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The Human Operators

"The Human Operators"
The Outer Limits episode
Episode no. Season 5
Episode 7
Directed by Jeff Woolnough
Written by Naren Shankar (script)
Harlan Ellison (story)
A.E. van Vogt (story)
Production code 95
Original air date 12 March 1999
Guest appearance(s)

Malcolm McDowell as Ship (voice)
Jack Noseworthy as Man
Polly Shannon as Human Operator of Starfighter 88
David Kaye as Young Man
Noah Heney as Man's Father

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List of The Outer Limits episodes

Malcolm McDowell as Ship (voice)
Jack Noseworthy as Man
Polly Shannon as Human Operator of Starfighter 88
David Kaye as Young Man
Noah Heney as Man's Father

"The Human Operators" is the seventh episode of season five of the revived 1960s science-fiction television series The Outer Limits. It is based on a science fiction short story by Harlan Ellison and A. E. van Vogt, first published in the January 1971 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. It first aired on 12 March 1999.

A man is awakened by a starship's computer, to once again do its bidding.

Humanity constructs advanced military spacecraft, but the ships learn to think for themselves. They kill their crews by disengaging the life support systems. However, they keep a small number of humans alive for repairs they cannot do themselves.

One such ship, Starfighter 31, carries a father and his son, but once the father discovers that he is nothing more than a slave, he attempts to cripple the ship's computer core and is killed in the process of successfully destroying one of several spheres that apparently are critical to the core systems; in that way the ship cannot deactivate its automated defenses. This is witnessed by his son through the hatch doors.

Once the son reaches adulthood and is able to fix the core systems (so that ship can deactivate its defenses), Starship 31 rendezvous with Starship 88, whose single young female crew member is brought aboard in order to mate with him and conceive a child. The male is shown what to do by the ship through "tutorials" and with guidance from the female. He falls in love with her, and due to her effect on him, he finds himself angering the ship on numerous occasions. At different points, they are both "racked"; they are subjected to energy bolt torture, despite the risk of her having a miscarriage. When she becomes pregnant with a girl, she is told to return to her own ship. He is threatened with death in the rack if he attempts to keep her aboard.

He eventually comes to the same realization as his father, that he is nothing more than a slave. He sabotages the rack because its circuitry is connected to the computer core. This gives him an excuse to gain access the computer core. He destroys the primary control systems, then straps himself in while the ship tries to kill him with extreme maneuvers. This destroys most of the ship's aged systems.


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