"Mindbender" -- Not for the first time, a UFO closes in on Moonbase low to the surface during sunspot activity. But then, 4 miles away, it takes off-- before then suddenly exploding! WHY? Straker and Foster form one of two teams searching the area for wreckage. Nobody finds anything except for a rare crystal rock, as a "memento" (maybe to "use as a paperweight"). Suddenly, the man who picked it up begins hallucinating, seeing Mexican Banditos all over, gets into fights and shoots someone dead before getting killed himself. Back on Earth, Henderson has stopped by again, truthfully less hostile than before, about the latest budget report, which isn't ready because Straker has Virginia Lake using the computer non-stop trying to figure out what the hell went on at Moonbase. When Straker asks Lake for "moral support", the look on her face shows she's warming up to Straker. Another astronaut, in SHADO HQ, suddenly goes berserk, and sees aliens everywhere. When he holds Lake by force, Straker has no choice but to shoot him dead! Soon after, he's brought the first dead man's personal belongings, and handles the crystal, just as Henderson returns and starts to argue. And then SUDDENLY... Straker finds himself standing on the set of a TV show filming the adventures of SHADO, and everyone refers to him as an actor playing "Ed Straker". WHAT THE HELL? He runs outside, sees himself, but it's really his stuntman. He's told by Miss Ealand he should be watching his "rushes", and in the theatre, watches events from his own life unfold-- the car crash that nearly killed himself and Henderson, his son John as he got hit by a speeding car, his ex-wife screaming she never wants to see him again. Somehow, Straker's will is so strong, he KNOWS-- it's all a dream-- but how to "get back"? He eventually makes his way back to the very spot and moment where it all started, holds up his empty fist, which earlier held a gun, and throws it. And then SUDDENLY, we see the crystal hit the wall and shatter into a thousand pieces. Realizing the crystal was a "booby trap" affecting the minds of whoever touched it, he explains what happened to everyone around him.
Now this was really a VERY disorientating episode! 2 things Gerry Anderson liked to do, in pretty much every one of his TV series, was a "dream" episode, and an "clip show". In "Mindbender", he got to do BOTH at the same time! And, in doing so, I'd say this was arguably one of the BEST "clip" shows I've ever seen.
I have had enough very-vivid dreams in my lifetime, where either I could not understand what was going on, or, I actually KNEW I was dreamng, but couldn't wake up, that watching this was absolutely uncanny. Many dreams are JUST like this! Not the specific details, but the way things aren't as they seem, or where you'd swear you recognize where you are, only it doesn't look like that at all, or people you know AREN'T who they are in the dream.
The opening sequence on the moon was actually reused from "Flight Path". Later, the "rushes" feature clips from "Identified" and "A Question Of Priorities". Paul Foster (not really) in the dream smiles when John gets killed and says, "This oughta make a GREAT episode!" I've heard Gerry Anderson say that himself, and many fans claim it's their favorite-- but I HATE that story, for the way it's so EXCESSIVELY mean-spirited, and had 2 separate plot-lines, BOTH of which had pointlessly-downbeat endings.
This was the latest episode involving alien mind-control, a running theme in much of the 2nd half of the run.
Al Macini, as astronaut "Andy Conroy", looks to have only appeared in 2 episodes-- this one and "The Cat With Ten Lives". I'm actually surprised those 2 were broadcast in the correct order, although, while in production they were 19 and 24, as broadcast they were 3 and 14 (sheesh). Conroy became only the 2nd recurring character to get KILLED on the show, after Michael Mundell as Interceptor pilot Ken Matthews (who was in "Identified" and "Computer Affair"). On that score, the 2 Interceptor pilots virtually "bookend" the series.
The entire 2nd half of this episode takes place all around the film studio. There's a giant hand prop seen, and it returns in the next episode, all of which takes place around the film studio. Crazy enough, Straker damages some of the computers in SHADO HQ in both this episode and the next one, though you don't see it happen in this one. I forget which website I read it at, but someone a few years back clued me in that "Mindbender" and "Timelash" were filmed IN THAT ORDER (24 and 25), but despite this, the A&E DVD box set swapped their order on the disc. I can only imagine the reason for this was someone figured Gerry Anderson tended to do "clip shows" at or very near the end. When I got the DVD set, I tried watching those 2 episodes BOTH ways. (Lucky thing it's easy to do that with DVDs.) I concluded, without any doubt in my mind, that "Mindbender" absolutely SHOULD be watched right before "Timelash". If you watch them back-to-back that way, they feel like a 2-PARTER-- and, by the end of "Timelash", you'll probably feel EXHAUSTED.
In this episode, Grant Taylor, who played General Henderson, looked as if he's suddenly lost about 40 pounds since his previous appearance. By the end of 1971, he passed away at only the age of 54. (Having this broadcast 14th instead of 24th really becomes too obvious when "Court Martial" was aired 20th.) Although Straker gets into an absurd argument with Henderson, in which the General starts going "BAAAAA!!!!!" like a sheep, it seems clear to me this only happened during Straker's dream, a reflection of how much tension there'd been between them for so long. But before this moment (and after the dream ended), Henderson actually was far more reasonable than he'd been in previous episodes. His main concern was just to get the budget report in on time, otherwise, BOTH their jobs could be on the line. And, as he said, HE could leave anytime, but not Straker, who has "a monkey on his back"-- that of DEDICATION to his job. I actually take that as a compliment, coming from the man.
An odd detail I noticed was hot the scene of the motorcade being attacked by the UFO from "Identified" and seen again here, parallelled the near-identical motorcade being attack in "Eleven Days To Zero" but then having that footage be re-purposed with different characters being killed in a later episode of VOYAGE. (I forget which one!) Funny how a scene like that should appear TWICE on BOTH shows.