While
vacationing at a sort of alternate-universe Club Med with his wife and kids,
family patriarch Hal Sterling (Sam Groom) soon falls hard for the sexy seductress,
Scarla Raye (Barbara Stock), the siren who runs the establishment.
Of
course, there’s a good explanation for Hal’s unexpected flirtation with
infidelity. Scarla Raye lures him away
from his family responsibilities with a brand of pheromone perfume called “Coloma”
(“the essence of life” and created
literally from human desire.)
And
well, Hal’s clearly not in his right mind; he’s “under the influence.”
At
first merely flattered by Scarla’s attentions, Hal soon stays out all night
with her, unable to refuse her anything. He then becomes verbally abusive to
his children, and downright rude to his wife.
So while “Paradise Lost” concerns a science-fiction concept and provides
a (chemical) excuse for Dad’s extra-marital romp with another woman, it’s
pretty clear that the episode concerns a serious “real” issue: a family on the verge of falling apart.
Things
go pretty far too in this episode of Otherworld too. We don’t know (*ahem*) exactly what good old Dad is up to
till 4:30 am with Scarla (though we can guess…), and at the end of the episode,
while still under her spell, Hal explains to his wife and children his sincere desire
to stay on the island with “the other woman:”
“From now on, I only think about me and what
I need,” he tells his wife, a shell-shocked June (Gretchen Corbett).
This
is a particularly blunt and bracing moment, as Hal chooses the “pleasure”
island over everything else of importance in his life. The moment feels surprisingly real and harsh,
and I’m sure Hal’s words, or variations of those words, have been spoken many
times in too many families.
Fortunately, June is a fighter and isn’t about to lose her husband. She tells Hal that Scarla has made him “forget” who he really is. And then she pointedly contrasts herself with the immortal Scarla, a woman made perpetually young by ingestion of the Coloma. “I can’t offer eternity. I don’t even know what that means,” June admits. But June does offer the “hope of growing old together,” and notes that she is Hal’s best friend.
That
moving and well-delivered speech snaps Hal out of his stupor, and he flees with
his family as the island paradise conveniently self-destructs and Scarla
super-ages into an old hag in a matter of moments.
Hal
then concludes, in voice over narration that “paradise begins at home.”
Since
this is a continuing TV series, you might have guessed there was going to be a
happy ending and a re-affirmation of marriage and monogamy, right?
Here,
Hal is persuaded to return to his family, but in real life, that’s not always
that way. In real life, once a person
starts thinking only about himself, it’s hard to draw him back on the basis of
being a “best friend.” People leave
marriages or cheat because they are looking for the exotic, the different, and
that’s precisely what Scarla Ray offers.
Despite the re-assertion of mainstream family values (and thus order),
this Otherworld
remains pretty daring since it risks making the audience hate, or at least
dislike, Dad. At the very least, the
episode portrays him as weak.
Directed
by Tom Wright (Millennium), “Paradise Lost,” like the previous two episodes of
this 1985 series, combines a family story with a science fiction plot. It does
so, at least most of the time, with a degree of intelligence and humor. This episode develops June's character very well, in particular, as she deals with the surprising changes in her husband. The kids are shunted to the side a bit, but that's okay, because the family issue here is commitment, and how it relates, specifically, to husband and wife.
Fans of cult-tv will note that the late Ian Abercrombie (Seinfeld, Birds of Prey) has a significant role here, as Scarla Ray's superior from the home land. And lovers of good literature will recognize resonances of The Tempest here, in the setting, and of The Picture of Dorian Gray.
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