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.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #30

June 7, 2023

Wow, what a day.

It was NEW COMIC BOOK DAY and it was the first day I was able to go to Comic World early in the afternoon and sit and do some reading. It was a pleasant day, and I got a chance then to talk with my friend Todd.

Todd had attended a convention this past weekend in Minneapolis. He got some books signed for me by Dan Jurgens (more on that later). He also had the opportunity to sit and talk with the 1970s star of Flash Gordon, Sam Jones. Sam Jones was very tall, according to Todd. Todd was standing and Sam was sitting and he was still talker than Todd (Todd may also have been a bit short…)

Comic World received about half of the Marvel comic books in from a few weeks ago when the truck had that terrible accident. That meant that there was a huge lot of books in my box. I also picked up a couple of other books (including a graphic novel that I haven’t gotten to yet). I have read a whole bunch of books this week, but I still have a pile of new books to read that rivals a huge regular week. It is quite impressive.

Starting off with what I have finished reading….

Superman/Doomsday: Hunter/Prey #1-3. Written by Dan Jurgens and drawn by Brett Breeding. Dan Jurgens was at the convention Todd attended so I have purchased this three book series and Todd said he would take it and get them signed by the writer. So cool. Thanks again Todd. The three book mini series was a pretty decent read as well. I liked the psychological issues that Superman had when he was searching for Doomsday. You don’t see doubt creeping in to the Big Blue often, but, of course, after being killed by Doomsday, it makes sense.

The ClanDestine #1. “Apparently Unrelated Events: Family Reunion- Part One” The pretty gold foil cover attracted me to this number one, but the title reminded me of the group of villains from the Ms. Marvel Disney + show from last year. These characters were nothing like those ones. Written and drawn by Alan Davis. It was fine. It did not make me want to search out any more issues, though.

Captain America: Sentinel of Liberty #13. “Cold War Part 5” Written by Jacoson Lanzing & Collin Kelly with art by Alina Erofeeva. Steve Rogers did not die in the last part of the Cold War saga (I know… surprising, right?). He’s back with Sam Wilson and he has come to his senses. Alina Erofeeva’s artwork in this issue (especially the Sam and Steve stuff in the snow) is beautiful.

Red Goblin #5. Written by Alex Paknadel and drawn by Jan Bazaldua. Honestly, I was a little confused about what was happening since I have not seen the whole part of this Carnage Reigns story. I did like the team up with Normie and Miles Morales, but I skimmed a bunch of this book since I am unclear about the story.

Nocterra #15. Written by Scott Snyder with art by Tony S. Daniel. Emory comes up with a plan to try and get Bailey’s grandpa’s equation to work, stopping the darkness. Problem is… Bill is here and is bringing the trouble. There were some amazing panels of art in this issue and it brought a feel of intensity.

Storm #1. “Blowback. Part 1: Wind-Rider” Written by Ann Nocenti and drawn by Sid Kotian. Alan Davis & Alejandro Sanchez did the cover art. This is yet another book that is set in the past. This one takes place around the time frame of Uncanny X-Men #176. I’m not sure why this has become a trend at Marvel, telling ‘untold’ stories from the past. Most of these feel very disjointed from the regular books since these characters are not acting like the characters act today. The Storm book was okay, but the conflicts within Ororo felt out of date. And I do not remember Kitty Pryde acting like this. I’m not a fan of this book. I would much rather have current in continuity comic starring Storm than setting one in the past.

Phantom Road #4. “Chapter Four: Don’t Look.” Written by Jeff Lemire and featuring art by Gabriel H. Walta. What is Project Jackknife? What does Agent Weaver know about it? How does it tie in with all the things that have happened to her? Lots of questions in a compelling book with a lot of visual storytelling this issue. Phantom Road continues to be strong work each month.

Hallows’ Eve#3. Written by Erica Schultz and including art by Michael Dowling. Janine has a confrontation with Spider-Man in this issue. Spidey is always welcome for me, and I enjoyed this issue more than the previous two. I am starting to feel positively about Hallows’ Eve and her weird mask power. I have liked the originality of the book so far.

