The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone s2 e5-8

June 11, 2023- numbers 41, 42, 43

Spoilers

Season two has not been very strong so far. However, there were three exceptional episodes in a row with the fourth one being fine. This stretch of episodes really elevated the season.

“The Howling Man.”

Dutch angles for everyone!

What a great episode this one was. I enjoyed The Howling Man. Stumbling into the castle, David Ellington was lost and needed help. Just like Brad and Janet from Rocky Horror. Just like Bugs Bunny in several Looney Tunes shorts. Or Count Dracula’s castle. It never turns out well.

It was a unique opening as we started with David Ellington seemingly addressing the audience about the shocking horror that he had experienced. It felt for awhile that David would take the place of Rod Serling in the narrator chair, but Rod did eventually show up.

The prostrate form of Mr. David Ellington, scholar, seeker of truth and, regrettably, finder of truth. A man who will shortly arise from his exhaustion to confront a problem that has tormented mankind since the beginning of time. A man who knocked on a door seeking sanctuary and found, instead, the outer edges of The Twilight Zone.”

Mr. Ellington was allowed to stay in the castle because he was sick and could not leave on his own. However, this was a bad thing for all as he came across a man locked away in the castle who claimed that the leader of this cult-like group, Brother Jerome, was crazy and had him locked up for no reason.

Brother Jerome was pretty sketchy too. Mr. Ellington wanted to understand, but Jerome did not want to tell him the full story. He knew the true story would make him sound like a loon.

Finally, Jerome broke down and explained to Mr. Ellington that the man he spoke to was no man at all… he was the devil. He told Mr. Ellington how the devil came to be locked in a room in their castle. Mr. Ellington pretended to believe him, and as soon as he could, he went and freed the man from the room.

Ellington was clearly blinded by his illness and his own foolishness because the questions he asked, which were good one about the lock on the door and why the man couldn’t just get himself out, were ignored.

Sure enough, the devil was freed and shapeshifted into his devilish form, horns and all. According to Rod’s narration, the devil was behind WWII, The Korean War, the weapons of war until Mr. Ellington had recaptured him.

We find out that, instead of narrating, he had been telling his own maid about the story to make sure that she never open that door. Which, of course, she promptly did.

This reminded me of the myth of Pandora’s Box. Pandora was a good person who did not intend on releasing the worst pain and anguish onto the world by opening the box and letting them out. Yet, that is what happened, just like Mr. Ellington opened the door and let out the great evil of the world. They say that the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Looks like this episode agrees with that idiom.

“Eye of the Beholder”

A second consecutive awesome episode. Eye of the Beholder started out with the poor fate of Miss Janet Tyler, her ugly face completely covered in bandages, in a hospital for her last chance treatment.

Suspended in time and space for a moment, your introduction to Miss Janet Tyler, who lives in a very private world of darkness. A universe whose dimensions are the size, thickness, length of the swath of bandages that cover her face. In a moment we will go back into this room, and also in a moment we will look under those bandages. Keeping in mind of course that we are not to be surprised by what we see, because this isn’t just a hospital, and this patient 307 is not just a woman. This happens to be the Twilight Zone, and Miss Janet Tyler, with you, is about to enter it.

The nurse and the doctor were in to see Janet, but it was clear immediately that something weird was going on. We saw nobody’s faces. The doctor and the nurses were shot with specific camera angles or within shadows that kept the audience from seeing anyone’s face. Meanwhile we were told that Janet had one final chance to be able to be normal or she would need to be taken away to be with her kind of people.

Boy, are there some connections to this episode and the world we live in right now? As the episode continued, we were introduced slowly to several ideals of their current society. We even got to hear from their “Leader” on a closed circuit TV. The longer the episode went, the more bizarre the world seemed to be.

I thought the truth was fairly obvious early on in the episode. I had guessed that when they removed the bandages from Janet’s face, she would be revealed as being beautiful and, my thought was that everyone else would have blank faces. I was half right as the doctors and nurses were revealed to have ugly, pig-like faces.

The actual removal of the bandages was done wonderfully, building tension with every unwrapping. It took its time and it was a great payoff.

“Nick of Time”

William Shatner is in The Twilight Zone!

Before his iconic turn as Captain Kirk or his role in probably the most well-known Twilight Zone episode ever, William Shatner was here as the recently wed Don Carter.

The hand belongs to Mr. Don S. Carter, male member of a honeymoon team en route across the Ohio countryside to New York City. In one moment, they will be subjected to a gift most humans never receive in a lifetime. For one penny, they will be able to look into the future. The time is now, the place is a little diner in Ridgeview, Ohio, and what this young couple doesn’t realize is that this town happens to lie on the outskirts of the Twilight Zone.

Don and his new wife Pat have their car break down and they get stuck in Ridgeview, Ohio. While they were waiting for their car to be repaired, they went to a diner for food. At their booth, there was a little fortune teller napkin dispenser that you could put in a penny and ask a yes or no question and the machine would spit out an answer like a fortune cookie.

Problem was the answers seemed coincidentally accurate and Don, who was very superstitious, began to believe in the power of the machine. He slowly became obsessed with what the fortune teller was saying to them and was allowing the box to dictate their life.

At first, Don thought the machine had told him that something bad would happen if they left early. Don figured out that if they left before three, something bad would happen. So they stayed until 2:55. This drove me crazy. You waited this long, why not wait another five minutes. Why press fate?

Of course, right at 3, they nearly get hit by a car, which only cemented Don’s belief in the precognition of the machine. He took Pat back to the diner and began asking question after question.

Pat was able to bring Don back to reality with some common sense and they were able to get out of the diner and into their car to go wherever they wanted to go. However, another desperate looking couple came into the diner and sat down at the booth, pumping the fortune teller full of pennies and asking advise for their lives.

