Sandkings
- Episode aired Mar 26, 1995
- TV-PG
- 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
In his own garage, a discredited scientist creates intelligent, insect-like creatures that were yielded by soil samples from Mars.In his own garage, a discredited scientist creates intelligent, insect-like creatures that were yielded by soil samples from Mars.In his own garage, a discredited scientist creates intelligent, insect-like creatures that were yielded by soil samples from Mars.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Brandon Obray
- Todd Brantley
- (scenes deleted)
Kevin Conway
- The Control Voice
- (uncredited)
Nathan Lomax
- Background Performer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Acting and score both above average
Science-as-horror entertainment for the entire family. Adults can indulge the gleeful overacting while kids get to experience fright night as they take everything at face value. Casting is marvelous, with Helen Shaver as the mad scientist's blonde wife an especially inspired choice. Years before, she had played the protagonist's love interest in the voodoo-horror flick "The Believers" in which her classically beautiful WASP face was progressively disfigured by ugly boils that turned out to be ... spiders living under the skin! With this subtext under the viewers' belt, the horrifying encounters she has with the "sandkings" carry an added resonance and punch.
Of course the TV show's plot has been greatly altered from the sci-fi short story, no doubt partly due to budget limitations. I didn't mind. Lloyd Bridges is content to play out his part's stereotype to the hilt, but Beau Bridges gives an acting masterclass by additionally injecting some truly disturbing moments into his performance (the bathroom scene, as noted by other reviewers). For a TV drama, the music score is above average.
Recommended for a rainy evening while curled up in front of the fireplace.
Of course the TV show's plot has been greatly altered from the sci-fi short story, no doubt partly due to budget limitations. I didn't mind. Lloyd Bridges is content to play out his part's stereotype to the hilt, but Beau Bridges gives an acting masterclass by additionally injecting some truly disturbing moments into his performance (the bathroom scene, as noted by other reviewers). For a TV drama, the music score is above average.
Recommended for a rainy evening while curled up in front of the fireplace.
Downfall of the Martian God
The pilot episode of "The Outer Limits" TV series is an adaptation of G.R.R. Martin's novel from 1979. The series does not have unique story-line, but it is an anthology of short SF / Fantasy / Horror films, and the "Sandkings", with its duration of one and a half hours, has all the qualities of a feature film.
The eggs are found in a sample of a Martian soil and Beau Bridges plays the scientist who manages to restore the race of alien insects and, in an attempt to prove that these beings possess reason, he gradually loses his own. Production is at a satisfactory level for a series of that time, the acting is ok, and the story is interesting and quite tense. It was massively bashed by viewers who read Martin's story, but it kept my attention all the time and definitely lured me to continue with this series.
"Increasingly, modern science pursues powers traditionally reserved for the almighty, but those who encroach upon the province of the gods realize too late that the price for entrance is destruction."
7/10
The eggs are found in a sample of a Martian soil and Beau Bridges plays the scientist who manages to restore the race of alien insects and, in an attempt to prove that these beings possess reason, he gradually loses his own. Production is at a satisfactory level for a series of that time, the acting is ok, and the story is interesting and quite tense. It was massively bashed by viewers who read Martin's story, but it kept my attention all the time and definitely lured me to continue with this series.
"Increasingly, modern science pursues powers traditionally reserved for the almighty, but those who encroach upon the province of the gods realize too late that the price for entrance is destruction."
7/10
The Outer Limits/Sandkings - 26/3/1995
When his research project is closed down, Simon Kress rescues a few of its living subjects and transplants them to a recreation of their native Martian environment in his barn. They grow and learn, but then Kress makes an error with disastrous implications.
BBC2 debuted this episode of the new The Outer Limits I think on Sunday the 1st of May 1995. I was familiar with original series from the 1960's, but the new version of this particular episode really impressed me with a hidden or subversive message with the warning to scientists trying to play or replace the power of god through scientific advancement.
BBC2 debuted this episode of the new The Outer Limits I think on Sunday the 1st of May 1995. I was familiar with original series from the 1960's, but the new version of this particular episode really impressed me with a hidden or subversive message with the warning to scientists trying to play or replace the power of god through scientific advancement.
Not a very good episode of The Outer Limits.
This episode is inspired by the George Martin short novel Sandkings. It is actually a very different story with different themes and concepts and ideas.