Loki #1. “The Liar” Written by Dan Watters and drawn by German Peralta. I love the character of Loki, especially the newer version of the God of the Story. He is still chaotic and not necessarily honest, but not evil. His manipulative ways are put to the test here and the last page of the issue puts Loki’s existence into question. I’m mean… I’m sure he’s fine…

Spider-Man #9. “Maxed Out Part Two: Spider-Sensitivity Training.” Written by Dan Slott and penciled by Mark Bagley. Spidey and his super spider sense is really being pushed to his limit. It gets so bad that Spidey’s spider sense is going off in his head every time he punches a bad guy. Gold Goblin and Spider-Boy have an interaction, once again bringing into question exactly whom this Spider-Boy is. Oh, and there is Electro.

Fantastic Four #8. “If Memory Serves…!” Written by Ryan North and drawn by Ivan Fiorelli. Alex Ross is the artist on the cover. The FF is home at the Fantastic Farmhouse (as dubbed by Sue). They begin a cool mystery in their new little town with a creature that is able to reshape the world’s minds. I enjoyed the first part of this issue with Sue and Alicia and … Flame-O!

Daredevil #12. “The Red Fist Saga Part 12.” Matt Murdock is starting off his plan to bring back Foggy from death and it seems as if it requires Elektra to kill him. As the finale to Chip Zdarsky’s run on DD comes quickly to us, every issue is just better than the last one. Written by Chip Zdarsky and drawn by Marco Checchetto.

Hellcat #3. “The Know-It-All.” Written by Christopher Cantwell and drawn by Alex Lins. Cover art by KJ Diaz and Marte Gracia. I have been loving Hellcat each issue. In fact, this was my favorite comic (so far) this week (it was actually one of the issues that was on the ill-fated shipment). We get more info on Pasty’s past as well as the murder that she is trying to solve. She seems to be scaring Blackheart. Hm. And I do believe that the little stuffed rabbit (aka Damien Hellstrom, Son of Satan and Patsy’s ex-hubby) has something not so right about his motives.

That is not quite half of the books I got this week. It was a massive week and I hope to get some more read as I continue the June Swoon 2, The Daily Zone (Twilight Zone episodes) and the regular movie reviews (Transformers coming this Friday).

Hope you’ll be able to read this soon, Todd. 🙂 Seriously though hope things are better.

The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone s1 e23-24

June 7, 2023-numbers 23-24

Spoilers

“A World of Difference”

Lights. Camera. Action.

At least, in the Twilight Zone.

You’re looking at a tableau of reality, things of substance, of physical material: a desk, a window, a light. These things exist and have dimension. Now this is Arthur Curtis, age thirty-six, who also is real. He has flesh and blood, muscle and mind. But in just a moment we will see how thin a line separates that which we assume to be real with that manufactured inside of a mind.”

Another winner of an episode as we peek behind the camera of a man’s life. Is he Arthur Curtis? Or instead is he actor Gerald Raigan?

This episode shows a man having a nervous breakdown, believing that he is, in truth, the character that he is playing in a movie. Or does that character really need a vacation from work because he has had some delusion. I do like the even balance the show gives us. Although it does feel as if Gerry is the true personality, there is enough uncertainty to warrant debate.

The episode featured David White, most well known as Larry Tate from Bewitched as Gerry’s agent/friend.

“Long Live Walter Jameson”

Walter Jameson is old. Really old.

He has fallen in love with a younger woman. However, her father has discovered the truth of Walter’s age. Walter was old enough to have been friends with Plato.

The idea of immortality is revisited here, and the idea that it would not make a person happy is brought back once again. We saw how things could go bad in the episode, “The Escape Clause” and here it takes a slightly different path, but reaches the same conclusion. That death is what makes life so valuable.

The ending of the episode was very well done as we see Walter, shot by a former wife, died slowly, but aging rapidly as he died. He wound up a pile of dust on the floor after we had seen him age from the man that we knew. It was a neat effect.

Last stop on a long journey, as yet another human being returns to the vast nothingness that is the beginning and into the dust that is always the end.

Glorious (2022)

June 7, 2023

Day: 7, Movie: 7

The June Swoon 2 gets really gross today with the horror/comedy film that can be found on Shudder called Glorious. The film was directed by Rebekah McKendry and featured one basic location, a rest stop bathroom.

Wes (Ryan Kwanten) is traveling with all of his stuff in his car. He was depressed and sad and stopped at a rest stop where he promptly begins to drink and burn items from the car. He could not bring himself to burn the photo of Brenda (Sylvia Grace Crim), the woman he had just lost.

