When the first
baby is born on Alpha celebrations soon turn sour as the child grows by five
years in a few seconds though everyone except Koenig seems to take it in their
stride. By no coincidence whatsoever an alien spaceship also turns up and the
commander is the one who spots a connection between the two events. You never
know which way this episode is going to turn. At first the kid- named Jackie
Crawford- seems relatively normal but director Ray Austin captures some spooky
shots of him that wouldn’t be out of place in a horror movie. It soon seems
that the child has some psychic powers which also set up the weekly argument
with Alan Carter!
What happens
next is perfectly acceptable in your average 70s sci-fi tv show but looks a bit
naff now. As you’d expect the child grows again into a man played by Julian
Glover but unfortunately he is wearing a very tight silver outfit that makes
him look ridiculous! Glover does his best but his clobber constantly threatens
to suck the menace from his character even when he is threatening the entire
crew with imminent death so his people can take over their bodies. Presumably
they’ll be bringing their own shimmery clothes!
There’s a lot
to like about this episode which shows a less technical, more human side to the
cast as characters react to the child. Alan whizzes him about like an Eagle,
Victor has him drawing but you know there’s something up when Jackie is more
interested in that globe thing that Victor also stares into. Barbara Bain in
particular is excellent whether cooing over the newborn, then horrified by
developments and later in the control of the silver clad Jarek. It’s a strong
episode for Martin Landau too though the writers do seem to constantly make him
the only one who can see through alien deception and trickery. Didn’t anyone
else do the course on alien deception and trickery?
Writer
Christopher Penfold adds a little more substance with discussions between the
Alphans over their reaction to events. While using Jackie as an example could
have been influenced by the kid himself it still makes a valid point. Sometimes
it seems as if the crew are constantly struggling to decide how to react and if
their default position is to attack episodes like this show how futile that can
be. I’d have liked some more references to the impact of a birth on the base
before the odd things start to happen. At the start we see everyone nervously
awaiting news and it would have added another layer to have had some characters
talking about their own situation as they surely would have reflected on it. As
the aliens’ ultimate plan is brief in execution there would have been time in
the episode for something along those lines.
It’s a great
episode if you like spaceships and it shows where my priorities lay when this
was originally shown as these were the only things I remembered. Yep, it’s the
episode with the long spaceship in it. Interestingly we never see who is inside
it but their arrival is well timed at a point when all of the crew are choking
to death. Even though I know there are many episodes to come I am thinking- how
are they going to resolve this? When it was first shown it must have been real
edge of seat stuff. Having shown us someone growing from birth to middle age in
a few days the episode signs off with a lovely finish that makes a sort of
sense but leaves you with a warm glow.
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