|
BEHOLD, ECK!
Peter Lind Hayes, Joan Freeman, Parley Baer, Douglas
Henderson,
Sammy Reese, Marcel Hebert, Paul Sorensen.
An optical expert develops some glasses which allow him to see aliens.
|
|
QUICK SCAN...
This is a pro-glasses episode, in which a spectacles wearing
optician makes some special lenses, in order than an alien can
see in our dimension. Peter Lind Hayes is wry and entertaining
as Dr. Stone, the optician. The FX of Eck, the alien, are pretty
good.
|
SYNOPSIS...
An optician finds his store wrecked. Later, an odd, fire crystalline
creature shows up.
Glasses the optician develops allow people to see the "monsters".
Others can not see the aliens.
The optician develops a special lens which will allow the alien to
see in our dimension. The alien finds his escape route and exits,
first returning the special lens to the optician.
REVIEW...
Director Byron Haskin's BEHOLD ECK! is one
of the better, later "Outer Limits" episodes.
Peter Lind Hayes, as "Dr. Stone", is a pretty cool customer.
Early on, Hayes tours the ruins of his optical center. "It's
interesting. Very interesting," he murmurs, like an emotionless
Vulcan.
Joan Freeman, as Stone's Associate "Elizabeth Dunn", offers
fine support. She radiates class, and a certain sense of aristocracy,
though not snobbishness.
The dialogue in the film, (Teleplay by John Mantley; Story by William
R. Cox), is flip, almost camp. When the cops ask Dr. Stone who would
have a reason to smash his optical center, Stone quips, "Probably
someone who just doesn't like spectacles."
BEHOLD ECK! appeared rather late into "The Outer Limits"
run. At a time when many episodes were either great, ("Demon
with a Glass Hand", "The Inheritors"), or misfires
("Cry of Silence", "The Brain of Colonel Barham"),
BEHOLD ECK! scores a double, a solid "B" for you non-sports
fans out there.
Eck, a twirling, burning crystalline-like alien, is done via decent
FX. The 'Creature' was designed and photographed by Project Unlimited,
Inc. The effective Optical Effects are courtesy of Butler-Glouner,
Inc.
The episode's music, by Harry Lubin, is appropriately mysterioso.
It's also a nice change of pace from Dominick Frontiere's usual, by-the
numbers, spook score.
BEHOLD ECK! should be fairly watchable for most Sci-Fi fans. Those
viewers who wear glasses will especially dig this episode. BEHOLD
ECK! is definitely well worth beholding!
 
 
 
 
 

OUTER
LIMITS Index * HomeVideos.com
Index * THE 10 BEST EPISODES
BridalShops.com
* ChristianVideos.com
* DivorceLawyers.com *
MachineShops.com
Nightmares.com * Receptions.com
* Romances.com * Touchdowns.com
* UsedTrucks.com
  
|