Passed out, Wes laid on the ground all night. In the morning, Wes rushed into the bathroom to throw up. When in there, he was engaged in conversation by a voice form the next stall. Not really wanting to start a conversation, Wes tried to get away, but he realized that the bathroom door could not be opened and that the voice had something to do with it.

The voice told Wes his name was Ghatanothoa (J.K. Simmons), a demigod who was trying to hide from his father, a primordial who had accidentally formed the universe, and Ghatanothoa needed a favor from Wes to avoid its father’s detection and, thus, the destruction of the entire universe.

Glorious was bloody, grimy and darkly funny. The dialogue between Wes and the demigod was both ridiculous and informative. Wes’s constant desperate attempts to escape kept turning out to be failures and he kept flashing back to memories of Brenda.

JK Simmons is, as always, great. His voice was the perfect catalyst for the craziness that was going on in this bathroom. The tale was insane, yet you believed what was happening.

There was a hilarious situation involving a glory hole that has to be seen to be believed. Then, the unexpected twist at the end of the film was shocking and completely out of nowhere, challenging everything that we had known up until that point, and yet, made total sense.

Glorious has a down ad dirty feel to it, much like the setting of a rest stop bathroom, and it keeps you off-balance. The end had that Twilight Zone type feel to it. It is a short film (only 79 minutes) but it uses every second well.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #29

June 6, 2023

It is summer vacation.

One of the issues with summer vacation is that I sometimes lose track of what day is what. Especially on a day like today. I went to Cinemark for a double feature of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 and Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse. I had already seen both of these movies, and they are my two favorites of the year so far. I am not sure which way they are. They feel as if the are 1A and 1B. Guardians was more emotional, but Across the Spider-Verse had more fist-pumping moments.

Anyway, as I was saying, It has been a long time since I went to Cinemark on a Tuesday. The double feature made it feel like a Saturday instead. I have to keep telling myself that tomorrow is not Sunday, it is NEW COMIC BOOK DAY, nd I get the chance to go hang out at Comic World and read some of the new books there. It is always a blast during the summer.

Oh, and by the way, I was FINALLY able to find Where Monsters Lie #1. I had been searching through every box that I had even remotely put something new into recently, but I found it in the pile of books I have yet to box. I did not think it would be there, but right there it was.

Because I was searching for Where Monsters Lie #1, I was going through one of the number one boxes that I keep issue #1s that I do not collect. While in there, I came across a book that I did not remember seeing, and one that was interesting to read.

Damn Them All #1. Written by Simon Spurrier and illustrated by Charlie Adlard. This book from Boom! Studios was one that drew my attention in Previews last week, but it was listed as #7 so I was not sure if I wanted to jump in. However, after finding number one, I went to eBay and bid on the rest of the series. Issue #1 was really engaging and fun with a magic world.

Betsy Braddock: Captain Britain #4. “Earth’s Most Furious” Written by Tini Howard with art by Vasco Georgiev. Erica D’Urso & Matthew Wilson are the cover art team. There are a ton of guest stars in this issue, trying to contain Morgan Le Fey. The Avengers. Dr. Doom. Betsy had a fencing match with Tony Stark. There is some fun to be had here.

X-23: Deadly Regenesis #3. “The Past Haunts Us All Part 3” Written by Erica Schultz and drawn by Edgar Salazar. Kalman Andrasofszky (whew, what a name) was the cover artist. Laura found herself back in the clutches of her old handler, Kimura. She wanted to make an offer for an assignment for Laura, but she had to go about the process of having her agree… and that was not going to be easy.

Year Zero: Volume 0 #1. Written by Daniel Kraus and drawn by Goran Sudžuka. Another short series that I am ready to jump into this summer. This is a prequel to the first Year Zero book that I enjoyed quite a bit. This book continued its way of jumping around the globe and checking in on how the world is going with this zombie strife. Plus, a grandmother gnawed off her foot. Ooft.

Sleeping Beauties #7. Adapted by Rio Youers and art by Alison Sampson. Based on a novel by Stephen and Owen King. Getting back into this series, which only has a handful more issues to go. There is a plan afoot to launch an attack on the prison in order to get to the woman who can sleep. Meanwhile, all kinds of trippy-dippy things are going on.

Strayed #1. Written by Carlos Giffoni and drawn by Juan Doe. Another short series that has been in my ‘Too Read’ pile for quite awhile. Scientist Kiara Rodriguez developed a device that allows her to translate brainwaves into language and so she communicates with her cat. Lucky for her, her cat can travel the astral plane. It is a bizarre book.

