Search

» » The Outer Limits The Mice (1963–1965)

Short summary

An advanced civilization contacts the U.S. to test both worlds' experimental teleportation systems, by exchanging citizens. Fearing the matter transport will fail, U.S. military select a prisoner serving a life sentence, not caring that a murderer's being set loose on Chromos, because it's 10 light years away. But will the ex-boxer escape before the exchange is completed, in the narrow window when the planets are aligned?

Writer Joseph Stefano named the protagonist Chino Rivera after his good friend, actress and dancer Chita Rivera.

The teleportation unit is the same assembly used for the skyward aimed laser in "The Bellero Shield".

The wavy line special FX used for the teleportation device is the same special FX used in "The Borderland" device for opening up a dimensional wall between Earth and the hereafter.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Adaly
    "The Mice" is rarely singled out as a noteworthy OUTER LIMITS episode, yet it has many distinctive qualities. The strangeness that we find in the best episodes of this series is here in full force. A prisoner exchange between Earth and a little-known alien society allows a bizarre creature to arrive on this planet. This prisoner behaves in its own alien way and is creepy and fascinating to watch. There are a couple of suspenseful scenes when the creature is on the loose and wreaks some havoc. In the cast are Michael Higgins, Diana Sands and Henry Silva: all very good actors who bring plenty of realism to their roles. It's especially interesting to watch the sympathetic connection between Sands and Silva. This episode does not waste Henry Silva (a wonderful performer) as another entry, "Tourist Attraction", does. He really carries the show and makes it a must-see for anyone who in interested in early 60s TV drama.
  • comment
    • Author: fetish
    This episode stands out not so much for its creepiness or writing or any of the traits we usually associate with Outer Limits, Twilight Zone, etc, as for some unusual casting against type and against Hollywood 'rules' of the time.

    Henry Silva usually plays creepy, stiff bad-guy types. But in this episode, he's personable, dynamic, and outgoing.

    More interestingly, Diana Sands - a black actress - is cast as a central character. This was rare in 1964. She plays a doctor - NOT a nurse - and interacts closely with Silva's character in a time when blacks and whites rarely touched each other on television.

    Probably, her light complexion and Silva's character being Hispanic mitigated the circumstances, but still pretty unusual for the time.
  • comment
    • Author: iSlate
    This interesting episode featured a story about a planet exchanging one of its more dangerous criminals for a human prisoner on Earth deemed just as dangerous. The popular character actor Henry Silva played the human prisoner from our planet who actually was frightened himself by the strange gelatin-like creature who produced its own protozoa type substance from a small lake near the prison facility. It sort of freaked me out when the creature would flap its crab-like paws. I thought the scene where Silva tries to escape from the prison facility while the guards are distracted by the alien creature was a bit claustrophobic and his acting was a bit melodramatic or over the top but all in all this was a fascinating story which showed that other planets in space could also produce shady characters and criminals much like us humans down here on Earth. This episode also featured one of the earlier roles for the great character actor Dabney Coleman. The irony of this story as it turns out, the character played by Henry Silva actually helps out the other characters in the episode including the sweet actress Diana Sands and we tend to be more sympathetic towards him even though he is a criminal. It again shows that the "awe and mystery" as the famous Control Voice mentions during the introduction of each Outer Limits episode of possible life on other planets will even stifle the evil done by human beings down here on Earth as even the most hardened of criminals from our own planet also somehow fears the unknown alien life on other planets.
  • comment
    • Author: Gelgen
    A distant planet contacts Earth and sends plans for a matter-transmitter (a primitive prototype for the Transporter seen on STAR TREK 3 years later). The authorities decide to test it by using a convict pulling a life sentence. But when the alien arrives, things get a LOT stranger than anyone imagined...

    Like a lot of "lesser" OUTER LIMITS episodes, this one rambles a bit, and the more action-filled 2nd half is more confusing than suspenseful. But there are 2 standouts that make it memorable. One is Henry Silva's convict, who proves a far more fascinating and likable character than one might expect (indeed, I find this one of his BEST roles!). The other is the alien, which I can only describe as looking like something you'd get if you blew your nose too hard. Not sure if the thing is actually frightening, or just really disgusting to look at!

    Look quick (and carefully) near the end for an early cameo role by Dabney Coleman, still more than a decade away from fame as the preacher on MARY HARTMAN, MARY HARTMAN (growing that moustache must be the best career move he ever made).

