Okay, with "The Duplicate Man" I was actually bored out of my mind. A smuggled forbidden creature escapes and its keeper creates a duplicate of himself to kill the thing. ??? A story by author Clifford Simak and this did absolutely nothing for me. What a yawner. It was amusing to see the show's depiction of the year 2011 and where absolutely nothing resembled our present day. Of course that's really no surprise.
"Counterweight." What was supposed to be the point of this? A group of volunteers embark upon a lengthy simulated space flight to test for human adaptability to extended space travel. Sure personalities clashed and some sort of alien presence is involved, but I couldn't make any sense of this. At the core could be an interesting idea, but it goes nowhere and becomes boring.
"The Brain Of Colonel Barham." In a sense this is representative of some of the cheesy movies of the '50s. It also made me think of TOS' episode "Spock's Brain" because of a conceptual similarity. In "Spock's Brain" a living mind was needed to manage a society's mechanics and technology---actually a worthy science fiction story idea. In this OL episode a living mind is needed to guide or pilot a planned mission to Mars, but problems arise because they use the brain of an egocentric.
I love the rationale that at the time few people believed a computer could be sophisticated enough to carry out autonomous functions and yet many space probes now do it routinely and are getting better all the time. It's also amusing that in an era that had only the most rudimentary of computers anyone could even consider the success of keeping a human brain alive and be able to interact with it through some mechanical interface. Mind you this idea has been used before and since probably most well known in Anne McCaffrey's
The Ship Who Sang. And slow progress is indeed being made in regards to interfacing with the brain. Today such a story would not involve using the actual brain, but rather copying and patterning the the consciousness and downloading that into an artificial mind. Or you'd just use a very advanced A.I. which in the '50s and '60s would be termed a supercomputer.
I'll credit the episode with trying to deal with the idea in a straightforward manner, for the most part. And the acting is generally fine. But the story veers into B-flick territory when the now disembodied brain develops strong telekinetic like powers. The human brain actually generates very little electricity and it would take a helluva boost to amplify its output. Of course this is sci-fi and it can gloss over the details of how things could really work. And, of course, the egocentric personality becomes megalomaniacal. I do love the simple and elegant solution of just firing a bullet into the thing to put it out of everyone else's misery.
Part of me wanted to like this episode because in the beginning it seems to start out well enough, but then it falls into predictability and lost my interest.
"Premonition." An X-15 test pilot and his wife are cast into the future by a weird time warp and faced with trying to find a way back or be trapped forever. I don't think I've ever seen a time travel story done quite like this. But for all its novelty it left me unengaged.
"Probe." Not a horrible swan song for a last episode. An aircraft crew are forced to ditch their plane in the ocean and are picked up by an alien space probe. An interesting twist on the alien abduction theme: being taken by accident. This actually felt kind of like a
Star Trek story at times as the trapped crew try to figure out where they are and how they got there. It kept me curious to see how it played out.
And that makes the whole series. Overall I'd have to say this was a good series with only a very few disappointments and most of those in the last half dozen episodes. The rest ranged in quality from competent to excellent in my opinion.
I will also say that I got the sense the creative minds behind this were performing some sleight of hand. The series sported some B-level material in terms of visuals and depicting aliens and space tech that could give one the impression of shlock if you were just quickly channel surfing past it. But if you paid attention to the execution of the stories and the ideas you could see that the subject matter was treated seriously by the writers, casts and production crew. And you can easily see how this approach to storytelling could be seen as a basic template similar to what Gene Roddenberry seemed to have in mind for his space adventure series. A key distinction though is that Roddenberry wanted to get past any schlock aspects and aim a little higher.
Good stuff.
But now that I'm done with
The Outer Limits I plan on revisiting the original
The Twilight Zone of which I have few memories.