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Context Recap / TheOuterLimits1995S3E17FeasibilityStudy

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1->'''The Control Voice:''' In a world where change is the rule, we rely on the unyielding constants in life for comfort and security... that the sun will rise, that the earth will turn. But what if we could no longer be certain of anything? To what then would we cling?
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3A neighborhood is abducted by aliens who inform them that if they can survive the alien's environment, the rest of humanity will be abducted and enslaved.
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5->'''The Control Voice:''' For centuries philosophers and theologians have debated what it means to be human. Perhaps the answer has eluded us because it is so simple. To be human is to choose.
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7This is a {{Remake}} of one of the episodes from ''Series/TheOuterLimits1963''. Tropes for the original version are [[Recap/TheOuterLimits1963S1E29AFeasibilityStudy here]].
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9!!Tropability Study:
10* AdaptationalVillainy: A surprising case here, as it's an adaptation of an episode from the 1960's version of the show. The basic plot of both is the same: A group of aliens teleport an entire Earth neighborhood to their planet -- they need slaves, and want to see if humans are a good fit for the job. The original episode features the Luminoids, who are looking for a race to enslave because they suffer a genetic condition that turns them into immobile stone as they get older; they explain that they don't use their extremely advanced machinery for simple, everyday chores because it seems like an unworthy application for such amazing technology. In the remake, the potential enslavers are the Triunes; the genetic condition, and with it any possibility of sympathy, is removed, as the aliens are simply lazy and don't want to bother with working.
11* BearerOfBadNews: Teenaged Sean Terzer is the first one to see an alien and spread the word, really letting the rest of the neighborhood realize what kind of story they're in.
12* BittersweetEnding: All of the humans die of the disease that turns the infected to stone...but they willingly ''chose'' to contract that disease to convince the Triunes that there's no point to enslaving humanity. The Control Voice proudly notes that it's the ability to make such choices that [[HumansAreSpecial sets humans apart.]]
13* DatingWhatDaddyHates: Sara's biker boyfriend, although her father is fairly civil and matter-of-fact when saying why he thinks they shouldn't date.
14* GettingSickDeliberately: As in the original episode, the humans heroically infect themselves to save all humanity.
15* GoodShepherd: Father Puglia, one of the first to agree to perform a HeroicSacrifice.
16* HeroicSacrifice: An entire Earth neighborhood is transported to a world ruled by powerful but lazy aliens who want a race of servants; if the people from the neighborhood prove able to survive on their world, all of humanity will be enslaved. When a teenage girl inadvertently contracts a fatal disease from another alien race, her father, and eventually everyone who was taken, decide to deliberately infect themselves to trick the kidnappers into thinking that humanity is a bad fit for their experiment.
17* AHouseDivided: Mr. Terzer is attacked by a neighbor for having a working generator, and general strife is spreading until the climax.
18* InnocentAliens: Adrielo belongs to race with a pre-industrial society, several hundred years less technologically advanced than that of late 20th Century Earth. The Triune, who were in search of slaves, abducted a small group of them to determine whether they could survive the [[TakenForGranite petrification disease]] which had killed every other species that they had brought to their planet. However, Adrielo's race was as susceptible to it as the others and the abductees soon died out.
19* MassTeleportation: A four block suburban area is transported to the Triunes' planet to study the feasibility of enslaving the entire human race.
20* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: Sara is infected while trying to help a dying alien she finds, although this is ultimately portrayed as the best conclusion out of several bad ones.
21* PapaWolf: Joshua cares deeply for his daughters safety and is willing to die with her.
22* TheQuisling: Teased but averted when one neighborhood resident, a science fiction author, does suggest submitting to the aliens out of hopes of finding HappinessInSlavery, but doesn't go through with it.
23* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: The neighborhood security guard, who is quick to respond when things go bad, tries to keep people from turning on each other, and is one of the first to agree that they must resist the aliens after hearing the truth about them.
24* TheRemake: Of the original 1960s episode of the same name.
25* RousingSpeech: Joshua gives one about defeating the aliens by getting sick.
26* RousseauWasRight: As in the original episode, the inhabitants of the neighborhood ultimately decide to willingly submit themselves to the petrification disease, dooming themselves but saving the entire human race in the process. It crosses over with WhatYouAreInTheDark, as no one on Earth will ever know that these total strangers chose to save them, yet those same strangers make the sacrifice anyway.
27* SlaveRace: The Triune plan to turn humanity into slaves ''en masse'' but the plan goes awry. They made a similar failed attempt with Adrielo's race.
28* SmartPeopleWearGlasses: The bespectacled Joshua proves to be the voice of reason for the neighborhood.
29* TakenForGranite: An alien disease causes anyone infected to gradually petrify.
30* {{Tuckerization}}: The character Father Puglia is a reference to Frank Puglia, who played the equivalent character Father Fontana in the original version, ''Series/TheOuterLimits1963'' episode "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1963S1E29AFeasibilityStudy A Feasibility Study]]".
31* WeWillUseManualLaborInTheFuture: Much like the original, this episode hangs a {{lampshade}} on this trope. When the Triune explain their plan for humanity to Joshua Hayward, he exasperatingly asks what use they could possibly have for slaves when they have the technology to move a giant chunk of a distant planet thousands of lightyears to their present location. One Triune responds that they consider using this technology for menial labor to be demeaning.

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