Darkland #1. “Episode One: Stay Awhile.” Written by Nicholas Black and featuring art by Serg Acuna. Darkland was a number one in my pile of books too read so I figured to give it a chance. It was okay. There are some interesting character designs, especially Zed. There was one guy who reminded me of the Unknown Soldier. I did not find myself interested enough to go searching for any more of the series from Scout Comics. This will take its place in my number one box.

The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone s1 e22

June 5, 2023

Spoilers

“The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street”

I loved this episode.

“The Monsters are Due on Maple Street” was excellent from beginning to almost end. There was no much in this episode, clearly taking shots at the McCarthy hearing and how people were seeing Communists all over the place.

Maple Street, U.S.A., late summer. A tree-lined little world of front porch gliders, barbecues, the laughter of children, and the bell of an ice cream vendor. At the sound of the roar and the flash of light, it will be precisely 6:43 P.M. on Maple Street.

This is Maple Street on a late Saturday afternoon. Maple Street in the last calm and reflective moment –before the monsters came

Something flew over Maple Street. The people who lived on this street thought it might have been a meteor. However, everything stopped working. No lights. No cars. No machinery of any kind. Nothing would start or turn on.

Why? No one was sure and they were nervous. When an imaginative child brought up an idea of the ‘meteor’ was in actuality a space ship and that the child had read a story about how monsters from outer space would infiltrate a community to set up for the landing.

The people dismissed the idea at first, but it got inside their minds and the paranoia of the situation started to rot their attitudes. They began blaming individuals on being guilty, with no evidence and even less reality.

It devolves into violence as one of the people is shot because they thought it was a monster coming out of the darkness.

The accidental death did not calm the tensions. In fact, it only triggered the people into chaos. I loved how this episode showed how human beings can react to rumors and innuendo, becoming mob-like.

Now, I am not sure I loved the very end of the episode where we see that this whole situation was being manipulated by aliens from a space ship, what had actually flown over the street. I would have preferred to have left that reveal a mystery. I don’t think that was necessary.

However, that did not take away from how much I loved this episode. It may be my current favorite episode of the series.

The tools of conquest do not necessarily come with bombs and explosions and fallout. There are weapons that are simply thoughts, attitudes, prejudices… to be found only in the minds of men. For the record, prejudices can kill… and suspicion can destroy… and a thoughtless, frightened search for a scapegoat has a fallout all of its own—for the children and the children yet unborn. And the pity of it is that these things cannot be confined to the Twilight Zone

Good Luck to You, Leo Grande

June 6, 2023

Day: 6, Movie: 6

It is amazing to think that this is the same actor who played Ms. Trunchbull in last year’s Matilda the Musical.

Emma Thompson is an unbelievable actor and the range that she can show in a calendar year of performances is astounding.

In Good Luck to You, Leo Grande, Thompson played a retired teacher who had recently lost her longtime husband and she wanted to experience some sexual experiences that she never had with him. So she hired a young male sex worker to make those experiences come true.

Thompson, whose character was named Helen, got more than she was expecting. She showed such an amazing amount of nervous energy and uncertainty over what she was planning that everyone could relate to the feelings that this was stirring up.

Daryl McCormack played Leo Grande, the sex worker who is much more than a hired prostitute. He ran his own company and provided services to his clientele that they required. Well-spoken and intelligent, his very nature confounded Helen as she was not expecting someone like Leo Grande.

The dialogue between the two actors was impeccable. The dialogue gave us glimpses into who these two individuals were as people and was sexy and uncomfortable at the same time. There was an undeniable chemistry between Thompson and McCormack that pulled you into the connection between them. The movie becomes much more than just a sexual encounter. It is a character piece between two people who are able to bring the best out in each other.

Good Luck to You, Leo Grande is currently on Hulu and it is a film that gives two outstanding performances in a sexual coming-of-age story for any age.

The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone s1 e19-21

June 5, 2023- numbers 19, 20, 21

Spoilers

“The Purple Testament”

I did not expect much from this episode. It was a basic war story… that is, until it took that twist that you can only find in the Twilight Zone.

“Infantry platoon, U.S. Army, Philippine Islands, 1945. These are the faces of the young men who fight, as if some omniscient painter had mixed a tube of oils that were at one time earth brown, dust gray, blood red, beard black, and fear—yellow white, and these men were the models. For this is the province of combat, and these are the faces of war.”

