• This episode is similar to the ending of
Alan Moore and
Dave Gibbons' comic book mini-series,
Watchmen (1986–87). According to Moore, while he was writing issue 10, he came across a guide to cult television that featured this episode and was surprised by its similarity to his already planned ending. However, editor
Len Wein said that "it simply stole the ending to an episode of
The Outer Limits, which Alan fully admitted!" Wein found reusing the episode's ending to be unacceptable, and quit the series when Moore refused to change it. When writing the prequel series
Before Watchmen: Ozymandias (2012), Wein specifically referred to this episode as the in-universe source of the idea. While the
film adaptation of Watchmen (2009) omits the "space squid", the opening titles of
The Outer Limits are shown on a television screen towards the end of the film. In the fifth episode of
HBO's
Watchmen, a direct reference is made when
Adrian Veidt claims that the only weapon that can stave off mankind's extinction is fear, and subsequently claims to be its architect. • The
Showtime series
The Outer Limits revisited this episode with "
Afterlife" (1996), using a more alien approach to the main character, played this time by
Clancy Brown. The ending in this case has the aliens coming to retrieve their new "brother" (which makes it slightly more akin to "
The Chameleon" episode. •
Filmmaker Kevin Smith has stated that, before offering him the chance to write
Superman Lives in 1996,
Warner Bros. offered him two projects: A remake of "The Architects of Fear" and
Beetlejuice Goes Hawaiian. • In 2011, Nobel prize-winning economist
Paul Krugman mentioned the episode when he said that building a defense against a fictional alien invasion could speed recovery from the
late-2000s recession; however, he misattributed the episode to
The Twilight Zone. ==Cast==