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Object Z (1965) Season 1 Episode 4 - The Aliens

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Transcript
00:00The End
00:30Object Z is now in orbit 1,600 miles from the Earth.
00:48On board, we are certain are intelligent beings from another world.
00:51Where do they come from? What do they want?
00:53The world scientists are working furiously to find an answer to these questions.
00:56And the world statesman are united as never before in the face of this menace.
01:02I don't know how he keeps it up.
01:04When is he due back?
01:05Half an hour.
01:06I don't want him here. I want him to go straight to Dunstable to set up a permanent OB unit there.
01:10Why?
01:11Because the government are moving back there, that's why.
01:13They feel safer under ten feet of concrete.
01:15Because the research group are there too with Dr. Ramsey.
01:18I want Peter to be ready to cover the whole thing.
01:20Interviews with the Prime Minister, anything new from Dr. Ramsey, including his opposite numbers in Russia and America.
01:28The Prime Minister will be in constant touch with the Americans and Russians by means of Telstar.
01:32Peter can get on with that.
01:35Downing Street, could I speak to Peter Barry, UK TV, please?
01:39Yes, it is urgent.
01:43What about us? Are we going to Dunstable too?
01:45No, we're staying. Somebody has to hold the fort here.
01:59Hello, there.
02:00Hello, poor old Ramsey. I don't think he's had an hour's sleep in the last two or three days.
02:04Well, I haven't had any at all, so there.
02:06You don't look so bad.
02:07No, well, it's the excitement. It keeps me going.
02:09I'm sorry we're so late, gentlemen. Allow me to introduce. This is Dr. Rickover from Mount Palomar.
02:15Hello.
02:16There's a Buranoth of the Lenin Institute.
02:18And Professor Morgan from Cape Town.
02:21Now, Object Z is in orbit at the height of 1,600 miles from the Earth and a course parallel to the equator.
02:28Where exactly has it come from?
02:29Well, it was first observed in the region of Altair, which is in the constellation of Aquila.
02:34How far away is that?
02:36About five light years away.
02:38Well, we know where they've come from. What are they going to be like?
02:41I imagine that the invaders, whatever they're like, will have intelligence.
02:46Having accomplished so vast a journey without mishap, one must assume that they have an intelligence far superior to our own.
02:53And can we contact them?
02:55I think Dr. Rickover will be able to cover that more fully.
02:59Well, any intelligent beings, such as we assume these invaders to be, must have a language, whether it's transmitted by radio, telepathy, by visual images, or as ours is, by sound.
03:10And any language, once its method of transmission is known, can be deciphered.
03:13How do you intend to sell about it?
03:15Oh, well, since the laws of mathematics remain true throughout the universe, we're going to try sending them a mathematical formula by radio, simple sums, squares, primes, to show that we too have intelligence, and in this way to establish a common ground for further communication.
03:30Now, this should be a start.
03:32Meanwhile, we're keeping a 24-hour worldwide watch on all frequencies, and Chalice and Duncan are doing some special work at Abernethy.
03:49Well, let's try the prime numbers.
03:51Okay.
03:52One, three, five, seven, eleven, thirteen, seventeen, nineteen...
03:58Oh, it's hopeless.
03:59Let's try two or four megacycles.
04:02One, three, five, seven, eleven, thirteen, seventeen...
04:08Ah, there's nothing.
04:09I don't think they'll ever answer.
04:11Why not?
04:12Because I think they don't want to.
04:13I can imagine them sitting there in their spaceship, having a good look at us, ignoring our efforts to contact them until they're ready.
04:20Ready for what?
04:21Ready to land, of course.
04:23Look, they've come from five light years away.
04:26The journey must have taken centuries.
04:27Could you imagine them just staying in orbit or simply departing again?
04:31No.
04:33Strange, you know.
04:34Who worked it out?
04:35They must have started about 1,600 years ago.
04:39And all this time they've been coming, century after century, rushing through space at hundreds of miles a second, and nobody knew.
04:45Well, it wouldn't have made much difference if they had.
04:47Come on, let's try two or four.
04:50One, three, five, seven, eleven, thirteen...
04:53Hey, wait.
04:54What is it?
04:55Listen.
04:58One, four, nine, sixteen, twenty-five, thirty-six.
05:03It's them.
05:04Must be another sense.
05:05Check the wavelength.
05:07It's our wavelength.
05:10Let's send the cubes.
05:12One, eight, twenty-seven, sixty-four.
05:15It's odd, isn't it?
05:22We've been wondering for years what it'd be like to contact things from outer space.
05:26And here they are bleeping.
05:28Hmm?