Bewitched star Dick York appeared in this episode of The Twilight Zone as a main supporting character. I had seen this fact during my research, but I had forgotten about it so when I saw him, I was shocked. I thought he did a very good job.

Meanwhile, our lead character, William “Fitz” Fitzgerald, developed a strange and disturbing ability. Fitz was able to look at the face of other soldiers in his platoon and he would see a light indicating that they were going to die.

This power clearly upset Fitz, as you would expect. He did what he could to come to grips with his precognition.

I found this episode to be extremely well done. It had a tragic story that brought Fitz into a terrible state of mind. The ending was very powerful. It brought the idea of a failure to be able to prevent death even with foreknowledge is a very sad but relatable theme.

“Elegy”

Another example of a spaceship that leads to a breakdown, stranding the pilots somewhere familiar, yet foreign. Much of this episode was bizarre and mysterious. I do think that I was engaged with the story at the beginning. The seemingly frozen people in this location was odd and I was not sure what was going on.

When Jeremy Wickwire, the caretaker of the place, turned to the camera, I actually shouted. I did not expect that.

Unfortunately, the next ten to fifteen minutes or so of the show really felt weak. There was just a ton of enigmatic exposition as Wickwire tried to maintain the mystery of what was going on. The show lost me during this period. However, the ending was extremely dark and intriguing. I loved the final three minutes or so as Wickwire poisoned the three astronauts and set them up in their own “final wish”.

I found the tones of this episode to clash with each other. There was some serious and mysterious feeling early and Wickwire brought a more humorous tone that seemed to undercut what was going on. Then the show ended very darkly and with a great deal of irony and Wickwire showed his true feelings for the human race, and we did not see that prior at all.

It is a real mishmash for me.

“Mirror Image”

One of the more well known episodes (apparently it inspired Jordan Peele’s film Us), “Mirror Image” was one that I was looking forward to, but, though it was interesting, I do not think it quite reached the level that I was expecting.

“Millicent Barnes, age twenty-five, young woman waiting for a bus on a rainy November night. Not a very imaginative type is Miss Barnes: not given to undue anxiety, or fears, or for that matter even the most temporal flights of fantasy. Like most young career women, she has a generic classification as a, quote, girl with a head on her shoulders, end of quote. All of which is mentioned now because, in just a moment, the head on Miss Barnes’ shoulders will be put to a test. Circumstances will assault her sense of reality and a chain of nightmares will put her sanity on a block. Millicent Barnes, who, in one minute, will wonder if she’s going mad.”

Strange things are happening for Millicent. People are telling her that she had been asking questions that she had not been. People said she had been places where she was not. She was starting to feel as if she were losing her grip on reality. Could she be delusional?

The arrival of the friendly gentleman, Paul Grinstead, brought her down a bit, but things ramped up again when she started speculating about evil doubles from parallel worlds.

Of course, that is what was going on and she would eventually spy her doppelganger on the bus that she intended to be on. I had a problem here. Why would she not go up and confront this doppelganger with Paul beside her? Instead, she just screamed and ran off, apparently passing out.

Paul called the police to take her for mental help and then he realizes that she wasn’t wrong as the same thing starts to happen to him.

I found this to be way overrated. I still enjoyed a lot the episode, but the fact is the conclusion felt rushed and made little sense. I did not like the way the characters reacted and the ending did not support what was a decent start.

Candy Land (2022)

June 5, 2022

Day: 5, Movie: 5

The next June Swoon 2 movie is Candy Land, and it is not a happy-go-luck children’s saccharine sweet game adaptation. There is nothing for children in this film.

The movie dives into the world of truck stop sex workers and the inherent dangers that these workers face as there is a slasher in their midst. The likable group of sex workers who formed a bond between them are faced with the brutal slaying of several individuals.

I don’t want to go into too many specifics here to avoid spoilers, but the film does not shy away from any of the graphic imagery that one would see in a slasher movie. There is a lot of blood here. It also does not leave out the sexual section of this environment either.

The film does take some time to introduce us to these characters and understand why many of them are living the life that they are living. They are not portrayed as victims here, but it does not ignore the ugliness that can come with this lifestyle.

It is a movie that can be extremely uncomfortable to watch at times, and it is unapologetic for its choices. I expect that there would be plenty of people who will not like this film because it deals with several scenes that are tough to watch.