    I get a kick out of it when Silva's character hands a revolver over and says, "Just watching him for you. He's a killer!"
  • comment
    • Author: Scoreboard Bleeding
    When the prison warden summons three inmates serving life sentences, they are interviewed by Dr. Thomas 'Kelly' Kellander that is seeking a volunteer with authorization of the government to test a teleportation system to another planet. Chino Rivera accepts the offer and learns that the advanced civilization from planet Chromos has contacted the earthlings and offered the technology for teleportation. They propose an exchange of natives from each planet and soon Dr. Kellander receives an alien that walks freely in the facility. However Dr. Robert Richardson finds a strange goo floating on the lake and decides to investigate, but is murdered by the alien. Meanwhile Chino tries to escape from the facility and stumbles upon Dr. Richardson´s body. He is accused of murder and only Dr. Julia Harrison believes him. What is the real intention of the alien from Chromos?

    Despite the potential of the storyline, "The Mice" is a poorly written and acted episode of "The Outer Limits". How can an alien come to Earth and circulate unmonitored in a state-of-art military facility? The attitudes of the sluggish security officers are ridiculous. Nobody comments the fate of the officer sent to Chromos. The way Dr. Julia Harrison reports her findings nearby the lake to Dr. Kellander is unthinkable. My vote is five.

    Title (Brazil): "Os Camundongos" ("The Mice")
  • comment
    • Author: Steelrunner
    This is yet another OUTER LIMITS episode where a good idea got lost due to clumsy handling. Despite some good acting and more action than SOME episodes, the plotting prevents the buildup of real suspense and the story elements aren't handled in such a way as to reinforce the plot idea; as a result we wind up kind of confused at the end!

    Earth scientists have established contact with a distant space civilization, the Chromomites. They build a matter-transporter with the aim of exchanging representatives; the Chromomites demand that the first being to pass through the transporter be an important Earthman, a kind of scientific diplomat. However Earth's authorities decide that it would be best to test the device by sending a criminal, just in case, and they select a man they believe to be no more than a hardened killer. However when the Chromomite representative arrives, it soon appears that the aliens may have had the same idea...
  • comment
    • Author: Rleillin
    Earth and the Planet Kromo have agreed to a "mutual transportation" where members of both their races will be sent through "transmission" to each other's planets. Sufficed to say, something goes horribly wrong when the Kromo representative starts to kill humans… Actor Henry Silva (last seen two episodes prior in "Tourist Attraction" with a far more impressive character and performance here) is a convict given a chance to be the human representative, but he wants to be looked at as not some mouse test subject but a man with feelings and a conscience. Meanwhile, the alien from Kromo (looks like a blob of Vaseline with legs, crabs for hands) is spending time by the science laboratory's nearby lake, throwing objects in that turn into flabby substances it then consumes. Learned through correspondence with the Kromo aliens, Dr. Thomas Kellander (Michael Higgins) understands that they live through photosynthesis, and there is a secret that is revealed at the very end that only punctuates the tragedy that is the loss of life, the alien erroneously taking violent means when not needed. Silva, as prisoner Chino Rivera, has a lot of fire and charisma, a part that doesn't just work as a stereotype, the actor transcends it, giving the character depth and dimension, by pointing out that he yearns for freedom, aches for it, impulsively attempting, futilely, to escape, almost doing so at one point. The loss of life is especially disconcerting considering if the Kromo race had just been up front and honest with Kellander and told them the reason was for contact and transport to Earth, it might have saved every death that occurs at the alien's claw-hands. That's the point, the lack of trust, and the inability to just communicate causes unneeded consequences that will only ruin what could have been a peaceful co-existence between two worlds, two species.
  • comment
    • Author: Anayajurus
    If one were to evaluate the way science works in our culture using "The Outer Limits" as our guide, we would conclude that we stupidly launch headlong into whatever another alien culture wants and ask questions later. Henry Silva plays a convicted murderer who has been given the opportunity to participate in a major experiment. He volunteers to be sent to another planet through teleportation while the aliens send one of their own in exchange. The other guy comes first and he looks like a gigantic garlic with legs. He is allowed to roam around the compound. While there he spends lots of time at a pond where he throws things in the water. What develops is a living substance that he eats (actually he stuffs the substance in some part of his body). He is also quite dangerous when confronted, especially if his food source is threatened, and he manages to leave a couple of bodies in his wake. Meanwhile, Silva's prisoner becomes the center of things. It turns out the murder he committed was justified in his mind because the man had done horrible things to his sister. He develops a bond with a young female doctor at the facility who sees him in a much more positive light.

