David 'Balin' is working as an orderly at Valley View Sanatorium. After discovering that a surgeon is using experimental mind control, he unwillingly becomes a patient himself.David 'Balin' is working as an orderly at Valley View Sanatorium. After discovering that a surgeon is using experimental mind control, he unwillingly becomes a patient himself.David 'Balin' is working as an orderly at Valley View Sanatorium. After discovering that a surgeon is using experimental mind control, he unwillingly becomes a patient himself.
- Jack McGee
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- Mental Patient
- (uncredited)
- Mental Patient
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
The Quiet Room
Then, David is put in a straitjacket and locked up to keep him quiet after he confronts the mad doctor about his unethical methods and threatens to show his incriminating video to the authorities ... later, his straight jacket is ripped up when the Hulk enters the picture, but Banner is caught again after his transformation and is drugged. The videotape, however, is lost in the grounds somewhere ...
Quite an entertaining episode with an interesting setting -a sanatorium. David, at first, thinks the doctor is a genius as all the patients suddenly are cured, but later learns that mind control methods are used.
The Hulk Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
A familiar theme explored in episodes of Mannix, The Rockford Files and films like The Fifth Floor-of when sane,desperate pleas are seen as insanity given the surroundings of an asylum, a corrupt doctor's diagnosis and how will the "sane" victim prevail? In one scene, he begs a laundry truck driver to help him get out-the driver only turns him into the attendants as he clings to a bag of laundry in sheer desperation-"Look I'm not a patient here..I have to get out" Banner(in pajamas) pleads, and the driver goes "Sure buddy, just get in the truck and I'll let you know when it's safe". Later, Banner appears completely resigned,pacing about his padded cell everything working against him, Bixby acts the character as if, this time, he's truly given up.
The truth is that even in 1979, patients couldn't be involuntarily operated on so while it was an excellent episode, it had some far fetched elements that were more out of the 1940's.
The Sanitarium
The Hulk Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Lots of other good stuff going on here - I liked the way they didn't waste any writer's time setting up David's situation: he starts off as an orderly (it's explained that the head nurse noticed his credentials and promoted him from janitor) and he goes from there. And there's a clever take here on the witnessing of David's transformation - a bunch of patients literally see him change back from the creature. But of course his identity's safe, since who's going to believe mental patients? And maybe I'm wrong but that scene where the Hulk throws a safe out the window to break free from his "Quiet Room" seems an awful lot like the (spoiler alert!) scene at the end of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest when the Chief hurls that sink out the window to allow his escape. I'm just saying.
If I had any qualms about the show, it would have to be that I the doctor's master plan wasn't 100% clear or credible. The videotape he took was of a guy whom he ordered to shoot a girl, but that guy should've been someone he just operated on, to make it clear. And maybe some more realistic explanation of how the surgery does actually affect behavior, instead of some scientific gobbledygook, could've helped.
But overall, a very solid show. And, despite its time period (they were still calling mental health facilities "sanitariums") it's not too dated. Two excellent hulk-outs, one involving a straitjacket, the other a frustrating phone call as the heroine is undergoing a very involuntary surgery. Penultimate season two show is no wonder why the series was a ratings dynamo and was easily picked up for season three.
BTW: That videotape is an actual VHS videocassette. Since this is early 1979, it's most likely the first time the mass viewing audience ever saw such an item. It was definitely the first time I ever did.
The Hulk Checks In
The secret is Dr. Moreau's surgery also makes the patients susceptible to mind control, and he plans to sell the procedure to the highest bidder. David makes off with a videotape of evidence, but realizing he's about to be caught, he chucks it under a bush.
Here's where the episode loses all credibility. Moreau and his henchmen inexplicably cannot find the tape. Whenever they ask "Where did you hide that tape, David?", I wanted to shout "Did it occur to you to check the place where you found him, geniuses?" But the stupidity gets much worse: they plan to use Moreau's surgery on David. When Moreau tells Dr. Hill this, she shrugs, as if performing experimental brain surgery without the permission of the patient or his next of kin were something doctors do every day instead of a guaranteed ticket to prison.
A lot of drama is built around the hidden tape, so I guess the writers were shooting for an award for Most Anticlimactic Resolution, because not only does Moreau get the tape in the end, but it turns out he was going to show it to Dr. Hill anyway. Which also makes no sense, because all showing her the tape does is introduce the risk of her turning against him. Still, the mental patients are fun, so the episode isn't a *total* loss.
Did you know
- TriviaCharles Napier's first to provide the the Hulk roars and growls, for the remainder of the run.
- GoofsWhen Dr. Hill calls the police, she tells them that she is a doctor at the Valley View Sanitarium, instead of the Valley View Sanatorium.
- Quotes
Dr. David Bruce Banner: You know I eh, I was very impressed with the results of Tom Vincent's operation.
Dr. Hill: When the scientific community finds out about Dr. Murrow's new work, there won't be a criminally insane or violently uncontrollable person, we won't be able to get help.
- ConnectionsFeatures Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man (1943)
- SoundtracksThe Lonely Man
End titles by Joe Harnell
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- Mayfield Senior School - 500 Bellefontaine Street, Pasadena, California, USA(as Valley View Sanatorium)
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