"The Outer Limits" Manifest Destiny (TV Episode 2000) Poster

(TV Series)

(2000)

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6/10
Flawed but Effective
Sandsquish9 February 2009
"Info-dumps" are a hazard of sci-fi and horror storytelling. They're those parts of the story where a character stops to tell another character what's going on because, presumably, the audience hasn't caught on yet because, presumably, it's all to weird for us to decipher.

The problem is, if the authors have done their job well, the audience can already see what's happening, so the info-dump is redundant and brings the story to a halt for no reason.

Yes, this episode has several info-dumps, but most of them are short and, mostly, no one has to break character to deliver them. Since sci-fi fans have learned to tolerate these things, this doesn't really hurt the show until the end, when one of the characters actually points the camera at himself so he can explain the theme of the show to the audience. Ugh.

But, up until then, this episode was pretty effective. The characters are investigating the abandonment of another spacecraft. There's a mystery to be solved, and it's a pretty creepy one, with cryptic messages and several things jumping out of nowhere and then disappearing into the darkness of the crippled ship.

One of characters is documenting the investigation with a video-camera, so the audience literally sees the story through the eyes of someone who is involved in the situation, and learns about the mystery along with that character, in "real time," and is right there with the character as his comrades succumb to the madness that created the mystery.

It's too bad the filmmakers didn't trust that they had shown the audience everything they needed to understand the show, because the final info-dump crippled everything that went before it.
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9/10
Ersatz "Alien"
Hitchcoc17 August 2014
This is one of those episodes where one needs to focus in on what is and isn't reality. A space ship is sent to investigate a huge station that has brought about the destruction of all flora and fauna on planet, leaving it available for colonization. The rub is that all aboard seem to be dead or at least absent. The factor that isn't fully thought out is that such action may have also destroyed a sentient race. The actions of the investigating team are being recorded. Something is causing paranoia and depression, nee madness on board. So as the crew comes to realize the violence of the adversary (whatever that is), they seemingly become the monster. The issue at hand is what we (or any explorers or colonists) are allowed to do to gain the future. Once the invaders "infected" the indigenous culture, like Cortez and the Indians, a race disappeared, but the invaders brought back the object of reprisals. Watch this a couple of times, especially after you've seen the results.
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10/10
One of the best sci fi stories, sets, and effects !
tanner32120013 May 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This has to be one of the all time greatest science fiction television episodes ever written.As I watched I had a foreboding feeling of what was in store for the human race.It was so eerie and creepy it was palatable.The superb writing,acting,set,props,lighting,unique filming angles,and the dead creatures achieved this by making it look and feel so real.An absolute heart pounding nail biter.This story had so much potential to be made into a full length movie on par with movies such as Alien.The ending to this episode was one of the best I have ever seen!!!I was like OH NOOOO !!!An absolutely jaw dropping ending.A+++ One more thing.... Sarah Deakins is.... SOOOO... Sexy and gorgeous!
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4/10
A clear case of "sci-fi."
gatebanger26 December 2022
I haven't written any reviews to speak of lately but want to put in a plug for a review written by a member who signs himself as "Sandsquish."

He's spot on with this one. The writing wasn't horrible and the story was decent. I lay any defects at the feet of the producers and the sponsors (in that order, though it used to be the other way around). Producers think viewers are idiots, mostly because THEY don't get it. Sponsors don't like anything they think will demean whatever they're trying to get you to buy. For a common example of this thinking, read about the network reaction to the first "Star Trek" pilot.

This episode, and virtually everything else in TV-land related to speculative fiction, can be classified as "sci-fi."

It is well to remember that when Forrest J Ackerman coined the term "sci-fi" back in the 1950s, he wasn't talking about anything good, and certainly not "science fiction."

Sandsquish's point about the numerous info dumps identifies the major flaw with this episode, and so many other teleplays. The only thing more annoying is the notes in scripts that read, "insert technobabble here." You might watch it once, but you're not going to watch it twice,

In summary, an OK story, poorly told.
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