duplication machine he plans to use to make hundreds of Greenbacks so that no-one would find the real one. He creates a duplicate of Penfold to test it; however, the machine malfunctions and he is unable to turn it off. Danger Mouse investigates but has to deal with the endless numbers of Penfolds. Title reference: "Tiptoe Through the Tulips"
1074"Project Moon"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
12 March 1984 (1984-03-12)
Danger Mouse and Penfold journey to the moon to put a radio jamming station Greenback has built there out of operation. While there, Greenback has Stiletto fight them off with some remote controlled mechanical monsters and weapons. Danger Mouse eventually kicks a piece of moon crystal into the base causing it to self-destruct.
1085"The Next Ice Age Begins at Midnight.."Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
19 March 1984 (1984-03-19)
Greenback uses a weather control machine to cover London in 90 metres deep of snow. Danger Mouse and Penfold head to Willesden Green to try to stop him.
1096"The Aliens Are Coming"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
26 March 1984 (1984-03-26)
Danger Mouse and Penfold are chosen as ambassadors to meet space aliens. Danger Mouse greets the robotic-looking alien and then tries to demonstrate a hand shake at a pat on the head, but the alien repeats the action too harshly and pats both Danger Mouse and Penfold into the ground. The alien also zaps Penfold into the space above. Danger Mouse gets angry and tries to fight the alien. Eventually it is revealed that the robot was just a small toy to a gigantic alien's child. The real space aliens conclude there is no intelligent life on the planet and leave. The title is a reference to the quote "The British are coming" attributed to Paul Revere.
1107"Remote Controlled Chaos"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
2 April 1984 (1984-04-02)
Greenback makes a device to control DM's car.
1118"The Man from Gadget"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
9 April 1984 (1984-04-09)
A salesman of gadgets for secret agents tries to sell Danger Mouse devices which will help him in reaching Greenback's hard to reach hideout. Title reference: The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
1129"Tampering with Time Tickles"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
16 April 1984 (1984-04-16)
Greenback develops age-altering bombs which turn Danger Mouse into an over eager youth and puts Penfold on the verge of senility.
11310"Nero Power"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
30 April 1984 (1984-04-30)
Nero gains strange powers (telekenesis), which, he uses to terrorize Danger Mouse and Penfold, after he falls into one of Greenback's inventions.

Series 6 (1984–85)

Series 6 episodes are 10 minutes each, and originally aired on Thursdays with no commercial breaks (except for the first episode, which aired on a Tuesday). 19 of the episodes (Once Upon A Timeslip and 18 other episodes) show the copyright year as 1984, although for eight episodes ("Viva Danger Mouse", "Hear! Hear!", "Multiplication Fable", "The Spy Who Stayed in With a Cold", "Alping is Snow Easy Matter", "One of Our Stately Homes is Missing", "Ee-Tea!" and "Tut, Tut, it's Not Pharaoh!") the year is shown as 1983.

