A two-dimensional alien, stranded in our three-dimensional world, inadvertently causes havoc in Los Angeles. Only a mild-mannered optician and his secretary have the power to help.A two-dimensional alien, stranded in our three-dimensional world, inadvertently causes havoc in Los Angeles. Only a mild-mannered optician and his secretary have the power to help.A two-dimensional alien, stranded in our three-dimensional world, inadvertently causes havoc in Los Angeles. Only a mild-mannered optician and his secretary have the power to help.
- George Wilkenson
- (as Sammy Reese)
- Miss Willet
- (as Marcel Hebert)
- Eck
- (uncredited)
- Control Voice
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Good episode.
Good Story
(Or, I could take another tack and say 'How dare they not use the latest technology and insane budgets available to TODAY'S movies and TV shows??)
I could, but I won't, because THAT would be just plain silly.
Judging this show on the only FAIR merits that I can, I pronounce it to be a well-written, well-scripted episode with a dash of 'hard science' which would (and should) appeal to any Star Trek fan.
'Nuff said!
Is the Speech Two Dimensional?
Sideways
"...with effects that are comic or tragic..."
I'm 70 and saw this episode when it premiered. It falls back on a basic plot -- the absent-minded professor no one will listen to -- but it's gloriously silly. It's apparently the only TV episode that ever considered a two-dimensional universe and beings. (The idea has been treated in much more depth in "The Planiverse", which really ought to be made into a film.)
Parley Baer (Dr Stone's brother) was the original "Chester" on the radio version of "Gunsmoke". He would later be accidentally "killed" by Judge Stone (odd coincidence) on "Night Court".
Did you know
- TriviaByron Haskin only directed this episode because he was contractually obligated to do so. In "The Outer Limits Companion", he said, "It was an alleged comedy that was just a bomb. They laid that script in my hands; I got one sniff of it and damn near fainted."
- GoofsWhen Eck first encounters Dr. Stone in his office to take his glasses, the blackboard there switches back and forth several times from being entirely covered with formulas to being partially erased on the right side. Actually, there are two blackboards in different parts of the room. Only in the last shot of the story does the camera pan the room to show the separate locations of both blackboards.
- Quotes
Dr. James Stone: And the lenses will be made of glass.
Elizabeth Dunn: Not meteoric quartz?
Dr. James Stone: Eck is from another world. We need material from another world in order to see him. By the same token, for him to see us in our environment, his eyes must be corrected by our lenses.
Details
- Runtime
- 51m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 4:3







