The Outer Limits Wiki
Advertisement

A scientist steals specimens of Martian life from his subterranean workplace laboratory to illegally continue research on an aborted, classified government project at home.

Opening narration[]

"Some of man's greatest achievements have been motivated by a driving need for love and acceptance. What happens when that need for recognition, becomes a desire to be revered, and then worshiped...like a god?"

Plot[]

Sandkings 3

Dr. Simon Kress' (Beau Bridges) research for the government on Martian life is aborted because one of his specimens escaped his lab and almost made it to the surface. However, Kress does not agree with the abandonment of the project and decides to continue his experiments in his barn. He steals some sand containing Martian eggs from his lab and creates a makeshift incubator to hatch more of the Martian lifeforms. Kress' obsession with the project causes his relationship with his wife Cathy (Helen Shaver) to break down. The family dog, Cowboy, gets eaten after stepping into their territory, having been awoken by their digging.

Sandkings

The sandkings evolve into two distinct groups, a white group and a red group, and they settle on opposite sides of their glass enclosure. He begins to mistreat the sandkings, including withholding food, to see how they react. Kress comes to believe that he is a god to his sandkings when the white group builds a sand structure that resembles his face. He smashes the sand structure of the red group who did not do the same, one of them getting loose and stinging him. The effects of the alien venom take a toll, causing his physical and psychological health to deteriorate. Kress recruits his former supervisor Dave Stockley (Kim Coates) to help him go public with his work. However, when Stockley threatens to report him to his former employers, he kills him by tossing him into the enclosure, where the sandkings then devour him.

Sandkings 1

The sandkings escape from their enclosure and trap Kress, along with his son, in the basement with the red colony, who have made a nest with the face of Stockley. His son escapes from the house along with his wife and father, where Kress stays behind, breaking a gas pipe to cause an explosion in an attempt to kill all of the sandkings.

In the ending of the episode, a colony of sandkings is shown surviving in the wilderness.

Closing narration[]

"Increasingly, modern science pursues powers traditionally reserved for the Almighty. But those who encroach upon the province of the gods realize too late that the price for entrance...is destruction."

Notes[]

Sandkings 2
  • It premiered on March 26, 1995 on Showtime and features three generations of the Bridges acting family: Beau, his father Lloyd, and son Dylan. Kim Coates and Helen Shaver also star.
  • Kim Coates also appeared in the series finale "Human Trials".

Aftermath[]

Sandkings 4
  • The Sandkings thrived after their escape from Kress' home laboratory. Fragments from the episode are included in the final episode of season one, "The Voice of Reason". There, clips from "Sandkings" are used to support an argument that the Earth is undergoing a number of different alien invasions. Later in the episode, two alien conspirators acknowledge, in private conversation, that the Sandkings could become a serious problem in about thirty years, assuming that they could survive in a methane-based atmosphere, which the aliens intended to gradually transform from the Earth's human-friendly one.
  • In the sixth-season episode "Final Appeal", it is revealed that the Sandkings plague has been eradicated, which took "the better part of a decade" to complete.

Differences from the original story[]

Sandkings 6
  • The action of the original story Sandkings by George R. R. Martin takes place in the distant future on a faraway planet colonized by humans.
  • The original story does not specify the planet of Sandkings' origin.
  • Simon Kress is possessed by neither scientific interest nor desire to receive the Nobel Prize but simple cruelty (there is a difference between cruelty and aggression), which turns the initially harmless Sandkings into aggressive creatures.
  • There are no Maws that act to control the Sandkings.
  • No betting takes place, even though that is a pretty large plot point in the original story.
  • The faces don't change based on the SandKing's perception of their "God".
  • There are only 2 groups, not 4.
  • There is no psionics explaining any of the characters' action.
  • There are two murders instead of at least ten.
  • There is no real elaboration about the Sandkings.
  • Most of the horror elements have been removed; the original story was mostly science fiction with a small bit of horror.
  • All of the actions taken to destroy the SandKings are changed.
  • The protagonist is a family man, as opposed to a wealthy bachelor in the novelette.
  • Without the Maws and their increasing size and intelligence as well as their psionic ability, there is no way to examine the idea of superintelligence or evolution.
  • In the original story, at least one alien is involved in importing the Sandkings; in this retelling, humans bring the Kings back themselves.
  • The episode examines the themes of hubris and ecological catastrophe rather than the responsibility of a parent ("God") to a child and how that child will "grow up".

