“The
Premonition”
Season 2, Episode 16 (48 overall)
Originally aired 1/09/1965
Fifty years ago tonight, The Outer Limits was facing cancellation. It's probably appropriate that this, its penultimate offering, would dwell on the nature of time.... since the show's time was just about up.


Comparing the X-15’s chronometer against the one in the base’s control room, Jim deduces that the couple were displaced in time and thrust several seconds into the future. Time isn’t actually frozen---- it’s just moving extremely slowly, and will eventually catch up with them. They encounter an iridescent man (the “Limbo Being”) who explains that he, like them, was once displaced in time; however, because he missed the moment of time's re-synchronization, he is eternally trapped in nothingness. The Darcys must be in their respective places--- Jim in the X-15’s cockpit, Linda in her car--- at the precise moment time corrects itself or they’ll face a similar fate.
![]() |
Finally! That MacGyver prequel everyone's been clamoring for. |
Jim ditches the X-15 into the sand, and Linda crashes into the boulder. Both are unhurt but have no memory of their experience. An intangible feeling--- a “premonition”--- sends them rushing back to the base, where they find Janie unharmed.
.
RANDOMONIUM
“The Premonition” began as “Gordian Knot,” a story treatment by Ib Melchior, who wrote “Water Tank
Rescue” and “Voice of Infinity” for TV’s Men
into Space, plus the screenplays for 1959’s The Angry Red Planet (which he also directed) and 1964’s Robinson Crusoe on Mars (a film directed by Outer Limits six-timer Byron Haskin). Said treatment was expanded
into teleplay form by Samuel Roeca,
who would go on to write several episodes of Mission: Impossible and serve as story editor on the third and
final season of Land of the Lost
(which was an awesome show if you were a kid when it originally aired, which I
was… those Sleestaks were fucking cool).
Gerd Oswald, who helmed more Outer Limits episodes than anyone else
(a whopping fourteen), is back for one more ride in the director’s saddle. I
wish I could say his final offering was on par with his earlier brilliance… but
it most certainly isn’t. There’s really not much here: lots of Air Force stock
footage, lots of running around, and a lot of freeze frames depicting frozen
time… nothing impressive. However, I do like the scene with the Darcys walking
through the control room, weaving in and out of frozen folks (which are
actually actors standing still; there's a really nice overhead shot of this tableau in act three), so I guess that’s a good staging effort. The
crashed X-15 mockup looks good, but that’s more of a set design success than a
directorial one. There’s definitely some production value added by shooting on
location at a real Air Force base at Paramount Studios, which looks enough like a military base to fool your average TV-watching idiot (like me; thanks as always to David J. Schow for correcting me), and Director of Photography Kenneth Peach captures it all ably with
minimal flourish… except for some extreme close-ups of William Bramley’s mouth
during the countdown, which is a bit off-putting.
.
It feels like a good five or ten minutes of screen time is used up just showing the Darcys running back and forth repeatedly from the crash site to the base and back again. It doesn’t help that the same few camera angles are used each time (I assume all these sequences were shot together, so Dewey Martin and Mary Murphy--- or maybe their stunt doubles--- must’ve been hot, tired and a bit pissed by the end of the day). Since I have so much time on my hands (ha! Get it?), I threw together a super cut of all the repetitive shots for your amusement (or irritation):
It feels like a good five or ten minutes of screen time is used up just showing the Darcys running back and forth repeatedly from the crash site to the base and back again. It doesn’t help that the same few camera angles are used each time (I assume all these sequences were shot together, so Dewey Martin and Mary Murphy--- or maybe their stunt doubles--- must’ve been hot, tired and a bit pissed by the end of the day). Since I have so much time on my hands (ha! Get it?), I threw together a super cut of all the repetitive shots for your amusement (or irritation):
Okay, so it wasn’t quite five or ten minutes. Sure seems like it,
though. Y’now, Linda’s car didn’t look totaled by any means. Shouldn't they
have at least tried to start it before spending all that time and energy
running back and forth? And how far is it from the crash site to the base? I’m
assuming it’s at least a couple miles.
