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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Introduction  





2 Opening narration  





3 Plot  





4 Closing narration  





5 Cast  





6 Notes  





7 External links  














The Hundred Days of the Dragon






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


"The Hundred Days of the Dragon"
The Outer Limits episode
Episode no.Season 1
Episode 2
Directed byByron Haskin
Written byAllan Balter
Robert Mintz
Cinematography byConrad Hall
Production code7
Original air dateSeptember 23, 1963 (1963-09-23)
Guest appearances
Sidney Blackmer
Phillip Pine
Mark Roberts
Episode chronology
← Previous
"The Galaxy Being"
Next →
"The Architects of Fear"
List of episodes

"The Hundred Days of the Dragon" is an episode of the original The Outer Limits television show. It first aired on September 23, 1963, during the first season.

Introduction

[edit]

An Asian government develops a reliable means of changing a person's physical appearance and fingerprints, by rendering tissues "malleable in molecular arrangement", and uses it to replace a U.S. presidential candidate with his double.

Opening narration

[edit]

Somewhere south of the Mongolian border and north of the Tropic of Cancer, in that part of the world we call the Orient, a slumbering giant has shaken itself to wakefulness. Passed over in most histories as a nation forgotten by time, its close-packed millions in the short span of twenty years have been stirred to a fury by one man: Li-Chin Sung. A benevolent despot in his homeland, Sung stands as an irresponsible threat to peace in the eyes of the rest of the world. William Lyons Selby, candidate for the presidency of the United States, predicted by every poll, survey, and primary to be a certain winner in the forthcoming election.

Plot

[edit]

An undisclosed Asian government, presumably Mao Zedong's Communist China, based upon the description in the opening narration, plans to take over America by infiltrating and substituting officials at the White House. During the presidential campaign, William Lyons Selby, the candidate predicted to win the presidential election, is murdered and replaced by a lookalike, a doppelgänger. Selby is indeed elected, and the impostor assumes the office of President of the United States.

Though he fools the nation at large during his first few months in office, his daughter, Carol, soon begins to suspect that the man in the White House is not her father. Carol observes that Selby remembers dates and other publicly available information, but forgets private information, such as his food preferences and details of her husband's research projects. She voices her concerns to the Vice President, Ted Pearson, who disbelieves her, at first, until he is targeted for replacement by an assassin who breaks into his residence, is discovered lying in wait, and is chased off before he can effect the replacement, he being already in the guise of Pearson, which Pearson observes in disbelief.

Carol's husband, a physician and medical researcher, recalls that a peer-reviewed scientific journal disclosed Soviet experiments wherein a hominid animal's soft tissue had been successfully altered, and he speculated that the "serum" which was employed had been advanced significantly beyond that which was previously disclosed, to include human subjects, and he explained this to the Vice President. Now convinced that Carol's expressed concerns are plausible, Pearson informs Frank Summers—the head of the Secret Service detail assigned to the White House—of the plot, and his suspicion that Selby is actually an impostor, but Summers' team fails to confirm Selby's true identity using forensic science.

Prior to a planned summit meeting, the leader of the Asian government confers with his impostor at the White House, wherein the Asian reveals to Selby the second phase of his conspiracy—to replace various cabinet members (Labor, etc.) and numerous private industry chief executives (banking, broadcast and print media, oil, steel, etc.) in order to complete his takeover of America.

When Selby arranges a second attempt at replacing the Vice President, the conspirators, including the Vice President's doppelgänger, are captured, brought before the President and numerous invited guests during a state reception, and, along with Selby, are publicly exposed, with the real Pearson placing the doppelgänger Selby under arrest, charging him with murder (of the real Selby) and conspiring to overthrow the United States government.

Summers proposes an armed response against the Asian government, but Pearson, now as President, declines.

Closing narration

[edit]

To Theodore Pearson not even so monstrous a crime as the assassination of William Lyons Selby justifies an act of war, because there is no war as we know it, only annihilation. A great American has been killed in the service of his country. Now it is the job of those who continue to serve to carry on guarding our freedom with dignity and unrelenting vigilance.

Cast

[edit]
  • Sidney Blackmer – as William Lyons Selby, and Selby's doppelgänger Ho Chi-Wong
  • Phillip Pine – as Theodore Pearson, and Pearson's doppelgänger
  • Joan Camden – as Ann Pearson
  • Nancy Rennick – as Carol Selby Conner
  • Richard Loo – as Li-Chin Sung
  • Mark Roberts – as Dr. Bob Conner
  • Aki Aleong – as Dr. Sui-Lin
  • Clarence Lung – as Major (later, Colonel) Ho Chi-Wong
  • James Hong – as Wen Lee
  • James Yagi – as Li Kwan
  • Bert Remsen – as Frank Summers (Secret Service officer)
  • Dennis McCarthy – as Carter
  • Richard Gillings – as Briggs
  • Robert Brubaker – as Bryan
  • Eugene Chan – as Man in Hotel
  • Henry Scott – as FBI Agent Marshall
  • Vic Perrin – as Voice of Mr. Schumacher
  • Leslie Stevens – as the Election Returns Commentator (uncredited)
  • Notes

    [edit]
    [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Hundred_Days_of_the_Dragon&oldid=1217396094"

    Categories: 
    The Outer Limits (1963 TV series) season 1 episodes
    1963 American television episodes
    Television episodes about assassinations
    Television episodes about elections
    United States presidential succession in fiction
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles lacking sources from September 2018
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    Articles lacking reliable references from November 2008
    All articles lacking reliable references
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