The Tale of the
Super Specs is the first story narrated by Gary (Ross Hull), the
leader of The Midnight Society. I honestly went into this episode
roughly remembering the story, and expecting it to be more mediocre.
Instead, this episode is outright horrifying, taking a pair of joke
shop glasses, and using them to present a frightening scenario.
I like Gary a lot as
a character. Before the story starts we’re shown him with Kristen
(Rachel Blanchard) in his father’s magic shop. In the shop Gary
picks up a pair of glasses like the ones in the story before going to
the meeting. This gives us the impression that Gary may have made up
this entire story on the fly, making him the definitive story-telling
ace of a group that in other episodes discusses working on stories
for extended periods of time.
This episode
introduces us to the show’s second recurring character, Sardo
(Richard Dumont), a magic store owner who somehow manages to
constantly sell protagonists real, and very dangerous magic, which
even he thinks is fake. As with Vink, Sardo was never intended to
recur, and the episode ends with him trapped in limbo, so I can only
assume later appearances take place in alternate universes.
The episode follows
a boy named Weeds (Eugene Byrd) and his girlfriend Marybeth (Graidhne
Lelieveld-Amiro), who come into Sardo’s shop, and buy dust made
from monkey bones, and a pair of the glasses. The glasses themselves
appear to be inert on their own, but playing around Weeds throws some
of the dust on the glasses, enchanting them.
While it’s never
really commented on, it bears noting that Weeds is black, Marybeth is
white, and they are explicitly stated to be a couple multiple times,
even though it’s not necessary for the story. Yay for progressive
children’s media! They have good chemistry as a bickering couple.
Weeds is a
prankster, but is portrayed positively for it. Marybeth, on the
other hand, is the voice of reason. When she begins putting on the
specs and seeing people veiled in all black, Weeds assumes it’s an
April Fools joke. However, Marybeth continues to see strange things,
and even subtle changes to the environment through the glasses (a
kettle on the stove visible only through the glasses, and a fire in
the fireplace). It’s tense.
And when she tries
to get rid of the glasses they, predictably, reappear in her bag.
Weeds, meanwhile,
plays pranks, and messes around with the dust, eventually assuming it
doesn’t work because he’s turned the wrong way to see it’s
effect.
Going to Sardo,
Marybeth is told that she and Weeds have somehow opened a door to
another dimension, and the two realities are fighting to exist (an
explanation Sardo clearly makes up, but is proven to be correct).
Getting the monkey dust back from Weeds just before he flushes it as
useless, she forces her boyfriend to sit through a ritual with Sardo
to close the door. We get creepy imagery, and a bunch of people in
veils.
When Sardo attempts
to finally seal the doorway, a woman’s voice loudly announces that
two universes cannot co-exist, and we cut to a reality where the two
leads are replaced by different actors (Paul Frappier and Tarah
Anick). Then, the veiled woman (Rachelle Glait) reveals herself, and
explains to the two that they’d opened a door to another universe,
but she’d sealed it away to save theirs. We then see our three
leads in a crystal ball, screaming.
I’m a bit confused
by why the ending seems to imply that the woman in black was a
villain, if she was saving her own universe, but her voice goes
low-pitched so she’s evil. Also, no one but her seems to veil
themselves in the alternate universe, so I’m not sure who the other
figures were. Still, kind of a minor criticism.
We close out on Gary
pranking the group by giving them specs, and having a veiled David
(Nathaniel Moreau) step in front of them. The logistics of this
prank I don’t understand, but they needed a closing.
When people say
horror should focus on scary ideas over gore, this is what they mean.