“The Children of Spider County”
Season 1, Episode 21
Originally aired 2/17/1964
Twenty years after running out to get a pack of smokes, an absent father returned home to connect with his son and hopefully makes amends. Not exactly a new story idea, I'll grant you that... but when you consider that the father is an alien from a planet billions of miles away, it suddenly seems fresh and interesting. Fifty years ago tonight, The Outer Limits proved that, in addition to brilliantly realizing great scripts, it could also half-ass less-than-brilliant ones.
(from left: Hainsley, Wheatley , Masters, Robertson, Ethan Wechsler)
The United States Space Security Agency is investigating four missing scientists who share a number of strange connections: each was born in the rural Spider County (Massachusetts? Connecticut? Rhode Island? It’s kinda hard to tell from that map), all four were born within a month of one another, and each of their fathers disappeared shortly after their births. Agent John Bartlett heads to Spider County to investigate; his first order of business: connect with a fifth individual matching the MO of the missing men who hasn’t gone missing… he’s being held in the Spider County jail.
Spider County’s “Witch Boy,” Ethan Wechsler, is a social outcast feared by the hillbilly citizenry for supposedly possessing supernatural abilities. He’s being charged with first degree murder (a charge which he denies) and is being escorted in handcuffs to his court date. A hideous alien in a suit and tie appears in the middle of the road, causing the police car to careen off the road and flip onto its side. The alien disintegrates the deputy before he can take action, then takes on a human form before fleeing with Ethan in tow.
The two take refuge in a barn at the Bishop farm, where Ethan's girlfriend Anna lives. The alien, Aabel of the planet Eros, explains that Ethan is one of five human-Erosian hybrids. The Erosians lost the ability to bear male children, so five of their men came to earth to interbreed. Aabel, who is Ethan's father, has come to bring all five back to Eros. Ethan is in love with Anna and refuses to go.
Anna's father shows up toting a shotgun and ends up disintegrated for his trouble. Ethan and Anna flee into the nearby woods and are eventually apprehended. Agent Bartlett meets with Ethan and convinces him to help the Space Security Agency stop Aabel. Aabel breaks Ethan out and takes him to his space ship's secret location deep in the woods, where the other four hybrids are waiting. Aabel realizes that Ethan has betrayed them: he's wearing a homing signal device, and the authorities are closing in.
Aabel goes to disintegrate Ethan, but finds himself unable to destroy "the better part of himself." Ethan (along with his fellow hybrids) refuses to leave Earth and, defeated, Aabel boards his ship and leaves, and Ethan is reunited with Anna.
And you thought The Outer Limits never had happy endings...!




And you thought The Outer Limits never had happy endings...!
RANDOMONIUM

In the director’s chair is Leonard Horn, who previously helmed Lawrence’s “The Man Who Was Never Born” and, more recently, “The Zanti Misfits.” Director of Photography Kenneth Peach makes his debut this week, and we’ll all have to get used to him pronto because, aside from a few notable exceptions, he’s shooting the rest of the series. He’s no Conrad Hall (I’m gonna try like hell not to compare them every week; I'm not making any promises), but he does have his moments. There seems to be a conscious effort on the part of both Horn and Peach to replicate the visual style of “The Man Who Was Never Born”; this is most evident in act three’s forest chase, which is adorned with swirling fog, smeared lenses, and cameras pointed directly at the sun. This is all derivative of a vastly superior episode, sure, but it does impart a somewhat-similar dreamlike quality to the proceedings. The shot of Aabel, wearing his true alien face as he walks through shafts of light and fog, is a stunning composition (time stamp 32:08).

We do hear it again, however: at 32:43, Aabel emits the same ear-piercing screeching sound, which is heard by the various parties bumbling around in the woods, for no apparent reason and with no apparent result. Several minutes of screen time are subsequently wasted on Ethan and Anna finding a canoe (which he spends way too long staring at, incidentally), hitting the lake and attempting to cross it…. only to give up and immediately return to the dock when the authorities arrive on the scene (never mind the fact that they're almost to the other side!). If the intent was to build up dramatic tension leading up to Ethan’s capture… well, it’s neither tense nor particularly dramatic. At no time does Ethan’s flight feel particularly urgent; however, it’s possible that the languid pacing may be an intentional choice to underline the wispy, dreamlike visuals. I’m willing to cut the episode some slack; however, by the fourth act my patience is gone, baby, gone.


