“Wolf 359”
Season 2, Episode 8 (40 overall)
Originally aired 11/07/1964
Fifty
years ago tonight, a determined scientist cloned an entire planet and still had
time for cocktails, steaks and sex. Damn, this cat is sci-fi's answer to James Bond.
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The experiment works, and a miniature human race develops and rapidly evolves, its history paralleling that of the earth. Unfortunately, something else develops as well: an evil phantom creature which is able to transcend Dundee Planet and can leave the greenhouse room at will, killing anything it comes into contact with.
The experiment works, and a miniature human race develops and rapidly evolves, its history paralleling that of the earth. Unfortunately, something else develops as well: an evil phantom creature which is able to transcend Dundee Planet and can leave the greenhouse room at will, killing anything it comes into contact with.
Meridith
becomes aware of the creature’s lethality and takes it upon himself to complete
the research alone, sending his wife Ethel to stay elsewhere and firing his assistant
Peter to protect them. He witnesses his tiny offspring gradually succumbing
to the pervasive influence of the entity until, consumed with hatred, they bomb
themselves out of existence. The phantom then turns its deadly attentions to
Meridith.
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Ethel arrives, having experienced a premonition of sorts that Meridith is in trouble. As the entity chokes the life out of him, he begs her to destroy the planet, which she does by hurling a chair through the protective glass of the greenhouse. The miniature planet’s atmosphere dissipates and the creature vanishes.
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RANDOMONIUM
“Wolf
359” began life as “Greenhouse,” a story treatment by Richard Landau (probably best known to genre fans for co-scripting
the 1955 cult classic The Quatermass
Xperiment), and was crystallized into script form by associate
producer/story editor Seeleg Lester.
The five-pronged cast evokes Joseph Stefano’s scripts of season one,
particularly “The Bellero Shield” and “The Forms of Things Unknown,” both of
which are populated by quintets. While “Wolf 359” doesn’t quite attain the
theatricality (or the audacious brilliance) of those earlier efforts, it’s
still a nice subliminal throwback. And with its meditation on human/alien
evolution, it evokes season one’s “The Sixth Finger” as well. The core idea---
a miniature model of an alien planet spawning a demonic entity--- is one of
season two’s more interesting concepts, something the season one gang might've exploited much better... but that's not to say that the episode as is is a failure by any
means.
“Wolf
359” is directed by Laslo Benedek (who
also helmed five Stoney Burkes as
well as “The Man with the Power” and “Tourist Attraction,” both in season one).
Much of season two is brightly lit and relatively flat, so it's a welcome surprise that this week's offering has much to offer in the way of atmosphere and shadows (it feels a bit like season one at times, particular during Ethel's late-night stroll around the house). There's a nice sense of space throughout; ample time is allowed for characters to simply react with silent dread to the impossibility of the ghostlike creature hovering before their eyes, effecting a creepy vibe that never feels like unnecessary padding. Director of Photography Kenneth Peach contributes an awesome first-person POV shot approaching--- and then looking through--- the periscopic viewfinder at
Dundee Planet and it's resident cranky critter, which is generally referred to as the Plag Creature, even though it's never called that in the episode.
The barbecue scene in act one looks like an outtake from a Mad Men episode. We got the men discoursing about bourbon and martinis while Meridith’s wife just sits there looking pretty and doling out canapés (and enduring the thinly-veiled come-ons from her husband’s boss). Speaking of come-ons, what’s with the overlong shot of the Meridiths in bed, stroking one another’s hands in the dark? It’s gotta be an implied sex thing, only a lot more subtle than the customary train going through a tunnel shot.
On a related note, was anyone else driven to distraction by that phallic cactus on the Meridiths’ porch (time stamp 29:38)?
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Science types are probably aware that Wolf 359 is a red dwarf star in the constellation Leo (it's that little orange dot in the middle of the picture at right; thanks, Wikipedia!). Sci-fi nerds like me, meanwhile, know it best as the location of The Borg’s massacre of the Federation fleet in “The Best of Both Worlds, Part 2” on Star Trek: The Next Generation.
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“Wolf
359” was parodied on The Simpsons in
1996 in Treehouse of Horror VII (the
“Genesis Tub” segment). Lisa Simpson unwittingly grows a colony of miniature
people after her extracted tooth is charged with electricity. She observes them
evolving at an accelerated rate and is revered as their benevolent God. In a
nice twist, they regard her obnoxious brother Bart as the devil.