William Shatner was great here, really playing up the paranoia and the obsession of the superstitious man, and he showed the strength to escape from the pull of this belief.

“The Lateness of the Hour”

Robots everywhere.

“The residence of Dr. William Loren, which is in reality a menagerie for machines. We’re about to discover that sometimes the product of man’s talent and genius can walk amongst us untouched by the normal ravages of time. These are Dr. Loren’s robots, built to functional as well as artistic perfection. But in a moment Dr. William Loren, wife and daughter will discover that perfection is relative, that even robots have to be paid for, and very shortly will be shown exactly what is the bill.”

Dr. Loren’s daughter, Jana, was not a very likable character. She felt very selfish and most likely jealous of the robots and how much they did for her mother and father. She worried that these robots were keeping her parents from fully living their lives.

She did it in the most obnoxious way though, including throwing one of the robots down the stairs. She insisted that her father shut the robot staff down. He did not want to but he finally acquiesced when Jana said that either it was the robot staff shut down or she would leave and never come back.

I personally would have shown her the door, but there was a reason that was not going to happen. The twist of the episode, which again I had figured out early, was that Jana was also a robot. She flipped out when she discovered this truth, and her father had no other choice but to turn her into a maid instead.

“Let this be the postscript — Should you be worn out by the rigors of competing in a very competitive world, if you’re distraught from having to share your existence with the noises and neuroses of the twentieth century, if you crave serenity but want it full time and with no strings attached, get yourself a workroom in the basement, and then drop a note to Dr. and Mrs. William Loren. They’re a childless couple who made comfort a life’s work, and maybe there are a few do-it-yourself pamphlets still available… in the Twilight Zone”

While much of this episode irritated me because of Jana’s behavior, I loved the end of the episode. She absolutely deserved this ending.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #31

June 11, 2023

There are still a couple of books from last week that I have yet to read, but a chunk more have gone down since. The biggest one that I have yet to touch is the giant hardcover book Criminals by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips. It collected that series and I am looking forward to getting that one started. However, it is a big book and is a tad intimidating.

So with some of the others from last week still up, I will push that book off for awhile.

Killadelphia Vol. 1. “Sins of the Father.” Written by Rodney Barnes and drawn by Jason Shawn Alexander. This is a collection of Killadelphia issues #1-6 from Image. This series was Eisner nominated and, although I typically do not like the collected books, Killadelphia has been around for awhile and would be expensive to get the actual comic book issues. And who knows if I would have even liked it. So I grabbed the first volume at Comic World last week. This was great. It made President John Adams and his wife Abigail Adams vampires. This was so cool and told a great father/son story as well. May have to look into the next volume of books.

Damn Them All #2. Written by Simon Spurrier and illustrated by Charlie Adlard. More magic as Dora and Ellie move on with their attempts to find help with the 73 demons. We are introduced to Carlin and Pruflas in this issue.

X-Men #23. “When Cometh… the Stark Sentinels” The X-Men come to confront the brand new Iron Man Sentinel from Orchis and they discover that one of these new Sentinels is going to be very difficult to handle.

New Mutants: Lethal Legion #3. “Old Wounds, Old Weapons“. These New Mutants are strange for me. I have found them interesting to read, but I have struggled to know who was whom. Outside the familiar New Mutants such as Rahne, Dani and Karma, the rest of these characters are new or unfamiliar to me and tough to connect with. I have been enjoying the book so far though.

Fury #1 Who is S.C.O.R.P.I.O.?” Written by Tom King. Art is handled by several people including Scot Eaton & Cam Smith, Tom Reilly, Adam Kubert, and Ramon Rosanas. Adam Kubert and Dean White did the cover art. This was an interesting book using both the new Nick Fury and the original Nick Fury, showing where they are and moments of their backstory on how they got where they were. It was neat how they told the story with different styles from the different time periods. I could definitely get into more Nick Fury, especially with Secret Invasion coming this month on Disney +.

Thor #34. “Blood of the Fathers Part Four” More goodness from Thanos, Dr. Doom and Thor. We also have Hela making a return, Loki showing up, Thor’s sister taking a step forward. Things are feeling as if they are beginning to prepare for a finale for this storyline.

Deadpool: Badder Blood #1. Story by Rob Liefeld, script by Chad Bowers and pencils by Rob Liefeld. Team up with Cable and Wolverine. I have to say there were some amazing moments of art in this book, including a couple of pages that were tilted in the other direction that made this an intriguing read. I’ve been digging Deadpool recently.

Star Signs #2. Written by Saladin Ahmed and featuring art by Megan Levens. A group of young heroes, who’ve been dubbed names of the Zodiac, are begin brought together after the stars disappeared from the sky. It looks as if there are two sides collecting powered individuals and things are getting more fascinating.

Invincible Iron Man #7. “Fight the Future” Written by Gerry Duggan and drawn by Juan Frigeri. Kael Ngu did the art on the cover. Tony and Rhodey try an assault on the Stark Unlimited facility producing the Iron Man Sentinels. Things seem to be going well until Rhodey gets captured and set up for murder. (BTW… I thought the cover art was a little weird. It looks like Tony Stark has big rollie-pollie, cartoonish eyes that are looking up and to the right. I know that is not what it was supposed to be, but now I can’t unsee it.

Peacemaker: Tries Hard #2. Written by Kyle Starks and drawn by Steve Pugh. Cover art was by Kris Anka. Peacemaker and Mallah go to assault the secret base of General Immortus to get the DNA of the Terminator. And things do not turn out well for Peacemaker.

Daredevil & Echo #1. Written by Taboo & B. Earl with art by Phil Noto. This story takes place during two distinct timelines, current day with Daredevil and Echo and in 1835 with Tommy Murdock. This was a good read, better than I anticipated it was going to be.