And speaking of these boy geniuses, what’s the story with their mothers? We’re told that they “are unwilling to admit or even discuss” the nature of their offspring… and U.S. Space Security is cool with that? Seems like they’d go to greater lengths for answers in the interest of national security, doesn't it? If this were a true story, I’m pretty damned sure our government would be detaining, polygraphing and probing the hell out of those uncooperative ladies, then or now. Are they aware of their offspring’s true natures? Or were each of them brainwashed (or coerced) into not cooperating? Your guess, the old saying goes, is as good as mine.
Another parallel to “The Man Who Was Never Born” is Aabel’s ability to conceal his true appearance by telepathically implanting a different (i.e. human) visage in the minds of those around him. Andro’s illusion included period-appropriate clothing to conceal his tattered burlap-sack robes; Aabel, meanwhile, wears a suit and tie in both guises. It’s certainly a strange sight, seeing those lumpy clawed feet sticking out of his slacks (he adds Florsheims when he appears human, which makes me wonder if the whole outfit is in fact an illusion; maybe Erosians are of the au natural persuasion, but 1960’s Standards and Practices frowned on nudity of an kind, including arachnid alien nudity).
I may be wrong, but those Erosian feet look a lot like the Helosian feet from “O.B.I.T.” (the fact that the two species rhyme is probably a coincidence, but one never knows).

In any case, the idea of an alien wearing semi-formal human clothing is pretty nifty from a surrealist standpoint. It's an effective juxtaposition of two things that are (pun alert!) alien to one another but forced to coexist; a visual contradiction of sorts. The Outer Limits, however, wasn’t the first to do it. Two years earlier, The Twilight Zone featured an alien in a swingin’ turtleneck-and-blazer-combo in its “Hocus-Pocus and Frisby” episode.
Aabel has demonstrated that he can easily disarm people by telepathically lulling them into a trance; why is it necessary for him to kill (sorry, uncreate) two different people? The deputy he dispatches in act one didn't even draw his firearm; it seems his only crime was looking at Aabel with a semi-perplexed look on his face. Mr.Bishop is certainly more aggressive, but he's just a small-minded yokel trying to protect his daughter, hardly deserving of his death sentence (sorry, uncreation). Aabel's powers seem limited to telepathic suggestion (and really thick skin on the bottoms of those bare feet)... so how exactly is he not harmed by Bishop's point-blank shotgun blast? If he's somehow immune to gunfire, then those two deaths (I mean uncreations) are completely gratuitous, which makes him a total dick.
And I have some issues with the Erosian plan to sire human-Erosian hybrids. The men of Eros have evidently lost the art of dreaming, thereby rendering them unable to sire male children. Um... what now? Even if the lack of dreaming could impact a man's fertility, how the hell could it be a gender-specific? If the problem is that its men can no longer sire males, shouldn't they have brought Erosian women them to test Earth's "favorable climate"? If interbreeding with humans was the only option (and I can't fathom why it would be), wouldn't it have made more sense to send Erosian women to mate with Earth men? If their men are a dying breed, why risk five of them on an interstellar voyage?
At time stamp 11:48, we watch as a newly-sprung (yet already exhausted) Ethan tumbles into a nearby pond, and dramatically splashes water on his face. 1964 viewers must have found this particular bit painfully familiar, since David Jansen was doing the exact same thing every week during the opening credits of The Fugitive (which also aired on ABC). And look! Both have a pair of handcuffs hangin' off of 'em.
And I have some issues with the Erosian plan to sire human-Erosian hybrids. The men of Eros have evidently lost the art of dreaming, thereby rendering them unable to sire male children. Um... what now? Even if the lack of dreaming could impact a man's fertility, how the hell could it be a gender-specific? If the problem is that its men can no longer sire males, shouldn't they have brought Erosian women them to test Earth's "favorable climate"? If interbreeding with humans was the only option (and I can't fathom why it would be), wouldn't it have made more sense to send Erosian women to mate with Earth men? If their men are a dying breed, why risk five of them on an interstellar voyage?


DEJA VIEW

Actually, it appears that the shot was actually reversed in "Nightmare": the serial number on the ship is clearly backwards, something I'd never noticed before. For it's reuse here, it's unreversed (revealing that the native language of Eros is in fact English).
TEASE ME!
This week’s teaser is the act one scene in which Aabel’s presence in the road causes the sheriff’s car to flip onto its side, followed by his unceremonious uncreating of the deputy. It seems to be the same shot-for-shot sequence (though, curiously, the music kicks in earlier in the teaser). The real difference here is the amount of Vaseline blur on the screen: it’s much less pronounced in the teaser, which indicates that the effect was added in post-production (versus smeared onto the camera lens during shooting).
AURAL PLEASURE
Like every episode for the rest of the season (except “The Forms of Things Unknown” in May), “The Children of Spider County” doesn’t feature original music. This week we get selections from several Dominic Frontiere scores of episodes past, including the following:
Building Terror, It’s Here (from “The Human Factor”)
Washington D.C. (from “The Hundred Days of the Dragon”)
A Father’s Search, Zapped into Box (from “Don’t Open Till Doomsday”)
Allen Leighton, Alien on the Loose (from “The Architects of Fear”)
Coffee and Cigarettes (from "Controlled Experiment")
Coffee and Cigarettes (from "Controlled Experiment")
That's quite a varied list (it's by no means complete, by the way; these are just the cues that stood out for me).
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
Hoo boy, we've got all kinds of cross-connections this week.