The Plag Creature is one of the subtlest, most minimalist “bears” in the entire series (even less complex than that light-up Christmas tree-topper Eck), but somehow its simplicity serves to enhance its malevolence; it’s as if possessing less detail streamlines the evil that emanates from it. It’s like a spectral Terminator: “It can't be bargained with. It can't be reasoned with. It doesn't feel pity, or remorse, or fear. And it absolutely will not stop, ever, until you are dead.” But it is really simple… so simple, in fact, that I’ll bet a talentless oaf like me could make his own. That’s right, kids, it’s time for another installment of Project Limited, Ltd.!
My first inclination was to somehow pull this off using Kleenex tissues and a lollipop, but it was just too damned small. Here's what I used instead:
To quote Dr. Finkelstein from The Nightmare before Christmas: “(It’s) construction should be exceedingly simple.” But was it? More importantly, did it turn out okay? See for yourself: ladies and gentlemen, I give you--- His Satanic Majesty!
His dork materials:
gloves, balloons, chopstick. Sharpie and Scotch tape not pictured.
I
cribbed Meridith’s climatic showdown with the Plag Creature for The Adventures of Can’t-Miss Craig, a collection
of short films I made way back in 1992. The premise involved a guy (played by
me; I worked cheap) who experiences a crisis of faith and challenges
God to prove his existence by helping him sink difficult basketball shots (this was back in my Christian days, before I became enlightened--- and essentially agnostic if not downright atheist). He
then finds himself cursed with the inability to miss a shot, no matter how
impossible (the moral: don't challenge The Lord thy God, lest thou be ever afflicted. Subtle, eh?). The concept mutates throughout the shorts until the ball itself
emerges as a sentient nemesis. One Halloween night, our
unfortunate hero finally snaps and murders the ball with a butcher’s knife…
only to be haunted by a hysterically stupid in-camera effect intended to
represent the ball’s ghost. Have a look:
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DEJA VIEW
Judging
by the photographic evidence, it appears that the miniature Dundee Planet is a combination
of the Mars from “The Invisible Enemy” and the future Earth of “Soldier.” The
use of the Martian Sand Shark is an interesting choice in particular, given the
fact that Lester’s original script (and maybe Landau’s initial story treatment
too, I dunno) dealt with a miniature duplicate of… yep, you guessed it, Mars.
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GRILL OR BE GRILLED
Ye olde pastime of barbecuing animal flesh, first glimpsed in “Cold Hands, Warm Heart” last month, is depicted again this week, gloriously so: a gorgeous closeup of
sizzling steaks on the grill opens act one. I’m a sucker for a good steak, so
my mouth instinctively began watering when I saw it (it’s watering again as I
type this, in fact). Summer’s long gone, but I’m a staunch supporter of year-round
grilling, so some medium-rare cowboy ribeyes may be on the menu very soon….
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AURAL PLEASURE
Harry
Lubin’s contributions this week include a lovely cue called “Celestial Bodies,”
which sounds vaguely similar to his familiar end title music (“Supernatural"; also heard during the episode this week), chilled out and augmented
with wordless female vocals (think Alexander Courage’s Star Trek theme, which was still a couple of years off in 1964).
Other Lubin pieces underlining “Wolf 359” include “Mental Anguish” (also heard
in “Soldier”), “Hostile Galaxy” (accompanying the Control Voice
prologue intro), “Hostile Space” and “Evil Apparition.”
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DRAMATIS PERSONAE
This
week’s cast all have something in common (besides their appearing together
here): all appeared on at least one of Alfred Hitchcock’s television series.
Cue Charles Gounod’s Funeral March of a
Marionette and read on.
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Jonathan Meridith is played by Patrick O’Neal, whose genre credentials include two run-ins with Rod Serling (“A Short Drink from a Certain Fountain” on The Twilight Zone and “A Fear of Spiders” on Night Gallery). O’Neal also showed up on Alcoa Presents One Step Beyond (“The Return of Mitchell Campion”) and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (“Bed of Roses”).
Sara Shane (Ethel Meridith) has very few genre credits,
and all of them came at the very end of her career. She popped up on Alfred Hitchcock Presents (“The Old Pro”),
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (“Captive
Audience”) and Voyage to the Bottom of
the Sea (“Long Live the King,” which guest-starred TOL alum Carroll O'Connor and was her final acting gig). She’s now known
as Elaine Hollingsworth, controversial holistic medicine proponent and Director of the Hippocrates Health Centre in Queensland, Australia. And yes,
she’s definitely a TOL Babe (she
still looks pretty damn good at 86).
If Ben Wright (Phillip Exeter Dundee)
looks familiar, it’s because he’s already visited The Outer Limits three times before (“Nightmare,” plus he did voice work on “Moonstone” and “A Feasibility Study”). He first blipped on Daystar Productions' radar when he scored a gig
on their pre-TOL series Stoney Burke (“Point of Entry”).
