
Adventures in Streaming: Outer Limits is your next favourite binge
If one measures the success of a TV series by its spinoffs, Star Trek (Paramount+), must stand alone, with an astonishing 13 different television iterations — that's not even counting the dozen or so movies.
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Surely, though, the original series –Trekkers call it TOS for short — was the fountainhead that inspired all those offshoots.
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Has it aged well since its 1966-69 run? Well, developments in everything from visual effects to fight choreography have rendered the show somewhat quaint, at least through the jaded eyes of contemporary media consumers with the ability to pinpoint slipshod digital alterations while standing 20 paces from a 4K flatscreen.
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But in these divisive times, it remains a series that made one hopeful about the future in its depiction of earthlings from different backgrounds and ethnicities who put aside their differences to co-operate on a noble, non-colonizing interstellar mission: 'To boldly go where no man has gone before.'
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And yet the show's reputation as the alpha and omega of television science fiction is as persistently tight as a Vulcan Nerve Pinch.
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Star Trek's mission was, in a way, forecast in a series that developed years before Captain Kirk was but a glimmer in the eye of a CBS network programmer.
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The Outer Limits (1963-65, new on Tubi), is delightful old-school science fiction that anticipated TOS, even if its format went with a different story and cast every week. If Star Trek looked forward, Outer Limits was very much formed by its immediate past, the geopolitical aftershocks of the Second World War, with the threat of nuclear annihilation at the forefront. Also, it was shot in newsreel black and white, which gives it more gravitas than Star Trek's '60s sickly-psychedelic colour palette.
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Even with its primitive effects, it could induce nightmares. The episode The Zanti Misfits is about powerful aliens who negotiate a deal with earth to harbour a Botany Bay-like ship filled with prisoners. Once revealed, the creatures are merely large bugs with human faces, animated with stop motion. And yet, these crawlies still have the power to creep you out.
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Go for the bugs. Stay for the hair-raising sado-masochistic sparks between earthly criminal Bruce Dern and his girlfriend (Olive Deering), a runaway wife, who unwittingly facilitate the misfits' escape. (The series' main writer Joseph Stefano wrote the screenplay for Psycho, and presumably knew a little something about, psychosexual subtext.)
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The most celebrated episode, Demon with a Glass Hand, was written by sci-fi gadfly Harlan Ellison, and stars Robert Culp as a man with no memory, dropped into Los Angeles, vaguely aware of a mission to foil an aggressive alien race that will defeat earthlings hundreds of years in the future. (In 2009, TV Guide ranked the episode as #73 on an all-time list of great TV episodes.)
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Global News
2 days ago
- Global News
Donald Trump says he's not ‘solely responsible' for ‘Late Show' cancellation
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Montreal Gazette
3 days ago
- Montreal Gazette
Opinion: Many reasons to lament Late Show cancellation
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Vancouver Sun
3 days ago
- Vancouver Sun
In production: What's filming in Metro Vancouver this summer and fall
Another year, another blast of headwinds in Hollywood North. B.C.'s production professionals have been hit first by COVID lockdowns, then a pair of disruptive strikes among writers and actors in 2023, then a post-strike recalibration in the industry that saw the number and scale of film, TV and streaming productions drop worldwide. This year's tariff threats from Trump, though hardly coherent, are just another headache adding to the uncertainty and general hesitancy to pull the trigger on new ventures in the business. It's been a struggle for those trying to maintain their careers in B.C., but those who have stuck it out are powering along and remain among the world's leaders in terms of skill and professionalism. Get top headlines and gossip from the world of celebrity and entertainment. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sun Spots will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Are things turning around? Perhaps slowly, but the local scene could use a few more big announcements like 2024's second season of The Last of Us. Here are some highlights of what's on set and heading into production around Metro Vancouver and B.C., according to Creative B.C. and the Directors Guild of Canada. Julia Garner — who burst on the scene in Ozark and is a superhero this summer in The Fantastic Four: First Steps — takes on the female lead in the story of crypto fraudster Sam Bankman-Fried. She'll play his girlfriend Caroline Ellison, who testified in the case after being nabbed as a co-conspirator. The limited series for Netflix is on set until November. A release date hasn't been set. One of the few feature films in the works this summer, this thriller directed by Takashi Doscher has Isabel May (of the Yellowstone prequel 1883) and Cynthia Erivo (Wicked) in the cast. Shooting is set to wrap up in early August. The reimagining of Sherlock Holmes's sidekick Dr. Watson stars Morris Chestnut back in his medical career after Sherlock's death. While studying rare diseases at a Pittsburgh centre — with Vancouver standing in for everything but the external shots — he finds his old sleuth life intruding. The second season debut is now set for Oct. 13, after CBS originally pushed it to 2026. It airs on Global in Canada. Justin Hartley stars in this hit show about a survivalist and missing persons hunter based on the Jeffrey Deaver novel The Never Game, which had its debut on CBS in 2023. It's been a ratings leader for the network, duelling with Watson for top spot. Shooting for Season 3 just got underway and runs into April 2026. While Hollywood remains a source for many splashy productions here, CBC came to Surrey for its cop drama Allegiance and recently renewed the show for a third season. It will be on set until early November. Joel McHale's good-natured sitcom about human hijinks at an animal control centre is back for a fourth season. The shoot starts in late August and runs into November. The first three seasons aired on Fox and CBC, and can be seen on CBC Gem. Another CBC show coming back for a third season — and fourth — is this comedic procedural in which a detective and con artist team up to solve crimes. Leads Giacomo Gianniotti as the cop and Vanessa Morgan as the con woman return. Shooting is set for late August to early December. Call this saga about wildfire crews timely. It debuted in 2022 after devastating seasons in both B.C. and California and has found an audience on both Global TV and CBS. The third season ran through April and Max Theriot and cast are back on set now through March 2026. The Paramount+ show that blends the supernatural with high school drama, which debuted in 2023, is back for a third season. Production began last week and is set to run into October. It will be released next year. Jason Priestley and Cindy Sampson return as the leads in this spinoff of Global's Private Eyes, which ran from 2016 to 2021 and was set in Toronto. The reboot is shooting in Victoria until early September. Based on the 2022 young-adult novel Every Summer After by Canadian author Carley Fortune, it tells the story of two teens whose summers of puppy love might actually be the real thing. It's being produced for Amazon Prime Video, which had a hit in the same vein with The Summer I Turned Pretty. Shooting is set to run all summer and wrap up in early October. There's no release date or trailer yet. Set to launch next year, this horror series once again follows the awkward, bullied telekinetic teen from the Stephen King novel and classic 1976 movie starring Sissy Spacek (and John Travolta!). Filming is due to wrap in October. Jonathan Glatzer, who's produced prestige television like Succession, Bad Sisters and Better Call Saul, is attached to this Silicon Valley drama. Shooting wraps up in early August, with a 2026 release planned on streamer AMC. This Netflix thriller about a politically compromised naval officer (Gugu Mbatha-Raw of Loki) just went into production and will be on set until November. Richard Madden (Robb Stark on Game of Thrones) and Marcia Gay Harden (So Help Me Todd) are the other leads. The fantasy adventure series based on the grade-schooler novels of the same name by Rick Riordan is already shooting a third season, even as the second is awaiting its December debut on Disney+. Shooting starts in early August and is set to continue into March. 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