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
1141"Once upon a Timeslip..."Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
25 December 1984 (1984-12-25)
Due to a fluke in the narrator's microphone, Danger Mouse and Penfold are transported to the year 1215, where they have to act out characters from Robin Hood: Starring Danger Mouse as Robin Hood, Penfold as Little John, Colonel K as the damsel in distress, and Baron Greenback as the Sheriff of Nottingham.
1152"Viva Danger Mouse"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
3 January 1985 (1985-01-03)
Greenback harvests Mexico's saguaro cacti and uses them to fill the seat cushions of Britain's leaders, as well as Colonel K's and Danger Mouse's seats. Danger Mouse and Penfold travel to the Chihuahuan Desert to try to stop him
1163"Play it again Wufgang"Brian CosgroveStory by: Nigel Rutter and Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
10 January 1985 (1985-01-10)
Danger Mouse and Penfold go after a mad composer who has destroyed all the world's music. They must rely on an emergency audio cassette player to help them with their latest mission, leading them to have to play the appropriate background music on their adventure.
1174"Hear Hear"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
17 January 1985 (1985-01-17)
Greenback has a device that transmits waves to brainwash people. He brainwashes Colonel K to send Danger Mouse and Penfold on a mission to the South Pole, where they have trouble with a mechanical wild goose that lays explosive eggs. Danger Mouse realizes they've been tricked. On the way to Greenback's lair, Danger Mouse gets brainwashed as well, but Penfold, who has been hard of hearing the entire episode, seems to be immune. Stiletto chases down Penfold, but Penfold falls onto the device and turns it off. It is later revealed that Penfold has been wearing ear plugs.
1185"Multiplication Fable"Brian CosgroveStory by: Brian Cosgrove
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
24 January 1985 (1985-01-24)
Danger Mouse and Penfold meet a space alien who has crash-landed in Birmingham and who has a pet tickle-hi-puss that likes to crawl up Penfold's trouser legs. However, the pet gets loose and whenever there is some physical impact, it multiplies. The episode is a parody of the Star Trek episode, "Trouble with Tribbles"
1196"The Spy Who Stayed In with a Cold"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
31 January 1985 (1985-01-31)
While Penfold is home with a cold, Danger Mouse gets a mission to deal with the Mongol hordes that have recently acquired motorbikes. In Northern Finland, he meets up with Agent 57, who also has a cold and changes form whenever he sneezes, thanks to messing around with a molecular fragmenter device. Together, they manage to fool Baron Greenback and Stiletto, and then stop the Mongols. Title reference: The Spy Who Came in from the Cold
1207"It's All White, White Wonder"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
7 February 1985 (1985-02-07)
Danger Mouse and Penfold find Baron Greenback's hideout, but the Baron has escaped, and Stiletto is left behind in disguise. However, Stiletto gets hit by something that turns him completely white, and somehing almost pulls Penfold down the sink drain. It turns out there is an enzyme monster from the Wonder White Soap Company that is loose in the London drains and turning everything all white.
1218"The Hickory Dickory Dock Dilemma"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
14 February 1985 (1985-02-14)
Danger Mouse and Penfold head to the Tower of London to look for thieves that are after the crown jewels. They find a grandfather clock but when they enter it, they find they are actually in a time machine. They travel to the time of Stonehenge and then to an age where there are sea pirates. They also travel to the future where Danger Mouse encounters a security robot and a kingdom ruled by a large descendant of Penfold.
1229"What a 3 Point Turn-up for the Book"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
21 February 1985 (1985-02-21)
Danger Mouse finds out he needs to hurry to attend an award ceremony, but the Mark III somehow cops an attitude and refuses to be controlled. Danger Mouse and Penfold spent most of the episode trying to chase the Mark III down.
12310"Quark! Quark!"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
28 February 1985 (1985-02-28)
Space alien J. J. Quark announces that he is going to claim the Earth as his. Danger Mouse and Penfold disguise themselves in a horse costume and meet J. J. with intentions to settle with a tour of the Earth and sharing tea. J. J. doesn't want to do so and plans to blast Danger Mouse but J. J.'s robot assistant Grovell, keeps groveling at any mention of his name and gets in the way of the blasts, resulting in falling to pieces and having to get repaired. Penfold ultimately gets out of the costume but when J. J. sees Penfold, he laughs uncontrollably and retreats.
