The Midas Plague
- El episodio se emitió el 20 dic 1965
- 1h
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaThe Future is bright for most of society: robot labour and free energy make the creation of goods easy and automatic. But the disadvantaged of this Golden Age are those who have to stem the ... Leer todoThe Future is bright for most of society: robot labour and free energy make the creation of goods easy and automatic. But the disadvantaged of this Golden Age are those who have to stem the inexorable tide of robot-manufactured goods; they are continually supplied with more thing... Leer todoThe Future is bright for most of society: robot labour and free energy make the creation of goods easy and automatic. But the disadvantaged of this Golden Age are those who have to stem the inexorable tide of robot-manufactured goods; they are continually supplied with more things than they can possibly consume. Is there any way for a 'poor' man to get off this treadm... Leer todo
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Man in Pub
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
The major problem with the show is the painfully dated feel that is part of television production in those days . You have to be very forgiving as to how this plays out and television today is closer to cinema where as in 1965 television was closer to filmed theatre and would remain so well in to the 1980s but even so this is no excuse to how staid and static everything appears here . DOCTOR WHO may be perceived as a children's TV show but compare that show to the episodes here and you'll notice at least DOCTOR WHO does have an imagination and ambition behind it unlike OOTU
What makes this even more unforgivable is the fact that the show has many different writers , directors and designers working on it and yet there seems to a lack of sharp contrast between the episodes . If a story is set in the future then invariably everyone must wear a bleached blonde wig and implausibly futuristic looking clothes . You might like to know one episode Some Lapse In Time has an unknown BBC employee called Ridley Scott as set designer and yet all his sets look like every other one used in the show that resemble basic plywood boards
The storytelling itself is equally uninspired and is composed of actors sitting or standing around a very limited small number of sets talking , talking and talking . You could claim I'm missing the point of drama but it should be remembered that before the apocalyptic climax QUATERMASS AND THE PIT spent five episodes of actors standing around talking and that remains the telefantasy masterwork that has never been surpassed . Talkative scenes should be compelling and here they aren't . You have to also bare in mind some of the greatest writers of sci-fi are having their work adapted such as Wyndham , Asimov , Ballard and Pohl so it's difficult to excuse the unengaging nature of the storytelling . It should be pointed out that running for 60 minutes each and every episode would have greatly benefited from having at least a quarter of its running time cut out at first draft script stage . As it stands The Counterfeit Man featuring an intriguing premise of alien infiltration aboard a spaceship is the best of a very mediocre bunch
In summary OUT OF THE UNKNOWN is an attempt to bring literary science fiction to the general British public but television isn't a good medium to do so especially in the primitive way television was produced in the 1960s . The storytelling lacks incisive brevity and the idea driven concepts lacking incidence complete with a bland staid look make this show something of a chore to sit through
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesTodas las entradas contienen spoilers
- PifiasSome actors playing robots mime to a prerecorded voice track. Barman Gideon 20 mouths "What is a satisfaction circuit?" to complete silence. The voiceover then plays, and he must hurriedly re-mouth the words.
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Duración1 hora
- Color