Kent Smith plays Aabel (in his human form) in the second of his TOL turns (he was the nefarious Dr. Bloch in “It Crawled Out of the Woodwork” back in December). He also popped up in the “Always Say Goodbye” episode of TV’s I Spy in 1966, a series which starred TOL leading man Robert Culp. Smith also had a recurring role as Edgar Scoville on TV’s The Invaders (1967-68), a series which guest-starred most of this week’s cast at some point or other.



Joe E. Tata is back as Wheatley, one of the boy geniuses (he played the unnamed radar operator in December’s “The Zanti Misfits”). Sheriff Stakefield is played by Crahan Denton, who will return in season two’s “Counterweight.” Mr. Greenbane (Ethan’s attorney) is played by Joseph Perry, whose face we never see (the closest we get is the silhouette sequence described above). Perry also appeared as the Chief of Police in “The Galaxy Being” (where he crossed paths with William O. Douglas Jr.). He also did two Twilight Zones (“Nightmare as a Child” and “The Gift”), plus the “Five by Eight by Eight” episode of Stoney Burke, which also featured Bennye Gatteys, here playing the nubile Anna Bishop.
HOME VIDEO RELEASES
“The Children of Spider County” hit VHS in two flavors: the standard retail release (which, like most of MGM's TOL tapes, featured a beautiful cover) and the mail-order exclusive Columbia House release, which paired it with the upcoming “Second Chance." LaserDisc collectors were stuck with one of these options, since the episode wasn’t included in the four Outer Limits LD sets.
The episode has shown up on DVD three different times: the season one boxed set in 2002, the volume 2 set in 2007 (which comprised the first second of season 1), and the complete series boxed set in 2008 (which is just the three 2007 volumes combined into one box). I bought the 2002 release the day it came out, so I skipped the later releases.
TRADING CARD CORNER
Like many TOL creatures, Aabel was part of the Monsters from Outer Limits trading card collection in 1964. You’ll find him on card #9, in which he is recast as an earthly landlord who also happens to be a vampire. *sigh* Well, wait... I guess maybe he does have a bit of a Nosferatu vibe about him....

MERCHANDISE SPOTLIGHT
We touch on Dimensional Designs’ TOL models almost every week (since they’ve got a kit for almost every episode), but imagine my surprise when, as I was doing research (i.e. scouring the internet) for this week’s entry, I unearthed no less than three different model kits of Aabel. Let’s look ‘em over….
A 1/8 scale resin model kit of Aabel’s true form is available from Dimensional Designs (“Eros Creature”, DD/OL/EC-26), sculpted by Jon Wang ($49.95 plus shipping, if you’re so inclined). It’s got the iconic pose, which I do appreciate, but… well, let’s look at what Mr. Enamel has done with it:
I dunno. This one doesn’t do much for me. The problem is the face. I’m not sure if it’s the sculpt job or the paint job, but it’s not really speaking to me.
Another resin model kit (also 1/8 scale) was offered by Lunar Models at some point. I’m not really crazy about this one either. Not sure why he was painted brown here, but I get a serious Wolf Man vibe… which I’m pretty sure wasn’t the intent. I’m not sure how one would acquire this, except possibly on eBay.
An individual who goes by the moniker “Loosecollector” over at Figure Realm created a custom action figure of Aabel back in 2010, calling him the “Vampire of Spider County” (apparently he took the Topps card as gospel). Now THIS is more like it! This rendering of Aabel has some serious swagger going on, and the detail is marvelous. Love it.
We've seen this guy’s work before: he was also responsible for the custom Helosian figure I gushed over back in November’s “O.B.I.T.” spotlight. I love the idea of smaller-scale Outer Limits figures (as awesome as the Sideshow Collectibles offerings are, they’re kinda huge), and wish like crazy somebody would pick up the license and start churning some out.
THE WRAP-UP
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My nephew William Siccardi, whose Spider Sense is always tingling. |

This week's entry is brought to you by Black Widow Porter, a seasonal offering from McMenamins (one of the many reasons why the Pacific Northwest is the undisputed mecca of craft beers). I had a bottle left over from Halloween and, given this week's spider-centric episode, it seemed like the perfect time to bust it out.