"The Time Tunnel" End of the World (TV Episode 1966) Poster

(TV Series)

(1966)

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8/10
Exciting Adventure
claudio_carvalho13 September 2009
Doug and Tony are transported to a mine shaft and Tony finds that two hundred miners are trapped in gallery due to a cave-in. They seek help but nobody wants to come to the Emperor Mine since they believe the world will end in a couple of hours. Doug and Tony find that it is the late spring of 1910 and the Halley's Comet is passing near to Earth. Further the prominent Professor Ainsley believes that the comet will crash on Earth and the world is in panic. While Tony tries to convince the locals to help the men trapped in the mine, Doug tries to prove to the scientist that he is wrong in his assumption. Meanwhile The Time Tunnel complex is in danger affected by the magnetic field of the comet.

"End of the World" is a flawed episode but also an exciting adventure. The desperation of the emotional and impulsive Tony contrasts with the prudent attitude of Doug and is engaging to see their fight to save the miners. The situation in The Time Tunnel complex is also fantastic. However there is a great contradiction with the paradox of the encounter of Tony with Doug and Sergeant Jiggs in 1958, since they should recall the event ten years later. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): "O Túnel do Tempo" ("The Time Tunnel")
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8/10
'Too bad that most of the episodes were NOT this good!
garrard23 July 2011
Warning: Spoilers
This is a standout installment because of the tension created with the approach of Halley's Comet, the claustrophobic nature of being trapped in a mine, and the great sfx when the comet from 1910 has an effect on the present-day Time Tunnel.

Great acting comes from the main cast as well as from veteran actors Paul Fix, James Westerfield, and Gregory Morton. Paul Carr, who will appear in several other episodes during the show's single-year run is also effective as a trapped miner.

The better episodes of the show were the ones that were steeped in history as opposed to the ones that used those trademark silver-faced aliens.
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7/10
Interesting epsiode with a good science aspect
shakspryn2 February 2020
People often poke fun at Irwin Allen, because of the tendency for his series to get stuck on 'monster or alien of the week' in Lost in Space and Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. But here, the viewer gets a lot of background and context about Halley's comet. And we learn about some aspects of astronomy and phenomena that can affect observations. That is really nice! We see some good, old-time character actors here that fans may recognize from Westerns. Lee gets to show some quick thinking, good to see this fine actress do more than turn control knobs. While I enjoyed the episode (I'm working my way sequentially through the Blu-ray set) I notice that Tony (James Darren) tends to "run hot" during his performances. His character is very excitable and his intensity level is super-high much of the time. I prefer Doug (Robert Colbert) who is the calm type--way more so than Tony! This is a good episode and most viewers (who aren't scientists) will learn something about astronomy.
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Sci-Fi & Disaster
StuOz7 July 2006
Tony and Doug see Halley's comet in 1910.

They don't come much better than this!

This is one of my three favourite episodes of The Time Tunnel.

The teaser sees a surprisingly pumped up Robert Colbert grab Paul Fix ("Oh come now") and Colbert walking outside to see an ugly planet-like ball in the sky. Then the teaser ends, the viewer knows they are in for a ride!

I am not sure why it is, but there is something really special about the spoken words in the hour. The thing that defines End Of The World is a general feeling of gusto in the acting, gusto in the direction and a clever use of stock music. This is Whit Bissell's finest hour. I first viewed this episode in February 1978 and have made an estimated 150 viewings of it over the years. Yes, it really is that good.
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6/10
Who decided that extreme close-ups were a good idea?
cpotato101017 February 2019
The writing and acting for this episode were good, but I noticed that a few times they decided to show the actors in extreme close-up.

This might be OK for inside the mine, as it lends to the claustrophobic feel, but in the Time Tunnel lab, it makes everyone look strange. They even found a way to make Lee Meriwether look odd! Not cool!

Bad idea. Bad, bad idea. I only wish we could go back in time and prevent the director from doing this.
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6/10
Gee, maybe time travel is a good thing after all
DRBERNABO25629 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Watching these shows again after forty years, it is really a trip (so to speak) to see how they dance all around the larger implications of time travel. In the first two episodes there was no regard whatsoever for how what happens in the past can affect the present or how what happens in the present can affect the future. However, this time Doug and Tony are stuck in a mining town where everybody is convinced Halley's Comet is going to destroy the world. A local scientist has done the numbers that confirm the collision and Doug redoes the calculations and find they are correct. It turns out that it is the Time Tunnel that saves the earth by deflecting the orbit of the comet. Pretty impressive, right? Yeah, well, NOBODY notices. These two might be unstuck in time, but you would not think that would jar their brains loose. However, this just becomes part of the fun as they continue to play with the time continuum.
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9/10
The Halley's Comet is coming!
toshiro-edson19 June 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Tony and Doug were transported to 1910 when The Halley's Comet pass close at Earth.

Só close that had scaring people around the world Crowds praying hoping tô move away The comer or simply waiting The doomsday Newman try try to convince men to help yours mates trapoed on a mine Meanwhile Phillips try to make change the theory of Professor Amsley According his Idea the comet will schock on Earth and there's nothing tô do It.

