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Object Z (1965) Season 1 Episode 3 - Flight from Danger
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Short filmTranscript
00:00The End
00:30The whole world is watching and waiting
00:45Watching Bacchus, the largest rocket ever built
00:48As she plunges through space
00:49Carrying the hopes of the whole world with her
00:51Object Z is now about 200,000 miles away
00:55And unless we can score a direct hit with Bacchus
00:57This horror from outer space
00:59Six miles across with a mass of millions of tons
01:02Will strike the earth in nine days' time
01:05What time do you make it?
01:08Seven o'clock
01:09Haven't you been to bed yet?
01:10No, I stayed up to watch that
01:11You look awful
01:12I feel awful
01:13There's some interesting news about Keeler
01:19They say he's hiding out in the Scottish Highlands
01:21With a gang of his bully boys
01:23Says he will return when his country needs him
01:26Until then he'll bide his time
01:29Well, you'd better get a move on, I suppose
01:31Where to?
01:32Haven't you heard?
01:32The government's moving to emergency headquarters in Dunstable
01:35You'd better get down there with Peter
01:37We'll have to cover all this
01:38If there's anything left to cover after the big bang
01:40What about you?
01:42I've decided to stay here
01:43Don't argue, Diana
01:45I have made up my mind
01:47Any news, Ian?
01:55No, John
01:55They're phoning here as soon as it comes through
01:58Hmm, how's the shelter position now?
02:00There should be room for about ten million people
02:03The rest will just have to take their chances
02:05Of course, we may never need it, you know
02:07No, possibly not
02:09Cabinet?
02:13Yes, this is Molly
02:14Yes, he is, just a minute
02:16It's for you, John
02:19Chandra speaking
02:22Yes
02:23Yes, yes
02:25Oh
02:26Very well, then I'll say that
02:28Yes, goodbye
02:29That was Ramsey
02:31Bacchus has failed completely
02:33Object Z is still approaching us
02:36At high speed
02:37I had, as you can imagine
02:57Wished very much that I could bring you good news tonight
03:00Unfortunately, though a direct hit was scored with Bacchus
03:04No impression was made
03:05And I have to tell you that Object Z is approaching the Earth
03:09On the same course as before
03:10And at the same speed
03:12As you know
03:14There is not enough time to prepare and fire another rocket
03:18Even if we could be sure that such a rocket could have any effect
03:21And there is nothing we can do but await the impact with courage and calmness
03:26As I know you will
03:28Excuse the radio after I know
03:30Penny for them
03:35Hmm?
03:37Oh, I was just having a good look at London
03:39Strange to think that in a short while it may not exist
03:44I'm glad we're getting out of it
03:49I wish I could have persuaded Brown to come with us
03:54Yeah
03:55I don't think the next few days here are going to be much fun
04:00Is it going to be fun anywhere?
04:05No, I don't suppose it is
04:06I don't understand it
04:30We scored a direct hit with a thousand-maker-ton bomb and we didn't even dent it
04:36Even if it's made of Nikolai
04:41How do you know it is?
04:43It's got to be. If it was stony, it'd be shattered to bits
04:45How do you know it's stony?
04:46It's got to be either stony or Nikolai, and these things always are
04:49But nothing like this has ever been seen before
04:51How hot is it?
04:53It's pretty hot after that explosion
04:55I make it about 6,400 degrees
04:58Well, I'd better get to work with my spectroscope while it's still bright
05:01It'd be worth finding out what it's made of, wouldn't it?
05:03Yes, yes it would
05:05I'll get on to Harvard and check with them
05:07There just won't be time to get 25 million people to high ground
05:20Unless we start now
05:22Then we must start now, that's all there is to it
05:24I think it's better to let people take their chance
05:26There's barely a 50-50 chance of us surviving anyway
05:29Why drive people from their homes?
05:33Why frighten them?
05:34It's better to leave them alone
05:35If moving them gives them a better chance of survival, then of course we must move them
05:39Come in
05:40Ah, Ramsey, what's the latest?
