T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
326.1 | The Zone | SLDA::ROSE | | Mon Apr 14 1986 14:06 | 12 |
|
I've been watching the new Zones from the beginning (not every episode,
though). I agree it would be a shame if they go, but I'm not too
crazy about them in general. I think some of them are *excellent*
(which is why I keep trying!) but for the most part they are
predictable and boring. I liked the Last...Camelot, but the first
episode, a bad rip-off of the body snatchers was really innane.
Totally predictable!
Bob
|
326.2 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Mr. Gumby, my brain hurts | Fri Apr 25 1986 01:43 | 5 |
| I haven't heard any specific rumors about its cancellation, but
it hasn't been on since that "Last Defender" episode, so I'd
say things look fairly grim.
--- jerry
|
326.3 | Twilight Zone continues a bit longer | CHEV02::GREGORY | Don Gregory @ACI | Sun Jan 04 1987 22:00 | 5 |
| A few 1/2 hour new Twilight Zone shows were aired on Saturday nights
during the last few months...I hope they continue. While the nature
of an anthology show is erratic quality, some have been *excellent*
-- e.g. "Profile in Silver", even though possibly with a few holes,
was riveting in my opinion.
|
326.4 | RE 326.3 | EDEN::KLAES | Alchemists get the lead out. | Mon Jan 05 1987 09:32 | 4 |
| What was "Profile in Silver" about?
Larry
|
326.5 | | VIRTUE::RAVAN | | Mon Jan 05 1987 10:37 | 62 |
| First the bad news: TZ has been cancelled. I've written a nasty
letter to the network, but it will take a lot more to get them to
change their minds.
"Profile in Silver" was one of my favorite episodes, a well-played
story on what might have been a trite theme. The performances and
the pacing made it gripping and beautiful, and it doesn't matter
that some of the plot was predictable.
Lane Smith (last seen as the villainous Nathan Bates in "V", and a very
fine character actor) portrays a history/social studies professor at
Harvard, who also happens to be a time traveler. He has come to the
U.S. in 1963 to study Kennedy's presidency and assassination. He
mentions this to a fellow time-traveler, who cautions him to remember
his professional detachment and not to interfere with the course of
history. It seems he is descended from the Kennedy clan, and has a
treasured family momento - a Kennedy coin dated (obviously) from
*after* the assassination. He reassures his colleague that he is only
here to study, and off he goes to Dallas.
But his professional detachment is strained beyond bearing when
he sees the scene shaping up, and when he spots the assassin's rifle
he can't take it. He calls to the guards and attracts their attention,
and foils the assassination - and winds up getting a lift on Air
Force One to receive the thanks of the President.
Now, this man is just a historian, notwithstanding his time-travel.
He's completely stunned to be meeting his legendary relative face to
face, and is also in a state of shock at having breached the terms of
the time-travel arrangements. As he stammers out a greeting to Kennedy,
he nervously fingers his coin, and drops it.
Kennedy picks up the coin and notices the image on it - his own.
He knows that no one living is memorialized on a coin, and the date
is of the following year; and he quickly puts the pieces together.
But that isn't all. The hot line rings, and the news is bad and
getting worse. All over the world, things are shaking loose; formerly
stable political situations are becoming unstable, and very soon
the world is on the brink of war. [I've forgotten some of the details
here, but it's basically the old bit about "change something in
the past and you change history".] Kennedy confronts his
rescuer/kinsman with the situation and demands to know what's going
on, and the hapless historian, horrified at what he has done,
confesses.
The President asks whether there is any way to undo what has been done,
realizing that this means his own death. The historian says that he can
return them to the moment of decision and let things take their former
course, but he is agonized at the thought of it. The President insists,
and the time traveller whisks them back to Dallas; but before they go,
he offers the President a gift - a ring he is wearing. He doesn't tell
him that the ring serves as his "lifeline" to the future, and will
return the wearer to that time. The humble historian takes his place
in the Presidential motorcade just before the shots ring out...
And after the gunfire, the scene shifts to a classroom, where someone
is lecturing on the events that occurred that day. It is Kennedy;
taking the place of the man who saved his life and removed him forever
from his time.