05:29Bleeping, that's what they call it, isn't it?
05:31You think they get tired of sending numbers?
05:34Well, that's the first step.
05:36The next thing, I suppose, is send pictures.
05:38Pictures?
05:39Yes, if they've got radio, it's a fair bet they've got tally, too, or something like it.
05:43Oh, heavens.
05:44They're sending us gun law next.
05:46Yes, Pete.
05:48So this is it.
05:50Above us, the huge, bright disc.
05:52Well, he's off.
05:52The subject Z glares balefully at a watching world.
05:56Here in Dunstable, the Europe's top scientists are working furiously to decipher the messages
06:00that stream in constantly from outer space.
06:02What do they say?
06:04Can we ever hope to reply?
06:05Well, one thing is clear.
06:06It's science which brings to vast spaceships across a great distance.
06:13How's it going wrong?
06:14Uh, try the idea.
06:21What is it?
06:30So that's what they look like.
06:33I don't know about you, but I get the feeling it's staring straight at us.
06:36That's exactly what it is doing.
06:38Well, I'm glad it's 1,600 miles away, that's all.
06:40Ah, here's the Prime Minister.
06:42What is it?
06:42What puzzles me is how a thing of this size stands up to gravitation.
07:07Its mass must be immense.
07:09Perhaps its own world has a slight gravitational field.
07:13Still, there are limits.
07:15I wonder what it's like on their world.
07:17Pressure.
07:18The atmosphere.
07:19I wonder what they can be like.
07:20Their sun is not unlike our own.
07:23They're made of the same elements as we are.
07:24They must obey the same fundamental laws.
07:27How big is it?
07:28About a mile across.
07:29Gosh, a mile across.
07:30Its mass is gigantic.
07:31Ah, coffee.
07:36Hello?
07:38Yes, this is Abernethy.
07:41What?
07:43Are you sure?
07:46Yes, I'll pass it on.
07:47That was Mount Palomar.
07:56Object Z has changed its course and looks as if it's going to land.
08:05I'm afraid.
08:06There's no need to be.
08:08They're very intelligent.
08:09They must be.
08:11They're intelligent beings.
08:13They can't be wholly bad.
08:14I suppose not.
08:16Still, one good thing has come from all this.
08:18What's that?
08:22Well, you know, I'm rather shy.
08:24And if it hadn't been for them, well, I'd never had the courage to propose to you.
08:30And away, I'm glad they've come.
08:31Are we through yet?
08:39No, not yet.
08:42I shall be talking to the President of the United States in a few minutes.
08:45Have you any idea where it'll land?
08:47Here.
08:49In the Pacific.
08:50About 200 miles southeast of Manila.
08:52The Philippine Trench.
08:53It's one of the greatest ocean depths in the world.
08:56What will the effect of the impact be?
08:58Well, that depends entirely on its mass.
09:00The President's coming through now, sir.
09:09Is that you, Mr. Prime Minister?
09:11Yes, Mr. President.
09:12Are you receiving me?
09:13Loud and clear.
09:14Well, I've got some news for you.
09:16Paloma reports the pistol is slowing down.
09:18Looks like they're using retro rockets to slow themselves down.
09:22Now, we've got to make up our minds within the next few minutes.
09:24SAC is standing by to blast them the moment we give the word.
09:27Blast them?
09:28But they're still signaling to us.
09:30Well, I know that as well as you do.
09:31Do you think I want to do it?
09:32But I've been in touch with Yeraminko.
09:34He says if we don't fire within the next six minutes, he will.
09:37But this is monstrous.
09:38They haven't attacked us.
09:39They've not attacked us, Mr. President.
09:41I know, I know.
09:42But if they land traveling at this speed anywhere within a thousand miles...
09:45Hold on a minute, please, Mr. President.
09:47Get me Yeraminko.
09:49Right.
09:49Contact him at once.
09:50Mr. President.
09:50I'm going to ask you for three minutes.
09:54We're expecting news of impact any moment now.
09:56We're through to Woomera, sir.
09:57They're still tracking.
09:58Point of impact will be known in 30 seconds.
10:0030 seconds.
10:01Please.
10:01Please.
10:31Siberia, any news of impact there?
10:35I'm sorry, no.
10:36Prime Minister, Yeromenko is through.
10:42Parallel, would you please translate it, please, sir?
10:44Mr. Prime Minister, will you refrain from firing for three minutes?
11:01You see, if this object is to strike Soviet territory, we must fire.
11:10The point of impact will be known at any moment.
11:12If it falls in the Atlantic, they're safe.
11:15Tell him that.
11:16Yes.
