Walking Distance

Walking Distance is an episode of the television series The Twilight Zone.

Details

Episode Number:5 Season: 1 Production code: 173-3605 Original air date: October 30, 1959 Writer: Rod Serling Director: Robert Stevens Music: original score by Bernard Herrmann

Cast

Martin Sloane: Gig Young Martin's Father:Frank Overton Martin's Mother: Irene Tedrow

Synopsis

A middle-aged man driving cross-country stops his car, and walks toward his hometown, which appears exactly as it was when he was a boy. he sees himself as a boy, and following him home, meets his parents. Trying to convince his parents that he is their son from the future he succeeds only in proving his insanity. Finally, his father confronts him, having seen the papers in his wallet and now believing him to be who he says he is, and tells him to return to his own time. Martin tries to warn himself as a kid to enjoy his childhood before it's too late, but his advances scare young Martin who falls off the merry-go-round and injures his leg. Martin returns to his own time with a limp.

Trivia

Features a bit part by a young Ron Howard.

Themes

Deeply personal story for Serling, who had always wanted to revisit a part of his youth, which largely includes his hometown of Binghamton, New York. In this episode he ultimately concludes that he can not, or should not, return home. Similar themes are explored in The Incredible World of Horace Ford and, to a lesser extent, Young Man's Fancy. The episode also deals with the relentless pressures of the business world, which also serve as the basis for A Stop at Willoughby, The Brain Center at Whipple's and two Serling teleplays from before and after The Twilight Zone: Patterns and the Night Gallery episode They're Tearing Down Tim Riley's Bar.

Critical Response

"It's been three decades since he made that journey but the experience still tingles the flesh and waters the eye. This was "Walking Distance, Episode Five of Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone. Originally aired on October 30, 1959, it was the most personal story Serling ever wrote, and easily the most sensitive dramatic fantasy in the history of television. The yearning to recapture one's youth is an inescapable part of the human condition, and to discover, in the end, that the past is irrevocably behind you can be heartbreaking and sobering. With mesmerizing performances by Gig Young and Frank Overton, Serling played out this theme of ice cream and irony, of band concerts and broken dreams, and allowed us to take a better look at ourselves in the process. Devoid of the gimmickry that pervaded other episodes, "Walking Distance" stands alone in its simplicity and maturity. It captured the essence of Serling's poignant pen. Moreover, it's a fine example of how inventive cinematography and inspired direction could propel a half-hour teleplay forwarda rarity in the "golden days" of harried, grind-'em-out production schedules." Paul Mandell, excerpt from "'Walking Distance' from The Twilight Zone", first published in the June 1988 of the American Cinematographer magazine.

External link

References

  • Zicree, Marc Scott: The Twilight Zone Companion. Sillman-James Press, 1982 (second edition)

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
wwt caerlaverock
soleil moon frye
list of national trust properties in england
national trust properties in wales
national trust properties in northern ireland
popper
william cavendish
francis picabia
list of conservation topics
sword beach
the independent
deftones
ludham potter heigham nnr
general american
convention of sintra
mid yare nnr
redgrave and lopham fen nnr
holkham nnr
tuvaluan language
c4 explosive
elbe lbeck canal
the woodland trust
bitmaps
rhinovirus
mr. denton on doomsday
the sixteen millimeter shrine
escape clause
the lonely
time enough at last
perchance to dream
g.711
quartet in autumn
some tame gazelle
strangers and brothers
jean plaidy
elizabeth taylor (novelist)
jean rhys
list of monasteries dissolved by henry viii of england
mary renault
"weird al" yankovic
thomas woolner
sega master system
warsaw fire brigade
international university bremen