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5.0 out of 5 stars Early Star Trek?
This is without question one of the best episodes of "The Outer Limits" ever created. William Shatner stars as a decorated astronaut where he was the only crew member of a mission to Venus. Although he returned safely, while there, he encountered a creature and that experience has altered his mind and body. His body now finds normal temperatures to be much too cold, he...
Published on August 3, 2009 by Charles Ashbacher

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Metamorphosis: Venusian style!
Brig. General Jeff Barton, (William Shatner), completes a round-trip one man space flight to the planet Venus to promote the feasability of the Mars colonization project "Vulcan". During a break in radio communication Barton encouters an alien being on Venus who manages to infect his body causing him to change gradually into something not entirely human...
Published on February 20, 2000 by james_m_b


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Metamorphosis: Venusian style!, February 20, 2000
This review is from: Outer Limits: Cold Hands Warm Heart [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Brig. General Jeff Barton, (William Shatner), completes a round-trip one man space flight to the planet Venus to promote the feasability of the Mars colonization project "Vulcan". During a break in radio communication Barton encouters an alien being on Venus who manages to infect his body causing him to change gradually into something not entirely human. These changes require him to seek out higher temperatures as though adapting to the climate of planet Venus. Upon discovery of Barton's condition, Dr. Mike, (Malachi Throne), uses blood transfusions and a high temperature pressure chamber to reverse the process. Oddly enough, this is actually a love story focusing on Mrs. Ann Barton, (Geraldine Brooks), and her struggle to win back her husband from both his driving ambition and the alien interloper. Harry Lubin's musical score creates a mesmerizing background for the eerie and suspensful encounter between Barton and the Venusian as the scene with the most dramatic special effects and content. Although conceptually intriguing, this episode is marginal.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Venus Held Me In Her Arms!, March 29, 2002
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This review is from: Outer Limits: Cold Hands Warm Heart [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This was Shatner's first famously hammy performance, playing Colonel Jeff Barton, the first astronaut to Venus and back. Sure, he's all smiles and NASA p.r. before the cameras, but behind the scenes, Jeff's having problems. He avoids his wife, can't concentrate, can't sleep, has snappish fits of temper, suffers unremembered terrifying nightmares, and can't keep warm. Soon, his problems run deeper - he's actually physically mutating into something not human. Turns out he met something on Venus, during the eight minute telemetry loss the mission had when he went under cloud cover. He's only now beginning to remember what...

Should have been a winner. Falters due to an unintentionally comedic, melodramatic script, and the actors' obvious discomfort at having to speak such soap-opera lines. It's additionally funny today for reasons the production team could not have predicted: the manned Mars mission Shatner's character tries to sell for NASA after his Venus flight is named "Project Vulcan," prefiguring Star Trek, and at one point he makes a vow to his wife by solemnly lifting his hand and saying, "Promise!" which he did identically, years later, in T.V. promotions for Promise Margarine.

Even turkeys like this one have their good moments, though, and are not total wastes. The being Shatner encounters on Venus is a memorably clever underwater puppet effect that is kind of creepy, accompanied by an eerie, minor-key sort of waltz music, and the scene in which Shatner's wife, Geraldine Brooks, helps rescue him from his horrific condition is often moving.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Early Star Trek?, August 3, 2009
This review is from: Outer Limits: Cold Hands Warm Heart [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This is without question one of the best episodes of "The Outer Limits" ever created. William Shatner stars as a decorated astronaut where he was the only crew member of a mission to Venus. Although he returned safely, while there, he encountered a creature and that experience has altered his mind and body. His body now finds normal temperatures to be much too cold, he bundles up, turns on the heat in the middle of the summer and drinks coffee that is boiling hot. Shatner also suffers from recurring nightmares about his encounter.
Shatner is also the primary spokesperson for "Project Vulcan", a plan to colonize other planets and he is working hard in anticipation of his testimony before a congressional committee that will decide whether or not to fund the project. His wife is dutiful and supportive but she becomes frustrated with his work and concerned over the physical and mental alterations.
The doctors are puzzled over his symptoms and when the appearance of his hands is altered, they put him in a space environmental unit in an attempt to cure him. This works and Shatner is generally returned to normal and speaks to the congressional committee.
You can see the genesis of the Captain Kirk character in Shatner's performance here, as many of the mannerisms he exhibits as the decorated astronaut recur in his Star Trek role. I am sure that I was not unique in noting "Project Vulcan" and the identical name of the home planet of Mr. Spock in the original Star Trek series. Given that the name Vulcan has an origin in mythology, it could have been a coincidence, however it is also true that Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry was familiar with television, so there is reason to believe that the selection of the name was no coincidence.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Classic early Shat!, February 20, 2002
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Johnny (Moorpark, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Outer Limits: Cold Hands Warm Heart [VHS] (VHS Tape)
For those that are shat fans, this is a MUST WATCH! Bill stars as an astronaut whose mission to Venus goes astray as an alien infects him. He starts to change into some kind of alien with wacked-out hands. Today we would call this genetic terrorism I guess... Kinda funny that the project is called "vulcan". I am sure that it IS just a conincidence with ST because Spock was in the original pilot for Star Trek and our hammy friend Shat was not. But then again...

Overall its a pretty good ep. All the makings of Pre-ST Sci_Fi. Cool 'weirdo' music, bad (in todays standards) special effects, and good plot. All of the OL episodes kinda remind me of the old X-MINUS ONE radio show....