X-Men: Before the Fall-Mutant First Strike #1. “Here to Help” The anti-mutant organization Orchis is spreading misinformation and propaganda against mutants and the X-Men are doing what they can by helping victims of a deadly strike against a small town of Milford. The strike was intended to look like it was done by mutants, though it seemed that Orchis orchestrated it. It was cool to see some of these X-Men again (in their fun red X, white jackets). It was weird though cause I saw Angel here and then, for a few panels, I saw Archangel, and I did not know why there was no example of Warren changing. Maybe I missed something over the years of skipping X-books.

Love Everlasting #8. “Too Hip for Love.” Written by Tom King and drawn by Elsa Charretier. Joan is back from the mental ward and is struggling to maintain her grasp on sanity. Doesn’t help when she is seeing the Cowboy constantly. Plus, it never seems to change from 1963. Joan is reaching the end of her rope as she had a gun to her head this issue. She did not kill herself, but the idea is there.

Ambassadors #6. Written by Mark Millar and illustrated by Matteo Scalera. I picked up the second variant cover, which was in black and white. This is the final issue of the first arc of Millar’s newest book. This final issue was filled with some excellent action as the super heroes all come together for the first time. A brutal ending too.

Decision to Leave (2022)

June 11, 2023

Day: 11, Movie: 11

I have been waiting anxiously to watch this Korean made film for the June Swoon 2. Decision to Leave was a popular hit of the international films last year, but I have been pushing it off because of the length. The film was almost 2 hours and 20 minutes, which was long for a film that required reading.

Before I go on about the movie, I have to complain about the captions. The English translation was small on the screen and some of the dialogue went too fast. It was difficult to keep up with the flow of the story without being 100% sure what they just said. I have said that in previous subtitled films, you forget that you are reading and just fall into the story, but this time the reading was more difficult at times that it never truly allowed me to lose myself in the story.

That is not necessarily a flaw of the film as much as it was Vudu and its presentation. I will not hold that against Decision to Leave, but there is no doubt that it affected my viewing pleasure.

According to IMDB, “From a mountain peak in South Korea, a man plummets to his death. Did he jump, or was he pushed? When detective Hae-joon (Park Hae-il) arrives on the scene, he begins to suspect the dead man’s wife Seo-rae (Tang Wei). But as he digs deeper into the investigation, he finds himself trapped in a web of deception and desire.”

I did enjoy this movie with its mystery at its core. Exactly how much of a role had Seo-rae played in her husband’s demise or was it actually just suicide? The film does a great job of keeping the story going as you are never sure what the truth is.

The relationship between Hae-joon and Seo-rae felt wrong for most of this movie as you could never be sure if she were playing him or if she was just a victim of the situation. This relationship caused Hae-joon’s marriage to crumble, although there are some hints in the movie that implied that Hae-joon was already not very happy with the path of his life.

Reason to Leave was directed by Park Chan-wook, who also directed the iconic film Oldboy. Park Chan-wook created a beautiful look to the film and brought a great deal of magic to the love story.

Decision to Leave tells a solid romantic story with touches of tragedy mixed in. The performances are all really strong and the film looks lovely. It is a touch long, but it takes its time telling the story effectively.

The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone S2 E3 & 4

June 11, 2023- numbers 39 & 40

Spoilers

“Nervous Man in a Four Dollar Room”

A whiny, nervous criminal is in a small, cheap hotel room when approached to do more than the petty, two-bit crimes he is used to committing.

“This is Mr. Jackie Rhoades, age thirty-four, and where some men leave a mark of their lives as a record of their fragmentary existence on Earth, this man leaves a blot, a dirty, discolored blemish to document a cheap and undistinguished sojourn amongst his betters. What you’re about to watch in this room is a strange mortal combat between a man and himself, for in just a moment, Mr. Jackie Rhoades, whose life has been given over to fighting adversaries, will find his most formidable opponent in a cheap hotel room that is in reality the outskirts of The Twilight Zone.

Jackie was hoping George, the head crook, would give him something special tonight, and he was right. However, Jackie was not excited about it at all.

George gives Jackie a gun and instructs him to kill a little old man who was rebutting the gangster’s advances. George wanted him to be made am example of and George gave that job to Jackie because no one would expect such a whimpy loser to be a murderer.

Jackie may have been a criminal, but he had never killed anyone before so this assignment triggered a conflict of conscious within Jackie. And Jackie began having a discussion with the reflection of himself in the mirror.

After a dramatic confrontation with the mirror image, Jackie refused the job and beat up George, resigning from his employ.

I took this as an example of the character of Jackie dealing with a split personality. It seemed more than just an argument over a conscience. The reflection spoke about how Jackie could have taken dual paths and that he chose a poor one. This is clearly something that Jackie has dealt with in the past. And at the end of the episode, the alter personality, who called himself John, takes over the body from Jackie.

I did enjoy the psychological aspect of this episode. The argument with the reflection in the mirror is a well known trope of this style and I wonder if it had happened before the Twilight Zone.

“A Thing About Machines”

Get out of here, Finchley

Get out of here, Finchley

Get out of here, Finchley

“This is Mr. Bartlett Finchley, age forty-eight, a practicing sophisticate who writes very special and very precious things for gourmet magazines and the like. He’s a bachelor and a recluse with few friends, only devotees and adherents to the cause of tart sophistry. He has no interests save whatever current annoyances he can put his mind to. He has no purpose to his life except the formulation of day-to-day opportunities to vent his wrath on mechanical contrivances of an age he abhors. In short, Mr. Bartlett Finchley is a malcontent, born either too late or too early in the century, and who, in just a moment, will enter a realm where muscles and the will to fight back are not limited to human beings. Next stop for Mr. Bartlett Finchley – The Twilight Zone.”

Mr. Bartlett Finchley was a pompous, stuck-up individual who blamed all the problems around him on the machines that filled up his home, and not on the blistering temper that seemed to overwhelm him at a drop of a hat.

