“Keeper of the Purple Twilight”
Season 2, Episode 12 (44 overall)
Originally aired 12/05/1964
Fuzzy alien invasion plan? Check. Wacky rubber alien masks? Check.
Tasty female morsel on hand to serve cocktails and faint on cue? Check. Fifty
years ago tonight, these elements meshed to create the weird and often
hysterically goofy “Keeper of the Purple Twilight.”
Professor Eric Plummer is on the verge of a breakdown trying to
solve two equations that will make viable his matter disintegrator invention.
After a warning from Karlin, his immediate superior, that his funding is in
jeopardy due to his lack of results, Eric recklessly speeds home, clearly at his wits’ end. “You gain
nothing by suicide,” advises a disembodied voice from the backseat, snapping
him out of his dark reverie.
The disembodied voice belongs to Ikar, an alien who can turn
invisible and/or assume human form, who has stowed away in Eric’s car. Back at
Eric’s home office, Ikar explains that he is an advance scout from an invasion
force planning to annex the Earth to handle their overflowing population. He
offers a trade: he’ll give Eric the two equations he needs in exchange for his
emotions, which Ikar will absorb and study to better understand humanity. The
frustrated Eric eagerly agrees.

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from left: Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego. |
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This shot inspired Boy George to write the Culture Club classic "I'll Tumble 4 Ya." Y'now, probably. |
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RANDOMONIUM


“Keeper” exists in that same gee-whiz rocket-jock B-movie subgenre
as “The Invisible Enemy,” only here the whole vibe is jacked up to eleven. It’s
screwy and silly and it doesn’t give a single damn if you don’t like it. I have
to respect it somewhat for that reason, and it’s certainly nowhere as awful as
“Behold Eck!” (sorry, Bill) or “Expanding Human.” In its final produced form,
“Keeper” is probably exactly what ABC wanted when they greenlit the series two
years earlier, but never quite got from the Stevens-Stefano gang. Unfortunately,
by this time the network was more or less ready to pull the plug, so they
probably didn’t experience any late-in-the-game warmth toward Daystar for this
effort.
“Keeper” brings us yet another stupid alien plot with no possible
resolution but total failure. Is it really wise to give humans the necessary
knowledge to build the matter disintegrator, and then have them build it for
you? Seems unnecessarily reckless. And once Ikar and his Gang of Three are
dispatched and the weapon prototype is destroyed, what’s to stop the aliens
from simply trying again? Hell, why do they even need the weapon at all? They
can simply teleport themselves to Earth en masse and easily take over
using their squiggly lasers and powers of invisibility.
What’s with that funky metal mobile hanging in Eric’s office?
It seems to exist solely for Ikar to demonstrate his telekinetic
abilities, which he implies humanity will possess in another thousand years.
This becomes a bit confusing after Ikar relieves Eric of his
pesky emotions, at which point Eric seems to possess the same telekinesis. Has the removal of his emotions thrust him a thousand years further along in
man’s evolution? Quick, somebody count this guy’s fingers.
The idea of Ikar teleporting the entirety of Eric’s emotions into
his own head is ludicrous (too bad we don’t get an “Inheritors”-style push-in
when he does it.). He knows nothing about human emotions, yet he somehow knows
exactly where they reside in Eric’s Brain and has no difficulty whatsoever telepathically
excising them. Even sillier, he’s able to incorporate them into his own brain,
which isn’t human and most likely isn’t a neurochemical match with Eric’s. Yes,
I’m nitpicking instead of just rolling with it and enjoying myself. I make this
sacrifice for you, dear reader, so you can enjoy it without thinking too hard.
You’re welcome.
We’ve already seen Ikar pass through solid objects (the fence in
the prologue, various doorways, etc.), so why does he need to open
the door to exit Eric’s car? He’ll use teleportation repeatedly throughout the
episode, but for some unfathomable reason he doesn’t think to use this talent
when the alien soldiers are chasing him. And why does he lift that big heavy matter
disintegrator instead of simply moving it with his mind?