05:43The speed is increasing
05:44Object Z is now entering our gravitational field
05:47So the speed will go on increasing?
05:48Yes, at present it's about 6 miles a second
05:50By tomorrow it might be 9
05:52I'm afraid we haven't got 6 days as we expected
05:54In fact it's barely 4
05:55Only 4 days?
05:57The speed of head-on impact will be at about 15 miles a second
06:01This is much higher than we thought
06:03Yes
06:03Of course the effect will be much greater
06:04I can see that
06:05We think we can tell you now where it's most likely to fall
06:07Show us on the map
06:08According to our calculations
06:12It will fall in the Atlantic
06:14About 1,600 miles west of here
06:1612 hours before impact
06:19We might be able to give you the point within 200 miles
06:22Suppose it falls here
06:24Then it will destroy New York and most of New England
06:27Complete destruction will extend north to Canada
06:30West to the Alleghenies
06:32And south to Florida
06:33And here?
06:35Then I'm afraid we should be completely destroyed
06:37There will be severe shock and flooding
06:39From Norway to Morocco
06:42And east as far as the Elbe
06:43We must speed up the evacuation
06:45Start it tonight
06:45We must get the people out of London within 3 days
06:48Get 14 million people out of London in 3 days?
06:50It can't be done
06:51We must try
06:52It's about time we made a move, John
06:54The emergency headquarters at Dunstable are ready
06:56Whenever you want to move in
06:58Dunstable?
06:59Well, at least we shall be safe from flooding there
07:00I wonder if we shall ever see London again
07:13This must be the vastest movement of population in the history of man
07:24In World War II, about 2.5 million people left London
07:28This time, about three times of many have left the capital
07:32And in about one-tenth of the time
07:34As a feat of organisation, it is magnificent
07:38Police, troops and transport workers have been toiling
07:4112, 15, 20 hours of the stretch from the past three days
07:45Coping with the incredible numbers of people
07:48That must be got out of London if they are to survive
07:51And these scenes are being repeated at this moment
07:54In countries all over the world
07:56I have seen no panic
07:59But these people, however bravely they may hide it
08:02Are in the grip of fear
08:04When they arrive at their destination
08:07They must ascend into the shelters prepared for them
08:09And there await the impact of Object Z
08:13Institute of Education
08:15Music
08:20Music
08:22Music
08:36Music
10:11We're barely 120,000 miles away, and it may be possible soon to give the exact point of impact.
10:17But at present we can say no more than that it will strike within a circle east of Florida and north of the Azores.
10:24The evacuation of low-lying regions have gone well.
10:30As you can well imagine, the task of moving so many millions of people in such a short time was immense.
10:35This map shows an up-to-the-minute progress of the evacuation.
10:40As you can see, we are using the normal plotting techniques.
10:44Fortunately, in view of the possibility of severe flooding, the government have built most of the shelters on high ground.
10:52The rest have been fitted with flood-proof steel doors and enough oxygen for 48 hours.
10:57The scientists have assured us that this will give us an ample margin, and that the floods, severe as they are likely to be, will have receded within six to ten hours.
11:08May I ask a question?
11:09Yes.
11:09These shelters, are they going to be any good?
11:12Well, they will improve the people's chances immensely.
11:14The main damage is expected from shock and blast, and the home shelters are proof against that.
11:19If hasn't the public tumbled to what we all know?
11:22If the shelters are virtually useless, they might as well take their chance up on the surface.
11:25That we're all doomed.
11:26That's absolutely untrue.
11:29We're not all doomed.
11:33I'd better put a few facts straight before we begin.
11:36Now, it's quite true that the home shelters will not be any good.
11:38I've known that for several weeks.
11:41But what would you have me do?
11:43Leave people without shelter at all?
11:45Or worse still, leave them without even the hope of survival?
11:48Why do you think those who went into the deep shelters were chosen by lot?
11:51Because it was the only fair way to do such a thing.
11:54It isn't easy to condemn 30 million people to death.
12:01I'm...
12:02I'm sorry, sir. I don't think any of us appreciated your position.