Somehow, the machine began speaking to him and intentionally doing things to irritate and upset him.

The machines get the last laugh in a fit of personification as Finchley’s car chased him around the neighborhood and killed him in a pool.

The episode gave us no reason for the mysterious machines to come to life. It did hint at this being in Finchley’s head, but there was no evidence of that actually occurring. Though there were some ideas here, there were too many silly images included taking whatever tension the episode tried to build out. I knew what we were up for when the electric razor began coming down the steps on its own.

Finchley was unlikable, but lacked any real reason for the audience to see him drown in a pool by his own car.

The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone S2 E1 & 2

June 10, 2023- numbers 37, 38

Spoilers

“King Nine Will Not Return”

Season two kicked off with a couple of new details. One, the well known Twilight Zone theme was in the opening, standing out. I’m not sure if it was included on the first season intros, but it definitely stood out more this season.

Secondly, Rod Serling, who always spoke the opening narration, appeared on screen to deliver the narration.

This is Africa, 1943. War spits out its violence overhead, and the sandy graveyard swallows it up. Her name is King Nine, B-25, medium bomber, Twelfth Air Force. On a hot, still morning, she took off from Tunisia to bomb the southern tip of Italy. An errant piece of flak tore a hole in the wing tank and, like a wounded bird, this is where she landed, not to return on this day, or any other day.”

We see the downed airplane in the desert and then the camera sweeps around to see the unconscious body of Captain James Embry. When Embry awakens, he starts looking desperately for the remainder of his crew.

Failing to find them, Embry continued to get more disheveled. He gets to the place where he is seeing images of his crew, who are not actually there.

At this point, Embry is breaking down in frustration and desperation. The scene shifts from the desert to a hospital where Embry is being taken care of after going into shock when seeing a newspaper with a headline about the King Nine being discovered after crashing during the war years ago. Embry was supposed to go on the mission, but backed out at the last instance and did not die as the rest of the crew did.

Embry wakes up and believes that he had dreamt the whole thing. However, the sand in his shoes implied that there was more real about the events he encountered than suspected.

This certainly deals with the idea of survivor’s guilt, which is a horribly insidious trauma.

Season two kicked off with a decent episode. The performance of Bob Cummings as Embry was very strong as the entire premise of the episode depended on his skills.

“The Man in the Bottle”

When I started the Daily Zone, I knew I had seen some episodes, although I have not seen near as many as I thought as only one was familiar in season one. However, there was one episode that I knew I had seen. I did not remember the overall concept behind it, but I knew it had to do with an older couple and a little shop. I also remembered something about the man becoming Adolf Hitler. Well, this is that episode.

The Man in the Bottle is, of course, a genie. When a struggling older couple with their antique shop come in possession of a bottle, it falls to the ground and opens. A genie appears offering 4 wishes.

Arthur and Edna Castle are unsure what to do. Edna was very anxious about making the wishes, saying that she did not like the look of the genie. When Arthur used the first wish to fix a broken glass on the display case, they saw that this was true and that they could do anything.

They wished for a million dollars. The genie provided and the Castles were extremely happy. They gave away $60,000 dollars to the people of the neighborhood only to find out that the IRS wanted their part. The tax turned out to be a HUGE piece of it. After taxes and the money they gave away, they had $5 dollars left.

Then Arthur tried to become the leader of a country and the genie turned him into Hitler at the end of WWII in the bunker. Arthur had to use the final wish to fix things and return to normal.

Poor Arthur, who was a kind man, did not deserve being messed with as the genie did. Arthur was kind, helping out an old lady at the beginning, giving her a dollar even though he could not pay his own bills. They showed him giving out money to people in a kind-hearted way. Yet, he was screwed over.

Obviously, the episode’s theme was ‘be careful what you wish for…’ but treating this kind old couple the way the show did, felt more cruel than just teaching a lesson. Even at the end, the Castles were able to just laugh off their experiences.

Breaking (2022)

June 10, 2023

Day: 10, Movie: 10

The June Swoon 2 continues today with Breaking, a movie based on a true story starring John Boyega.

Former Marine Brian Brown-Easley (John Boyega) “is denied support from Veterans Affairs, financially desperate and running out of options, he takes a bank and several of its employees hostage, setting the stage for a tense confrontation with the police.” (IMDB)

John Boyega was amazing as the desperate Marine was and how he was trying to shine a light on the problem that he was facing. It was not just that he needed the money, which he did, but he wanted that the VA, which had denied his money, to make things right.

Boyega showed how troubled Brian was, both with the situation and with the mental aspect. He was more than just a troubled man. He was shown to be a good man even though the two hostages he kept in the bank were afraid for their lives. Nicole Beharie and Selenis Leyva are tremendous as the two bank employees remaining as hostages. The negotiator was played by Michael Kenneth Williams and he brought an empathy unlike most any other character in the film.

There was a lot of tension developed in the film by not only the situation but also the character dialogue. You were never sure exactly what was going to happen. You might feel that this situation was going to end up tragic, but there were plenty of uncertainty about what was going on. That made this an effective way to create a mood.

I am not sure if the film was able to shine enough of a light on the problem facing Brian. There are issues with the way the VA treats some vets and this film touched on it, but it needed to go into it more if they wanted it to be a message.

Breaking was a film that I had always heard positives about, but I never got around to seeing it in the theater or on streaming. It made a great film for the June Swoon 2.

The Daily Zone- The Twilight Zone s1 e35 & 36

After a very strong season of episodes, I am afraid that season 1 ended with a couple of clunkers for me.

Spoilers

“The Mighty Casey”

A terrible baseball team from New Jersey holds try outs and they wind up with a new pitcher. Casey is a left handed master who was as dominant as he could be. There was only one problem.

