The Revelations of Becka Paulson
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The Outer Limits episode | |
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“The Revelations of 'Becka Paulson” | |
Episode no. | Season 3 Episode 15 |
Guest star(s) | Catherine O'Hara as Becka Paulson, John Diehl as Joe Paulson, Bill Dow as Doc Fink, Steven Weber as The Handsome Man, Marilyn Norry as Flo |
Writer(s) | Brad Wright/Story by Stephen King |
Director | Steven Weber |
Production no. | 59 |
Original airdate | 6 June 1997 |
Episode chronology | |
← Previous | Next → |
“Music of the Spheres” | “Bodies of Evidence” |
"The Revelations of 'Becka Paulson" is an episode of The Outer Limits. It first aired on 6 June 1997, during the third season.
Contents |
[edit] Introduction
'Becka Paulson accidentally shoots herself in the head while watching a soap opera. The bullets lodges in her brain, and begin to have some strange effects.
[edit] Opening narration
"Even in the most innocent of minds, there are still secrets best left unrevealed."
[edit] Plot synopsis
In a stroke of 'luck', the bullet does not kill Becka, but her severe brain damage (which inevitably is the cause of all that follows, more likely then not) causes her to begin to hallucinate that the picture of a tuxedoed stranger on top of the TV (Who calls himself 'The 8 By 10' Man; in the original story it was a picture of Jesus) is talking to her. Under the advice of the 8 By 10 Man, Becka eventually decides to kill her worthless husband, and in a bit of 'damaged savantry', rigs up the television (under the 8 by 10 Man's instructions) to deliver a fatal electrical pulse to whoever touches the knob. Becka in the end tricks her husband into touching it, but as he begins to be fatally electroduced she finally realizes just what she's done and tries to save him. All she does is alter the circuit by touching him, and the two fall dead, the victim of a tragic quirk of fate that was in the end far from lucky.
[edit] Closing narration
"Perhaps the descent into madness... is not a solitary journey, after all."
[edit] Trivia
- The episode is based on the short story "Revelations of 'Becka Paulson" by Stephen King