Tourist Attraction
- Episode aired Dec 23, 1963
- 51m
Tycoon John Dexter spears a dolphin-like sea creature off San Blas in the Caribbean. It appears to be dead but, on shore, it comes to life and begins to make shrill, whistling sounds, which ... Read allTycoon John Dexter spears a dolphin-like sea creature off San Blas in the Caribbean. It appears to be dead but, on shore, it comes to life and begins to make shrill, whistling sounds, which have a pattern and can be decoded.Tycoon John Dexter spears a dolphin-like sea creature off San Blas in the Caribbean. It appears to be dead but, on shore, it comes to life and begins to make shrill, whistling sounds, which have a pattern and can be decoded.
- Capt. Fortunado
- (as Noel da Sousa)
- Paco
- (as Martin Garralga)
- Policeman
- (as Henry Delgado)
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
- Ichthyosaur
- (uncredited)
- Security Guard
- (uncredited)
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
- Woman
- (uncredited)
- Control Voice
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
"Tourist Attraction" feels like a somewhat padded episode for me, with shots of a Carnivale-type of affair, long passages of underwater scuba diving and so on...not to mention TWO expositional commentaries from the "Control Voice" during the course of the episode itself! Screenwriter Dean Riesner's script is middling at best, with touches of Stefano frills here and there, and Hungarian director Laslo Benedek's helming of the film is competent, if no more. Fortunately, the episode still manages to please, largely by dint of the three performances by the leading players, and the FX on display here. Indeed, I have long thought that the look of the so-called "bears" in this episode to be very impressive (I can hear you laffing at that remark), and well recall the first time that I saw them. I was a high school kid at the time (more decades ago than I care to admit), and watching this episode on a local station here in NYC one Saturday afternoon while in the process of getting what Jay Thomas has referred to as "herbed up." Maybe it was my state of mind, but when those creatures arose from the waters of Lake Aripana, my eyes were just boggling out of my head. I couldn't believe what I was seeing! The crew responsible for these critters--Byron Haskin, Wah Chang and all of Projects Unlimited--is to be commended for a job well done. These critters were apparently not only difficult to produce, but also impossible to maneuver underwater--one of the men inside his creature suit almost drowned. The creation of these monsters also busted the budget for this landmark series yet again. But the bottom line is that despite the excellent creature FX, "Tourist Attraction" remains one of the lesser efforts of the generally superb Season 1. It is NOT artful, like so many of the other episodes that came before and would soon follow, but it yet still manages to entertain. Fortunately, the series would rebound in a big way the following week with one of its most fondly remembered outings..."The Zanti Misfits"!!!
Not a favourite episode of this series but the goofy sea creatures remain forever locked in the memory and it is fun watching the character "Tom" as the actor playing him - Jerry Douglas - would go on to play a time traveller in one of the very best episodes of - Irwin Allen's Land Of The Giants - titled: A Place Called Earth (1969).
These are not really solid reasons for making this hour good but I just can't bring myself to calling Tourist Attraction a stinker. Perhaps you would do better watching the three Creature From The Black Lagoon films of the 1950s?
Resume:
First watch: 2020 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 5
Did you know
- TriviaThis is the only episode of the series to feature narrations other than the opening and closing narrations: one in Act I and another in Act IV.
- GoofsThe cut made to the freezer door was already made before the creature started cutting.
- Quotes
Control Voice: The forces of nature will not submit to injustice. No man has the right nor will the checks and balances of the universe permit him to place his fellows under the harsh yoke of repression, nor may he again place the forces of nature under the triple yoke of vanity, greed and ambition. In the words of Shelley, "Here lies your tyrant who would rule the world immortal."
[the drowned body of Gen. Juan Mercurio, face down in the mud, is retrieved]
Details
- Runtime
- 51m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 4:3