Casey was a robot.

When the league found out about the truth, they insisted that Casey was suspended. However, Casey’s creator, Dr. Stillman, said he could give Casey a heart, thus making him human. The surgery was a success, meaning that Casey could continue to pitch. Unfortunately, Casey’s new heart turned him into a pitcher who could not get anyone out.

Jack Warden played manager “Mouth” McGarry.

I found this episode to be my least favorite episode of the season so far. It was a silly premise and the execution was worse yet. When Casey was pitching, they added stupid sound effects to his fastball, slowball and curve ball. The whole episode was just a joke and was a huge step down from anything that I had seen before.

“A World of his Own”

I had always thought that I had seen my share of the episodes of The Twilight Zone, but as I have watched the first season, I did not recognize or was familiar with any of them. That is, until this episode. I remembered parts of this episode as I was watching it so this is the first of the Twilight Zone episodes that I had seen before. It would have been decades ago though.

This was also not a favorite of mine, though better than the baseball one I just watched.

Gregory was a writer who had the power to bring to life characters that he created. All he had to do was speak into his tape recorder and the characters would come to life.

This led to a conflict with his wife Victoria, who came upon Gregory snuggling up with a blonde woman (called Mary). When Gregory explained that she was just a creation of his, Victoria was ready to have him committed.

Gregory could take the tape, cut it out with his scissors and toss it into the fire, which caused the person to disappear.

The end of the episode did help save it a bit. Victoria was shown to be a creation as well and she, not believing it, tossed her own tape into the fire. She disappeared. That was fairly obvious as it was happening. The best part was when Rod Serling appeared in the room to narrate the events and Gregory tossed his tape into the fire too, cause Rod to disappear. That was the best part of the episode.

“Leaving Mr. Gregory West—still shy, quiet, very happy… and apparently in complete control of The Twilight Zone.”

This ends the first season of The Twilight Zone. The Daily Zone will be continuing into the second season soon.

The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone s1 e32-34

June 10, 2023- numbers 32, 33, 34

Spoilers

“A Passage for Trumpet”

Jack Klugman stars in the thirty-second episode of The Twilight Zone and he carries the episode on his back. Klugman is very strong here, delivering several monologues and playing off other actors that can not or will not respond to him.

Joey Crown, musician with an odd, intense face, whose life is a quest for impossible things like flowers in concrete or like trying to pluck a note of music out of the air and put it under glass to treasure. Joey Crown, musician with an odd, intense face, who, in a moment, will try to leave the Earth and discover the middle ground – the place we call The Twilight Zone.”

Joey Crown is a depressed trumpet player with an alcohol problem. Life was getting him so down that he decided to commit suicide by stepping in front of a speeding truck. That was when things got weird.

Joey found himself walking around the area, but unable to interact with anyone. Everyone he came across reacted as if they could not see Joey. Joey made the reasonable assumption that he was dead… that he was a ghost.

However, he comes across a man playing the trumpet that lets him know that is not the case. In fact, he says that Joey was in a limbo state and he could choose to go back or remain in the land of shadows. Joey goes back and things get much better.

Klugman was the reason to enjoy this episode. Joey did not seem to mind being in limbo so his choice to return to a world where he tried to leave by suicide did not make much sense. Still, the acting was strong and the message of stick with life is a good one.

“Mr. Bevis”

…with Butthead nowhere to be seen.

This was a second episode in a row that depended on the lead performance of the actor. This was Orson Bean and his semi-comedic role as Mr. James B.W. Bevis was excellent stuck into an episode that was strange and that had a message that did not feel very well done.

“In the parlance of the twentieth century, this is an oddball. His name is James B. W. Bevis, and his tastes lean toward stuffed animals, zither music, professional football, Charles Dickens, moose heads, carnivals, dogs, children, and young ladies. Mr. Bevis is accident prone, a little vague, a little discombooberated [sic], with a life that possesses all the security of a floating crap game. But this can be said of our Mr. Bevis: without him, without his warmth, without his kindness, the world would be a considerably poorer place, albeit perhaps a little saner.”

Loved the word ‘discombooberated.’

Mr. Bevis is a carefree, kind-hearted, fun-spirited man who could not hold a job because of his idiosyncrasies. We see him go through a day where he loses his job, has his car ruined and ends up in a bar getting drunk.

He is approached by his guardian angel, J. Hardy Hempstead, who has been guardian angelling Mr. Bevis’s family for years.

He told Mr. Bevis that he could redo the day and everything would turn out differently, but he would have to change the way he lived. No more funny suits, no more weird car, no more sliding down the bannister, no more playing on the street with the kids.

When he went through this day with the new way of acting, Mr. Bevis realized that he did not want to have a life where he could not do those things, even if it meant he would not be successful.

So I guess the message is that it is best to be yourself, but get used to failing if you do. The only way to success is by being something you are not, suppressing your true nature. That does not seem like a very positive message.

This was clearly inspired by “It’s A Wonderful Life” but it fails to reach that level of entertainment. Orson Bean does everything he can with what he is given and nearly pulls it off. Unfortunately a disappointing message and a lackluster story derailed this performance.

“The After Hours”

This is probably the most frightening episode of The Twilight Zone to date. There were some really anxiety creating shots as poor Marshal White struggled to remember what was going on.

“Express elevator to the ninth floor of a department store, carrying Miss Marsha White on a most prosaic, ordinary, run-of-the-mill errand.

Miss Marsha White on the ninth floor, specialties department, looking for a gold thimble. The odds are that she’ll find it—but there are even better odds that she’ll find something else, because this isn’t just a department store. This happens to be The Twilight Zone.”

I immediately spotted that there was no 9th floor on the elevator that Marsha White got on and I knew something was going on. What happened from here on out was weird.