We don’t see much of Ikar in his native form, which is a shame
because it’s such a gorgeous alien design. Ikar is one of the more iconic
creatures in the Outer Limits oeuvre,
and rightfully so. I really dig those long, slender fingers (Star Wars fans
will no doubt notice that bounty hunter Greedo has very similar hands) and his
bulbous, oversized head. He’s a compelling mash-up of the super-evolved Gwyllm
Griffiths from “The Sixth Finger” (head and fingers) and the “Chameleon” aliens
(multi-gilled mouths and groovy disco jumpsuits)… but what the hell is up with
the metal claws of the alien soldiers? Are they cybernetic attachments (they
appear to have some kind of laser weapon built into them), or just really
uncomfortable gloves? Or… are they born
with them? In any case they’re clunky and silly-looking, which is unfortunate since
the soldiers are otherwise well thought out: their bodies are larger and stronger,
necessary for battle, and their heads are smaller, befitting of their
(presumably) smaller brains. The facial features between Ikar and the soldiers
are essentially the same, but they look nothing alike; it’s an effective
illustration of how minor shifts in proportion can dramatically alter
appearance.
I should note that, despite the physiological differences, both Ikar and his soldiers wear the same groovy semi-sparkly outfits and clawed metal boots….unless those are their actual feet. Fuck, I dunno. If they are boots, they look damned uncomfortable. These boys need some Uggs, and fast.
Ikar’s attraction to Janet is neither developed nor explored,
which is a shame. When he laments that he “doesn’t want to feel what’s
happening to” him, we all know what’s really going on: he’s got his first
boner, and the poor schmuck has no clue whatsoever what he's supposed to do with it. This story would no doubt be told
very differently if remade for the new Outer
Limits by those soft-core Showtime folks.
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AURAL PLEASURE
“Keeper” contains a fairly broad range of selections from Harry Lubin’s library of stock compositions.
“Haunting Trautonium I and II” perfectly underline the mysterious prologue
described above, while the raucous “Suicide Attempt” is used for both Eric’s
reckless drive home in act one and the climactic showdown at the end of act
four. Other cues used this week include the lovely “Floating Dream” and the
bombastic “Evil Horror.”
The Trautonium is an electronic instrument (similar to the
better-known Theremin), which is probably best known for producing the bird
sounds in Alfred Hitchcock’s 1963 avian nightmare The Birds. The curious among you can learn more here.
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DRAMATIS PERSONAE
Wow, Warren Stevens and Gail Kobe don’t get credit at the top of
the episode? Don’t get me wrong, Robert Webber is fine and all, but he sure as
hell isn’t carrying the whole show.
Ahem. Webber first crossed paths with Daystar Productions when he appeared
in the “Spin a Golden Web” episode of their pre-TOL series Stoney Burke (the guest cast of which also featured TOL alums Salome Jens and John Anderson). Other genre stints include The Fugitive (“The Garden House”), Alfred Hitchcock Presents (“A True
Account,” “Burglar Proof” and “First Class Honeymoon”), Boris Karloff’s Thriller (“Portrait without a Face”),
and Alcoa Presents: One Step Beyond
(“The Captain’s Guests”). I know him best as Cybill Shepherd’s father on TV’s Moonlighting (1985-1989).
Genre fans should be quite familiar with Warren Stevens (Professor Eric Plummer). Like Webber, he appeared
on Stoney Burke (“Bandwagon”), Alfred Hitchcock Presents (“Premonition”
and “Never Again”) and Alcoa Presents:
One Step Beyond (“The Riddle”); you can also spot him on both the original Twilight Zone (“Dead Man’s Shoes”) and
its 80’s revival (“A Day in Beaumont”). Sci-fi fans probably know him best from
Star Trek (“By Any Other Name”), and
of course he was Lieutenant “Doc” Ostrow in 1956’s Forbidden Planet. He’s also the first of two cast members this week to score
the coveted Robert Culp connection for his appearance on I Spy (“The Time of the Knife”).
Gail Kobe is radiant and delightful as
Janet Lane in her second Outer Limits
trip (she played a different Janet in season one’s “Specimen: Unknown”). Like
Webber and Stevens, she showed up on Stoney
Burke (“Sidewinder”) and Alfred
Hitchcock Presents (“Crack of Doom”); her other notable genre connections
include three Twilight Zones (“A World of Difference,” “In His Image” and “The Self-Improvement of Salvador Ross”) and one Fugitive (“Ticket to
Alaska," whose guest cast also featured TOL alums Geraldine Brooks and Tim O'Connor). And in case I haven’t been clear enough, she is absolutely, positively, doubtlessly, unequivocally a TOL Babe.

