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The Outer Limits: Expanding Human
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Directed by Gerd Oswald.
A mysterious hulking figure prowls a university campus at night and yanks the door off of a locked storage room to steal chemicals -- a guard spots the intruder but before he can react, the man knocks him cold and kills him, carrying the body as if it weighed nothing. The police investigation, led by Lt. Branch (James Doohan), can't figure out how the door was removed or the guard was asphyxiated -- and the materials that were stolen are fairly mystifying as well, chemicals used in experiments with consciousness-expanding ("CE") drugs. Dr. Peter Wayne (Keith Andes), the head of the drug experimentation program, and his associate (and brother-in-law) Dr. Roy Clinton (Skip Homeier), insist that there's nothing missing that was worth a burglary, much less a murder, but the lieutenant insists on checking out a possible connection between the crimes and a group of students and faculty members who were previously dismissed from the university for their CE experiments. This leads to new puzzlements -- including a man (Aki Aleong) who turns up, seemingly dead, for no apparent reason -- and the murder of a philanthropist associated with the university, apparently committed by a man that no one except Dr. Wayne remembers seeing. And of what significance is one student's claim that he saw Dr. Clinton on campus, at the science building, on the night of the burglary, which Clinton insists can't be true? Or Clinton's suggestion that CE drugs may be at work on others around them, affecting their judgement and their abilities? The story poses lots of questions, as well as momentarily waxing poetic on the potential of consciousness-expansion, and then answers them very slightly too early and quickly, in this otherwise eerie and suspenseful mystery. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Gerd Oswald's "Expanding Human" is one installment of The Outer Limits that has proved especially annoying to fans and viewers over the decades. As a Jekyll-and-Hyde story for the 1960's, it should, by rights, not only have been one of the more suspenseful shows from the series' second season, but also one that was extremely topical, dealing with university experiments with consciousness-expanding drugs; at the time of its original broadcast in late 1964, the public was only vaguely aware of real-life experiments in the field, though by the time the series was cancelled and being rerun in syndication in 1966, this was as contemporary a subject as any science fiction series could have dealt with. Oswald does his best as director to maintain the mood of suspense, succeeding for much of the time in the first half-hour, but the way the script is written, it deflates the mystery and suspense a little too soon. The plot actually bears some resemblance to a contemporary novel called The Power, which was filmed in 1968 by George Pal, about the search for a person, hidden in among a group of researchers, whose ESP abilities are so powerful as to make him a threat to those around him; the difference is that The Power kept its mystery alive for the length of the feature film, where "Expanding Human" shows us just a little too much of the mysterious assassin (especially his face, which is a good make-up job but one that should have been revealed only gradually) -- this was an instance (one of many) where the ABC network's insistence on the presence of a "monster" as early as possible in each Outer Limits show damaged the program's potential for suspense and mystery. One can see that Oswald tried hard to hide as much of the burglar/assassin as possible without being totally successful; the script also gave too much dialogue to the Skip Homeier's character, in the way of planting clues and red-herrings, so that one could easily enough guess why he was there; and not enough is explored about other interesting supporting characters, including Akada, the CE drug researcher, or the mysterious ex-grad student portrayed by Peter Duryea, who appears and disappears too abruptly; and too much of the action takes place in the dullish surroundings of Dr. Wayne's and Dr. Clinton's homes. What does work among the background details is James Doohan's Lt. Branch, who is convincingly worn out and out-of-his depth dealing with crimes whose methods, motives, and purposes are totally beyond his experience; and Keith Andes' Dr. Wayne, whose decency is totally convincing, although this also makes him a very weak ally on the side of the angels in the denouement. Interestingly, "Expanding Human" played horrendously for decades as a broadcast program, with commercial breaks; but on home video, without the commercials it has a suspenseful rhythm that it never showed before. It's a curious artifact of its era, and more reasonably-toned for most of its length than, say, Dragnet's anti-drug diatribes of the same period. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
 



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