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Reviews
The Outer Limits: The Message (1995)
A craftily written science fiction drama, suitable for children
THE MESSAGE is a science fiction movie featuring Marlee Matlin as a deaf schoolteacher, Robert Wisden as her husband, and Larry Drake is a janitor in a hospital. The janitor was formerly an astrophysicist knowledgeable in computer programing and laser technology, but he fell upon hard times, and was forced to take the janitor job.
The story is about a woman who receives an implant in her ear that is supposed to restore hearing. However, this particular implant does not work properly, and the result is that the woman "hears" strange things. She writes down what she "hears" and the result is a series of X's and O's. She writes down thousands and thousands of X's and O's. The woman works in a school for deaf children, and her experience is first disclosed when she is teaching the class using the blackboard. The camera shows her from a side-view angle, busily jotting things down on the blackboard. The viewer cannot see what she is writing. One of the children senses that something is wrong, and she runs out for help. The school principal returns, and the viewer sees that the blackboard is filled with lines of X's and O's.
As one might expect, things go downhill for Marlee, since almost nobody believes her claim that she is really hearing things. The fact that the X's and O's are, at first glance, devoid of any sense, reinforces skepticism about Marlee's claims that she is really hearing actual things. Her doctor proscribes her with an anti-psychotic drug called MOROXYDOL. (I looked this up, and I found it amusing that there does not exist any drug called MOROXYDOL. It was made up solely for this episode of Outer Limits!!!) The janitor immediately recognizes the many X's and O's as binary code, and he transcribes them to his computer. As the story unfolds, Marlee's husband grows increasingly skeptical regarding her wife's mental health, and the janitor becomes increasingly devoted to decoding the series of X's and O's. Regarding the code, the unfolding plot shows that the meaning of the code is similar to that in CONTACT, a movie starring Jodie Foster. (Don't worry, I do NOT give away the ending.) THE MESSAGE does not have any violence, bad words, disturbing computer graphics, or concupiscence. Thus, this story is fine for children. THE MESSAGE was released in 1995, hence, people interested in following the career of Marlee Matlin will be pleased to view this movie (remember, it was in 1986 that she starred in CHILDREN OF A LESSER GOD). The storyline of THE MESSAGE is not particularly clever, and not astonishingly unique, relative to the best of the OUTER LIMITS stories from the 1990's. However, THE MESSAGE is a cute little movie, and I am glad that I watched it.
The Outer Limits: Time to Time (2001)
One of my favorite stories from the entire repertoire of movies and television
TIME TO TIME is one of my favorite stories from the entire repertoire of movies and television. The characters include a college student (Kristin Lehman), her mother, her father, and several employees of a time traveling agency called, CHRONONICS.
FIRST SCENE AND SECOND SCENE. In the first scene, Kristin is studying outside on a college campus, working on her master's thesis. A stranger tries to make small talk, and they quiz each other about American history from the 1960s. The dialogue is clever and magnificently crafted, as is the dialogue from the entire story. The pair engages in a lively exchange of trivia questions about names of astronauts, names of Academy Award winners, and names of politicians. The first really clever line, is when the stranger asks her, "What was most popular country music country music song on the charts in 1967." Kristin responds, "I don't listen to country music," momentarily showing a brief scowl of disgust. Then, the stranger spills coffee on her notebook, and Kristin reaches over to wipe off the coffee, and the stranger reaches down too, and his ring scrapes on her hand, and a sharp feature of the ring takes a blood sample. The ring acquires the blood sample, and relays the results of DNA analysis to a small computer. The small computer confirms the fact that the woman (Kristin) is the right person for transporting to the future. Kristin's mother is a manager of an apartment building. In the next scene, the mother seems to have a minor illness, but she has been in bed all day, and seems to be emotionally depressed. The mother repeatedly ignores a complaint from one of the tenants who needs a simple repair. Then, Kristin goes off for a drive, swerves to avoid a truck, and plummets off of an embankment to meet certain death. However, a millisecond before striking the ground, Kristin vanishes, and materializes some 50 years in the future, where she finds herself in a time-traveling company. "Where am I," she asks, when she rises from a couch, somewhat dazed. "Not where . . . WHEN," responds an older man, who explains that she is in a facility called, CHRONONICS-TIME TRAVEL FOR HIRE.
SPECIAL EFFECTS. The special effects are excellent, and on par with those in any of the Star Wars movies. The interior of CHRONONICS reminds me, somewhat, of the interior of the floating city in GULLIVER'S TRAVELS, a science fiction movie starring Mary Steenbergen and Ted Danson. The operation of the time machine has plenty of gee-whiz power. Most of the TIME AFTER TIME takes place on the campus of University of California at Berkeley, one day in 1969. Although reconstruction of U.C. Berkeley is not exactly a "special effect," they did a very good job at reconstructing the lingo and period garb from that era. The only major mistake was part of the dialogue referring to a part of the campus called, "The Quad." There never existed any part of the U.C. Berkeley campus called, "The Quad." I should know. I was a student at U.C. Berkeley from the years 1969 to 1980 (undergrad school plus graduate school).
EMOTIONAL IMPACT. There are two kinds of time travel stories. One is where the emphasis is on the whiz-bang nature of time travel and of the associated equipment needed for time travel, such as the stories in the TIME TUNNEL series, and the film, THE TIME MACHINE, starring Guy Pearce. The other kind of time travel movie is that where the emphasis is on a deep-seated nostalgia, and a longing to connect with a time in the past, and to connect with loved ones in the past. TIME TO TIME is the second type of time travel story. Other examples of the second type include Twilight Zone episodes WALKING DISTANCE and A STOP AT WILLOUGHBY, and the full-length film, THE PHILADEPHIA EXPERIMENT. TIME TO TIME is about nostalgia for one's parents (mother and father) in an earlier era, when one's parents were still in their twentys. Regarding the dialogue and acting, I don't see how it is humanly possible to have dialogue that is more clever, razor-sharp, and yet entirely natural. The accompanying facial expressions, those of rubber-faced Kristin Lehman, are a delight throughout the entire story.