Johnny

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An Outer Limits dress-rehearsal for Star Trek ?, May 19, 2001
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brian akers (Atlanta formerly) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Outer Limits: Cold Hands Warm Heart [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Imagine William Shatner intoning: "...to lead the way to new worlds, new life, new knowledge". You might think this is a slightly skewed recollection of his famous Star Trek preamble; but in fact its a bit of his dialog from this flawed, but still enjoyable, second-season Outer Limits offering. Did Shatner compose his Star Trek "pre-ramble", by "borrowing" directly from this OL script? You can't help but wonder, and he has commented since that he doesn't remember his work in this OL very clearly (in TNT's broadcast of interview footage with him during their OL marathon a few years back). Hmmmm... But diehard Shatner fans will exonerate him with no questions asked when they get a load at his trademark hammy acting, abundantly on display here (check out the photo on the video box!). Similarly, a scene with Malachi Throne promminently foreshadows Capt. Kirk's full-contact collegial rapport with Star Base Commodore Mendez--you can see them getting their chops down as actors here, playing off each others' style and delivery. Special effects are low-budget, but still exert an effective mood. As usual for the original OL, it is the sheer staging of the scene that carries it off. Playing Shatner's wife, poor Geraldine Brooks has to keep a straight face while delivering dialog in which she talks to the planets as though calling a pet dog home; its hard not to cringe a little, especially remembering what a good part they gave her to play in a first season episode. But the story here is solid, of an astronaut who begins to undergo some disturbing changes after returning from a space voyage, while trying to hold it together in his marriage and his space exploration goals. The dream sequence in which Shatner re-lives his frightening adventure on Venus is a high point, and pretty hair-raising. As with so many Outer Limits episodes, instead of being told what's going on by some lab-coated doink standing in front of a blackboard and rationalizing it all for us (as in a lot of inferior vintage scifi pieces), we are shown--a much more dramatically effective approach, and more stimulating to the imagination. Although not one of the best, this OL episode is nonetheless quite memorable and better than much, if not most, scifi cinema. But those who dislike Shatner (and you know who you are) need not apply; for that audience, may I suggest a rerun of "Star Trek: The Pepsi Generation" instead ?
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Hammy, May 4, 2001
By 
William Smith (Fontana, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Outer Limits: Cold Hands Warm Heart [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I would give this 2 and 1/2 stars. I find it odd that this pre Trek Shatner is involved with "Project Vulcan" and I can swear there is the actor who will go on to play "Stonn" on Star Trek in a VERY small bit part (watch for it). A lot of the Outer Limits (in my opinion) come off more like 50's B movies than legit 60's Sci-Fi television, and this ep. is a prime example. I have come to the conclusion that most have good ideas but simply suffer from the TZ's 4 season of "one hour programs for 30 minutes of good material." Make no doubt about it, I would buy this on dvd, but it would be one of the last I would buy. Soldier and the Man With The Power are better eps. so check those out.
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An Outer Limits dress-rehearsal for Star Trek ?, May 19, 2001
By 
brian akers (Atlanta formerly) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Outer Limits: Cold Hands Warm Heart [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Imagine William Shatner intoning: "...to lead the way to new worlds, new life, new knowledge". You might think this is a slightly skewed recollection of his famous Star Trek preamble; but in fact its a bit of his dialog from this flawed, but still enjoyable, second-season Outer Limits offering. Did Shatner compose his Star Trek "pre-ramble", by "borrowing" directly from this OL script? You can't help but wonder, and he has commented since that he doesn't remember his work in this OL very clearly (in TNT's broadcast of interview footage with him during their OL marathon a few years back). Hmmmm... But diehard Shatner fans will exonerate him with no questions asked when they get a load of his trademark hammy acting. It is abundantly on display here in all its overwrought glory (check out the photo on the video box!), recalling his roughly contemporaneous Twilight Zone episode "Horror at 20,000 Feet" (er, wait a minute--was it 20,000 or 30,000? Well, anyway...). Similarly, a scene with Malachi Throne prominently foreshadows Capt. Kirk's full-contact collegial rapport with Star Base Commodore Mendez--you can see them getting their chops down as actors here, playing off each others' style and delivery. Special effects are low-budget, but still exert an effective mood. As usual for the original OL, it is the sheer staging of the scene that carries it off. Playing Shatner's wife, poor Geraldine Brooks has to keep a straight face while delivering dialog in which she talks to the planets as though calling a pet dog home; its hard not to cringe a little, especially remembering what a good part they gave her to play in the first season episode "Architects of Fear". But the story here is solid, of an astronaut who begins to undergo some disturbing changes after returning from a space voyage, while trying to hold it together in his marriage and his space exploration goals. The dream sequence in which Shatner re-lives his frightening adventure on Venus is a high point, and pretty hair-raising. As with so many Outer Limits episodes, instead of just being told what's going on by some lab-coated doink standing in front of a blackboard and rationalizing it all for us (as in a lot of inferior vintage scifi pieces), we are shown, without the corny explanations--a much more dramatically effective approach, and more stimulating to the imagination. Although not one of the best, this OL episode is nonetheless quite memorable and better than much, if not most, scifi cinema. But those who dislike Shatner (and you know who you are) need not apply; for that audience, may I suggest a rerun of "Star Trek: The Pepsi Generation" instead ?
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Outer Limits: Cold Hands Warm Heart [VHS]
Outer Limits: Cold Hands Warm Heart [VHS] by Vic Perrin (VHS Tape - 1998)
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