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Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9786301971485
Format: Black & White, NTSC
ISBN: 6301971485
Label: MGM (Video & DVD)
Languages: EnglishOriginal LanguageAnalog
Manufacturer: MGM (Video & DVD)
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: MGM (Video & DVD)
Release Date: September 26, 1995
Running Time: 60 minutes
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
Theatrical Release Date: September 16, 1963
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This is the sixth and one of the best episodes of the series, from start to finish.
Joe Reardon (Karl Held) is an astronaut who somehow passes through a time warp in space, and lands on Earth during the year 2148. He is confronted by another person (Martin Landau), who is genetically mutated for his time. He explains to Reardon that a man named Bertram Cabot Jr. created a microbe that destroyed the entire planet. Reardon decides that he and the creature should travel back in time so ...
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"The Architects of Fear" and "The Man Who Was Never Born" are the only episodes of the 60's anthology that underneath the otherworldly trappings was a love story.
Martin Landau ("Andro") stars as an Earthman from the future that travels back in time to prevent the birth of a man destined to destroy humanity as we know it. Along the way he falls for "Nicole" (Shirley Knight), the woman that would become the mother of Earth's destroyer. Both actors show why they have been a theatrical ...
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Easily one of OL's top five episodes. The effects are rancid, but the story is so well written, acted, and produced, you won't care. It's a study in the suspension of disbelief that will completely draw you in, and leave you with your jaw dropped - it has probably the most haunting ending of any entry in the entire series.
Martin Landau was the ideal choice to play Andro, who travels eighty-five years back in time to prevent a sterilizing and disfiguring biological warfare plague from ...
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One thing I liked a lot about Outer Limit was the viewer could never be sure where the story was taking him. Unlike series TV where you might lose a Star Trek private but NEVER a regular, with Outer Limits there were NO REGULARS, so they could tell the tale anyway they wished. They do so here in a great form, as the story keeps twisting in ways one may not expect. This is a very thoughtful episode with many touching moments. And who does not want to root for the beast to win the gal?
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This Outer Limits episode written by Anthony Lawrence and directed by Leonard Horn, is probably as seminal as The Zanti Misfits, but while this one too features a hideous monster, it also uses Conrad Hall's soft-focus lighting to create a romantic fable. As an inhabitant of the wasteland earth of the future, a vision which predates Planet of the Apes, Martin Landau has the opportunity to travel back in time and change destiny. Landau's English accent and Shakespearean intensity is right for his futureworld ...
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