12:06Well, I hope you do now.
12:08May I ask a personal question?
12:10Certainly.
12:12The drawing of lots for the shelters was done.
12:14Are there any exceptions?
12:16None whatever.
12:16Not even to members of the government?
12:18Not even to them.
12:22Well, none of us were lucky.
12:25May I ask you...
12:25I think I know what you're going to say, and the answer is yes.
12:28I was present to the drawing of lots.
12:30I'm afraid I wasn't one of the lucky ones either.
12:34I'm afraid I wasn't one of the lucky ones either.
12:34Okay.
12:34Bye.
12:35Bye.
12:47Bye.
13:00Bye.
13:31What time is it, Peter?
13:49Six minutes to go.
14:01Are you frightened?
14:04Yes.
14:07I suppose it will be very quick when it comes.
14:11Very.
14:14We won't know what hit us.
14:21Oh, hello, Doctor.
14:30Hello.
14:31Well, I suppose everyone must be down in their shelters by now.
14:35Yes, I expect so.
14:36The lucky one in ten.
14:38Well, at least we know where we are now.
14:55Four minutes.
14:58Now, you mustn't be frightened.
15:02Life will go on.
15:04Not ours, but others.
15:06I find it helpful to think that some part of humanity will survive.
15:10It would be too bad to think of everyone perishing.
15:14That would be death indeed.
15:17Do you think the world will ever recover from this?
15:41Oh, yes.
15:42Quite a few people will survive on the other side of the world.
15:45They'll have to start again, of course.
15:48That's been done before.
15:50Civilization has fallen in ruins before.
15:52Ruins so complete that even the memory of it has been lost.
15:56But man has survived.
15:59Civilization has survived.
16:02We must try and think of that.
16:09One minute to impact.
16:11Looks as though I won't be able to finish this after all.
16:13Pity.
16:14I found it rather helpful.
16:16What is it?
16:17Socrates.
16:19He wrote 2,500 years ago, but what he says remains true.
16:23Look, he said,
16:26Why should we fear death?
16:29It distresses us not when it is present.
16:31For when we are here, death is not.
16:33And when death is here, we are not.
16:4050 seconds to go.
16:5350 seconds to go.
17:20Hello.
17:21Hello. Yes, this is Ramsey speaking.
17:25What?
17:27Yes, I will.
17:34That was Rickover in America.
17:37Object Z has gone into orbit.
17:40It will not strike the Earth.
17:47And that you are all safely back in your home,
17:50and the terrible danger which threatened us all has passed us by.
17:55I need hardly say how thankful we all are
17:58at such a miraculous reprieve.
18:01Object Z, as you know, is now orbiting the Earth
18:04at a height of 1,600 miles
18:06and going round it at the amazing speed
18:09of nearly ten revolutions daily.
18:12Why this has happened, we do not know.
18:15Even the scientists are completely baffled.
18:18Baffled as to why an object approaching directly towards the Earth
18:22should suddenly change court...
18:27Get me that file on McHenry.
18:29John!
18:30Where have you been the last two days, having a holiday?
18:32Very funny.
18:33Come on, we've got a programme to get out.
18:35What do you think we've been doing for the last two days?
18:37Don't you watch your own programmes?
18:38Well, you've taken a long enough time to get back.
18:40It doesn't usually take people ten hours
18:42to drive from Dunstable to London.
18:44Well, what do you expect from anybody trying to get home?
18:46Diana, get me that address book.
18:47Home sweet home.
18:49Well, what's the next step?
18:54Well, the first thing is to set up a programme with Ramsay.
18:57He's with the Cabinet at the moment.
18:59They're having a press conference in an hour's time.
19:01See if you can get him to agree to do a programme
19:04or an interview about Object Z being in orbit.
19:06Well, that won't be easy.
19:08He's still under pressure from security.
19:10I wonder if my friend Captain Wade can help us there.
19:14You know, I have a feeling he knows a lot more than he says.
19:18There's one thing I don't understand about all this.
19:21What's that?