-b
|
326.6 | With signpost. | DROID::DAUGHAN | I love it when you talk Hi-Tech. | Tue Jan 13 1987 12:55 | 18 |
| re -.1: Beth! Start writing your own short stories! (But keep
on writing reviews.)
Amazing Stories had a TZ-type show last night in which a woman picks
up a hitchhiker as she is leaving her husband. Then cars begin
passing hers, each one carrying an episode from her past. The
hitchhiker (an older woman), between the car passings, tries to talk
her out of divorcing her husband. (We soon realize who the hitchhiker
is--the plot was not as subtle as it could have been.) Finally the
woman realizes her father's cold-hearted influence during her
childhood made her unable to forgive her husband's "weakness" when he
broke down when she told him she was leaving. Barely after she
decided to return they happen upon a car accident: It is her car &
guess who's in it. Then the scene changes to an empty road and the
older one thanks her for saving both their lives. The end. You
almost expected to see Rod standing off to one side.
Don ICEMAN::Rudman
|
326.7 | TZ still alive? | MORRIS::MLOEWE | Low_in_sugar Low_in_salt..Lowenbrau | Tue Feb 24 1987 13:39 | 8 |
| I thought TZ was already canceled. After not having seen an episode
since it was aired opposite Bill Cosby about 6 weeks ago, I just
watched an 1 hour (two stories) show on Saturday February 21st.
I checked the TV guide and they were not repeats. Does CBS still
have some new episodes they are going to show, or is it not yet
officially canceled.
Mike_L
|
326.8 | | XANADU::RAVAN | | Tue Feb 24 1987 16:56 | 9 |
| re .7:
I posted a note about the "new" TZ in the TV conference, but it's been
unavailable most of the time for the last week. At any rate, yes, TZ
was cancelled, and last Saturday's episodes appeared to be some of the
leftovers. (They weren't among the best, I thought, but somewhat
entertaining.)
-b
|
326.9 | TV alert: "Profile in Silver" on CBS Saturday | XANADU::RAVAN | | Wed Dec 02 1987 18:56 | 8 |
| The "Twilight Zone" episode containing "Profile in Silver" (reviewed in
detail in .5) is scheduled to air this Saturday, Dec. 5, at 9 p.m. EST,
on CBS (channel 7 in the Boston area). This segment, starring Lane
Smith as a historian from the future, is one of my favorite TZs (old
*and* new). If you didn't catch it the first time out, try to see it
this time.
-b (also posted in TV)
|
326.10 | RE 326.9 | DICKNS::KLAES | All the galaxy's a stage... | Mon Dec 07 1987 10:38 | 8 |
| Thank you very much for alerting us to that TZ episode. It
was very good! My only "complaint" is that I wish they had found
an actor who looked more like John F. Kennedy, but it was probably
difficult to find someone who both sounded *and* looked like the
former President.
Larry
|
326.11 | | AD::REDFORD | | Mon Dec 07 1987 18:21 | 9 |
| re: "Profile in Silver" TZ
Yes, it was a fine episode, especially compared to the Star Trek
that preceded it. The ST spent a lot more on production, but
somehow forgot to find decent writers. Does anyone know if
Kennedy's speech at the end is a real quotation from him? It sounded
genuine.
/jlr
|
326.12 | Straight from the Twilight Zone... | MTWAIN::KLAES | Saturn by 1970 | Tue Oct 25 1988 15:17 | 58 |
| Situations That Can Occur During A Re-Org
-----------------------------------------
1. If you get a phone call from Mars.
Speak slowly and be sure to enunciate your words properly. Limit
your vocabulary to simple words. Try to determine if you are
speaking to someone in a leadership capacity, or an ordinary
citizen.
Q. What if he or she doesn't speak English?
Hang up. There's no sense in trying to learn Martian over the
phone. If your Martian really had something important to say to
you, he or she would have taken the trouble to learn the language
before calling.
2. If you get a phone call from Jupiter?
Explain to your caller, politely but firmly, that being from
Jupiter, he or she is not `life as we know it'. Try to terminate
the conversation as soon as possible. It will not profit you.
3. If a starship, equipped with an FTL hyperdrive lands in your
backyard?