11:17Mr. Prime Minister, in a few seconds, the point of fire will be known.
11:23It's very possible that it will be in the Atlantic.
11:27In this case, we're in security.
11:32Well, I'll give him three minutes.
11:35What's he saying?
11:36He's saying, for three minutes, he will not fire.
11:41Thank God.
11:42Get McCone again.
11:43Point of impact coming through.
11:44Where will it be?
11:46California.
11:48McCone is on to you, John.
11:50Mr. President, they're going to strike you.
11:54Now, now.
11:56We've got to fire.
11:59Curtis?
12:01Open fire.
12:03Coltwood?
12:04Oh, yes.
12:06Bull run.
12:07Come on.
12:34, come on.
12:36The End
13:06Еще раз прошу вас всех, не волнуйтесь, идите спокойно в бомбоубежище и не выходите, пока вам не скажут, бояться нечего.
13:21Наша Родина стоит под угрозой не в первый раз.
13:28Я знаю, что великой советский народ мело встретит это новое нашествие,
13:34как и в старину наши предки встречали на береге татарской орды,
13:40польской шляхты немецких рыцарей и милицевских заквачек.
13:44Сорвь, о котором все еще говорят, что все еще говорят, что все еще говорят.
13:51Все еще говорят, что все еще говорят, что все еще говорят.
13:55Мой любимый, что еще говорят?
13:59Не пока.
14:02Как долго до выплачки?
14:042 минуты и 42 секунды.
14:06Я выяснил, что эти патриотики у них у нас есть технологии,
14:10I doubt our bombs will even touch them.
14:12We've got to try.
14:14Have you ever seen a man passing an ant's nest?
14:16An ant runs out and stings him.
14:18What does he do without thinking?
14:20Swiftly and instinctively.
14:22Kicks the nest to pieces, I suppose.
14:24Exactly.
14:26Look!
14:40They've hit it.
14:50God forgive us.
14:52Ian, tell the TV people I'll speak to the nation in half an hour.
14:56I'll draft what I have to say myself.
14:58Right. What about the press?
15:00The press.
15:02Oh, yes, the press. I'll see them now.
15:10Well, there's one question, Prime Minister, which I'm sure the viewers would like to know the answer to.
15:36Don't you think it a great pity that our first meeting with a new civilization should have ended like this?
15:44I most certainly do.
15:46But you must bear in mind this fact.
15:48Less than an hour ago, the President of the United States, the Premier of Soviet Union,
15:54and myself were faced with the most momentous decision.
15:58These invaders were approaching the earth at an enormous speed.
16:02And the impact of their landing would have caused tremendous destruction.
16:06But surely if they have the intelligence to come this far, they must have realized the danger to us of such a rapid descent.
16:12We'd no means of knowing that.
16:14Neither had we any means of knowing that they were aware of this danger.
16:17Or of the destruction their landing would have caused.
16:20We'd no alternative but to destroy their craft.
16:22Was there no way of warning them not to land?
16:24None whatever, I'm afraid.
16:26Prime Minister, don't you think that...
16:28I'm sorry, Mr. Burry, but I have no time for any more questions.
16:30To you I say, thank you, for your courage and your calmness,
16:36in face of the terrible danger that threatened us all.
16:39Good night, and bless you.
16:42We're clear now. Thank you, Prime Minister.
16:45Thank you, Mr. Burry.
16:47John.
16:48You know you're meeting the Defence Chiefs at five o'clock.
16:51I've prepared the agenda.
16:53How's this a shelter situation?
16:55We've set up a meeting on that at six o'clock.
16:57Right.
16:58We'd better get moving then.
16:59Right.
17:00Dr. Ramsey.
17:01Yes?
17:02You were in there with the Prime Minister a few moments ago.
17:13Did you advise him to open fire?
17:15Certainly not.
17:16I gave him the facts.
17:18He acted on them, that's all.
17:19Did you advise him not to fire?
17:21I'm a scientist, not a politician.
17:23Oh, for goodness sake, you're a human being as well as a scientist.
17:25I asked him to wait until the last possible minute
17:27so that we can make further efforts to get in touch with him.
17:29Further efforts to get in touch?
17:31Now look here.
17:33The time came when he could no longer postpone giving the order to open fire.
17:37Do you think that was the right order?
17:42You've no right to ask me a question like that.
17:45I'm not going to answer it.
17:47I will say one thing, though.
17:49Yes?
17:50Everyone seems to have overlooked the most vital factor in all this.
17:54I don't suppose you can imagine what that is.
17:58Can you, Mr. Barry?
18:06It is now a month since the invaders were destroyed.
18:09The public is now calm enough to accept a programme of this kind.