Most good science fiction is a metaphor for real life in the time in which it was written. It generally explores themes and ideas going on right here and now, and usually provides insight into modern problems or issues. The Sandkings episode of The Outer Limits doesnt really touch on any of the moral, philosophical, or ethical issues of the original short story. Its basically a god-complex story about a man who starts as a scientist, seeking to increase human knowledge, then goes off the rails as a maniac possibly infected with a disease making him act irrationally. There isnt much growth in the protagonist and no one really has a character arc. Nor do they debate the topics of one person having power over a lower life form, or letting a dangerous life form get out of control, or what kind of horrible things one man would do to either advance science or stoke his ego. And theres a lot of filler/fluff material about families that just doesnt work because its not well done or interesting. The dialog is cheesy, especially compared to later episodes of the series, and its all kind of a mess. Other sci-fi movies and shows have explored these topics better, and usually with a more satisfying resolution. I won't get into spoilers but lets just say the ending is pretty typical of lazy horror or sci-fi films and fails to capture the essence of good story telling, unlike the original short story which was very poignant.
3 / 10 and not a very good start to a series that would eventually become excellent. In fact the very next story about a live-in Android helper woman is superb by comparison.
Most good science fiction is a metaphor for real life in the time in which it was written. It generally explores themes and ideas going on right here and now, and usually provides insight into modern problems or issues. The Sandkings episode of The Outer Limits doesnt really touch on any of the moral, philosophical, or ethical issues of the original short story. Its basically a god-complex story about a man who starts as a scientist, seeking to increase human knowledge, then goes off the rails as a maniac possibly infected with a disease making him act irrationally. There isnt much growth in the protagonist and no one really has a character arc. Nor do they debate the topics of one person having power over a lower life form, or letting a dangerous life form get out of control, or what kind of horrible things one man would do to either advance science or stoke his ego. And theres a lot of filler/fluff material about families that just doesnt work because its not well done or interesting. The dialog is cheesy, especially compared to later episodes of the series, and its all kind of a mess. Other sci-fi movies and shows have explored these topics better, and usually with a more satisfying resolution. I won't get into spoilers but lets just say the ending is pretty typical of lazy horror or sci-fi films and fails to capture the essence of good story telling, unlike the original short story which was very poignant.
3 / 10 and not a very good start to a series that would eventually become excellent. In fact the very next story about a live-in Android helper woman is superb by comparison.
The Man Who Would Be God
This is one of those plots that has been done a hundred times. Beau Bridges (along with his old man) appear in a pilot of the much revered new version of "The Outer Limits." "The Sandkings" is about a pile of sand, taken back to Earth after a Mars mission. It contains living organisms, and Bridges's character is on his way to a Nobel Prize if he can continue his research. Unfortunately for him, he gets so obsessed with his effort that he becomes a danger to the people he works with. He chooses to ignore security and gets himself fired. When he betrays his friend/supervisor and steals some of the sand, he sets everything in motion. At first it is scientific. He goes overboard as he watches the little critters evolve and one might say he had a right to consider his research. Eventually, the Sandkings, which he has dubbed them, grow their own cultures; they become civilizations. They are builders and creators within the confines of a glass case Bridges has built for them. Soon, he loses his scientific objectivity and begins to play god with the little creatures. He deprives them of food and this forces them to wage war against their own kind. They build a monument with Bridges' face, Rushmore like, in sand. Of course, there are obstacles. One is the inability to hide what is going on from his family, his wife and little boy. Also, the scientists at the lab come to realize that a fair amount of sand is missing and he is the only possible suspect. There is a sort of maudlin subplot, where Bridges' own father, Lloyd Bridges (remember "Sea Hunt," and "Airplane"), takes on the fictional role. The younger Bridges resents his father for favoritism toward a brother who became a casualty of war. All this plays into the plot and, of course, when the Sandkings go through thirty-some generations, they begin to get fed up with their god. It is pretty entertaining, starting the series on a positive note, but at times it is really heavy handed. There is a scene where Bridges takes a stained glass window (his wife works in glass), and places it on the high wall of his barn/laboratory. He stands in front of it as the light shows through, arms spread in the ultimate Christian pose. But that's OK. It was really a fun series, running some seven years.
Did you know
- TriviaThe cast of this episode includes three generations of the Bridges family. The main character, Dr. Simon Kress, is played by Beau Bridges. His father is played by his real-life father Lloyd Bridges and his son is played by his real-life son Dylan Bridges.
- GoofsAt about 01:09:00 into the movie Dr. Simon Kress is in the bathroom throwing up in the toilet and it cuts to him sitting on the floor of the bathroom next to the toilet, and then the toilet slightly moves. Furthermore you can see that it is not anchored to the floor and doesn't have a water supply line and shut off valve coming out of the wall.
- Quotes
[last lines]
The Control Voice: Increasingly, modern science pursues powers traditionally reserved for the almighty, but those who encroach upon the province of the gods realize too late that the price for entrance is destruction.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Outer Limits: The Voice of Reason (1995)
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