.jpg)
The Limbo Being is, hands down, the single stupidest “creature” in
the entire series run. It’s not even monstrous… it’s just a guy painted silver
behind a blur filter (at least that’s what it looks like; I have no idea how
the so-called “effect” was actually achieved). He has some kind of weird aura around him that separates him from the rest of the limbo environment.... too much, actually. We never see him interact with the Darcys, which makes me wonder what a shot would look like with all three of them in it... is the aura just some kind of cloud that follows him around? He’s wearing a snazzy
blazer, so at least he looks presentable. And for some unfathomable reason that
has no bearing on anything, he shares Frankenstein’s Monster’s deathly fear of
fire. Why? I couldn’t tell you.
I get that he’s a “prisoner in time,” and that he got that way through
similar circumstances (Darcy’s X-15 is presumably the fastest plane ever built,
so I’m not sure how this sad sumbitch ever managed to go that fast, but
whatever), but that doesn’t explain why he’s at the Air Force base at the exact
time that the Darcys have their time-out-of-whack experience. Did his time
barrier violation event happen there too? Or or did he walk there from… I dunno,
wherever? I guess it’s possible that existing outside of normal time has
some spatial advantages (instantaneous teleportation, maybe), but the fact
that he can’t get past a fucking flare or pass through solid walls suggests otherwise (however, since every door on the base is open, I guess he
could just exit the building another way, right?). And he’s clearly articulate,
so why does he make those creepy boogeyman sounds when he first appears? He’s a
clumsy, ill-conceived convenience, placed in the Darcys’ path for the sole
purpose of telling them (and us) exactly what is happening and how they can
escape (which seems counterproductive, since being so open with them
dramatically reduces his odds of horning in on their escape to facilitate his
own), but his presence only serves to detract from the story. He does, however,
give a damn-near poetic (and admittedly well-delivered) summation of his
wretched existence:
LIMBO BEING:
If you miss your chance to
return, one-millionth
of a second behind time, time
will pass you by, and
leave you where I am now, in
forever now. Black, motionless
void. No light, no sun, no stars,
no time. Eternal nothing.
No hunger, no thirst. Only
endless existence.
And the worst of it? You can’t
die!
Speaking of The Twilight
Zone, they tackled the “frozen time” idea with “A Kind of a Stopwatch (right),” a
pretty dismal entry starring the normally-delightful Richard Erdman as an
obnoxious dweeb who ends up with a magical stopwatch that… well, you know. Rod
Serling and Company also gave us “Elegy” and “Still Valley,” neither of which
deal expressly with frozen time, but do feature large groups of frozen people. The
80’s revival series (unofficially known as The
New Twilight Zone) mined the idea twice: “A Little Peace and Quiet (below left)” is
essentially a pointless remake of the aforementioned “A Kind of a Stopwatch,”
while the clever “A Matter of Minutes (below right)” depicts a couple getting stuck in a limbo state
between two moments in time and witnessing crews of workers constructing the
minute to follow.
.
Check this out: after Jim climbs out of his X-15, he doesn’t notice Linda’s crashed car nearby until he hears her moaning behind the wheel. But here’s the thing: her car is directly in his line of sight two or three times before this moment. The most obvious example can be found at time stamp 11:41, which is supposed to be Jim reacting to the sight of the frozen coyote chasing the jackrabbit, but if you pay attention to the angles and spatial geometry and whatnot, he's actually looking directly at her at this moment, which becomes apparent once you see where exactly her car is. Nitpicking? Yeah, maybe a little. This is what y'all pay me for.
.
As much as I like Dewey Martin, his Jim Darcy comes off as a bit of a dick
when you examine his interactions with his family. After he rigs the seat-belts in the runaway truck, he takes a quick look at his daughter and says, simply
and emotionlessly, “All we have now is hope.” A few minutes later, when Linda
gives him a last “I love you” before time catches up with them, he doesn’t
bother to return the sentiment. After time re-synchronizes and he climbs out of
his wrecked X-15, he makes sure somebody puts the fire out before he even
bothers to see if Linda survived her car crash. And, most egregiously, he
provides The Outer Limits with its
first and only count of spousal battery when he “takes charge” of Linda’s hysteria
by straight up smacking her across the face (talk about putting the "palm" in "Palmville"). There are a few women throughout the series' run that had it coming (I'm looking at you, Vera Finley), but I think Linda's reaction is perfectly acceptable (I'm pretty sure all of us--- male or female--- would lose our shit if everything stopped moving). And don't forget that, just moments before, she was in a car accident and hit her head... so she may very well have a minor concussion. Macho prick.
