On July 6, 2019, I had the honor of appearing on Victor Gamboa’s wonderful Outer Limits podcast, where he grilled me at length about my blogs, podcast, and Outer Limits Blu-ray commentaries. We had a great chat, which you can hear for yourself here. The conversation felt (to me, at least) like a kind of summation on that third item… the work was done, both season sets had been released, we’d been honored with a Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Award, and… that was it. Hashing it out with Victor seemed to place a nice marker at the end of eight years of exploring my beloved Outer Limits. It was time to rest.
Ha! cackles the universe.
A mere six weeks later, DJS notified me that the Australian label Via Vision was planning their own Outer Limits Blu-ray release Down Under, licensing Kino’s supplements in the process. This presented an interesting opportunity to make the supplemental package even more robust (no mean feat, given the extensive treasure trove already extant). He had a couple of new pieces brewing, including The Unknown Unknown, a fascinating glimpse into a newly-discovered early draft of Joseph Stefano’s “The Forms of Things Unknown” teleplay that includes an actual monster (or bear, in Outer Limits parlance, which is referred to as, simply, The Form; you can read this version in From the Inner Mind to... the Outer Limits Scripts of Joseph Stefano, Volume 1, edited by Dave Rash for Gauntlet Press).
But DJS wasn’t stopping there. He wanted to provide even more exclusive content in the form of... that’s right, kids: more audio commentaries, which would be grafted onto the existing Kino disc masters. We’d do a total of three: Film historian and audio commentator of renown Tim Lucas would provide a new track for “The Hundred Days of the Dragon” (to compliment Dr. Reba’s Wissner’s existing track), and DJS and I would join forces for “The Architects of Fear” and “The Man Who Was Never Born” (both of which already had tracks by Gary Gerani). Why didn’t we cover episodes that didn’t get commentaries the first time around? Valid question, that. As I recall, Lucas had already expressed a desire to explore “Hundred Days,” and... hell, he’s Tim Lucas, so he can basically call his own shots. And it goes without saying that both "Architects” and “Man/Born” are two of the greatest---- if not the greatest--- episodes of the entire series, so both were/are absolutely worthy of additional exploration. So that was the plan, to be executed over the following few months.
So that was mid-August. About a month later (September 13, 2019), Kino took home another prestigious honor--- this time the coveted Saturn Award, which is presented annually by the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films, who had deemed the Outer Limits Blu-rays worthy of the Best DVD or Blu-ray Television Movie or Series Release (2018-2019) prize.
Look at that thing! Gorgeous.
So over the next couple of months DJS and I did some preliminary work on our new tracks for Via Vision, and I found myself increasingly doubtful that I could actually pull it off. See, he’s a natural at this kind of thing---- delivering what amounts to a casual lecture with nothing more than a sheaf of notes to periodically glance at--- but me? I need to script everything out in advance, pre-timed down to the second, without improvised comments and nothing off-the-cuff. It seemed daunting (if not downright impossible) to somehow marry our disparate approaches successfully, so he graciously agreed that we'd tackle the tracks separately--- he’d do “The Architects of Fear” and I’d take “The Man Who Was Never Born,” each of us armed with whatever notes the other had assembled thus far. And I’ve gotta say--- we made the right choice. Schow’s "Architects” track is nothing short of stellar, and my “Man/Born” effort.... well, it might be my best Outer Limits track of the eight I’ve done (or it is nine? Stay tuned). And Schow and I would get the chance to record together... but we’ll get into that in a couple of weeks.
Next time: Hey, Nice Package.
Lovely. I hasten to point out, though, that Kino-Lorber RE-released their Blu-ray sets this year as a two-box all in one ... less the booklet(s). (DJS)
ReplyDeleteWHOOPSY, I fucked it up again. They rereleased both seasons again, but not packaged together. (DJS)
ReplyDeleteYeah, this should be addressed. See next post.
DeleteThe ViaVision set aside - which I really want, so I hope they do decide to do another run, as it sounds like the definitive TOL release (or as near as we're going to get) - the Gauntlet book of TOL scripts is big news for me (and has very swiftly been ordered). Outside of enlightened fan circles, Joseph Stefano is not really accorded the status he ought to have as a writer, so this book goes a small way to rectifying that. Really looking forward to reading. Please keep us acolytes appraised of any news for a Vol. 2!
ReplyDelete