Marsha White was here to buy a gold thimble for her mother (which at the end is strange considering the twist). After purchasing the thimble, she realized that it was scratched and dented and tried to return it, but the manager told her there was no 9th floor in the store.

This started Marsha’s psychological problems, afraid of what she saw… especially when she saw the woman who sold her the thimble… as a mannequin.

The twist at the end I did see coming, but that did not make everything around it less creepy. The strong performance by Anne Francis made up for any problems that might have been in the episode and the twist, the fact that Marsha was a mannequin too, was creative and probably very effective for the time.

Transformers: Rise of the Beasts

I loved the Transformers as a kid. I loved the TV cartoon and I remember buying Transformers toys. Then the Michael Bay movies came along and I was excited. Unfortunately, they turned out to be some of my least favorite films ever. Legitimately, I believe Transformers: The Last Knight might be my least favorite movie of all time.

The last Transformers movie was Bumblebee, which was the first one without Michael Bay’s fingerprints all over it, and it was one of the best. Sadly, it did not do well at the box office so I was afraid that the film series would head back to the giant stupidity of the previous films instead of the solid work of Bumblebee.

Here come Transformers: Rise of the Beasts. This included characters from the 1990s animated TV show Beast Wars along with a low number of the Autobots. While I do not think this new Transformers movie was up to the level of Bumblebee, this was way better than any of the first five in the franchise and presented a breath of fresh air for the Robots in Disguise.

Set in 1994 after the events of Bumblebee, Rise of the Beasts featured Noah (Anthony Ramos), a down on his luck former soldier who was struggling to find employment to help his mother and his ill brother Kris (Dean Scott Vazquez). After failing to get an honest job, Noah succumb to criminal activity and tried to steal a car. Of course, his luck is terrible as he tried to steal the Autobot, Mirage (Pete Davidson).

Meanwhile, Elena (Dominique Fishback), a young museum intern, studied a falcon statue with weird markings on it. When she accidentally broke the statue, it revealed the Transwarp Key, an object that was taken by the group of Maximals, led by Optimus Primal (Ron Perlman), years before from their home planet when forces of the planet-sized Unicron, who consumed planets, tried to find the key. The key would open portals around the universe and allow Unicron unfettered access to any planet of his choosing. Unicron’s led henchman was named Scourge (Peter Dinklage), who had been searching for the key since. When Elena activated it, the signal alerted Scourge to its location.

The signal also brought Optimus Prime (Peter Cullen) and the few other Autobots to it, trying to find the key which would allow them to go home to Cybertron.

Okay, so… that is a lot of synopsis. And I just scratched the surface. Though it feels convoluted when I am writing the plot out, the film does a decent job of explaining things for the audience so they were not lost. At least, I was not lost, though I have a knowledge of the lore so perhaps someone not as familiar with the Transformers may be more confused.

There have been several issues I have had with the previous Transformers movies. The first one is the human characters. In previous movies, the human characters were terrible characters that simply took up time that should have gone to the Transformers. Here, Anthony Ramos and Dominique Fishback do a very good job of being vital and not ridiculous like in previous films (The film had Mirage make a great joke about Marky Mark…aka Mark Wahlberg, who was in previous Transformers movies).

Second issue I have had before was the fact that I could never tell which giant robot was which. All of the Autobots looked the same except for Optimus Prime and Bumblebee. The rest were dull and poor characters that were undistinguishable from the others. This is much better since they keep the Autobots to a limited number including Prime, Bumblebee, Mirage, Arcee and Wheeljack. The Maximals were much more original in their designs so they stood out better (although when they transformed into their robot forms, they were much less so). Optimus Primal and Michelle Yeoh’s Maximal character Airazor are the two Maximals that standout in this film. However, the villains were absolutely interchangeable, even Scourge not standing out of the crowd.

Previous franchise films had just stupid humor/jokes that were not funny. The humor in this film was kept to a minimum and usually worked well.

The writing has been truly stupid over the previous movies and, while this film’s writing isn’t remarkable, it is much better. There are several cringeworthy moments in the third act though that bothered me. The third act was decent enough as not to have ruined what they were going for, though it did feel like too much of a step back.

The mid-credit scene was great and looks to take the franchise into a very intriguing path that I would be all for. No spoilers here.

As someone who hated the Michael Bay Transformers movies, I am on board with this new path the franchise is on. This movie is not a brilliant film, but it easily clears the bar set by previous entries in the series. While not as good as Bumblebee, keeping the number of Autobots down helped this film and it is always cool to hear Peter Cullen voicing Optimus Prime. This film kept the really stupid things at a minimum and avoided most of the traps that ruined previous movies. I am cautiously optimistic about the future of the Transformers movies.

3.5 stars

Living (2022)

June 9, 2023

Day: 9, Movie: 9

The June Swoon 2 this morning features a movie that was utterly beautiful.

Bill Nighy gave an Academy Award nominated performance as Mr. Williams, a grim and humorless bureaucrat whose life changed after receiving a diagnosis giving him just a few months to live.

Mr. Williams decided to do something worthwhile will the few months he had remaining and he took up the fight for a local playground.

Bill Nighy is absolutely transcendent in this role. He is subtle and powerful with every glance and every slight word. He is never over-the-top, even though the situation could call for it. He was reserved yet determined to not fail in his final effort.

He had become withdrawn and callous within his job before the diagnosis altered his thinking. He spent some time with a former co-worker, Margaret Harris (Aimee Lou Wood), whose energy and willingness to embrace life attracted the old man. He wanted to remember how to engage in the daily joy of being alive while he still had the opportunity.

The film started off making it seem as if the leading protagonist would be Mr. Williams’s newest co-worker, Mr. Peter Wakeling (Alex Sharp), but he ended up as a supporting player in the story. Through his eyes, we get the chance to see the results of what Mr. Williams was able to accomplish.

