Night Call
- L’episodio è andato in onda il 7 feb 1964
- TV-PG
- 25min
L'anziana e disabile Elva Keene riceve una serie di distrubanti ed inquietanti telefonate notturne mentre è reclusa nella sua rurale casa nel Maine.L'anziana e disabile Elva Keene riceve una serie di distrubanti ed inquietanti telefonate notturne mentre è reclusa nella sua rurale casa nel Maine.L'anziana e disabile Elva Keene riceve una serie di distrubanti ed inquietanti telefonate notturne mentre è reclusa nella sua rurale casa nel Maine.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Narrator
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- …
Recensioni in evidenza
Besides Gladys Cooper, the so recurring theme of loneliness is probably the only other typical TZ factor. The story is good for a chilly ghost story but somewhat severe in nature for this normally more warm-hearted series.
It was startling, frightening, and perverse.
and Gladys Cooper was amazing in that show, too, as in "Night Calls". She was very convincing.
im sorry, this is not a review as much as my trying to share a gem of classic television.
First-rate TZ, even though there's only a cast of three and no real action. Still, the suspense builds as the mystery deepens. Cooper, in a long and distinguished career, is excellent at showing the mounting strain. TZ and Hitchcock Presents were a lot alike in that story was always paramount. Thus good acting came first rather than glamor or celebrity. That plus quality of writing (Here it's Richard Matheson) accounts, I think, for much series success. And shouldn't overlook fine direction here from movie vet Jacques Tourneur who helmed many of the Val Lewton horror classics, (I Walked with a Zombie; Cat People, et al.). Anyway, it's a first-rate TZ entry, so don't miss it.
This episode consists of an old lady that is wheelchair-bound who is receiving creepy phone calls. It's not what is said as much as how the unknown person sounds--almost like someone who is half-dead. Again and again he calls and each time, Cooper becomes more scared--she just wants the calls to stop. Then, in a final act of desperation, she makes them stop...but is this what she REALLY wants? Much of what is good about this episode isn't the plot but how it is handled. The story idea is very simple but combining the cinematography, music, acting and direction, it all becomes amazingly tense and creepy.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe title of Richard Matheson's original short story is "Long Distance Call". However, as there was already an episode of Ai confini della realtà (1959) with this title, Long Distance Call (1961), the title of this episode had to be changed.
- BlooperWhen Elva is sitting in her car at the cemetery, there's a man's face visible to the left of her head, reflected in one of the car windows, and then it's replaced by a hand twisting something. It is unclear what is being twisted, since the camera isn't moving at the time.
- Citazioni
[closing narration]
Narrator: According to the Bible, God created the heavens and the Earth. It is man's prerogative and woman's, to create their own particular and private hell. Case in point, Miss Elva Keene, who in every sense has made her own bed and now must lie in it sadder, but wiser by dint of a rather painful lesson in responsibility transmitted from - The Twilight Zone.
- ConnessioniFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Creepiest Twilight Zone Moments (2018)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione25 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.33 : 1