It's been awhile since I did one of these TZTs. I hope to get a few more of them up over the course of 2019.
A couple of folks have asked when I'm going to do something with the new Twilight Zone currently airing on CBS Access. I definitely look forward to seeing it, and when I do I'll be happy to set a place for it with the others. Whenever they announce a release date for Star Trek: Picard I'll take the All Access plunge. (Last time I did so - for the NFL playoffs - I thought great I'll finally watch Discovery - and ended up watching like 25 episodes of The Price Is Right instead. Go figure.)
For tonight, thought, let's have a look at an episode I've loved for many years:
Aired January 26th, 1962 |
"An old man and a hound dog named Rip off for an evening's pleasure in quest of raccoon. Usually, these evenings end with one tired old man, one battle-scarred hound dog and one or more extremely dead raccoons, but as you may suspect, that will not be the case tonight. These hunters won't be coming home from the hill. They're headed for the backwoods... of the Twilight Zone."
Hyder and Rachel Simpson are living out their twilight years in an unnamed mountain community where they've lived their whole lives. Over supper, Rachel asks Hyder not to go hunting that night as she has been seeing signs of ill portent all week: blood on the moon, weird birds, etc. He tells her not to worry; he'll be fine.
Whoops. |
Hyder and Rip wake up on the side of the river. Worried about what Rachel's going to say about all this, Hyder walks home. As he nears his house, he sees his neighbors digging a hole. They resolutely ignore him when he asks what they think they're doing digging a hole on his property, so he responds in the traditional manner:
He softens, though, once he learns they're digging a grave, and one of them is a little careless with the smaller of the two coffins. |
"Have a little care!"
"It's just a dog."
"It's just a dog."
"Not to some folks."
Hyder starts to realize he and Rip didn't survive the hunt once he gets inside and sees his wife in her funeral outfit and when the pastor and pallbearers don't answer his questions. |
He follows the throng outside but is puzzled by a fence he does not remember running alongside the road. ("I don't memorize ever seeing this fence" he tells Rip. Rip inwardly rolls his eyes.) They walk along until they come to a gate. A man steps out from behind it and asks Hyder a bunch of questions, before confirming Hyder's suspicions that he has indeed reached the clearing at the end of the path.
"Then I take you would aim at being St. Peter?"
"I keep the gate; that's a fact."
"I keep the gate; that's a fact."
Hyder's about to enter the gates of heaven when he's told he can't bring Rip. No Rip? What kind of heaven is this? This is folks heaven, the man replies; dog heaven's up the road a ways. Without hesitation, Hyder says no thank you. ("Any place that's too highfalutin for Rip is too fancy for me.") The man tries to persuade him otherwise, to no avail. Failing to entice him inside, he gives what sounds like good advice: don't be rash, neighbor, the stakes are eternity; why don't you just sit down and think it over for awhile?
Which he does. |
As he waits, another man appears, and this one knows his and Rip's names before Hyder has to tell him. When he tells them he's there to bring them to heaven, Hyder repeats what he told that fella up the road: he has no intention of going anywhere that Rip's not welcome to walk in beside him. The man grows quite concerned - you didn't get messed up with nobody in there, did you? When Hyder says it would be one hell of a place to settle down for eternity with no dogs and no raccoon hunting, the man tells him he isn't far wrong; that place was hell.
Good thing Rip was there or Hyder might have been tricked. "A man?
Well, he'll walk right into Hell with both eyes open... but even the devil can't fool a dog." |
And off they go to heaven. The End.
Mine, too. I first saw this when I was 15 or so, with my own dog (good ol' Bandit, R.I.{P. buddy) by my side. Did we used to watch The Twilight Zone together? It'd make a good story, but I don't think we ever had a serious ritual of it. He used to just come in and lay down near me when I was watching anything. Anyway: the regional or afterlife musings of this story aside, it's mainly a story about loving dogs.
"And another thing- don't talk
about him like that when he can hear you. Rip's got feelings. I don't
want them hurt."
Rachel's response amuses me: "I'll feed him, but I'll be switched if I'm going to start sweet-talking him." |
So yeah just as something to express a simple truth (dogs are awesome and we probably never live up to their intense loyalty and affection for us) in an uncomplicated manner, I like it. Everything else is secondary to that.