Living was directed by Oliver Hermanus and the film is an adaption of a 1952 Japanese movie Ikiru which had been directed by EYG Hall of Famer Akira Kurosawa.

I have not seen the original film from Kurosawa, but this new adaptation is lovely, life-affirming and filled with a zest for life that is too easily lost. Bill Nighy is spectacular in his reserved and measured performance that will no doubt break your heart while inspiring you to do better. Living was a wonderful experience.

The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone S1 E31

June 9, 2023-number 31

Spoilers

“The Chaser”

Strange when you think about it, this whole episode happened because someone needed to use the phone.

“Mr. Roger Shackelforth. Age: youthful twenties. Occupation: being in love. Not just in love, but madly, passionately, illogically, miserably, all-consumingly in love – with a young woman named Leila, who has a vague recollection of his face and even less than a passing interest. In a moment, you’ll see a switch, because Mr. Roger Shackelforth, the young gentleman so much in love, will take a short, but very meaningful journey into the Twilight Zone.”

Roger Shackleforth was desperately in love with Leila. She couldn’t be bothered. Roger was in the phone booth, trying to get Lelia to answer. To get him out of the booth, a man offered him the card of a man whom would be able to fix everything for him. That would make the man desperate to make a phone call the inciting incident. Weird writing.

The man whose card was given to Roger was for a man named “A. Daemon,” a professor who was reading and working in what appeared to be a library. The professor tried to get Roger to buy “glove cleaner” but eventually offered him a love potion to help with his troubles. He warned Roger that this potion would make Leila fall hopelessly in love with Roger, and she would dote over him forever.

Roger went to see Leila and immediately gave her the potion in some champagne and, sure enough, she became breathlessly taken with him.

They would marry and she would do everything for him, constantly gazing upon him, back rubs, anything for him. And he was becoming tired of the mindless obsession.

He tried to return to the professor and he purchased the “glove cleaner” to “take care” of the problem. However, Roger could not bring himself to give Leila that potion and he committed to live his life in this way.

I was not a fan of this episode. Leila was quite annoying, but Roger’s use of the love potion is the same as forcing someone to do something that they did not want to do. The idea that he would then murder her to get away from her is a horrible thought.

The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone s1 e30

June 8, 2023- number 30

“A Stop at Willoughby”

This was Rod Serling’s favorite episode from the first season of The Twilight Zone, and I can definitely see why.

An ad exec Gart Williams was struggling at his job, getting more stressed and anxious over everything.

This is Gart Williams, age thirty-eight, a man protected by a suit of armor all held together by one bolt. Just a moment ago, someone removed the bolt, and Mr. Williams’ protection fell away from him, and left him a naked target. He’s been cannonaded this afternoon by all the enemies of his life. His insecurity has shelled him, his sensitivity has straddled him with humiliation, his deep-rooted disquiet about his own worth has zeroed in on him, landed on target, and blown him apart. Mr. Gart Williams, ad agency exec, who in just a moment, will move into the Twilight Zone—in a desperate search for survival

While heading home on a train after a particularly problematic day, Mr. Williams fell asleep and dreamed of a long ago town called Willoughby. A town where everything was peaceful and tranquil, Boys went fishing. Carriages were pulled by horses. Everything seemed to go slower.

Mr. Williams could not get Willoughby out of his mind and, a second time he had the dream on the train, he nearly got off, only to be awakened by the jolt of the train.

His wife had little empathy for him. His boss kept on his back to “PUSH, PUSH, PUSH.” Everything was flying past him. He made the decision to get off the train the next time he dreamed of Willoughby.

And that is exactly what he did. Everything seemed to be peaceful and lovely.

However, this is The Twilight Zone so we were going to get a twist. It seemed that, in reality, Gart Williams, when he thought the train was stopped at Willoughby, in reality, jumped off the moving train, killing himself.

The mortuary company of Willoughby and Son picked up the body.

Great ending to this episode. I expected something magical to happen. Kind of like the Apple TV + series Schmigadoon. Instead, we get a sudden switch to tragedy and we take a sharp turn to the dark. Or is Mr. Williams still there in Willoughby, happy as he could be?

Wonderful episode.

“Willoughby? Maybe it’s wishful thinking nestled in a hidden part of a man’s mind, or maybe it’s the last stop in the vast design of things—or perhaps, for a man like Mr. Gart Williams, who climbed on a world that went by too fast, it’s a place around the bend where he could jump off. Willoughby? Whatever it is, it comes with sunlight and serenity, and is a part of The Twilight Zone.”

The Daily Zone: Twilight Zone s1 e27-29

June 8, 2023

Spoilers

“The Big Tall Wish”

“In this corner of the universe, a prizefighter named Bolie Jackson, 183 pounds and an hour and a half away from a comeback at St. Nick’s Arena. Mr. Bolie Jackson, who, by the standards of his profession is an aging, over-the-hill relic of what was, and who now sees a reflection of a man who has left too many pieces of his youth in too many stadiums for too many years before too many screaming people. Mr. Bolie Jackson, who might do well to look for some gentle magic in the hard-surfaced glass that stares back at him.”

Aging boxer Bolie Jackson looked to get his career back on track against some younger fighters. He was encouraged by a young boy who lives in the same building as he did. They were close and the boy told Bolie that he would wish for him to be able to win.

Things looked badly for Bolie, as he lay on the mat, staring up at the lights, the ref counting to 10. However, the little boy’s wish made everything right, flipping the script.

And all Bolie had to do was believe in magic.

Similar to some ideas found in Peter Pan, magic required that Bolie believed in it, but he couldn’t do it. This sent everything back to the way it was supposed to be.

This was a straight-forward episode that told a basic story. However, the all-black cast was anything but basic at the time of broadcast.

