During lockdown, I started to spend some of my time watching 70's horror anthology shows that I could find on free streaming services. After a bit of time away, I decided it was time to try and find another totally random one and after a bit of searching, I ended up on "Tales of Unease", a series produced by London Weekend Television and airing in 1970. I've written reviews for each episode of this, but I thought I'd also put something here about the series in general.
A strange woman disappears from the back of a motorcyclist giving her a lift. Two men are stuck in their offices by the automated services to the building. Three men are trapped down a collapsing mineshaft. A woman locks her dismissive husband in his study. A couple looking to buy a London house ignore the warnings of the current tenant. An author meets big fans of his most controversial work and a couple try to abandon their old car across London.
As it's an anthology series, it's perhaps not surprising that my enjoyment of the episode was varied. The episodes "It's too late now" and "Bad Bad Jo Jo" were probably my favourite, with "The Black Goddess" and "Ride, Ride" at the other end of the scale. Though it doesn't quite have the guest stars that some of its contemporary series do, the performances are generally really good and in one case, Rachel Kempson in the "It's too late now" episode, truly exceptional.
What the series overall did lack though was some sort of underlying theme or uniting premise behind the decision to tell these particular stories. A few have a direct supernatural element, a couple some vaguer form of otherworldliness and a couple don't have anything like that and are pure human stories. It's perhaps interesting that, whilst I wouldn't describe any of these episodes as being particularly scary, it's the outcome of one of the "human" ones (Bad Bad Jo Jo) that has stayed with me the longest.
Despite them all being (currently) available on Youtube the series is a bit too hit and miss and I'd say that, unless you're a completist for anthologies from this era, it's probably not worth your time.