Dead Man's Switch (The Outer Limits)
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“Dead Man's Switch” | |||||||
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The Outer Limits episode | |||||||
Episode no. | Season 3 Episode 13 |
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Written by | B. Richardson | ||||||
Directed by | Jeff Woolnough | ||||||
Guest stars | James LeGros as Ben Conklin, Kristin Lehman as Katya Rubanoff, Donnelly Rhodes as Gen. James Eiger, Yee Jee Tso as Hong | ||||||
Production no. | 57 | ||||||
Original airdate | April 4, 1997 | ||||||
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List of The Outer Limits episodes |
"Dead Man's Switch" is an episode of The Outer Limits (new series). It first aired on 4 April 1997, during the third season.
Contents |
[edit] Introduction
Ben Conklin, a Lieutenant in the United States Air Force, is given the assignment of spending one year in a bunker 11,000 feet beneath Alaska.
[edit] Opening narration
Young idealists often dream of having the power to save the world. But would that dream become a nightmare if saving the world could also mean destroying it?
[edit] Plot
After arriving at the bunker, Ben is told by General James Eiger that the Hubble Space Telescope has photographed a fleet of alien ships heading towards Earth. Fearing the worst, the world's chemical, nuclear, and biological weapons stockpiles were linked to create a single doomsday weapon. Five people, including Ben, are placed in five bunkers around the world (United States, Russia, China, South Africa, and Australia), with the mission of controlling the activation of a final revenge weapon should the aliens turn out to be hostile and take over. An alarm sounds randomly, and at least one of the bunker occupants must hit a dead man's switch to disarm it. The switch is designed so that the operator's handprint and retina scan are required for it to work. If a thirty-second countdown passes and no-one activates the switch, the doomsday weapon will fire and leave the surface of the Earth uninhabitable. General Eiger assures Ben that if the aliens try to disarm the system they will set it off and that "if we don't make it out of this alive, then no one else will either." To prevent the bunker occupants from being fed false information they are sealed off from the world, and can communicate only with each other and General Eiger.
As the months pass, the people in the five bunkers cope with the isolation and the uncertainty of the impending encounter. Ben develops a special relationship with Katya, the woman manning the Russian bunker. As their feelings for each other grow, the alien ships finally reach Earth. Claiming to be a scientific expedition, they send a number of "peaceful" ships to a summit meeting at Edwards Air Force Base. General Eiger relates the cautious optimism of the world's leaders, but then weeks go by without any further contact. In an effort to discover what is going on, Hone, an electrical engineer who is manning the China bunker, rewires his bunker to power a shortwave radio only to spark a gas leak that kills him. Soon afterwards, Donald (Africa) freezes to death when his life support system malfunctions. Gwen's (Britain) bunker is penetrated and she is pulled upwards by an unknown party, leaving only Ben and Katya to continue pressing their switches. Having heard nothing more from General Eiger, Katya believes the situation to be hopeless and wants to stop responding to the alarm — allowing activation of the weapon. Ben disagrees as he still believes that the humans on the surface may be able to win the supposed conflict.
On day 367, Katya dies from a fire in her bunker and Ben begins to lose touch with reality. On day 369, his supply of water runs out, and he decides to let the countdown reach zero. As the countdown is about to expire, he receives an urgent message from General Eiger telling him that they have finally defeated the invaders. Eiger pleads with Ben to continue pushing the switch until they can deactivate the doomsday weapon and dig him out of his bunker. When the communication ends, however, Eiger is shown to be controlled by a parasitic alien, with the city outside his window a burning ruin.
The episode ends with Ben still in his bunker — with (very) little food and water left and the bunker systems beginning to fail — repeating to himself: "Just keep pushing the button." The ending is inconclusive and it is left to the viewer to imagine the outcome.
[edit] Closing narration
Our destiny is controlled by the choices we make. Those choices can turn an ordinary man into a king, or reduce him to little more than a pawn. With the fate of the world in your hands, what would you choose?