This is a movie that I am glad I saw, but not one that I will revisit any time soon. Candy land was directed by John Swab and is currently available for rental on Vudu.

The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone s1 e15-18

June 5, 2023- numbers 15, 16, 17, 18

No Spoilers

I got four episodes watched this morning, and they were four dang good ones.

“I Shot an Arrow into the Air”

We kick off the four episode run with an outstanding episode about a failed space flight.

“I shot an arrow in the air; it landed I know not where,” said Langford, one of the heads of the mission that saw a crew on board a ship called The Arrow that had disappeared after takeoff.

That was a famous line from a Longfellow poem, but it had been changed by the character, and, looking back, I believe it was changed purposefully. Because the line actually said, ‘I shot an arrow in the air, it fell to earth i know not where.

That is exactly what the crew had done, crash landing back on earth in a mountainous desert range outside of Reno, Nevada. Of course, the three surviving crew members believed they had crashed on an asteroid and had no means to be rescued.

The baser instincts of humans took over, with the three men clashing over water, what to do with the injured and other ways to survive.

Practical joke perpetrated by Mother Nature and a combination of improbable events. Practical joke wearing the trappings of nightmare, of terror, of desperation. Small, human drama played out in a desert 97 miles from Reno, Nevada, U.S.A., continent of North America, the Earth and, of course, the Twilight Zone.

This idea of crashing back on earth unbeknownst to the crew was used again by series writer Rod Serling when he worked on the 1960s classic Planet of the Apes, where his iconic shock ending made that film a sensation.

“The Hitch-Hiker”

Her name is Nan Adams. She’s twenty-seven years old. Her occupation: buyer at a New York department store. At present on vacation, driving cross-country to Los Angeles, California from Manhattan. Minor incident on Highway 11 in Pennsylvania. Perhaps, to be filed away under “accidents you walk away from.” But from this moment on, Nan Adams’ companion on a trip to California will be terror. Her route: fear. Her destination: quite unknown.

The next awesome episode was ‘The Hitch-Hiker’ where Nan Adams was driving across the country, only to be stalked by a mysterious hitch-hiker, whom she seemed to never be able to outrun.

I had an idea early in this episode what exactly had happened. After the guy who was helping Nan after she had the tire blow out said that she was lucky to be alive, I had an idea that maybe she wasn’t. That is another classic trope of sci-fi films where the person involved does not know she was dead. This is a classic example of that and probably an inspiration for many of them.

This is one of the most highly regarded episodes of the first season, with it appearing on a bunch of top 20 lists. It does create an air of mystery with some definite creepy moments involving this mysteriou shitch-hiker.

“The Fever”

The next episode was entitled “The Fever,” which I did not know what was being referenced. Even with the opening narration, I was not sure.

Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Gibbs, three days and two nights all expenses paid at a Las Vegas hotel, won by virtue of Mrs. Gibbs’s knack with a phrase. But unbeknownst to either Mr. and Mrs. Gibbs is the fact that there’s a prize in their package, neither expected nor bargained for. In just a moment, one of them will succumb to an illness worse than any virus can produce. A most inoperative, deadly life-shattering affliction known as the Fever.”

However, as the episode started, I realized that this was not going to be some terrible plague or disease passed through the air. Instead, it would be gambling fever that wound up grasping Franklin Gibbs.

The episode does a great job of setting up to show how easily it is for somebody, even someone opposed to gambling, to fall victim to the obsession of those ‘one-armed bandits.’ Franklin, who spent most of the beginning of the episode chastising Vegas and the people who brainlessly put coin after coin into the slot machines in the desperate hope to win. And yet, through fate, Franklin wound up glued to one of the machines himself.

Oh yeah, the machine was calling him by name. This, of course, was the way to illustrate the beacon call of those people cursed with a gambling addiction. This episode does a tremendous job showing how tragic this obsessive addiction can become, as Franklin fell to his death out a window.

“Mr. Franklin Gibbs, visitor to Las Vegas, who lost his money, his reason, and finally his life to an inanimate, metal machine, variously described as a “one-armed bandit”, a “slot machine”, or, in Mr. Franklin Gibbs’ words, a “monster with a will all of its own.” For our purposes, we’ll stick with the latter definition because we’re in the Twilight Zone.”

Apparently, this episode was inspired by a time when Rod Serling himself wound up enslaved by a slot machine on a trip to Vegas.

