The way Toles draws McConnell always reminds me of the little alien (one-eyed and sans spectacles) in the wedding present box from the “Outer Limits” episode, “Don’t Open Until Doomsday.”
Even the opening narration by The Control Voice is appropriate: “The greatness of evil lies in its awful accuracy. Without that deadly talent for being in the right place at the right time, evil must suffer defeat. For unlike its opposite, good, evil is allowed no human failings, no miscalculations. Evil must be perfect, or depend upon the imperfections of others.”
And also, the closing words: “Without that deadly talent for being in the right place at the right time, evil must suffer defeat; and, with each defeat, doomsday is postponed for at least one more day.” Well, maybe.
The way Toles draws McConnell always reminds me of the little alien (one-eyed and sans spectacles) in the wedding present box from the “Outer Limits” episode, “Don’t Open Until Doomsday.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don%27t_Open_Till_Doomsday
https://www.pinterest.com/kathleencuyler/outer-limits/
Even the opening narration by The Control Voice is appropriate: “The greatness of evil lies in its awful accuracy. Without that deadly talent for being in the right place at the right time, evil must suffer defeat. For unlike its opposite, good, evil is allowed no human failings, no miscalculations. Evil must be perfect, or depend upon the imperfections of others.”
And also, the closing words: “Without that deadly talent for being in the right place at the right time, evil must suffer defeat; and, with each defeat, doomsday is postponed for at least one more day.” Well, maybe.