Nightmare as a Child
- Episode aired Apr 29, 1960
- TV-PG
- 25m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
A schoolteacher keeps seeing a strange little girl in her apartment building.A schoolteacher keeps seeing a strange little girl in her apartment building.A schoolteacher keeps seeing a strange little girl in her apartment building.
Featured reviews
Janice Rule stars in this Twilight Zone story about a woman who has blocked out
a memory of a terrible tragedy from her childhood. She went away after the
murder of her mother, but now is back and is actually teaching grade school.
Outside her apartment she meets a most strange little girl played by Terry Burnham who keeps bringing up some repressed memories of what happened. Just in time as Sheppard Strudwick who knew her back as a child and exudes more and more menace as the episode goes on.
It's rather obvious what's going on here, still Rule, Burnham, and Strudwick deliver some fine performances.
Outside her apartment she meets a most strange little girl played by Terry Burnham who keeps bringing up some repressed memories of what happened. Just in time as Sheppard Strudwick who knew her back as a child and exudes more and more menace as the episode goes on.
It's rather obvious what's going on here, still Rule, Burnham, and Strudwick deliver some fine performances.
I've seen just about every episode of the Twilight Zone, and I can say with relative confidence that this one scared me the most (and still does). Yes, it's pretty obvious what's really going on by the time it's revealed but people who say this is a detriment to the story misunderstand that this is really a suspense story not a mystery. The main source of anxiety on the viewer's part is the question of "when will Helen figure it out? Will it be in time?" The moment of realization for Helen is paired with the scariest cut in Twilight Zone history (in my opinion). The acting is really great and the casting was perfect.
This is a little more human episode. Are we dealing with the memories, repressed at childhood, or are we seeing the supernatural at work. Whether the young woman is actually experiencing this or thinking it doesn't matter. It is in her psyche and she must try to come to grips with it. The little girl's presence is certainly eerie, but this is about loneliness and fear and reclamation. The acting performances are quite good and the little girl is better than most. Serling loved to work the the ghosts of people's pasts, but usually it was some thing that they had done and they are now being punished for. This has a little of the lady caught in the bus station. Those observing would say she was on the brink of insanity. The difference comes in; the understanding. A good episode.
Helen Foley (Janice Rule) meets a little girl who clearly knows a lot about her. Helen is uneasy in the little girl's inquisitive presence. Then an older man called Seldon (Shepherd Strudwick) appears on the scene. Both visitors are concerned with the memory of Helen.
A very psychologically infused episode that would have been harder to figure out at the time. As is the case with many other entries this kind of theme has been done a lot since (and if you think about it there's a TZ a bit like this in series five , but done with a middle- aged adult not a child).
Fairly good but without any gleaming hallmark of TZ greatness.
Janice Rule went on to be a psychoanalyst in the 1970's,as well as continuing her long acting career,but this would hardly qualified her.
A very psychologically infused episode that would have been harder to figure out at the time. As is the case with many other entries this kind of theme has been done a lot since (and if you think about it there's a TZ a bit like this in series five , but done with a middle- aged adult not a child).
Fairly good but without any gleaming hallmark of TZ greatness.
Janice Rule went on to be a psychoanalyst in the 1970's,as well as continuing her long acting career,but this would hardly qualified her.
Janice Rule plays school teacher Helen Foley, who, after returning home from work, is confronted by a talkative little girl named Markie(played by Terry Burnham) who looks strangely familiar, but Helen just can't place her, despite Markie's constant prompting. Then a man from Helen's past returns into her life when he knocks on her door, reminding Helen that he knew her deceased mother and her many years ago, and that now he has come back for a most sinister reason... Interesting episode has a quite sophisticated idea at its heart, even if it is now rather obvious. Certainly a unique tale in the series canon, if not that well remembered.
Did you know
- TriviaActing debut of Morgan Brittany. She was uncredited even though she had several lines near the end as the little girl with the doll.
- GoofsWhen Markie and Helen are arguing about Markie's real name, Terry Burnham mouths Janice Rule's lines "Understand what?" along with her in between her own before a cut to her close-up.
- Quotes
Narrator: [Opening Narration] 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.
- ConnectionsEdited into Twilight-Tober-Zone: Nightmare as a Child (2020)
Details
- Runtime
- 25m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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