Other genre credits of note include three appearances on The Twilight Zone ("Judgment Night," "Death's-Head Revisited" and "Dead Man's Shoes"), three on The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (“A Home Away from Home,” “Murder Case”
and “Thou Still Unravished Bride”), and one-offs on The
Fugitive (“Nobody Loses All the Time”) and The Invaders (“Summit Meeting: Part 1”).
Peter
Jelicoe is played by Peter Haskell,
whose other genre credits include roles on The
Man from U.N.C.L.E. (“The Mad, Mad Tea Party Affair”), The Fugitive (“Runner in the Dark”), Land of the Giants (“Return of Inidu”), and The New Alfred Hitchcock Presents (“The Canary Sedan” in 1986).
Fans of cheesy horror film sequels may recognize him as the assholish Mr. Sullivan, CEO of Play Pals Toy Company, in both Child’s Play 2 (1990) and Child’s
Play 3 (1991).
Dabney Coleman turns in his third and final Outer Limits performance as James Custer
(you can spot him in “The Mice” and “Specimen: Unknown,” both from season
one). Coleman’s other genre work
includes an impressive four stints on The
Fugitive (“World’s End,” “Nicest Fella You’d Ever Want to Meet,” “Coralee”
and “Approach with Care”), two on The
Invaders (“The Innocent” and “The Saucer”), and two on The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (“Dear Uncle George” and “Isabel”).
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HOME VIDEO RELEASES
“Wolf
359” was released on VHS in 1991 (one of the final dozen Outer Limits episodes
to hit home video) and sported a classy, understated cover. As with many of these tape boxes, the cover image was a collage of multiple images from the episode, in this case these two:
For its inclusion in Columbia House’s mail-order Collector’s Edition club, it shared tape space with “Cry of Silence,” which made for a dry n' dusty desert double feature.
For its inclusion in Columbia House’s mail-order Collector’s Edition club, it shared tape space with “Cry of Silence,” which made for a dry n' dusty desert double feature.
I
have a love-hate relationship with MGM Home Video, and here’s why: they
released the entire series on DVD (season one in 2002, season two in 2003),
which is awesome since one could replace his/her 48-volume VHS collection with
higher-quality versions for a fraction of the cost (SRP was $12.95 per tape,
and each DVD set was around $50.00, so… you do the math, I’m busy typing),
saving large amounts of shelf space in the process. What’s not so awesome is the fact that they used double-sided DVDs, which
have proven immensely unreliable (even prone to failure) over time. They then
re-released the series in 2007, split up into three volumes, which would’ve
been awesome if they’d used single-sided discs… but they didn’t. That’s right,
kids, they foisted the same unreliable double-sided discs onto an unsuspecting
public. A mere year later, they collected those three volumes into one omnibus
collection, still using the same accursed discs. This means that they’ve been
selling the same exact discs for twelve
freakin’ years, and there’s no indication that they’ll ever remaster the
series in high-definition for a Blu-ray release. So I guess my relationship
with MGM is more hate than love.
If
you’re a relatively new fan, or a longtime fan who never bought the series, and
you’re considering seeking out the series on DVD, stop right there. Why would
you give MGM any of your hard-earned cash? You all have computers, and you all
have an internet connection (obviously, since you’re reading this blog), so
point your browser of choice (I prefer Google Chrome, personally) to Hulu,
where you can stream all 49 episodes of the series absolutely free. Too good to
be true, you say? Perhaps… or maybe it’s the universe making up for MGM’s
bullshit.
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MERCHANDISE SPOTLIGHT
Models
are usually more impressive if they’re packed with intricate detail; however,
sometimes simplicity and clean lines can yield something compelling and
beautiful. Case in point: Dimensional Designs’ 1/8-scale resin Plag Creature model
kit (DD/OL/PC-27), an elegant and graceful sculpt by Chris Choin. Obviously there’s no assembly required, and for all I
know the thing is already white out of the box, but damn is it ever gorgeous.
Here’s Mr. Enamel’s completed
specimen, which is just plain breathtaking:
If I
ever get around to collecting some of these (which will require me to employ
someone with finesse, patience and artistic ability to do the painting), the
Plag Creature is definitely on my short list of must-haves. If you’d like your
own Plag Creature, be prepared to pony up $49.95 plus shipping.
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THE WRAP-UP
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“Wolf 359” is one of season two’s better offerings (I’d probably put it in my top five). The premise is intriguing, the effects are well done (that foggy planet behind the glass really adds to the production value), the acting is uniformly good… and yes, the steaks are grilled to perfection. Delicioso!
Oh, and speaking of delicioso.... here are a couple of modeling shots I found online of the breathtaking and exquisite Sara Shane. Le sigh.
Oh, and speaking of delicioso.... here are a couple of modeling shots I found online of the breathtaking and exquisite Sara Shane. Le sigh.