The Special One
- Episode aired Apr 6, 1964
- 52m
The parents of a child science prodigy are approached by a mysterious official called Mr. Xeno, who offers to give him special private tutoring. Unknown to them, Mr. Xeno is an alien who wan... Read allThe parents of a child science prodigy are approached by a mysterious official called Mr. Xeno, who offers to give him special private tutoring. Unknown to them, Mr. Xeno is an alien who wants to use their son's talents for evil.The parents of a child science prodigy are approached by a mysterious official called Mr. Xeno, who offers to give him special private tutoring. Unknown to them, Mr. Xeno is an alien who wants to use their son's talents for evil.
- Roy Benjamin
- (as MacDonald Carey)
- Mr. Terrence
- (as Edward C. Platt)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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However in this process their parents resent for the Alien recruiter called Mr. Xeno coming anytime and also without previous permission, thus in New York Mr. Xeno has a permission of his father Roy Benjamin (MacDonald Carey) to teach his son Kenny (Flip Mark) in a regular time, nonetheless Mr. Xeno appears at your leisure, Benjamin suspicious that something is wrong due he see at your face Mr. Xeno disappears without a trace, the looking for the office's US's institutional program asking for about the teacher sent at your home, there he was informed that no teacher is allowed teach at home.
Knowing this right away Benjamin turns back and waiting for at your home to tackle Mr. Xeno to clarify the bothersome issue also withdraw the little boy Kenny of the ominous domain of the bleak Mr. Xeno, although the boy had already another plan, awesome episode!!
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First watch: 2023 / Source: DVD / How many: 1 / Rating: 7.5.
It's a great episode, thoroughly enjoyed this one, once again it's that formula of something ordinary, like tuition, being used as a tool for something that ultimately became so menacing. Great imagination behind this one, especially at the conclusion.
What a dramatic introduction, that certainly put you on edge, you came away aware that Xeno was an incredibly powerful and malevolent individual.
It's a long first series, and you have to hand it to the writing team, for constantly delivering new ideas, this one had a unique feel.
I liked that the introduction was altered somewhat in the main body of the story, now I may be wrong, but I think that may be a first.
Richard Ney was just so good here as Xeno, he really did present as someone a little menacing, a little strange, and from a child's point of view, the stuff of nightmares.
Enjoyed it.
8/10.
His directorial style from "the alternative factor" is represented here, three years earlier.
As a matter of fact it was not surprising that Gene Roddenberry tapped the crew of the outer limits and staffed star trek with them, least of all Robert H Justman who was practically Gene's right hand man for the original series and for the next generation its first year.
One of the reasons I like this episode a lot is because rather than having a teaser which is merely a random scene from the show shown at the very beginning of the episode, they actually have a teaser that leads in to the story and carries on after the short "outer limits oscilloscope display" at the beginning.
This is similar to "the invisible boy", the semi-official "sequel" to "forbidden planet"- A boy is made smarter by the machinations of an external agency. In "the invisible boy" this external agency is a supercomputer which looks like a bigger bubblehead for Robbie the robot, in this episode, it is what looks like a man, but he is not a man.
People who are writing reviews for the show in the year 2020 are neglecting the fact that this show was made in 1963. There was no CGI. They had to use photographic effects and prosthetics. A lot of times this was in the form of superimposition, an image superimposed over the top of another image. You will see where this is used in this episode.
A lot of these shows used your standard manual animation like they used on cartoons: this was done in "forbidden planet" when they showed the "Monster from the ID" in the force field of the ship. In this episode, it is used to convey a type of transportation, and I have to say for a special photographic effect created in the year 1963, this practically beats anything that I have seen in the transformers movies. Although I like CGI, usually.
People are judging this television show on the basis of the Poodoo made in this decade, this cannot be done. You cannot compare this show to any show that is on television today.