19:23Well, I'm not a scientist, so I don't know.
19:27But how can a vast object stop suddenly as if it's hit a brick wall
19:32and then go into orbit?
19:34I wish I knew.
19:36Such a thing is against all the laws of science as we know them.
19:39Object Z is now orbiting the Earth at a speed of 15,000 miles an hour.
19:43It might break up.
19:45Break up?
19:46Yes, into millions of fragments.
19:47Each one weighing anything from several tons to 10 or 20,000 tons.
19:5120,000 tons?
19:53If this object breaks up, how much warning of it shall we have?
19:56Several days, I hope.
19:57Any slowing down will be a sign that break up was imminent.
20:00So there would be ample time to get the people into the shelters?
20:02Yes, but they'd be quite useless against a direct hit.
20:05They would be useful against blast.
20:11Yes.
20:12Now look here, I told you we were not to be disturbed.
20:16Chalice.
20:17It's a Miss Chalice and a Mr. Duncan, John.
20:21They've just arrived from the observatory.
20:23What are they doing here?
20:24They have some new information.
20:26Apparently they can't talk about it on the telephone.
20:28Have them sent in.
20:29Send them in, will you?
20:31Yes, right away.
20:32Who are they, Ramsey?
20:33Chalice is an expert on spectroscopy.
20:37Duncan's up at Abernethy.
20:39They've been working on the composition of Object Z so far, I'm afraid, with very little success.
20:48Good afternoon.
20:49Dr. Ramsey, of course, you know, this is Ian Murray.
20:51How do you do?
20:52How do you do?
20:53Um, we have some information.
20:54I think you'd better address yourself to the Prime Minister.
20:57I'm sorry.
20:58Well, we've been working on the composition of Object Z.
21:00It's very difficult.
21:02The, the temperature and...
21:04Go on.
21:05Well, as you know, we've assumed that Object Z was composed of nickel iron or stone.
21:09Well, it isn't, sir.
21:10It's made of sodium vapor.
21:12Sodium?
21:13Are you sure?
21:14We've been in touch with the Americans and the Russians and their findings tally with ours.
21:18And what's more, it's got a metallic center.
21:21Probably not more than a few hundred feet across.
21:24Well, what has sodium vapor got to do with it?
21:26When a space vehicle is put into orbit, it's quite usual to equip it with a device which releases a cloud of sodium vapor at the correct distance from Earth.
21:33A cloud of ten or twelve miles across can be formed.
21:36It helps us to track the vehicle's course.
21:38Track the vehicle?
21:40Are you trying to tell us that Object Z is...
21:42Artificial.
21:43And it is not from our world.
21:51Come on, Peter. Ten seconds.
21:52All right.
21:54Five.
21:55Four.
21:57Three.
21:58Two.
21:59One.
22:00Good evening.
22:03I've just returned from a press conference in Downing Street with the latest news of Object Z.
22:08For four weeks now, we've all been living in fear, as Object Z, until recently thought to be a minor planet, plunged remorselessly towards us.
22:15Now, moments before impact, moments before the destruction of the Earth seemed absolutely certain, it has altered course and gone into orbit.
22:26The vision of centuries, the nightmare of science fiction, an invasion from outer space, has come true.
22:34For Object Z is no planet.
22:36It has an artificial body of enormous size, and it is, we must assume, manned by intelligent beings from some other world.
22:44We call them the invaders.
22:47Who are they?
22:49Who are they?
22:50What are they like?
22:51Are they anything like us?
22:53Or are they so unimaginably strange that our worst nightmares can give us no conception of them?
22:59Where do they come from?
23:01What do they want?
23:02Do they come as friends or as enemies?
23:04Can we contact them?
23:06We do not know.
23:08We do not know.
23:09Can we contact them?
23:10Who wants to know?
23:13We want to know them?
23:15We'll take a moment.
23:18Come over.
23:23Come over.
23:24Here we go.
23:25Here we go.
23:27Hopefully they are.
23:28One time it will tell us or not go anywhere.
23:32Come over now.
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