1:00:08
There it goes again.
1:00:09
Maybe finally
we can get the hell out of here.
1:00:11
With this weather,
nobody will be able to fly in.
1:00:14
We can't fly out either.
1:00:15
We shouldn't go till we know
about the pathogen.
1:00:17
- You don't decide anything for me.
- Calm down.
1:00:21
He's right, Michael.
1:00:24
No one leaves.
1:00:26
Rundell Peak, this is USS Crowley. Come in.
1:00:29
Rundell Peak, do you read? Over.
1:00:31
USS Crowley, this is Rundell Peak.
We read you.
1:00:34
Go ahead for Rundell Peak.
1:00:39
This is Dr. Bachman.
1:00:42
Yes, it's me. I'm here in Washington...
1:00:46
with the Secretary of Defense...
1:00:50
and some other men.
1:00:52
This is about the alien, isn't it?
1:00:56
My God, it's true.
1:00:58
Then I assume you've opened it.
1:01:01
How many fatalities?
1:01:03
Two by accident, four by infection.
1:01:07
The seven of us left
seem to have a resistance to it.
1:01:11
At least for the time being.
1:01:13
Have they contaminated
the environment outside the station?
1:01:16
Has the environment
outside the station been compromised?
1:01:20
No one's been outside.
1:01:22
What's going on, John? What's happening?
1:01:31
John, are you still there?
1:01:36
What you found in the ice
was an escape pod...
1:01:38
similar to our own aircraft ejection system.
1:01:41
On the night of July 2, 1947...
1:01:45
a similar vehicle
entered the Earth's atmosphere.
1:01:48
It landed near Roswell, New Mexico...
1:01:51
and started transmitting a rescue signal.
1:01:54
When they were retrieving
the unopened pod...
1:01:57
a ham radio operator named Gordon Osler...
1:01:59
stumbled on the frequency signal,
the same as you did.