Other things I like: Rachel and Hyder, the tenderness shown to one another, primarily through Hyder's dialogue with others (particularly at the end when he makes sure Rachel won't have any trouble with that fella up the road before he follows the angel into heaven) or just through some of the acting.
Like the looks on his face, not when he discovers the truth of his condition, but when he sees firsthand how it's impacting Rachel and that he can't do anything to comfort her. |
Also, I like that the devil is all just-the-facts (name, number, how's-you-die) and this subtly creepy shot of the road into Hell beyond the gate. ("That pasture up there they call the Elysian field. Cross that and you reach the golden street that takes you directly to the Old Master's headquarters.")
And now, some leftover screencaps. |
~
Considering the nature of the episode, maybe naming the dog "RIP" was too much? Or is it just the right touch? I've been asking myself that for 30 years ago, someone out there (probably not reading this blog here but hey) even longer.
I don't know if naming the dog "Rip" was too much or not, but Rip is a pretty great name for a dog, so I figure it's fair enough.
ReplyDeleteI've never seen this episode, but I strongly suspect I will love it. As I was reading along and got to the part where the guy can't take his dog with him, I though, "Well, fuck THAT, then." So I'm obviously on the right wavelength.
Regarding the CBS All Access "Twilight Zone," I lean toward recommending that you skip it. I genuinely liked two of the episodes; the rest were okay but fell apart at the end. And the season finale is just awful. AWFUL. And kind of offensive, on top of that.
Regarding "The Hunt" not having a sterling reputation among TZ fans, I occasionally find myself bumping up against conventional wisdom about the show. One of the most recent episodes I watched was "The Invaders," which I kind of didn't like. At all. And that's an acknowledged classic! On the other hand, I watched and quite enjoyed "Twenty-Two," which seems to be on nobody's list of favorites.
So be it!
I'm not expecting much from the new TZ. That's a shame to hear that about the finale.
DeleteRe: the "No Dogs Allowed" bit, wouldn't it be something had they done a The Death of Charlie Brown and Snoopy cartoon and just used this one as a template? Or maybe Garfield. Either way!
I like "Twenty-Two." I have trouble with that stretch of s2 episodes since they were shot on video and don't look that great, but that's the best of those I think.
DeleteThe video episodes are kind of a subset, aren't they? I don't mind that as much as I expected to. I also liked the one about the guy who buys the haunted car; weird episode, but enjoyable.
Delete"You're in the Afterlife, Charlie Brown!" seems like the gritty modern take on the Peanuts that we all need.
(1) I saw this a long while ago, back during a time when the Sci-Fi Channel still lived up to that name.
ReplyDeleteThat might have been all the way back "In the Year 2000". If so, it' remarkable how certain elements, the raccoon and the river, the tollbooth to "the other place". Honnicut and the dog.
I don't know if I'd call it the best Zone episode. However something tells me it's a mistake to give it all that too harsh a treatment. Sentimental? Yes, a bit, I suppose. However a little sentiment never hurt anyone now and then.
(2) I find ti interesting that Hammer already had the Walton grandparents already sketched out in a series of vignettes.
Does this technically mean the "Waltons" final episode was aired before the entire series premiered? Dude, cosmic!
(3) The mention of nostalgic fondness puts me in mind of something I just finished, for what it's worth:
https://www.scriblerusinkspot.com/2019/06/walt-disney-and-live-action.html
ChrisC.
I hope fans of THE WALTONS went back and watched the final adventure of Grandpa and Grandma Walton out there beyond the realm of death.
DeleteTHE WALTONS: BEYOND THE REALM OF DEATH! airing TONIGHT! After YOU'RE IN THE AFTERLIFE, CHARLIE BROWN...
Looking forward to reading that blog, thanks for the heads-up.
Does anyone know who played Rip the dog? The story wouldn't have been the same without him.I can't find any information.
ReplyDeleteI do not. Wish I did!
DeleteI finally got around to watching this episode. If I could see right now, I'd tell you what I thought about it...
ReplyDeleteI hope this is an indication that the episode moved you deeply, and not that a) you're so tired you can't see straight, b) you have been stricken with blindness, or c) the lights went out in Tuscaloosa!
Delete