I love the subtle homo-eroticism on display during Jim’s test
flight. The pilot flying behind him jovially remarks that he's “looking real good from
back here,” to which Jim replies, “I'm glad you're enjoying the view.” I can just picture
these two engaging in some spirited grab-ass in the locker room, and I’m pretty sure this brief exchange inspired 1986's Top
Gun, a film positively drenched in sweat, hair gel and ironic machismo.
.
AURAL
PLEASURE
“The Premonition,” like all second season efforts, is scored by Harry Lubin, drawing from his vast
library of pre-recorded music (much of it came from his previous stint on One Step Beyond). This week’s assortment
includes a few of the more familiar pieces we’ve been enjoying all season, among them: "Dark and Scary," "Dreamy Lullaby," "Haunted Mansion," "Hidey Hole," "Footsteps of the Killer 1" and "Destitute."
“Hidey Hole” is a quick little vibe flourish which, while
initially effective for reinforcing the strangeness of the frozen people the
Darcys encounter, quickly becomes tiresome because it’s used, oh I dunno, about
fifty or so times throughout the episode. I considered watching it again for
the express purpose of getting an exact count, but I came to my senses just in time (ha! See what I did there?).
.
DRAMATIS
PERSONAE
.
Mary Murphy (Linda Darcy) shares in the Robert Culp connection glory, as she too appeared on I Spy (“Any Place I Hang Myself Is Home”). Other notable genre roles include stints on The Fugitive (“Nicest Fella You’d Ever Want to Meet”), Alfred Hitchcock Presents (“A Secret Life”) and Circle of Fear (“Creatures of the Canyon”). She also appeared in the 1951 George Pal film When Worlds Collide, the cast of which also included Peter Hansen from last week’s “The Brain of Colonel Barham. TOL Babe? Most definitely. Yum.
Mary Murphy (Linda Darcy) shares in the Robert Culp connection glory, as she too appeared on I Spy (“Any Place I Hang Myself Is Home”). Other notable genre roles include stints on The Fugitive (“Nicest Fella You’d Ever Want to Meet”), Alfred Hitchcock Presents (“A Secret Life”) and Circle of Fear (“Creatures of the Canyon”). She also appeared in the 1951 George Pal film When Worlds Collide, the cast of which also included Peter Hansen from last week’s “The Brain of Colonel Barham. TOL Babe? Most definitely. Yum.
.
Other than The Twilight Zone,
William Bramley (“Baldy”
Baldwin) hits all our usual genre connections. He appeared on Star Trek (“Bread and Circuses”), The Fugitive (“The 2130” and “A Clean
and Quiet Town”), The Invaders (“Nightmare”),
Alfred Hitchcock Presents (“The
Test”), and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
(“The Tender Poisoner” and “Return of Verge Likens”).
.

.
Li’l Emma Tyson (Janie
Darcy) only has one other genre credit of note: she appeared in “The Trap” on The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. (however, because the series isn't available in even semi-decent quality, I'm using a Green Acres screen cap below... and before you get bitchy, let me just point out that the star of Green Acres, Eddie Albert, also starred in "Cry of Silence" earlier this season; so it's at least an approximate connection). Dorothy
Green, here credited as “Matron” (which we’d call a child care provider
today), also appeared on Boris Karloff’s Thriller (“Rose’s Last Summer”) and
the pilot movie that launched The Six Million Dollar Man. On the big screen,
she can be found in the 1954 Giant-Ants-on-the-Rampage opus Them!, the noir classic The Big Heat (1953) and the decidedly
non-classic Help Me… I’m Possessed
(1976). Finally, Christopher Riordan
(Frozen Soldier) is the only TOL vet
in the cast this week (he played “Young Doctor” in season one’s “The Chameleon,” plus he’ll back next week as “Young Scientist”). Three Outer Limits episodes is impressive, but
he topped that number on The Fugitive
with a total of four: “Man in a Chariot,” “Ballad for a Ghost,” “Brass Ring”
and “The Old Man Picked a Lemon.” Two years later, he’d play another Young
Scientist on the big screen in 1966’s Fantastic
Voyage.