First of all, do not run after your camera. You will not have
any film. Be polite. Remember, if they have an FTL hyperdrive,
they can probably vaporize you, should they find you to be rude.
Direct them to the White House lawn, which is where they probably
wanted to land, anyway. A good road map should help.
4. If you wake up in the middle of the night, and discover that your
closet contains an alternate dimension?
Don't go in. You almost certainly will not be able to get back,
and alternate dimensions are almost never any fun. Remain calm
and go back to bed. Check your closet in the morning. If it
still contains an alternate dimension, nail it shut.
5. If reality disappears?
Hope this one doesn't happen to you. There is not much you can
do about it. It can be quite unpleasant.
6. If you meet an older version of yourself who has invented a time
traveling machine, and has come from the future to meet you?
Follow the books on this one. Ask about the stock market and
cash in. Don't forget to invent a time traveling machine and
visit your younger self before you die, or you will create a
paradox.
I hope this guide will be of help to you, should you find yourself
confronted with any of the situations described. If anything like the
above should happen to you, get out your typewriter, and crank out a
story.
|
326.13 | Stowaway/Human Equation/Margin of Error/??? | VALKYR::RUST | | Mon Jan 09 1989 11:32 | 29 |
| Since the network cancellation of TZ, it has been revived in
syndication, but I've only caught a couple of shows and - until this
weekend - was not impressed. The plots seemed thin, and while the
production values were acceptable, nothing much seemed to be happening.
However, this weekend they aired an episode based on a Tom Godwin short
story that has haunted me for years. (The title escapes me, and it
didn't appear on WPIX's airing. Jerry?)
It is a very sparse plot: an emergency vehicle has been dispatched to
an outer colony bearing vitally-needed serum for the colonists. The
emergency vehicles contain the bare minimum of fuel and equipment to
perform their missions, and thus have no margin for error. On this day,
the pilot of the emergency vehicle (nicely played by Terence Knox, of
"St. Elsewhere" and "Tour of Duty") is notified that his ship is over
weight - there is a stowaway on board.
The stowaway turns out to be a young girl who hid on the ship in order
to visit her brother. But her added mass exceeds the slim tolerance of
the emergency vehicle, and the pilot is faced with the official policy
on stowaways: They are to be ejected at once.
It's a simple story, inexorable and devastating, and the television
treatment of it was excellent. The girl was played remarkably well, and
I thought the whole episode one of the best of the all-time TZs.
Now, if I could just remember the name of that story!
-b
|
326.14 | Electric Grandmother | ANT::MLOEWE | Up the paddle without a creek! | Mon Jan 09 1989 11:56 | 15 |
| Speaking of Twilight Zone episodes. My kids were watching a Nicholodeon
special yesterday afternoon called "The Electric Grandmother". This show
was a direct ripoff on an old Twilight Zone episode I once saw. They even
had the same amount of kids, two boys and a girl. The plot was identical,
the girl didn't want to become attached to warm and wonderful robot grandmother,
because whe knew she would "go away" or die like her mother did. Towards the
end she's running away near a street, with a car about to hit her, the grand-
mother leaps in front, pushes the girl down and gets herself struck down by
the vehicle. The girl immediately starts crying that she died just like mom,
and she can never have anyone love her that won't die. The grandmother then
gets up and reassures her, she's not dead and will never leave.
Does anyone else remember this Twilight Zone story? Did it come from a story,
or was it written by Rod Sterling? I saw no mention of original story in
the Nicholodeon special.
Mike_L
|
326.15 | "The Cold Equations?" | COMET::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA | Mon Jan 09 1989 12:21 | 7 |
| Re: .14
I'm not completely sure but if memory serves, the original was "The
Cold Equations" by (even less sure here) Poul Anderson. Great story
and even better since the screenwriters were true to the original.
Jim (usually a read only noter)
|
326.16 | Waaaaah!! I missed it!! | SKETCH::GROSS | Human Factors and much, much more. | Mon Jan 09 1989 12:42 | 20 |
| re .15
"The Cold Equations" is the right title, but I'm pretty sure that
Poul Anderson didn't write it (although he may *wish* he did :-)
That is one *terrific* story, and if it isn't in the SF Hall of
Fame Anthology (it's an oldie, so it should be in volume 1), it
should be. I had more respect for the TZ producers when I heard
they were attempting this. It's a *perfect* story for TZ, being
short on required sets and long on angst. And lasting about an
hour, too...
