A man walking through a snow storm suddenly finds himself at a refuge. They tell him that the entire world is covered in ice. Just as he begins to fall in love with someone, the people's per... Read allA man walking through a snow storm suddenly finds himself at a refuge. They tell him that the entire world is covered in ice. Just as he begins to fall in love with someone, the people's personalities suddenly change. What's happening?A man walking through a snow storm suddenly finds himself at a refuge. They tell him that the entire world is covered in ice. Just as he begins to fall in love with someone, the people's personalities suddenly change. What's happening?
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What the journalist has stumbled upon is a world in a curious intermediary between dream and reality, where the inhabitants, as victims of a megalomaniac, are reduced to mere avatars of themselves. It's up to the journalist to help them re-establish that link back to the real, back to the reality. But to do so he is forced to somehow plunge deeper into the dream while remaining whole.
I'd seen this episode as a young teenager and thinking about it today as an adult I hunted it down to see whether I could now catch the points I hadn't understood, then. Turns out there wasn't anything more to catch. It's a compelling scenario and it holds our attention to the end, but ultimately it just isn't very well thought-out. The explanation for how the journalist managed to resist the mind-scrambling is never elevated beyond the stage of primitive semi-scientific hypothesis, and no explanation is offered for why the nurse manages to resist partially but not completely. And while the explanation for all the victims' descent into the dream is satisfactory enough, the antagonist's mechanism of action is never buckled back in. It feels like a cop-out compromise between elaborate speculative mystery and bona fide "whodunit." The thematic cachet, the idea of dreams inspiring reality as much as reality inspiring dreams, is strong enough on its own but it is applied here in a rather thin and harried manner. None of this is improved by the camerawork and acting, both scarcely two steps above those of a daytime soap opera from the same period.
Perhaps a single hour-long anthology episode was simply too short to give this subject the treatment and this conflict the narrative and resolution they warranted. That's rather a shame. It was entertaining while I watched it but afterwards didn't feel like anything at all. I got the impression I had been duped into downing what looked like a packet of fancy chocolates and gotten little more than cotton candy. All-in-all, probably not worth your time.
Did you know
- GoofsAt about 4:00, Raymond is in bed and tucks his arm under the cover, in the very next scene, he's un-tucked.
- Quotes
Nurse Gina Beaumont: Why do you care so much what I think?
Raymond Dalton: Because out of this whole damn place, you are the only one who I really respect.