For one thing, each episode is 51 minutes long, and for the first season of the Outer limits, they were fairly strict about keeping every episode within that allotment of time. Modern shows are rarely longer than 40 minutes per episode. Number of episodes per show: In 1963 sometimes there were 40 episodes per season. Unless a show is unceremoniously canceled out of the blue like this show was halfway through its second season.
And, there were only three networks back then, Fox network didn't even exist.
Due to the superfluity of all kinds of new "channels" available to the person who's got several hundred dollars per month to purchase subscription to each provider of amusement, and the amount of shows that need to be made for every single one of these so-called channels, a show in the 2020 rarely gets more than 10 episodes per season, and starting in this year it has been 8 episodes per season, down from 10 last year. Which was down from 14 the year before, which was down from 22 earlier in the 2000's. Down from 26 for the 80's and 90's. So this basically shows us of a trend where we get less entertainment for our money than we used to get back in the days when television was free and being broadcast through the airwaves.
These are Internet stations, there should be no time limit and there should be more episodes per season and there should be longer episodes. But, corporate greed of course prevents us from having nice things.
The solution to the conundrum this episode is also very similar to the way "the invisible boy" was solved: and I cannot say any more.
Because although characters in this episode have discovered some kind of skulduggery afoot, who are they going to tell about it and who will believe them? There are no police, there are no FBI, there are no government officials, and there are no military solutions for this. The solution has to come from an area completely left field, and in this episode it works beautifully because of the way that they presented the solution: and we didn't expect this. Oh, I am certain that a few of us myself included had something knocking on the back of the hindbrain suggesting what if it was this or this happening? And maybe we guessed it correctly, but there was no way we could have guessed everything that was going to happen, this was where the virtual rug was pulled out from underneath us.
I have to say, I have been watching this show 2 to 5 episodes per day for the last week, and every single episode of this show is like this: we think one thing is going on, but it's actually something completely unexpected. Maguffins, as Hitchcock called them. This was probably the best television show of the 1960s, and I enjoy these stories much more than even the twilight zone or the twilight zone's one hour episodes which were also very good.
If you watch this show and want to comment about it in these modern days, you have to think about how television was in the 60s, you have to forget about what television has become, because it is not the same thing.
Ironically, The mother in this episode is Marion Ross otherwise known as Marion Cunningham from Happy days.
Mr. Xeno then arrives at the home of a couple (MacDonald Carey and Marion Ross) and introduced himself as a special tutor sent by the government to work with their genius son. They agree but after some time, the father is a bit concerned--weird sounds are emanating from his kid's room and Mr. Xeno just seems to 'pop in' with no notice. Later, however, the father realizes Xeno is not human. The problem is, no one believes him, his son has now been pitted against him and there is some evil brewing. What's next? See this one for yourself.
All in all, there isn't much to dislike about this one. Fine acting, exceptional writing and a story that keeps you on edge--this is one to see.
UPDATE: I just saw an old episode of "Tales of Tomorrow" (available through the public domain at archive.org) that was VERY much like "The Special One"! In fact, it would appear to have inspired this "Outer Limits" episode. Try watching "Many Happy Returns"--you'll see what I mean that it seems to have inspired this show a decade later.
Did you know
- TriviaThe pre-title sequence featuring Jason Wingreen is not a "teaser" preview of an upcoming scene, but a unique introductory sequence. It was written by Joseph Stefano to lengthen the running time of the show, which came up short.
- GoofsThe extensive, overlong segment of the machine producing feathers which overcome Mr. Zeno is obviously padding.
- Quotes
Mr. Xeno: Our records show that you and Mr. Benjamin worked on the Glenridge atomic project and were, for some time, exposed to minor radiation.
Roy Benjamin: The government checked us once a year for ten years, and we showed abolutely no ill effects.
Mr. Xeno: Correct, and as it turned out, you produced in Kenneth, a mutation plus.
Agnes Benjamin: A mutation plus?
Mr. Xeno: Yes. A mutation plus is a product of superior quality in athletics, scholarship, and so forth.
Details
- Runtime
- 52m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 4:3