I didn't realize that WPIX was even *showing* the new episodes!!!!
GRRRRR!!!! Does anyone have a tape or know when it will repeat?
I *really* want to see this episode!!
Merryl
P.S. I'm at the Mill.
P.P.S. Speak up more often, Jim!
|
326.17 | | MEMIT1::SCOLARO | A keyboard, how quaint | Mon Jan 09 1989 12:46 | 8 |
|
Re: < Note 326.13 by VALKYR::RUST >
I think the story you are referring to is "The Cold Equations".
I believe it won a Hugo for best short story some time (20-30 yrs) ago.
Tony
|
326.18 | From the great Bradbury | MTWAIN::KLAES | No guts, no Galaxy... | Mon Jan 09 1989 12:47 | 9 |
| I believe "The Electric Grandmother" originally comes from a
story written by Ray Bradbury with the much better title " I Sing
the Body Electric".
If TZ is smart, they'll use a lot of Bradbury's stories (with
his permission, of course).
Larry
|
326.19 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Mon Jan 09 1989 12:51 | 24 |
| Re .16: Well, I taped that particular episode, but I'm in ZK... You're
welcome to borrow it if you know anybody who commutes!
The TV episode listed the story as "based on a short story by Tom
Godwin," so I expect he's the right guy. The title doesn't ring any
bells, but then I never was very good at connecting titles, authors,
and plots - especially of SF short stories, when I've read so many of
them.
The syndicated TZ is being aired on WPIX, Saturdays (I think - weekends
are one big blur to me these days), at 5 p.m., and on channel 4 from
Boston at 7:30 (and I believe again late at night some time). [Caveat:
All times are from memory, and thus subject to error.] Since the TV
Guide does not list program summaries for these, you can't tell which
episode is airing. If they have repeat showings on other than the
weekend I don't know about it; calling channel 4 might help.
Does anyone know if the syndicated shows are still using scripts that
had been written before the network series was cancelled, or are they
writing new ones now? (The show's down to a half-hour format, and they have
been doing one story per show instead of the two or three mini-stories
per hour.)
-b
|
326.20 | re last few | ANT::MLOEWE | Up the paddle without a creek! | Mon Jan 09 1989 13:11 | 11 |
| Re Cold Equation?
I'm not sure if everyone knew what I meant when I saw this on Twilight Zone,
but it was the original TZ I saw this on. In fact, it was recently
(last few months or so) on Boston channel 68 at 7:00pm Mon-Fri. The show is
only a half hour. Check the T.V. guide for a repeat. I just didn't see any
credit in the Nicholodean special (which looked like a recent production).
And since it was identical to the old TZ show, I'm now curious where it
originated.
Mike_L
|
326.21 | RE 326.20 | MTWAIN::KLAES | No guts, no Galaxy... | Mon Jan 09 1989 13:41 | 2 |
| Please reread my Note 326.18.
|
326.22 | So thats it | ANT::MLOEWE | Up the paddle without a creek! | Mon Jan 09 1989 17:35 | 7 |
| RE Larry
I think I realized the problem. The reply in .15 said RE .14 which was
my note, and .16 picked up on it. The Cold Equations is the TZ episode
about the stowaway. Now I'm no longer confused.
Mike_L
|
326.23 | To reveal the climax | MTWAIN::KLAES | No guts, no Galaxy... | Mon Jan 09 1989 17:54 | 5 |
| Could someone please tell me in this Topic the outcome in "The
Cold Equations" - behind a spoiler warning, of course.
Thanks.
|
326.24 | wish I could quote the closing voice-over | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Mon Jan 09 1989 17:58 | 14 |
| re .23:
Sure, Larry
She was ejected of course. They managed a video connection to her
brother, where she apprised him of her situation, he of course realized
what that meant. They said their goodbyes, she stepped into the
airlock, and the pilot ejected her. (all with very well done pathos).