Awards and nominations[]

  • In 1995, for the role of Simon Kress, actor Beau Bridges was nominated for an Emmy Award in the category "Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series".
  • In 1996, The Outer Limits TV-series was nominated for some Gemini Awards, including Beau Bridges receiving a nomination in the category "Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Dramatic Program or Mini-Series", and the episode "Sandkings" was nominated in the category "Best TV Movie or Mini-Series" and "Best Sound in a Dramatic Program or Series". Also, for the series, Joseph Scanlan was nominated for "Best Direction in a Dramatic Program or Mini-Series", and Peter Outerbridge was nominated for Best Performance by an "Actor in a Leading Role in a Dramatic Program or Mini-Series".
  • Beau Bridges was nominated for the CableACE Award for Best Actor in a Dramatic Series.

Cast[]

  • Beau Bridges as Dr. Simon Kress
  • Helen Shaver as Cathy Kress
  • Dylan Bridges as Josh Kress
  • Kim Coates as Dave Stockley
  • Lloyd Bridges as Colonel Kress
  • Patricia Harras as Debbie
  • Nathaniel DeVeaux as Security Captain
  • Deryl Hayes as Policeman
  • Mark Saunders as Lab Assistant
  • J.B. Bivens as Mover
  • David Cameron as Technician #1
  • Brandon Obray as Todd Brantley (scenes deleted)
  • Kevin Conway as the Control Voice (voice)

External links[]

https://variety.com/1995/tv/reviews/the-outer-limits-sandkings-1200440966/

https://wiki2.org/en/The_Sandkings

Season 1 "Sandkings" • "Valerie 23" • "Blood Brothers" • "The Second Soul" • "White Light Fever" • "The Choice" • "Virtual Future" • "Living Hell" • "Corner of the Eye" • "Under the Bed" • "Dark Matters" • "The Conversion" • "Quality of Mercy" • "Caught in the Act" • "The Voyage Home" • "The New Breed" • "The Message" • "I, Robot" • "If These Walls Could Talk" • "Birthright" • "The Voice of Reason"
Season 2 "A Stitch in Time" • "Resurrection" • "Unnatural Selection" • "I Hear You Calling" • "Mind Over Matter" • "Beyond the Veil" • "First Anniversary" • "Straight and Narrow" • "Trial by Fire" • "Worlds Apart" • "The Refuge" • "Inconstant Moon" • "From Within" • "The Heist" • "Afterlife" • "The Deprogrammers" • "Paradise" • "The Light Brigade" • "Falling Star" • "Out of Body" • "Vanishing Act" • "The Sentence"
Season 3 "Bits of Love" • "Second Thoughts" • "Re-generation" • "Last Supper" • "Stream of Consciousness" • "Dark Rain" • "The Camp" • "Heart's Desire" • "Tempests" • "The Awakening" • "New Lease" • "Double Helix" • "Dead Man's Switch" • "Music of the Spheres" • "The Revelations of 'Becka Paulson" • "Bodies of Evidence" • "Feasibility Study" • "A Special Edition"
Season 4 "Criminal Nature" • "The Hunt" • "Hearts and Minds" • "In Another Life" • "In the Zone" • "Relativity Theory" • "Josh" • "Rite of Passage" • "Glyphic" • "Identity Crisis" • "The Vaccine" • "Fear Itself" • "The Joining" • "To Tell the Truth" • "Mary 25" • "Final Exam" • "Lithia" • "Monster" • "Sarcophagus" • "Nightmare" • "Promised Land" • "The Balance of Nature" • "The Origin of Species" • "Phobos Rising" • "Black Box" • "In Our Own Image"
Season 5 "Alien Radio" • "Donor" • "Small Friends" • "The Grell" • "The Other Side" • "Joyride" • "The Human Operators" • "Blank Slate" • "What Will The Neighbors Think?" • "The Shroud" • "Ripper" • "Tribunal" • "Summit" • "Descent" • "The Haven" • "Déjà Vu" • "The Inheritors" • "Essence of Life" • "Stranded" • "Fathers & Sons" • "Starcrossed" • "Better Luck Next Time"
Season 6 "Judgment Day" • "The Gun" • "Skin Deep" • "Manifest Destiny" • "Breaking Point" • "The Beholder" • "Seeds of Destruction" • "Simon Says" • "Stasis" • "Down to Earth" • "The Inner Child" • "Glitch" • "Decompression" • "Abaddon" • "The Grid" • "Revival" • "Gettysburg" • "Something About Harry" • "Zig Zag" • "Nest" • "Final Appeal" • "Final Appeal Part II"
Season 7 "Family Values" • "Patient Zero" • "A New Life" • "The Surrogate" • "The Vessel" • "Mona Lisa" • "Replica" • "Think Like a Dinosaur" • "Alien Shop" • "Worlds Within" • "In the Blood" • "Flower Child" • "Free Spirit" • "Mindreacher" • "Abduction" • "Rule of Law" • "Lion's Den" • "The Tipping Point" • "Dark Child" • "The Human Factor" • "Human Trials"
Advertisement