If Curt Conway
(Franklin Karlin) looks familiar, it’s because we saw him get barbecued by angry
Grippians in season one’s “Moonstone.” Like the trio of thespians above, he
appeared on Stoney Burke (“The Mob
Riders”), as well as The Twilight Zone
(“He’s Alive”), The Fugitive (“Nicest
Fella You’d Ever Want to Meet," whose guest cast included TOL alums Dabbs Greer, Read Morgan and Dabney Coleman), and The
Alfred Hitchcock Hour (“Terror at Northfield” and “Beast in View”).
Edward Platt (David Hunt) should be even more
familiar, as we've seen him twice before (“The Man with the Power” and “The Special One,” both in
season one). Platt’s other genre work includes roles on The Twilight Zone (“A Hundred Yards over the Rim”), Alfred Hitchcock Presents (“Museum
Piece”; he also had a minor role in Hitch’s North
by Northwest in 1959), Men into Space
(“From another World”) and Alcoa
Presents: One Step Beyond (“The Burning Girl”).
Mike Lane is the guy inside the Ikar suit,
and he’ll suit up again in two weeks as the Megasoid creature in “The Duplicate
Man.” My (admittedly limited) research only turned up two other genre TV gigs:
he played Daddy Long Legs on TV’s Batman
in 1965 (“Black Widow Strikes Again”/”Caught in the Spider’s Den”) and Frank N.
Stein in the short-lived Monster Squad
series in 1976. On the big screen, he played the grizzled cipher Fats in the soft-core Penthouse thriller A Name for Evil (1973), a film whose score was
composed by TOL musical legend
Dominic Frontiere and whose cast was headed up by a very naked Robert Culp (!).
Ah, those wonderful alien soldiers! Hugh Langtry’s Hollywood career was short
(1959-1967), and his two Outer Limits
gigs were his only forays into sci-fi/fantasy/horror. Two? Why yes, kids:
Langtry was also the guy in the Chromoite suit in season one’s “The Mice” (he
also had a bit part as a beatnik in the 1960 Jerry Lewis vehicle Visit to a
Small Planet, but I’m not inclined to call that legitimate sci-fi). Eugene "Gene" Wiley
and LeRoy Ellis, meanwhile, weren’t actors at all…
they were professional basketball players for the LA Lakers. Ellis is of particular interest
to Oregonians like me because he also played for the Portland Trail Blazers during
their very first season in existence (1971-1972). Ellis spent most of his later life in Oregon, particularly the little town of Scappoose, where he died
of prostate cancer in 2012. Now, I joke a lot about All Things Proctology in these
pages, but seriously, guys… it’s no joke. Get checked!

HOME VIDEO RELEASES
“Keeper of the Purple Twilight” was one of the first Outer Limits episodes released on home
video, arriving in March 1988 in the third wave of VHS cassettes, along with
“Demon with a Glass Hand” and season one’s “The Zanti Misfits.” These three
volumes included a semi-cheesy promotional trailer, which I already shared once… but I’ll share it again here.
The episode was paired with the moody and literate “The Bellero Shield” for its Columbia
House Collector’s Edition appearance… a fish-and-red-wine combination if there
ever was one. They even had the unmitigated gall to put "Keeper," a loudmouthed brat by comparison, first on the tape!
“Keeper” subsequently showed up on LaserDisc in 1995 as part of the fourth and final collection in that big, beautiful niche format that never really took off... instead, it mutated into something that rendered both itself and VHS obsolete. You know it as…
…DVD! “Keeper” arrived on this exciting new format in 2003, along with the rest of the second season, in one compact three-disc set (much more convenient than lugging 18 VHS tapes around, right?), which was later re-released as “Volume 3” in 2007. Finally, the entire series was released as one omnibus package in 2008. Obsessive collectors needn’t bother tracking down all three DVD iterations, unless packaging variations float your boat: the discs in all three sets are identical. No new content, no new transfers, no new special features, no new nothin’.