In a tentative to send a modern device to Phillips almost The Time Tunnel was destroyed, by the comet's energy One of my favorites episodes, for me an advanced technology hard imagine nowadays.
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7/10
Forget Science!
Hitchcoc3 August 2022
Doug and Tony find themselves in league with some miners and end up trapped in a cave in. No help. That's because people in 1910 think that Halley's comet is going to blast into the earth, destroying it. Mostly, the boys have to face off against a naysayer who refuses to help. The problem with the comet is that it is a fireball moving slowly toward our dear planet.
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7/10
This turn Halley's Comet!!!
elo-equipamentos24 February 2019
One the most weak episode on entire series, the bad script and also special effects almost ruins the episode, firstly when the Comet is coming straight to the Earth, totally inaccurate, second the Comet didn't appears as should be with a tail, a strong fails of Special effects, when the Halley's comet passing through nearby the Earth in 1910 in an incredible 5 millions kilometres, but in the episodes just few thousand or so, Irwin Allen should be known that, Doug trying to convincing the scientist was the outrage, how explain such fault, moreover the series fall into disreput, as entertainment works but the lack of credibility charge his price soon or later!!!

Resume:

First watch: 1971 / How many: 4 / Source: TV-DVD / Rating: 7
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5/10
Western Actors Lasso Giant Fireball
Johnny_West12 April 2020
Paul Fix is the guest star of this episode. The great sheriff of Northfork, Micah, on The Rifleman, could play many roles. He could look really old and beaten down, like he does in this episode, or pretty chipper and tough as he did on many movies and on The Rifleman. One thing you could always count on was that he delivered a solid performance and he was always a good person playing a good guy!

The Time Tunnel was a pretty sketchy show that usually did not do much research into the science that they were talking about. It seemed like most of the time, they just winged it. A perfect example is when Whit Bissell is asking the scientists whether or not the time tunnel machine can create any cosmic magnetic interference with Halley's Comet, and nobody knows anything.

Sam Groom plays a junior scientist to Dr. Ann McGregor (Lee Merriweather), and Dr. Raymond Swain (John Zaremba). When Groom begins to explain a possible side-effect of the magnetic interference, Whit Bissell tells him to shut up, or be demoted. That was a pretty lame way for a scientist to get verbally abused on a science show.

Whit Bissell played Lt. Gen. Heywood Kirk, and since he was in charge, and not a scientist, they used his character to blow off science and to do things that had no scientific explanation, and to otherwise turn what could have been a scientific science fiction show into fantasy garbage. Whit Bissell was basically on the show to bully the scientists and order them to do stupid things that they told him were dangerous.

It seemed like about half of this episode was spent on a screen shot of a flaming orange fireball that was supposed to be Halley's Comet. Having had the benefit of seeing Halley's Comet when it came by the Earth in 1986, and knowing that it never looked like a giant orange fireball, this episode seems even dumber than it is.

Another flaw is that James Darren keeps telling everyone that there are 200 miners trapped in the mine, and every time there is a shot of the miners, there are less than fifteen in a small room. It is pretty awful and ridiculous.

The best thing about this episode is that there are a ton of Western actors in it. Besides one of the stars, Robert Colbert being a Western actor, there was James Westerfield, a long time supporting actor, Paul Carr, Sam Groom (who was a guest on Gunsmoke a couple of times), Paul Fix, and Wesley Lau (a guest on The Virginian, Big Valley, Gunsmoke, Have Gun-Will Travel, Wagon Train, etc., and who also had been an L.A.P.D. Detective on Perry Mason).

Aside from the horrible special effects of the flaming orange ball, and the lack of any science research, the episode is entertaining thanks to the good actors!
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4/10
Doug digs.
BA_Harrison6 July 2022
It's rather amazing that, in all of the infinite corridors of time, scientists Tony and Doug always wind up somewhere catastrophic. In End of the World, the temporal travelers arrive in 1910, only to find Halley's Comet looming large in the sky, seemingly on a collision course for Earth; since our planet has never been in any real danger from Halley's Comet, one might assume that Doug and Tony have landed in an alternate universe; more likely, the writer of this episode opted to take huge liberties with historical facts to add extra suspense, tension and urgency to his story.

Without the sense of impending cataclysmic doom, this would certainly be a rather forgettable episode, as Tony and Doug meddle with history once again by trying to save two hundred men trapped in a collapsing mine. That said, WITH the added danger of the comet, it all becomes quite laughable, partly because of the huge factual inaccuracies regarding the comet (an orange fireball!), and partly because the comet's arrival in 1910 somehow affects the Tic Toc technicians in 1968 -- not sure how that works, but watching the frightened scientists recoil in terror as the comet approaches is hilarious. Hasn't the tunnel got an off switch?

While the 1968 scientists look on helplessly, Tony and Doug attempt to rustle up volunteers to help at the mine, but having been told that the world is about to end by local scientist Professor Ainsley (Gregory Morton), the townsfolk really can't be arsed. Doug visits Ainsley and convinces him that his calculations are flawed; when the professor admits to the locals that he was wrong, they pick up tools and get to work rescuing the miners. Jobs a good 'un!

Having happily altered history once again, the time travelers disappear, and after a brief visit for Tony to the desert location of the Tic Toc HQ circa 1958, the pair wind up in the Japanese consulate at Pearl Harbour, one day before the infamous attack. Not having much luck are they?
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5/10
End of the World
Prismark1029 November 2022
We never had this much trouble when Halley's Comet passed by in 1986. Then again unless you had a decent telescope there really was nothing to see. So the end of the world was not nigh.

This time Doug and Tony find out that the local townsfolk seem to care little for the two hundred miners are trapped inside a mine in 1910.

They think the world is due to end because of a flaming apparition in the sky. Halley's comet and a local professor is convinced that it will hit Earth, he had done the calculations.

It is left to Doug to convince the scientist that he has got it wrong.

A flaky episode with dodgy science. That people did not know about Halley's comet and Doug had difficulty in explaining to a scientist why the comet will not hit the planet.
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