“The Last Flight”

Time travel is a classic sci-fi trope and we get an intriguing one in this episode where a pilot from World War I suddenly finds himself flying to an American military post in 1959.

There were many cool concepts in this film, including the way they pieced back together what actually happened to the pilot.

Witness Flight Lieutenant William Terrance Decker, Royal Flying Corps, returning from a patrol somewhere over France. The year is 1917. The problem is that the lieutenant is hopelessly lost. Lieutenant Decker will soon discover that a man can be lost not only in terms of maps and miles, but also in time—and time in this case can be measured in eternities.

At first, I was afraid that several of the awesome ideas brought up in the beginning of the episode was going to be swept under the rug because of the shortness of the episode, but I was very pleased with they way the episode concluded. The idea that Terry Decker had to fly his plane back through the mystical cloud and go back to save the pilot he had deserted is a fun way to bring the story around. The closing section of the show with the British Air Vice Marshal Mackaye, the very pilot that Terry had returned to save, realizing that something magical had occurred was great.

Just like all time travel shows, the mind reels about what happened and how it happened. When Terry was in 1959, he had thought that Mackaye was dead, but when the Americans told him that Mackaye was coming to that very base for an inspection, that meant he had survived. Would he have survived if Terry had not returned to save him? Terry was in 1959, but he had not saved his friend yet.

This is one of those time is a flat circle ideas. The events from 1959 happened and would always happened because Terry was always the person to save Mackaye. This way, time is not a straight line, as explained in Back to the Future. Its more like everything is happening at the same time and you can’t change things.

Time travel is always tough. This works pretty well and I really liked the character of Terry Decker.

Four very solid episodes right in a row during the inaugural season of The Twilight Zone.

The Daily Zone: The Twilight Zone S1 E13 &14

June 4, 2023- numbers 13 & 14

Spoilers

“The Four of Us are Dying”

Shape shifting takes center stage in the Twilight Zone.

His name was Arch Hammer and he could change his face to look like someone else. He decided to use this ability to do some rotten things. He impersonated a deceased trumpet player to try and score with the woman the trumpet player loved. He made arrangements to run away with her. I didn’t know if he then intended to keep that face for the rest of time or if he was just messing with her and would dump her when he was tired of her. Either way, playing on her grief was a terrible thing to do.

Then he impersonated a gangster and threatened the head gangster that had had him killed. He was able to rip off a bunch of money.

Then, as he was being pursued, he switched to a random face he saw on a poster in an alleyway. He was a boxer. He avoided the thugs chasing him, but, coincidentally, he ran into the boxer’s father. The father was angry with his son and Hammer shoved him to the ground.

The old man would come back into play later when he shot Hammer dead outside of his hotel thinking it was his son.

He was Arch Hammer, a cheap little man who just checked in. He was Johnny Foster, who played a trumpet and was loved beyond words. He was Virgil Sterig, with money in his pocket. He was Andy Marshak, who got some of his agony back on a sidewalk in front of a cheap hotel. Hammer, Foster, Sterig, Marshak—and all four of them were dying.

This was very much of a noir episode, with the music from Jerry Goldsmith and all of those Dutch Angles. This episode was okay, at best.

“Third from the Sun”

This was a much different episode from the previous one. Here we had some government researchers/scientists involved in research on H-bombs and other weapons. Nuclear war was imminent.

“Quitting time at the plant. Time for supper now. Time for families. Time for a cool drink on a porch. Time for the quiet rustle of leaf-laden trees that screen out the Moon. And underneath it all, behind the eyes of the men, hanging invisible over the summer night, is a horror without words. For this is the stillness before storm. This is the eve of the end.”

The story featured Will Sturka and his family, along with his friend and co-worker Jerry Riden. They made a plan to steal an experimental spaceship and fly off the doomed planet and relocate to another planet that they discovered that also had people and was much like the planet they lived on.

One of their co-workers, Carling, was suspicious of them and he was hanging around, looking to cause trouble.

As they tried to get to their ship, Carling confronted them with a gun, hoping to take them to the police. They were able to overpower him and got to the ship.

As they were in the ship, they talked about the new planet they were heading towards… and it was called earth.

I liked the unexpected twist at the end of the episode with them heading TO earth instead of escaping from earth. There was some good tension built in the episode as the worry of nuclear war was a major worry that people of the time had to deal with.