“The Man With the Power”
Season 1, Episode 4
Originally aired 10/07/1963
“Don’t make me angry. You wouldn't like me when I’m angry.” Those immortal words, uttered by Bill Bixby in the pilot episode of TV’s The Incredible Hulk in 1978, could just as easily have come from tonight’s protagonist who, fifty years ago tonight, demonstrated just how violently destructive a seemingly nice guy can be if his id runs unchecked.
“The Man With the Power” introduces us to Harold J. Finley, a quiet, unassuming college professor who has dreams of doing something more substantial with his life. To this end, he’s devised a method of harnessing and directing cosmic energy through the use of a “link-gate” device that he’s had implanted in his brain. Imagine a kid using a magnifying glass to torch ants on a sunny day: in this analogy, Finley is the magnifying glass, all the energy in the universe is the sun, and the ants… well, they’re whoever gets in his way.
Finley can move incredibly heavy objects with his mind, a talent which the space program believes can be useful in extracting otherwise-inaccessible rare elements from asteroids. They’ve got a volunteer (all-American astronaut Steve Crandon) lined up, and he's just rarin' to get his own link-gate installed and get crackin'. Unfortunately, Finley is slowly discovering a horrific downside to his promising invention: deep down, beneath his conscious awareness, he harbors seething resentment issues over his doormat status and, when he feels intimated or threatened, those subterranean negative thoughts can access the energy just as easily as his conscious mind can, manifesting as a crackling cloud of energy that disintegrates those he secretly hates.

RANDOMONIUM
“The Man With the Power” is the only episode written by Jerome Ross; however, director Laslo Benedek will return to helm “Tourist Attraction” in December and “Wolf 359” next season.
Man, I thought Carol Maxwell (“The Galaxy Being”) was a ball-buster. Finley’s wife Vera is a mean-spirited, castrating bitch (check out the framing at time stamp 15:20, in which Vera is trimming a hedge, for a clever visual representation of said castrating). I’m only sorry Finley didn't vaporize her before the big light show at the lab during act four. From now on, every time I feel under-appreciated at home, I’m gonna think of Vera and thank my lucky stars for Teresa, my gorgeous and patient wife. I could’ve ended up with SO much worse….


A moment of weirdness: near the end of act two, when Vera has made Crandon (whom Finely has invited to dinner) uncomfortable enough to leave, Finley walks him to his car. Finley appears to be making feeble excuses for the iron maiden he calls a wife, but his dialogue is completely inaudible under the sound of the Energy Cloud gearing up off camera. This may have been intentional, some attention-getting avant-garde move, but it comes off as an amateur mistake. Why couldn't we have both on the soundtrack? The DVD doesn't have subtitles, fer crissakes.
Once you get to know her, she's really quite--- oh, fuck it. Just kill me now.

So far, each episode has featured distinct underscore during the episode-specific credits (at the start of act one); this week, we’ll instead hear an electronic buzzing, augmented with a reverby “magic wand” sound (I don’t know how else to describe it). This will be standard through the rest of the series; in season two, the magic wand sound will be dropped and we’ll hear only the aforementioned buzzing. Here, see (well, hear) for yourself:
TEASE ME
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I can’t speak for the syndication prints, but on all the home video releases of the previous three episodes "The Galaxy Being," "The Hundred Days of the Dragon," and "The Architects of Fear"), the show’s opening title sequence has been inexplicably moved in front of the prologue, which creates a structural anomaly that doesn't match the rest of the series. I suppose such tampering could be the culprit here too, except for the confounding fact that there is a teaser attached to this episode. Maybe it was done after the original broadcast but before the summer repeat, for conformity’s sake? Hey, that could be it… but it still doesn't explain the other three not having a teaser in evidence. Oh, my aching head.
AURAL PLEASURE
“The Man With the Power” doesn't feature an original score; actually, it doesn't have much music in it at all. We hear a cue from “The Architects of Fear” (“Allen Leighton,” which is the music heard when Allen’s name is drawn for the Thetanization makeover; it's used here as a bridge in act three between the scene of Finley talking to Dr. Hindemann and Finley at home with Vera). Two cues from "The Human Factor" follow ("Building Terror" and "Phone Call"), and, fittingly, "The Big Finish" cue from "The Borderland" plays during the climax. Interesting to see (well, hear) these cues prior to the broadcast of the episodes they were actually composed for.
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
Donald Pleasance is quite good as Finley; it’s easy to believe a meek and nonthreatening guy like him could have dark impulses seething behind his bland and forgettable persona (wait, does that make me sound like a Vera?). He also turned in a memorable performance as Professor Ellis Fowler in “The Changing of the Guard” on The Twilight Zone (in fact, his urging to astronaut Steve Crandon to “make (his) mark while (he’s) young” sounds like nothing if not a Fowlerism). Genre fans may also remember him from his roles in Fantastic Voyage and THX 1138, but he’s probably best remembered as Dr. Sam Loomis in the early Halloween films. To me, he’ll always be Ernst Stavro Blofeld in one of my favorite James Bond outings, 1967’s You Only Live Twice.

