15 Cult Sci-Fi TV Series That Ended Way Too Soon

14. The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy

In 1981, viewers were distracted from their digital wristwatches by the hugely improbable adventures of an ape descendant called Arthur Dent, his friend Ford Prefect (who was not, as it turned out, from Guildford), and the two-headed Zaphod Beeblebrox. Oh, and a paranoid android. Along the way, the Earth got demolished to make way for a hyperspatial bypass. But that was fine because Arthur discovered that the planet had been specially built so that mice could run a multi-millennia-long computer program to discover the real ultimate question (to which the answer is, obviously, 42). If none of this makes sense, shove a Babel fish in your ear. Sadly, the pitch-perfect casting of all the main characters, the sublime animation of the Guide's contents, and the genuinely funny jokes were not enough to earn a return to TV for the hitchhiking gang. Douglas Adams, the writer, wanted to make a second TV series using ideas from an aborted Doctor Who script but his plans fell apart for reasons not entirely clear to this day. However, these story ideas were, in the end, used as the basis for the third Hitchhiker's book: Life, The Universe And Everything. So, as the Guide itself would advise, don't panic.
Contributor
Contributor

Mike has lived in the UK, Japan and the USA. Currently, he is based in Iowa with his wife and 2 young children. After working for many years as a writer and editor for a large corporation, he is now a freelancer. He has been fortunate enough to contribute to many books on Doctor Who over the last 20 years and is now concentrating on original sci-fi & fantasy short stories, with recent sales including Flame Tree, Uffda, and The Martian Wave. Also, look for his contribution on Blake's 7 to "You and Who Else", a charity anthology to be released later this year. You can find him on Tumblr at https://www.tumblr.com/blog/culttvmike