    One thing. Watch the portrayal of the police in this episode. They are probably the most incompetent characters one has ever seen. When attacked, they throw their guns into the air and allow the threatening figure to get hold of them. The thing moves about two miles an hour and probably couldn't catch a one legged man. And it's not the element of surprise because they are out there looking for something dangerous. Just a sidelight.

    There is one red herring in the plot as well (unless I missed something). A policeman, lying in the transportation device, disappears. Where did he go? No one mentions him. Also, there is critical denouement. Why did the aliens do what they did without using other means? Food for thought (no pun intended).
  • comment
    • Author: komandante
    "The Outer Limits", like other anthology shows, relied on lots of guest appearances by character actors. However, oddly, Henry Silva stars in this one--just a few episodes after appearing in another. But, since he was a pretty good actor, I certainly won't complain!

    The show begins with a prison warden trying to get a volunteer for a scientific experiment. It seems that the Earth has been contacted by an advanced civilization (a pretty typical theme for this show) and wanted to do an exchange program--sending one of their beings to the Earth and accepting one of ours as a cultural exchange. But, since the equipment is mostly untested, they want to send a seemingly expendable person...a prisoner. Silva agrees to be the guinea pig--but there turns out to be MUCH more to the story than that--and much that the Earth has not anticipated.

    Not a bad episode overall. Silva's good performance helped to overcome the silly looking alien--that's for sure. And the plot was rather creative and interesting. Well worth seeing.
  • comment
    • Author: Tyler Is Not Here
    Henry Silva stars as a prisoner named Chino Rivera serving a life sentence for murder who is given a chance to participate in a unique exchange program with another planet called Chromo that has recently contacted Earth, and left instructions on how the teleportation machine will work. The Chromo comes through first, and is revealed to be a bizarre, gelatinous, crab-clawed biped that proceeds to leave the compound, murdering a scientist in its quest to recreate its food supply in the water. Just how can this thing be stopped, and what is its ultimate plan? Unique monster design to be sure, but overused in the broad daylight, and slow episode is otherwise much too dull.
  • comment
    • Author: JUST DO IT
    Viewers of the groundbreaking television show "The Outer Limits" were most likely wondering just HOW the series' creators could possibly top the memorable Zanti aliens that had been presented to them in the closing days of 1963. But in the program's initial offering of 1964, "The Mice," this fondly remembered program almost managed to do just that, giving the world an alien so truly grotesque and eye-catching that it almost carried the entire hour on its ownsome. This episode, #15 in a whopping 32-episode season (today, we're lucky if a program manages to squeeze out two dozen), turns out to be a solid albeit middling affair in a generally remarkable run of programs, saved by that creature costume and some very fine acting turns by a cast of solid pros.

    In "The Mice," as in the previous "Zanti Misfits," Earth has been contacted by the beings of another world. Here, that world is Chromo, which lies comparatively close to ours, at only 10 light-years distance; around twice the distance of our nearest neighbor, Alpha Centauri. The Chromoites have given our scientists here on Earth the technological know-how to construct a teleportation device (something like the transporter beam on the upcoming "Star Trek") and have proposed an exchange of one of their race, for a visit, for one of ours. Thus, the scientist in charge of the Neo-Kinematics Division of some unnamed research facility, Dr. Thomas Kellander (Michael Higgins, who would go on to appear in such classic films as "The Conversation" and "The Stepford Wives"), seeks a volunteer for the experiment, and winds up choosing convict Chino Rivera (the great character actor Henry Silva, who had just appeared in the #13 "OL" episode "Tourist Attraction") as the guinea pig/mouse of the title. The Chromoite is successfully transported to Earth, and spends its time wandering around the facility grounds, ultimately killing a scientist who had discovered that it was growing some kind of gloppy food in a nearby lake. Chino is of course accused of the crime, although resident doctor Julia Harrison (Diana Sands, who had recently appeared in the film "A Raisin in the Sun" and that same year would star in the Broadway show "The Owl and the Pussycat" with Alan Alda) defends him and maintains his innocence. Ultimately, the Chromoites are exposed in their underhanded plot, leading to a violent confrontation....