.

.
HOME VIDEO
RELEASES
MGM’s home video releases of Outer
Limits episodes initially followed the series’ production order… for the
first three episodes. After that, they pulled at random from both seasons
(though they did focus on the more familiar, generally superior episodes early
on). When they dumped the final dozen episodes onto the market in 1991, the
red-headed stepchildren that comprised the latter half of the second season---
a group which includes “The Premonition”--- finally saw the light of day.
The VHS series in its entirety is a beautiful collection, and most of the covers therein quite adeptly capture the spirit of their respective episodes quite well (and are gorgeous to behold). And then there's this boring "effort," which probably took all of five minutes to throw together. Yawn. Jim looks like he's falling asleep there... which, now that I think about it, is probably totally appropriate for the episode. Ahem.Here are the two shots from the episode used:
In Columbia House’s mail-order exclusive Collector’s Edition series, the episode was paired with next week’s “The Probe.”
The VHS series in its entirety is a beautiful collection, and most of the covers therein quite adeptly capture the spirit of their respective episodes quite well (and are gorgeous to behold). And then there's this boring "effort," which probably took all of five minutes to throw together. Yawn. Jim looks like he's falling asleep there... which, now that I think about it, is probably totally appropriate for the episode. Ahem.Here are the two shots from the episode used:
In Columbia House’s mail-order exclusive Collector’s Edition series, the episode was paired with next week’s “The Probe.”
“The Premonition” was not among the lucky 28 episodes chosen for
LaserDisc release; however, it was present and accounted for when the series
hit DVD in 2002 (season one) and 2003 (season two). I guess this isn’t really a
special honor, since all 49 were right there with it. Anyhoo--- in 2007, MGM
released the series again, this time splitting it up into three volumes (two
for season one, one for the abbreviated season two). In 2008, they bundled
those three volumes together for a so-called “45th Anniversary
Collection.” In a diabolical act of contempt for their customer base--- or
extreme laziness--- they used the identical discs from the original ’02 and ’03
releases, which means no matter which ones you buy, you’re gonna get the same
shitty DVD-18s (double-sided discs) that nobody uses anymore because they’re
delicate and prone to failure. The same DVD-18s were foisted upon the
Australian market as well, but at least the folks down under were treated to
some neat packaging variations (thanks to David J. Schow for these).
Across the pond in the UK, MGM released season sets basically
identical to the original US sets… except that they used single-sided discs.
This injustice continues to boil my blood and steam my clam (don’t ask).
I assume most of you already own the DVDs, but if you don’t… well,
I can’t really recommend that you buy them at this point, unless you can get
them really cheap (and even then I would avoid used copies like the plague,
given the tendency of DVD-18s to fail over time). If you’re a Hulu Plus
subscriber (at $7.99 a month, why wouldn’t you be?), you’re already covered: as
of two weeks ago, the entire series is available for PC, TV and mobile
streaming.
.
MERCHANDISE
SPOTLIGHT
Dimensional Designs has created high-quality model kits of nearly
every Outer Limits monster and alien
imaginable… but there are a few omissions. The Limbo Being is one, but you
might get a different impression if you visit their website: they have a
listing for a Limbo Being (actually, their name for him is "Limbo Man"; DD/OL/LM-41), sculpted by Sean Samson and Danny
Soracco in the usual 1/8-scale size… however, there’s no picture of it, no
box art, and no option for ordering. It was clearly planned at some point, but
does it exist? I couldn’t tell you. Should it exist? Probably not.
.
THE WRAP-UP
“The Premonition” is ultimately frustrating because there’s a
great idea at its center, but it’s muted considerably by a muddy, repetitive
narrative and an underwhelming, superfluous supernatural being. It’s certainly
not terrible, but it’s nothing close to what it could have--- should have--- been. But The Outer Limits was limping toward its
network-imposed finish line at this point, so I suppose it’s a minor miracle
that it turned out as good as it did.
Woah, I just thought of something: what if the spacious, ponderous narrative is in fact intentionally slow and repetitive, a Christopher Nolan-esque construct designed to convey the desolate emptiness of timelessness? If so, this just might be smartest, most subversive offering of the Brady regime. Okay, probably not. But what if…?