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Mark Richman, Nina
Foch, Philip
Abbot, Gladys Cooper, Barry Jones, Gene Raymond, Alfred Ryder.
Scientists develop a technique for sending living matter into another
dimension, which may be the after life.
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QUICK SCAN...
Fans of dimensional travel stories, or of tales involving people's
attempts to reach through the veil into the land of the dead, should
have fun with this episode. Mark Richman (Star Trek:NG) gives an
intense, Rod Serling like performance as the scientist. Actress
and famous acting teacher, Nina Foch ("Tales of the City")
offers strong support as Richman's wife. |
SYNOPSIS...
A scientist develops a way of entering another dimension. He gets
the funding from a rich man to expand his experiments. In return,
he agrees to try to contact the rich man's dead son, on the "other
side".
The scientist sends inanimate objects, as well as flowers and white
rats, into the other dimension. Meanwhile, phony psychics plot to
wreck his experiments.
While the scientist is in the fourth dimension, a psychic disrupts
the power supply. The scientist's wife pulls him out of the other
dimension. Desperate to contact his dead son, the rich man enters
the inter-dimensional chamber, disappearing.
REVIEW...
Director/Writer Leslie Stevens' THE BORDERLAND
is an unusually convincing tale of inter-dimensional travel.
Mark Richman ("The Probe") is compelling as a man determined
to explore another dimension, even at the risk of his life. With his
glittering eyes and lean, muscular face, Richman, under Stevens' taut
direction, brings just the right degree of intensity to lines like,
"And what we have discovered, in this invisible field, is a doorway,
a doorway into the fourth dimension."
Actress and acting coach, Nina Foch ("Tales of the City")
is vivid as Richman's mathematician wife. She is convincing, as being
both a dedicated scientist and as a woman, very much in love with
her knowledge seeking, risk taking husband.
Veteran character actors, Gladys Cooper ("The Twilight Zone")
and Alfred Ryder ("Star Trek") play two phony psychics,
determined to wreck Richman's authentic attempt to reach the other
side. As representatives of the "old school" of extra-scientific
investigation, Cooper and Ryder seem right at home.
Director Steven's Teleplay achieves a balance rare in Sci-Fi fables.
The character development and the pseudo-science stuff are given equal
time.
The episode's chief FX involves things "whiting out" and
reversing as they travel into another dimension and back. The serviceable,
if not dazzling, FX are courtesy of Butler-Glouner, Inc.
My favorite scene takes place at a dinner party at the home of a wealthy
man. After explaining that he put his left hand into another dimension,
Richman puts his hands on the table, revealing two right hands!
Director of Photography, John M. Nickolaus, Jr., is resourceful. Visually
striking is an overhead shot of Richman's dimensional chamber, and
it's nearby horse-shoe shaped control panel.
The music is mostly recycled stuff, including the trumpet-flavored
score usually heard over the series' end credits. Dominic Frontiere
is the responsible party.
THE BORDERLAND should be fairly watchable for most Sci-Fi viewers.
Those interested in tales involving attempts to contact or reach the
"other side" will be fascinated. THE BORDERLAND will knock
you dead!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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