18:13I suggest we meet next week to finalise the script.
18:16I suggest you cover the technology of the thing,
18:19what this spacecraft must have been like.
18:21Peter will, of course, compare.
18:22He's doing a piece to end up with,
18:24about the new world without hatred,
18:26united in the face of common danger, et cetera, et cetera.
18:29Yours ever, blah, blah, blah.
18:31Where's that script letter from Morgan?
18:34It's in front of you, somewhere.
18:36Oh, here it is.
18:38I suppose we could use him.
18:40I just don't like his studio manner, that's all.
18:43Hello!
18:44Gosh, you're looking well.
18:46Yeah, well, who wouldn't after a fortnight in the Pacific?
18:49Well, did the United States Navy treat you well?
18:51Like crazy, man.
18:53Well, how did you get on?
18:55Nothing, I'm afraid.
18:57We searched the whole impact area for about ten days.
19:02Not so much as a splinter.
19:04That's odd.
19:05I think that size blowing up, you'd think there'd be plenty.
19:07Of course, it could have all gone to the bottom.
19:10No, they thought of that.
19:12You see, the sea is very shallow there, only my 200 fathoms.
19:16Well, they went over the whole of it, every yard, with sonar, depth probes, all sorts of devices, nothing.
19:22I see.
19:23So your trip there was a waste of time, then.
19:25Yeah.
19:26Oh, by the way, who do you think I bumped into in Tokyo on the way home?
19:30Dr. Ramsey.
19:32What was he doing, then?
19:34I don't know, more research on Object Z from a Japanese observatory, I suppose.
19:38He looked a very worried man, too.
19:41You know, there's one thing that I can't get out of my mind.
19:45That night down in Dunstable.
19:48What he said about the one vital factor which everyone had forgotten.
19:52He wouldn't tell you what it was, would he?
19:54No.
19:55Anyway, he's asked me to go up and see him when he gets back to England.
19:58He's gonna be up at Abernethy for a few days.
20:01Well, go on, get a move on. There might be a story in it.
20:04Yeah.
20:06What's this?
20:07It's a script for your new show.
20:09Uh-huh.
20:10It is hard to realize that a few months ago we were living in fear of another kind.
20:17Fear of destruction by nuclear weapons, fear of one another.
20:23If any good has come from the presence of Object Z, it is that this is no longer true.
20:28In the face of common danger, we want rubbish.
20:31Why is it?
20:33Haven't you seen the news?
20:36Another little war has broken out in Southeast Asia.
20:39The Americans are determined to preserve their interests there at all costs.
20:42The Russians won't stand for any aggression and so on and so on.
20:46When will they ever learn?
20:49Never.
20:52Well, I'd better get off.
20:53I'll be back tomorrow with my story, if any.
20:57In the meantime, you can rewrite that script.
21:00Peter!
21:16Any change?
21:21No.
21:28Have you got the plates?
21:29Oh, here we are.
21:35Has Barry arrived yet?
21:36No.
21:37I asked them to send him up as soon as he comes.
21:40What about the report on the spectrograms?
21:43Here we are.
21:44Why is Barry coming here?
21:46I want to see what he makes of our news.
21:49Dr Ramsey?
21:50Oh!
21:51Hello there.
21:53Hello.
21:54Hello.
21:55Hi.
21:56Well, I'll come straight to the point.
21:57A few weeks ago, I told you there was one vital factor in all this that everyone seems to have overlooked.
22:02Do you remember?
22:03I could hardly forget.
22:04Well, I wasn't quite sure at the time.
22:06But, um, I hoped I was wrong.
22:09But since then, I've done some more research.
22:11And now I'm afraid there's no doubt whatsoever.
22:13June, can I see the plates, please?
22:21Look at that one.
22:24Um, I don't see quite what you're getting at.
22:27Well, the last time you were here, I showed you a blink comparator.
22:30Do you remember?
22:31Yeah, that thing over there.
22:32That's the thing we first saw Object Z on.
22:34Robert, would you mind?
22:35Oh, of course.
22:37Now, take a look.
22:38All right.
22:40The first plate was exposed three weeks ago.
22:43And the second was taken yesterday.
22:45The objects you can see are in the region of Altair.
22:48But...
22:51Object Z came from Altair.
22:54Exactly.
22:55And these others?
22:57I'm afraid so.
22:58Object Z was only the vanguard of an invasion.
23:01This spacecraft will reach us within the next six weeks.
23:06The aeronautonize for the whole games.
23:07I'm sorry.
23:08But here are a great things, so.
23:09Of course, there's a big struggle here for certain these nine ghosts.
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