12411"Alping is Snow Easy Matter"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
7 March 1985 (1985-03-07)
Danger Mouse and Penfold must stop Baron Greenback from using a heat ray to melt the polar ice caps to cause a flood so he can make a fortune selling inflatable boats and rubber ducks. They head to the Alps but find that Greenback's lair is blocked by a force field. They sneak in by tunneling in the snow and find themselves in a tunnel where a train knocks them to the secret lair. Danger Mouse tricks Stiletto and Penfold binds him. Danger Mouse then uses a titanium mirror to deflect Greenback's ray gun blast to destroy the lair.
12512"Aaagghg!! Spiders!"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
14 March 1985 (1985-03-14)
Penfold and Danger Mouse are shocked to find a giant spider in their bathroom. All of London has been covered in spider webbing, so Colonel K. tasks Danger Mouse and Penfold to put a stop to it. They discover it is the work of Stiletto, who while Greenback is on vacation in Paris, has been flying around in a vehicle and shooting a ray that enlarges all spiders.
12613"One of our Stately Homes Is Missing"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
21 March 1985 (1985-03-21)
An old English manor was moved away and held for ransom. Danger Mouse and Penfold meet with members of the Building Location and Emergency Expedition Platoon (B.L.E.E.P.) to recover it. The title is a reference to the film: One of Our Aircraft is Missing
12714"Afternoon Off with the Fangboner!"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
28 March 1985 (1985-03-28)
The alien J.J. Quark returns and sends a Fangboner to attack Danger Mouse.
12815"Beware of Mexicans Delivering Milk"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
4 April 1985 (1985-04-04)
Penfold must defeat El Loco after he drugs Danger Mouse's milk.
12916"CATastrophe"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
11 April 1985 (1985-04-11)
Greenback creates a mechanical cat that kidnaps Colonel K.
13017"The Good the Bad and the Motionless"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
18 April 1985 (1985-04-18)
Danger Mouse investigates strange goings-on at Stonehenge only to battle his evil alter-ego. Title reference: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
13118"Statues"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
25 April 1985 (1985-04-25)
Greenback devises a ray that animates London's statues and causes them to wreak havoc.
13219"The Clock Strikes Back"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
2 May 1985 (1985-05-02)
The clock returns with Merlin's predecessor as its passenger and it's up to Danger Mouse and Penfold to stop the wizard from taking over the world. Title reference: The Empire Strikes Back
13320"Ee-Tea!"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
9 May 1985 (1985-05-09)
Greenback has London at a standstill after he steals all of the world's tea. Title Reference: E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial.
13421"Bandits Beans and Ballyhoo!"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
23 May 1985 (1985-05-23)
Unpacking from a holiday in Mexico, Penfold discovers El Loco hiding in his suitcase. El Loco gets loose and goes on a crime spree in London.
13522"Have You Fled from any Good Books Lately?"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
30 May 1985 (1985-05-30)
Penfold's gift from J.J. Quark sets monsters after Danger Mouse and Penfold.
13623"Tut, Tut, It's not Pharaoh"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
6 June 1985 (1985-06-06)
Greenback sets out to steal an ancient Egyptian amulet which Danger Mouse and Penfold have been sent to find.
13724"Lost, Found and Spellbound"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
13 June 1985 (1985-06-13)
Danger Mouse battles a witch doctor when he and Penfold go to rescue Professor Squakencluck whose plane crashed in the sea off China.
13825"Penfold BF"Brian CosgroveStory by: Brian Cosgrove
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
20 June 1985 (1985-06-20)
Penfold swallows Professor Squakencluck's new pill and is turned into a superhero which causes Danger Mouse more problems than usual as he searches for a lost messenger pigeon.
13926"Mechanised Mayhem"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
27 June 1985 (1985-06-27)
Under orders from a supercomputer, all the world's machines mutiny and refuse to do their jobs.
14027"Journey to the Earth's Cor!"Brian CosgroveStory by: Brian Cosgrove
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
25 December 1985 (1985-12-25)
Penfold and Danger Mouse journey to the center of the Earth to stop a loud noise that originates there. Title reference: Journey to the Center of the Earth