“A Nice Place to Visit”

“Rocky” Valentine was a thief. During a robbery, he wound up in a shoot out with the police and was shot. He awakes with a man who called himself Pip standing over him. Pip insisted that he was there to help him do anything he wanted, and gave him $700 dollars from his pocket.

Pip took Rocky to a hotel room, helped him win at gambling and brought him some beautiful women. Rocky realized that he had been shot to death by the cops and he guessed that he was in heaven and Pip was a guardian angel.

After awhile of never losing at gambling or never failing with the women, Rocky became bored and pressed Pip to find out how he could change things up. Rocky even said that he did not want to be in heaven any longer and wanted to go to the other place. Pip laughed and told Rocky that he was not in heaven, but was already in the other place.

Be careful what you wish for because you might get it feels like the moral of this story.

“A scared, angry little man who never got a break. Now he has everything he’s ever wanted – And he’s going to have to live with it for eternity – In The Twilight Zone.”

I found Rocky extremely annoying and he was difficult to watch. I figured the twist very early as if was obvious that Rocky wasn’t going to heaven. Heck, even Rocky wondered how he was in heaven.

Pip was definitely the highlight of the episode, but I found myself more irritated with the character and even the ironic ending did not rewcue that for me.

“Nightmare as a Child”

So this was the best of the three I watched for this post. I loved the psychological aspect of this episode.

“Month of November, hot chocolate, and a small cameo of a child’s face, imperfect only in its solemnity. And these are the improbable ingredients to a human emotion, an emotion, say, like—fear. But in a moment this woman, Helen Foley, will realize fear. She will understand what are the properties of terror. A little girl will lead her by the hand and walk with her into a nightmare”

When Helen met Markie, things felt odd. Little did we know that Markie was just a figment of her imagination. Something there to help Helen Foley remember the traumatic event of her mother’s murder.

Everything was triggered when she had seen the killer (off screen) by her school where she worked. This led to Markie and those memories returning.

Mr. Seldon, who was the killer, came by her apartment to see what she was remembering. He knew that she was the loose end, the person who witnessed his murder.

I really liked the fact that they did not make something supernatural or magical about this. Instead, they played the little girl as a psychological symptom.

Mr. Seldon did fall into the villain who just explains his plans trope. The audience did not have to have it laid out as such. At least, I figured that he was the killer. I could have had a better wrap up of the episode, but overall, this was decent.

Sr. (2022)

June 8, 2023

Day: 8, Movie: 8

A Netflix documentary featuring Robert Downey Jr and his father Robert Downey Sr. has been on the streamer for awhile now, existing on My List since it came out. The June Swoon 2 allows me the chance to actually watch this.

Robert Downey Jr. is clearly one of the most charismatic actors we have today and this documentary shows that. It also spends a lot of time with Sr. and we get a good idea where a lot of RDJ’s personality came from.

The best parts of the doc were when we saw Jr. and Sr. interacting, especially when they included RDJ’s son Exton.

The documentary was shot in black and white and it added that gravitas to the film. It was a feel of something special and you get some truly amazing moments between father and son.

One of my favorite moments in the doc was when RDJ was singing a German folk song, “Fischerweise” with Sean Hayes on the piano. It was a request from Sr. and it is apparently something young 15-year old RDJ did in a contest. This section of the doc was hilarious.

Thinking back, I probably should have saved this film for Father’s Day in the June Swoon 2, but it fit today better, time wise. This is a beautiful love letter to a father from a son and from a couple of classic filmmakers.

The Daily Zone-The Twilight Zone s1 e25-26

June 8, 2023- number 25 & 26

Spoilers

“People Are Alike All Over”

Roddy McDowell is on the way to Mars and what he finds is unexpected.

You’re looking at a specie [sic] of flimsy little two-legged animal with extremely small heads, whose name is Man. Warren Marcusson, age thirty-five. Samuel A. Conrad, age thirty-one. They’re taking a highway into space, Man unshackling himself and sending his tiny, groping fingers up into the unknown. Their destination is Mars, and in just a moment we’ll land there with them

Honestly, I have been a fan of every episode of The Twilight Zone so far. Even the ones that were near the bottom of the list had parts that I really enjoyed. That streak is over now. “People Are Alike All Over” is easily my least favorite episode of The Daily Zone so far.

It was just so random. The Martians that appeared before Roddy McDowell were so ridiculous that it was impossible to believe that they were actually Martians. There was nothing that made this feel interesting at all.

That is not to say that Roddy McDowell is a problem. I have always found his work to be great and he does what he can here. It just feels like a slight episode without a lot of worthwhile ideas.

Humans in cages on display will be used better in future moments. From my limited research, it seems as if this episode has its supporters and that it has been an inspiration to many. I am happy for them. I am not one of them.

“Execution”

The second episode in a row that I did not like very much.

I found this premise intriguing. I did not expect to start with an attempted hanging and the set up was solid. When outlaw and killer Joe Caswell disappeared from the noose, I was certainly enthralled.

However, with his arrival in the future, I lost most of that early excitement.

I’m not sure if the sudden appearance of the Professor from Gilligan’s Island (with nary a coconut to be seen) affected my thoughts on what was happening.

Caswell ran around the future with a gun, attacked a juke box and shot up a TV.

Then, at the end, the story stopped being about Caswell and became the story of another guy, a thief named Paul Johnson. Johnson ends up killing Caswell in a fight and somehow gets himself stuck in the time machine and is sent back to take Caswell’s place in the noose.

While I do like the ending, I do not like how the character of Paul Johnson just appears from nowhere and becomes the center of the story in the final few minutes. I did not find it satisfying.

This is November 1880, the aftermath of a necktie party. The victim’s name—Paul Johnson, a minor-league criminal and the taker of another human life. No comment on his death save this: justice can span years. Retribution is not subject to a calendar. Tonight’s case in point in The Twilight Zone.