*** Welcome to piglix ***

Probe 7, Over and Out

"Probe 7, Over and Out"
The Twilight Zone episode
Episode no. Season 5
Episode 9
Directed by Ted Post
Written by Rod Serling
Featured music Stock
Production code 2622
Original air date November 29, 1963
Guest appearance(s)

Richard Basehart: Colonel Adam Cook
Antoinette Bower: Eve Norda
Harold Gould: General Larrabee
Barton Heyman: Lieutenant Blane

Episode chronology
← Previous
"Uncle Simon"
Next →
"The 7th Is Made Up of Phantoms"
List of season 5 episodes
List of Twilight Zone episodes

Richard Basehart: Colonel Adam Cook
Antoinette Bower: Eve Norda
Harold Gould: General Larrabee
Barton Heyman: Lieutenant Blane

"Probe 7, Over and Out" is an episode of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone. Its plot is a shaggy God story.

Astronaut Adam Cook (Richard Basehart) crash lands on a strange planet with gravity and atmospheric conditions similar to those of his home world. Most of his equipment is destroyed in the crash and cannot be repaired due to a broken arm and lack of resources. He manages to contact his home base, but they have little encouragement for him; there is no replacement spacecraft to rescue him, and his home planet may soon be at war.

In his last transmission, Cook's superior back home, General Larrabee (Harold Gould), tells him that there may be no survivors when the war is over, so he can expect no rescue, hoping for Cook that his new world is more peaceful.

Cook readies himself to make a home on his new world when he discovers another inhabitant, a human-like female (Antoinette Bower). They cannot understand each other but communicate through sketches drawn in the sand and by pantomime. He learns that she is also stranded; her planet had left its orbit and she is its sole survivor. As they learn to communicate, he learns that her name is Eve Norda.

Together Cook and Norda search for a more fertile area, which Cook describes as looking like a "garden." He fully introduces himself as "Adam Cook" and Norda gives her full name as "Norda Eve." Adam and Eve begin a new life on this planet she calls "Earth." At this point she even offers him a "seppla" ("seppla" is an anagram of "apples," which is artistically depicted as the biblical forbidden fruit). As they venture further, Rod Serling narrates that even he presumes that the place they are heading to is Eden.


...
Wikipedia

...