    "The Mice," as I mentioned up top, is a solid-enough episode that is redeemed by three factors: the Chromoite itself, a very fine acting contribution by Henry Silva, and the inclusion of Diana Sands in a supporting role. Let's take the alien first. It is truly a bewildering mess of a creature, resembling nothing less than a bipedal blob of melted wax and overly microwaved headcheese, equipped with twitchy, crab-claw appendages. It is a truly revolting-looking creature, one of the most way out of all "Outer Limits" creations, and never more hideous than when it is stuffing that lake-spawned doughy glop into its midriff orifice. Unfortunately, I have always felt that the creature costume here was a bit insufficient, and that the outfit itself should have been longer, so as to reach down to the feet of the actor wearing the darn thing. How much more effective would it have been if the alien seemed to be gliding along on the ground, rather than running on two legs! As for Silva, who is thankfully still with us (age 88, as of this writing), he is simply dynamic, and gives an energetic and vital performance. And then there is the matter of Diana Sands, an attractive black actress playing a doctor on a television show of the early '60s...and with nothing being made of her race whatsoever! I know that this sounds fairly unremarkable now in the early 21st century, but trust me, back in the early '60s, this was rather remarkable. (Similarly, the Duane Jones character in "Night of the Living Dead" would be praised, five years later, for the fact that nothing whatsoever was made of his race, either.) Other than the "Amos 'n' Andy Show" of the early '50s, not too many African-Americans had been permitted to carry a television show, or even appear as lead performers, and even then, certainly not portraying skilled professionals. That same '63 - '64 season, the TV show "East Side, West Side" was being aired, which starred George C. Scott and Cicely Tyson, and her role was seen as something of a big deal at the time. ("East Side, West Side" producer David Susskind would soon bring in Diana Sands and James Earl Jones to star in one Emmy-winning episode, "Who Do You Kill?.") Anyway, my point is that the inclusion of a black woman as a doctor here, and with the inference that nothing is very remarkable about that fact, was very praiseworthy, and deserving of any modern-day viewer's approbation. "The Mice" gives us an interesting script, courtesy of co-writer (and first-season producer) Joseph Stefano, always-interesting cinematography by the great Conrad Hall (especially the shadowy outdoor scenes), and just adequate direction by Alan Crosland, Jr., who would go on to helm episode #25, "The Mutant." It also features a unique score for an "OL" episode by Dominic Frontiere, with none of the usual musical cues to be had. In all, it is a fairly entertaining and memorable hour, slightly padded as it is (LOTS of shots of that Chromoite lumbering around by the lake and through the countryside). Still, it was certainly better than just about anything else on television on the night of January 6, 1964, I have a strong feeling....
  • comment
    • Author: invincible
    There are some good performances here, but they're marred by a ridiculously weak supporting premise.

    This story was produced during the height of the Cold War; so how likely is it that: 1.) such an important project as teleportation would NOT be kept top secret (which would rule out the use of prisoners as test subjects)? 2.) the grounds of a major research organization would NOT be patrolled by military squads, instead of lightly-armed civilian guards in very thin patrols? 3.) trained scientists (whose job is to test the truth of everything) would take the words of an extra-terrestrial civilization at absolute face value, and, without proof, trust that the E-Ts'intentions were peaceful? 4.) an extra-terrestrial being would be allowed to roam the outside world freely, WITHOUT armed military escort or even surveillance?

    A more minor point is that due to medical ethics, there has been a long- standing prohibition against prisoners being used as test subjects in what amount to medical experiments (teleportation would be a good example of such experiments), even when they volunteer. Prisoners aren't considered competent to give informed consent to being test subjects; they are not only detained by, but are considered to be under the protection of, the State.

    The willing suspension of disbelief is one thing, but a poorly crafted premise is another. The screenwriters give us no incentives really to believe in the story when its premise is so weak.
  • comment
    • Author: Jazu
    A prisoner is asked to be apart of a dangerous experiment.

    Not really a favourite episode, in fact for several years I hated it, but a more recent screening went over a bit better as the acting and general story draw you in from beginning to end.

    After 15 episodes of quality entertainment, I am sorry to say that the next two or three Limits shows leave one hell of a lot to be desired.

    In fact, after watching The Mice I would even consider jumping two or three shows and going straight to the episode: The Invisibles (this one is a total knockout). From The Invisibles onwards the series continues to be very good.
  • Episode complete credited cast:
    Henry Silva Henry Silva - Chino Rivera
    Diana Sands Diana Sands - Dr. Julia Harrison
    Michael Higgins Michael Higgins - Dr. Thomas 'Kelly' Kellander
    Ron Foster Ron Foster - Dr. Robert Richardson (as Ronald Foster)
    Dabney Coleman Dabney Coleman - Dr. Williams
    Francis De Sales Francis De Sales - Prison Warden (as Francis de Sales)
    Hugh Langtry Hugh Langtry - Chromomite
    Gene Tyburn Gene Tyburn - Goldsmith
    Don Ross Don Ross - Haddon
    All rights reserved © 2017-2024 hd.thomson-multimedia.com