View Full Version : Outer Limits
John in Woodbridge
July 5th, 2004, 09:35 AM
I vaguely remember the short-lived sci-fi series "Outer Limits" from childhood and rented a couple of them now that they are on DVD. While the special effects and make-up are cheesy by today's standards, I was impressed with the depth of sci-fi writing, some of the best I've come across.
Outer Limits reflected the white culture right before it's demise, which I think was the hippie/counter-culture movement, along with the Civil Rights movement.
Watching them it's painful to see just how devolved and niggerfied our society has become.
John in Woodbridge
July 5th, 2004, 12:39 PM
What impressed me is the complexity of some of plotlines and scripts, focusing mostly on science and the paranormal.
The original Star Trek series also had some great writing, egalitarianism was in there but not a major focus.
Today's Star Trek offshoots focus mainly on multi-cult and superficial plotlines, and are borish in comparison even though they have much better special effects.
Karl Ramstrom
July 5th, 2004, 01:15 PM
I enjoyed the original Outer Limits quite a bit. Most of the episodes were good, but a few stand out. One of my favorites starred David McCallum (of Man From U.N.C.L.E. fame) as the inventor of a machine that could accelerate human evolution. Two Star Trek actors also appeared in Outer Limits episodes - William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy. In Shatner's episode, he played an astronaut working for - believe it or not - "Project: Vulcan".
http://www.mortystv.com/showcards/outer_limits_250.jpg
Steve B
July 5th, 2004, 09:18 PM
[COLOR=Indigo][B]I enjoyed the original Outer Limits quite a bit. Most of the episodes were good, but a few stand out. One of my favorites starred David McCallum (of Man From U.N.C.L.E. fame) as the inventor of a machine that could accelerate human evolution.
Yeah, "the man with the sixth finger" was my favorite OL episode also. In it McCallum played the test subject and Edward Mulhare played the scientist. There was a scene that made me laugh like hell. Before Mulhare experiments on McCallum he does a test run on a monkey. He makes a monkey that can nearly read and write.....kinda like those peeps who hang out at Keys BBQ's.
In another scene I liked a large-domed McCallum, in his final phase of induced evolution, stares down two motorcycle cops and says, "Your ignorance makes me ill and angry!" One psychokinetic zap later, one of the officers is on the ground. The brief scene speeds by with the noise and force of a freight train.They just don't make 'em like this anymore!
http://www.beyondroswell.com/roswell/6%20finger%20twilight%20zone%20large.jpg
John in Woodbridge
July 5th, 2004, 09:54 PM
Before Mulhare experiments on McCallum he does a test run on a monkey. He makes a monkey that can nearly read and write
If only we can do that with the niggers. lol
British&Proud
July 7th, 2004, 07:20 PM
What about the new series of outer limits from the 1990s? From what i can remember it had some decent episodes and some big guest stars.
John in Woodbridge
July 7th, 2004, 08:32 PM
What about the new series of outer limits from the 1990s? From what i can remember it had some decent episodes and some big guest stars.
I never watched the more recent spin-off because I just assumed it wouldn't compare with the original series even thought you have to make a conscious effort to disregard the cheesy effects, which can detract from the episode.
One of my favorite episodes is O.B.I.T, not some much for the general plotline but how deep the layers of the plotline extended. Truly remarkable.
Karl Ramstrom
July 7th, 2004, 09:29 PM
O.B.I.T. was one of the best Outer Limits episodes, dealing with a machine that was capable of spying on anyone, anywhere, anytime. And the performance by Jeff Corey (yes, he's a Jew) was excellent. Very creepy.
http://images.amazon.com/images/P/6301971973.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
John in Woodbridge
July 8th, 2004, 05:25 AM
O.B.I.T. was one of the best Outer Limits episodes, dealing with a machine that was capable of spying on anyone, anywhere, anytime. And the performance by Jeff Corey (yes, he's a Jew) was excellent. Very creepy.
http://images.amazon.com/images/P/6301971973.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
I don't see how this series would appeal to the dumbed down MTV generation today.
Fredrik Haerne
July 15th, 2004, 03:16 PM
Makes me think of another TV show, Roswell, with three kids who discover that they are aliens and try to find out where they come from. They can change matter merely by touch, such as changing one liquid to another, writing letters in neon on the wall, putting together bookshelves -- very practical. They can do some other stuff too. Eventually they discover that they are a general and his wife, and the wife's brother, reincarnated as humans to hide them from the new government back home. Their bodies are what human bodies will be like a thousand years or so into the future.
Nifty. Overmen, they are; I always enjoy movies and shows that portray super-strength in a positive light.
chrissy
August 5th, 2004, 06:53 PM
Jim Crowe is right the scariest part of the outer limits or the twilight zone shows is what's happened to white society since then. I said on another thread that some WN producer should make a twilight zone episode set one hundred years from now showing whites being sold at slave auctions, and their black masters smiling at the irony of it all. Mostly you see how confident whites were then , other races just didn't impact their thoughts.
It's important to fight with words, it's more important to fight with your fists.
Adolf Hitler
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