You can also view the episode on Hulu. In fact, you can stick around and watch all 49 episodes of The Outer Limits while you’re at it, absolutely free of charge (note that their banner uses the same "Keeper" image as the cover of the third DVD volume from 2007). The only caveat, and it’s only slightly obnoxious, is that you’ll have to wait through randomly-placed commercials that you can’t skip. But hey, those lucky folks who saw the show in its original run, or discovered it later in syndication (like me), had to deal with the same minor annoyance. Call it a cross-generational karmic balancing and quit yer bitchin’.
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TRADING CARD CORNER
Topps released their near-legendary Monsters from Outer Limits trading cards in 1964, which focused exclusively on monsters and aliens found in the show’s first season… except for Ikar and his big beefy soldiers, which somehow made the cut. They can be found on cards 27-29, providing the second half of a six-card story arc that used the “Chameleon” aliens for the first half. Weird, right?
Behind Transmission Control’s David and Mark Holcomb created four additional (and quite apocryphal) cards in the Topps style, two of which we’ve already covered (The Man with the Powder from “Controlled Experiment” and The Spineless Ones from “The Guests”). I’m delighted to share the third card this week (note that they chose gold for the jumpsuits, which will make sense in just a minute)...
We’ll unveil the fourth and final Holcomb card in two weeks, when we dig into “The Duplicate Man.”
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MERCHANDISE SPOTLIGHT
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Season two is woefully underrepresented in the collectibles realm; however, “Keeper of the Purple Twilight” has spawned a number of artifacts for your acquisition pleasure. First and foremost, Sideshow Collectibles released a very attractive two-pack of 12” action figures (Ikar and Ikar’s Soldier) commemorating the episode back in 2002. Unlike their glorious Zantis or the Andro/Helosian two-pack, this set is extremely easy to track down cheap (I think I paid $30.00 for mine a year or so ago--- shipped and everything--- which was probably less than its original MSRP). Note that the color scheme evokes the Topps cards, but with gold jumpsuits...
The sculpts are pretty much dead on, and the detail is marvelous. I have two gripes---- the Soldier is way too short compared to Ikar (the bodies are actually the same height, but Ikar's big bulbous head makes him significantly taller). It's really only noticeable when they're standing side by side.... which is probably the way everybody would display them, in or out of the box. So I guess it's pretty damned noticeable, isn't it? Also, the matter disintegrator accessory is too heavy which, when coupled with Ikar's long slender non-articulated fingers, makes holding it difficult if not almost impossible.
More recently (in the last few months), Japan's Medicom Toy Company released two versions of Ikar in 10” vinyl form: the “standard” version and the “gum card” variant, which mimics the wild color scheme used by Topps (see above). These will run you around $129.99 (plus shipping) each from online retailers like Entertainment Earth or Midtown Comics. They look a bit too cartoonish for my tastes, so I’m not biting. The Sideshow figures provide me with all the Ikar I’ll ever need.
For the model lovers out there, Dimensional Designs offers two separate 1/8-scale resin kits of Ikar (DD/OL/IK-15) and his cranky Alien Soldier (DD/OL/AS-09). Both are sculpted by Chris Choin, who is responsible for more of these kits than any other sculptor by far (he did a total of 15; his nearest competition is Takeshi Yoneda, who did 6). You'll pay $49.95 (plus shipping) each; you can go here and/or here to order your own. Have a look at completed specimens, courtesy of the illustrious Mr. Enamel...
Not to be outdone, Chinxy weighs in with his own take on Ikar:
I dunno, man. Their skin should be green... right? There's of course no way to know for sure, since it's a black and white show... and, as far as I know, no color stills exist. I personally find the green infinitely more appealing, and certainly more in line with the pulp nature of the story.
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THE WRAP-UP
“Keeper of the Purple Twilight” is dumb and goofy, but undeniably
fun. The script is a bit soapy and hole-ridden, but the creature design is
frankly unforgettable--- this isn’t the first time we’ve seen a second-rate
story draped over a first-rate monster (and it won’t be the last; I’m looking
at you, “Counterweight”). It’s got B-movie written all over it…. not that
there’s anything wrong with that.

There was no episode broadcast the week of December 12, 1964,
which means there’s nothing to cover next week. We’ll reconvene on 12/19 and
commence digging into the final five. That’s right, boys and ghouls… you can
count the remaining episodes on one (glass) hand.