Series 7 (1986)

Series 7 episodes are 25 minutes each, and originally aired on Thursdays with no commercial breaks.

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
1411"DM on the Orient Express"Chris RandallStory by: Chris Randall
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
13 November 1986 (1986-11-13)
Danger Mouse and Penfold travel on the Orient Express with a document they obtained from Greenback. Title reference: Murder on the Orient Express
1422"The Ultra Secret Secret"Chris RandallStory by: Jean Flynn
Screenplay by: Angus Allan
20 November 1986 (1986-11-20)
Greenback offers to team up with Danger Mouse in order to thwart an alien invasion.
1433"Duckula Meets Frankenstoat"Chris RandallStory by: Keith Scoble and Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
27 November 1986 (1986-11-27)
Count Duckula teams up with Dr Frankenstoat to take over the world with a vampire magic machine.
1444"Where There's a Well There's a Way"Chris RandallStory by: Keith Scoble and Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
4 December 1986 (1986-12-04)
Danger Mouse is sent to find Merlin's magic ink well which will grant the finder a wish.
However, Copper-Conk Cassidy is on his tail, after eavesdropping the information given from Colonel K, with desires of using the well to rule the world.
1455"All Fall Down"Chris RandallStory by: Keith Scoble and Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Angus Allan
11 December 1986 (1986-12-11)
Danger Mouse must recover plans to a top secret device capable of shattering the world.
The device's blueprint is revealed to be stolen by the snake villain, Mac the Fork, who teams up with his friend, the owl chemist Dudley Poyson, who is capable of inventing the device.
1466"Tide of the Turn"Chris RandallStory by: Chris Randall
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
18 December 1986 (1986-12-18)
Danger Mouse travels to the moon and discovers it has been turned into a scrap yard, which has caused the tide to change and flood the Earth.

Series 8 (1987)

Series 8 episodes were 10 minutes each, and originally aired on Fridays with no commercial breaks. This series was the shortest-lived with just two episodes. Some sources such as the book 'The Guinness Book of Classic British TV' by Paul Cornell et al. list these episodes as theoretically belonging to the fifth or sixth series. It states that some episodes were often held back and not broadcast until years later as part of a repeats season. This would seem to be supported by the copyright information in the end credits, as both are dated 1983 (as per series 5 episodes and some Series 6 episodes).

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
1471"Gremlin Alert"Brian CosgroveStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
20 February 1987 (1987-02-20)
Danger Mouse and Penfold set out to stop the illogical Gremlin from turning Earth's sunlight into darkness.
1482"Cor! What a Picture!"Brian CosgroveStory by: Angus Allan
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
27 February 1987 (1987-02-27)
Greenback uses Penfold to kill Danger Mouse by stealing a picture of Penfold for use in a mind control machine.

Series 9 (1991)

Series 9 episodes were 22 minutes each and originally aired on Thursdays. The show's appearance changed noticeably with this series, now brighter and with altered artwork - most notably to Danger Mouse himself.

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
1491"I Spy with My Little Eye..."Keith ScobleStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
3 January 1991 (1991-01-03)
Danger Mouse and Penfold are sent to the Arctic when Greenback threatens to melt the polar icecaps with sun lamps.
1502"Bigfoot Falls"Keith ScobleStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Jimmy Hibbert
10 January 1991 (1991-01-10)
Danger Mouse and Penfold are sent to track down a huge hairy monster that has been crushing the local villages.
When they find it, they discover he's actually friendly, but suffers from extreme bouts of sore-feet. They get help from the RCMP - Royal Canadian Mounted Podiatrists.
1513"The Statue of Liberty Caper"Keith ScobleStory by: Brian Cosgrove
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
17 January 1991 (1991-01-17)
Danger Mouse is sent to stop Greenback who is behind the theft of America's greatest buildings.
1524"Penfold Transformed"Keith ScobleStory by: Chris Randall
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
24 January 1991 (1991-01-24)
Dr Crumhorn holds Penfold captive and has created a robot duplicate of him (which is far more efficient than the original). At the push of a button, it transforms into a giant machine intent on destroying Danger Mouse and his pillar box. Meanwhile, envious of Crumhorn's own plan, Greenback has Stiletto disguised as Penfold in costume in his attempt to hack into Danger Mouse's pillar box.
1535"A Dune with a View"Keith ScobleStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Jimmy Hibbert
31 January 1991 (1991-01-31)
The Mark III runs out of fuel, leaving DM and Penfold stranded in the Sahara Desert. Title reference: A Room with a View
1546"Don Coyote and Sancho Penfold"Keith ScobleStory by: Chris Randall
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
7 February 1991 (1991-02-07)
While on holiday in Spain, Penfold is kidnapped by a mad Coyote who thinks he is Don Quixote. They go tilting at a windmill that happens to contain Baron Greenback's latest device for world domination.