Douchebag Dean Radcliffe is played by Edward C. Platt in the first of three Outer Limits appearances. We’ll see him later this season in “The Special One” and next season in “Keeper of the Purple Twilight.” He also appeared on The Twilight Zone (“A Hundred Yards Over the Rim”).
Intrepid astronaut Steve Crandon is played by Fred Bier in his only TOL gig. He also showed up on The Twilight Zone in “Death Ship,” one of its greatest offerings but, for our purposes, we’re most interested an appearance he made on Burke’s Law in 1965, an episode called… “The Man with the Power”!


HOME VIDEO RELEASES
Nine, count ‘em, nine distinct video releases have featured “The Man With the Power.” It was one of the very first episodes ever released on VHS way back in 1987 (along with “The Galaxy Being” and “The Hundred Days of the Dragon”), in an old school oversized plastic clamshell case. The rest of the series was subsequently released in regular (but gorgeous) cardboard slipcases, so the episode was re-released later to match. It received another VHS release in the late 90’s with, um, revised artwork (the standard blue box was so much nicer).
It was also made available, mail-away club style, from Columbia House. Their VHS volumes contained two episodes each; "The Man With the Power" was paired "The Forms of Things Unknown." In the UK, the episode was paired with last week’s “The Architects of Fear.”
The episode was included in the third LaserDisc collection in 1994. Of the four total LD collections, this one has the least TOL-looking cover (except for the logo, ‘natch). I never had a player, so my LD knowledge is more or less nil. Do LaserDiscs have menus screens, like DVDs, or do they just play straight through like VHS tapes? If they do have a menu structure, are they similar to those on the later DVD sets? Anyone?
It’s shown up on DVD three different times: in the season one boxed set in 2002, the volume 1 set in 2007 (which comprised the first half of season 1), and the complete series boxed set in 2008 (which is probably just the three 2007 volumes combined into one box; I couldn't say for sure because I bought the original season releases the day they came out (true fan here), so I skipped the later releases.
And finally, MGM has made the series available for standard-def streaming on Hulu, but they have no apparent interest in future-proofing this groundbreaking and highly-influential series by remastering it in high definition. Yes, I’m bitter about the fact that it’s not available on blu-ray, and yes, I’m gonna keep bitching about it every single week.
TRADING CARD CORNER
Harold J. Finley (and his cloud of electric doom) has never been depicted on a trading card. Had Rittenhouse made it past their first series (which featured eight episodes), they might’ve gotten around to it eventually. And I guess Donald Pleasence isn't really monstrous enough to warrant a Topps card, so there ya go.
MERCHANDISE SPOTLIGHT
Not a goddamned thing here either, unless you count the listing on the Dimension Designs website. Harold J. Finley has been assigned a serial number (DD/OL/HF-43), but there’s no picture, no sculptor, no release date, no nothin.’ I sent them an email about a week ago, and they have yet to respond. So until I see something concrete, I’m gonna say this episode has never inspired any merchandise whatsoever.

Dimensional Designs does offer a model kit of the Energy Being from “It Crawled Out of the Woodwork,” which is basically an evil electrical cloud creature like Finley’s Energy Cloud, so there’s certainly a precedent for a formless, nebulous creature getting the model treatment. Or I dunno, maybe they’re too similar to do both.
Related?
THE WRAP-UP
“The Man With the Power” is worthwhile, but it’s by no means essential Outer Limits. Performances are good, effects are good, story is… well, pretty good, but nothing earth-shattering. No matter what, it’s a big step down from the brilliance of “The Architects of Fear” last week. If it had aired later in the season, say after “Specimen: Unknown” or “Production and Decay of Strange Particles,” it'd probably seem a whole lot better.
One final thought: Finley and Dr. Keenan are dead, sure, but can’t the other scientists just build another link-gate device and continue the project? Who’s to say Finley’s sacrifice will make any difference whatsoever? He probably should've had his cloud destroy the entire complex.