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
326.25 | | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Millrat in training | Tue Jan 10 1989 03:50 | 17 |
| re: "The Cold Equations"
Well, I'm a little too late to jump into this one, but for the
record, this is indeed the title, and Tom Godwin is indeed the
author.
re: "The Electric Grandmother"
As Larry said, this was originally a short story by Ray Bradbury,
"I Sing the Body Electric". It was adapted into an episode of the
original TZ series back in the 60's. Sometime circa 1980, it was
remade into a short (one-hour) tv special starring Maureen Stapleton
as the grandmother and Edward Hermann as the father. Very well
done, too. It's this latter version that pops up on various cable
channels now and then.
--- jerry
|
326.26 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Tue Jan 10 1989 13:34 | 7 |
| It's probably not likely that Ray Bradbury will have many of his stories
on TZ, since he has his own anthology series, "Ray Bradbury Theatre."
It airs on the USA cable network, usually to fill out an hour with the remakes
of the Alfred Hitchcock shows.
Look for it Friday and Saturday nights.
- tom]
|
326.27 | | DWOVAX::YOUNG | Sharing is what Digital does best. | Sat Jan 14 1989 22:57 | 4 |
| Hmmm, its my recollection that "The Cold Equations" ran in Analog
in the late '70's and won a Hugo for Best short story (or one of
those lengths). I recall that Analog editors claim that they recieved
more mail on this story than any other in their history.
|
326.28 | | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Oil is the work of the Diesel himself | Mon Jan 16 1989 13:11 | 7 |
| re:.27
I don't know what story you're thinking of, but "The Cold Equations"
was published in ASTOUNDING (which became ANALOG) in 1954, and it won
no awards.
--- jerry
|
326.29 | The Cold Equations won no prizes... | 20141::KENAH | Six wrongs make a left | Wed Jan 18 1989 15:44 | 11 |
| ...but you will find "The Cold Equations" in the Anthology "The
Science Fiction Hall of Fame," a group of short stories selected by
members of SFWA. This is the same group that selects the Nebulas.
Volumes IIA abd IIB contain longer pieces (Novellas and Novelettes).
The stories in the three volumes of the SF HofF are stories that
were written before the first Nebula Awards were given out, but
which the SFWA members felt were praiseworthy (and, perhaps,
prizeworthy).
andrew
|
326.30 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Secretary of the Stratosphere | Sat Dec 23 1989 12:00 | 12 |
| In case people are interested, "The Cold Equations" is scheduled
for Friday, 12/29 on the current syndicated re-runs of TZ.
For those of you in the Boston area, TZ (the 80's version) is shown
on WSBK (Channel 38) at 12:30 AM, Monday through Friday (or Tuesday
through Saturday, if you prefer, which means that the above episode
will really be on at 12:30 AM Saturday).
New Jersey's WWOR -- available on most cable systems -- broadcasts
the same episodes at the same time.
--- jerry
|
326.31 | Fast Diet | ESSB::DEARLY | Give up religion. Become a Diagnostic | Mon Jun 17 1991 12:24 | 6 |
| I just saw a repeat of the Cold Equations episode, and being in a
rather gruesome mood I reckoned that an alternate ending could have
been the girl being saved by having her legs cut off! Also they very
modestly remained fully clothed.
Dave (not Stephen King) 8*)
|
326.32 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | One of the Happy Generations | Tue Jun 18 1991 01:23 | 11 |
| re:.31
Actually, the TZ production staff had gruesome fights with CBS and
MGM (who controlled the syndication rights -- "The Cold Equations"
being part of the first-run syndication set) about this episode.
CBS wanted them to change the ending so that the *pilot* cuts his
legs off, but the staff absolutely refused to change the ending.
The phrase that was used was that CBS wanted "The Lukewarm Equations".
--- jerry
|
326.33 | Timely Coincidence? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:14 | 9 |
| I just read a story (in Analog or Asimov's?) with precisely that
ending, and explicitly acknowledging the debt to "The Cold Equations".
The idea occurs to the pilot when he starts to say something to the
effect of "I'd give an arm and a leg for any way to avoid throwing
you overboard".
len.
|
326.34 | analog... | SHAOLN::DENSMORE | Dirty deeds & they're done dirt cheap | Mon Jun 24 1991 08:46 | 5 |
| re .-1
it was analog. one of the last couple of issues (may-july timeframe)
mike
|