Series 10 (1992)

Series 10 episodes were 22 minutes each, and originally aired on Thursdays with no commercial breaks. The book 'The Guinness Book of Classic British TV' by Paul Cornell et al. lists these episodes as a continuation of the ninth series. This was the final series of the show's original run.

No.
overall
No. in
series
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
1551"Crumhorn Strikes Back!"Keith ScobleBrian Trueman6 February 1992 (1992-02-06)
Dr Crumhorn returns and uses his transformation pills to turn himself into a little girl in an attempt to get Danger Mouse to break into Fort Knox. This episode is seemingly treated as an introduction to Dr Crumhorn; hence it is a possible prequel to "Penfold Transformed" (in his debut appearance). Title reference: The Empire Strikes Back
1562"Ants, Trees and... Whoops-A-Daisy"Keith ScobleBrian Trueman13 February 1992 (1992-02-13)
Just as Penfold should be meeting his Aunt at the airport, he and Danger Mouse are sent to the Amazon jungle where a tribe have been sacrificing people to The Great Ant God from Ataxia.
Penfold is captured -the tribe thinking his eyebrows are "magic caterpillars"- and things look grim, but then, Penfold's Aunt arrives from a taxi and tells them all to stop playing silly games.
1573"There's a Penfold in my Suit"Keith ScobleStory by: Brian Cosgrove
Screenplay by: Jimmy Hibbert
20 February 1992 (1992-02-20)
Penfold puts on Danger Mouse's suit and can't get out, causing Colonel K to think he is Danger Mouse.
Later, DM and Penfold go to Bratislavakia to find out why all the countries of Central Europe have swapped places.
There, they, Greenback and Stiletto all fall foul of a mystical stone that causes people to swap bodies.
1584"Rhyme and Punishment"Keith ScobleStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Jimmy Hibbert
27 February 1992 (1992-02-27)
Dr Crumhorn "Ka-zonks" DM and Penfold into a hallucinatory world in an attempt to drive them crazy. Title reference: Crime and Punishment
1595"Pillow Fright!"Keith ScobleStory by: Keith Scoble and Jonathan Trueman
Screenplay by: Jimmy Hibbert and Trevor Hyatt
5 March 1992 (1992-03-05)
Greenback attempts to take over England with his latest invention...an army of remote control, allergy causing pillows.
1606"Heavy Duty"Keith ScobleStory by: Keith Scoble and Jonathan Trueman
Screenplay by: Brian Trueman
12 March 1992 (1992-03-12)
Crumhorn invents a chemical that allows him to create land sharks to terrorize London. Things get even more complicated when Penfold eats some of the formula.
1617"The Intergalactic 147"Keith ScobleStory by: Keith Scoble
Screenplay by: Jimmy Hibbert
19 March 1992 (1992-03-19)
A giant spaceship is spotted heading for Earth. It's part of the "Intergalactic 147" snooker game and it wants to pot the Earth into a black hole. This is the series finale.

Notes

  • The first 4 series were all dated 1980.
  • Series 5 was dated 1983.
  • For the syndicated market, notably for Nickelodeon, the first 5 series were all dated 1984.
  • Series 7 was dated 1985.
  • Series 9 and Series 10 were dated 1990.
  • At the end of the 7th, 9th & 10th series, the copyright under the DM logo has changed to COSGROVE HALL PRODUCTIONS instead of the usual 'A Cosgrove Hall Production' logo with a copyright under that caption.

    References

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