Eerie, Indiana: The Other Dimension

1998
Eerie, Indiana: The Other Dimension

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 Switching Channels Feb 07, 1998

Weirdness is seeping from one dimension of Eerie to another due to a strange cable salesman.

EP2 The Goody-Two Shoes People Feb 14, 1998

There's a new club in town, the Eerie Junior Executives Club and there's a secret held.

EP3 Standard Deviation Feb 21, 1998

Mad Bureau of Statistics woman tries to force the Taylors to become more 'normal'.

EP4 Time Flies Feb 28, 1998

A Coffee machine sold to Mr. Crawford, speeds up Eerie and the residents of Eerie by stealing time.

EP5 The Phantom Mar 07, 1998

Mitchell discovers a classmate who's become invisible because nobody noticed him, and they decide to get him noticed by his fellow students before he disappears forever.

EP6 The Young and the Twitchy Mar 14, 1998

A soap opera character's visit to Eerie leads to melodramatic behaviour all round.

EP7 Last Laugh Mar 21, 1998

A gag writing genius helps Stanley become a master comic, but Stanley goes to far as he insults everyone.

EP8 The Newsroom Apr 04, 1998

Local paper has a machine that creates bad news, destroying the city, and Mitchell must stop them before they kill his mother at the Eerie nuclear power plant.

EP9 Little Buddy Beep Beep Apr 11, 1998

Microchip toy fad hides sinister goings on at toy factory.

EP10 Perfect Apr 18, 1998

A Beauty treatment arrives in the city, and for cover, sinister things are goings on at factory. The company is making everyone into perfect human beings...dolls.

EP11 Nightmare On Eerie Street Apr 25, 1998

The legendary Sandman can't sleep so is keeping Eerie awake with nightmares.

EP12 Mr. Lucky May 02, 1998

Mitchell gains continuous good fortune from winning a wishbone, but there are unexpected results. So Stanley and Mitchell decide to receive help from the one who is now having so much bad luck.

EP13 Send In The Clones May 09, 1998

Mitchell accidentally creates a clone of his Dad from a plant, when he was 13 - and has to stop him blowing up the school with a giant potato and the power of electricity.

EP14 I'm Okay, You're Really Weird May 16, 1998

A salesman promises to free the 'inner goofball' of Eerie's inhabitants.

EP15 The Jackalope May 30, 1998

Mitchell and Stanley try to find the mythical jackalope, but they have some trouble when a hunter is out there trying to find it too.
6.7| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 07 February 1998 Ended
Producted By: Global Television Network
Country: Canada
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

A new mystery begins for two young boys in the seemingly ordinary town of Eerie, Indiana as they experience strange and interesting phenomena.

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Reviews

hawked-off Good, bad or indifferent, the pilot of this short-lived series assigns responsibility for the new weirdness in Eerie to the breakdown of social traditions and the mind control brought on by the power of media, specifically cable TV with no less than 2000 channels. (Mitchell: "Are you sure it's the same Golf Channel"? Stanley, incredulous: "There's more than one?") On one level, the show seeks to entertain kids and teens with the usual "kids on a crusade to rid the world of evil" plot lines, the evil cleverly twisted into seemingly innocuous weirdness, an element that is immediately relevant to young people beginning to encounter the world outside their homes. On another level, the script of the pilot mercilessly skewers the contemporary (1998) obsession with media-delivered entertainment and the accompanying breakdown of communication within families and between friends; conformity (five identical cheerleaders all drinking Black Cows in exactly the same way at the World o' Stuff soda counter); and the marketing manipulation, in the person of cable-TV salesman for the Eerie region, Ted Tanner. Through the expressed concerns of our heroes, Mitchell and Stanley, and their counterparts from the earlier series, Marshall and Simon, Eerie and the world are warned that "Eerie . . . will cease to exist . . . it wasn't just normality on the line - it was to be our very existence." With nearly two decades of hindsight (as of 2017) the dominance of "reality" TV, obvious and hidden marketing, and several forms of social media not even invented yet as this show ran its course, makes "Eerie . . . The Other Dimension" prophetic beyond its modest satirical intentions.
LittleNiniel Whether it was a cheap production or not, those monies could have been used for something much better. I'm going to give credit for trying to continue on the original Eerie Indiana (1991), but there is nothing that captured me with this version. Just as in movie sequels. If the sequel does not have any actors from the first movie, it wont be the same! If you watched the original Eerie Indiana and fell in love with those characters then the actors that played them will stay as the "real" characters, if you know what I mean. Seeing those actors as Mitchell and Stanley makes me wanna cry. It just looks like a parody on Marshall and Simon! And how can I say this without being rude... Mitchell and Stanley isn't the most "manly" names either... it's all a parody! I'm sorry but this version did not work at all for me! Omri, Justin, Jason... everyone from Eerie (1991) only gets sorely missed watching this version. It's so so so so sad that the show was canceled, but if ever making a remake... I doubt I would like it. If ever making a "sequel" kinda thing it would need to have the same actors... just an older version...Over and out!
Sparrow_in_flight I have to admit: Eerie, Indiana, The Other Dimension did better than I expected. But the series lacked the seriousness of the other show. More than anything, the adventures of Mitchell and Stanley seemed purely for the chance to do continuous gags, than an actual plot. And the kids just weren't as believable - they unfortunately did not have the grasp of their characters that Omri Katz and Justin Shenkarow had. The show was also rushed out at a time when FOX already had at least one show of this nature. Two at once was pure overload. I feel I must also mention that the books written for the series at times had more detail and plot than the show itself, another reason to its failure. It tried. And you had to admire the effort. But the original Eerie, Indiana was creepier, better written, and better acted.
neiljones1981 As with so many things in recent years that have come out of the archive and remade for a modern audience, Eerie Indiana: The Other Dimension does not have the charm of the original. Why this is really unknown because it looks and feels the same as the original (apart from the cast) but... well I don't know. I think it just wants to be an updated Goosebumps really using the Eerie Indiana template but doesn't pull it off.One of the episodes, I presume the first in the run to set the series up, uses archive footage of the original series to try and explain (not very well it has to be said) that the wierdness of Indiana has spilled over into a new dimension. It should have worked. Just the way it was done ruined everything. The rest of the series was really a load of tosh in hindsight, nothing really memorable about it.I'm not saying that it shouldn't have happened but it was just so detached from the first run in a few regards that, well, it sealed its own fate really. Or maybe I just grew up instead. Still at least it launched Daniel Clark's acting career so some good came out of it after all :¬D