I like the thought that the Lady Anne was truly on its last voyage. No supernatural elements, just a crew and a ship full of elderly passengers ready to go down with a ship that meant so much to them. And, that they cared for the young couple so much, they wanted the pair to live on and experience the same fulfilled life and happiness they had.
I agree with Walter about the ending being rushed, and coming out of nowhere. Then again, I liked the twist of the happily married passengers helping the young couple to rekindle their floundering relationship.
I'm going to say I understand the rushed ending. The ending was obvious. I guessed it basically as soon as it was all old people asking them to leave. So, cut it short. It's what gave time for all those brilliant conversations and such.
My guess is that the Lady Anne was a ghost ship and that the passengers are already dead, having finally crossed over and found peace and happiness...in The Twilight Zone.
id buy that if one guy didn't say his wife was already dead. honestly with everyone who was clearly alive trying to persuade them away from boarding the boat, I think all the old folk were all going on a Sucid trip to go down with the ship that meant the world to them
@jrrr9219 I don't think it was a "suicide ship", not when supernatural stuff is involved here. I think they just "crossed over" or something like that to be together with passed love ones or to be together forever in the afterlife etc.
@jrrr9219 I don't think it was a ghost ship either, but I just don't think they killed themselves. That seems a bit much for a 1961 storyline I suppose, which is why I don't think they did that in the end. But, I guess that's one way of them crossing over as well.
@jrrr9219 Yes, but does that necessarily mean suicide at the end? I still think something supernatural is involved, but I guess it works either way in the end.
I can see 2 possibilities, either this was a variation of the story where a living person finds themselves riding a boat down what turns out to be the river styx, or this was an elaborate mass suicide plan on the part of the crew and passengers and when a young couple got mixed in by mistake they didn't want to take them down with them.
It is interesting after so many, "This episode shows how poorly the hour-long format was handled in season 4" complaints, we get one where we're basically left wishing for another 10-15 minutes to get proper closure (presumably with the couple trying to find out what happened to the Lady Anne, and maybe even getting a clue to the nature of the ship's mystery.
This feels like a spiritual successor to Changing Of The Guard, as you have a supernatural occurrence help show people what matters in life with others they know
From what the ending feels like, rushed or not, is that the Lady Anne isn't necessarily a ghost ship from the start but it _became_ one, with the Ransoms being forcibly removed from the ship and set adrift at sea because the ship and everyone aboard is sailing off into the literal afterlife, subsequently vanishing without any trace like the SS Waratah or the USS Cyclops.
If everyone were ghosts it wouldn’t explain why the travel agent was trying to talk them out of going. Maybe all the people on the ship who were all old and at the end of their lives with such fond memories of the Lady Anne, planned a collective suicide pact to sink the ship somewhere where it wouldn’t be found and some people knew about it. Maybe all those people were dying of terminal illnesses and wanted to die on their own terms.
@jrrr9219they are referring to how some people in this comment section are theorising that all the passengers are ghosts. Also they is no definitive answer given so it is possible they were ghosts, but I don’t think they were.
@@danielclayton6772 I think its more plausible that they made some kind of scheme to just take the ship someplace else and not tell anybody where, and that's how the travel agent had a clue.
@jrrr9219 you really want them committing suicide lol. Goodness gracious. They were all on death’s doorstep already. This was a mirror to the greek myth of Charon ferrying people on the river Styx. It’s about people crossing over naturally at the end of their lives with fond memories of the ship. Nothing more.
This is an unusual one for Charles Beaumont as it's more sentimental than you'd expect from him. According to his son Chris, the episode and the short story it was based on were inspired by a cruise vacation the Beaumont family took a few years earlier that had a lot of elderly couples on it.
Yeah, and in the original short story (which was told in the husband's first person POV), our main characters were a honeymooning couple, not a troubled one. But the change works well here, though the original was good.
Alternate Ending: We see the couple decades later, elderly, and they mysteriously learn of the Lady Anne having one last voyage (again). Understanding what it means, they go on for one last voyage, while seeing a lot of familiar faces on board. In the next room, a young bickering couple, trying to work on their marriage. Another voyage of honoring/finding love. . . In the Twilight Zone.
I like the premise of a spectacular ghost ship ferrying its passengers to the afterlife. (Almost as if Charon was at the helm.) The idea of a young couple getting mixed up in all this and some of the elderly passengers trying to warn them also makes it interesting. Of course the ending makes it seem ambiguous what really happened to the Lady Anne; but I just stick with “it was a ghost ship” idea. It’s fitting since all the elderly are enjoying their last moments on earth before passing on into the next life.
I can see what you’re saying about the ending, but I think I kind of appreciate how non-definitive it is. Sometimes, you don’t get the answers you want in life 🤷♂️ ~_~
A final scene in a Maritime Museum Husband & wife walk through the museum hand in hand as the come to an exhibit. A banner reads, The Mysterious Disappearance of The Lady Anne. They see a model of the ship, They read from highlighted excerpt below the model, "The ship had been booked almost exclusively by elderly passagers that had sailed on the grand lady previously. She was crewed by the only most senior members and retired personnel. One oddity was the presence of a single couple that were seemingly on board for the first. The Lady Anne Sailed into parts unknown likely with all hands lost. Eileen: How? Why? Alan: Who can say? Perhaps, if they all wanted to enough... How many people get to decide how their story ends? Eileen: I suppose the same number that are granted a second chance. [They kiss] The reunited couple reminisce about the kind souls that spent their final hours instilling them with love & wisdom as they exit the museum and enter... The Twilight Zone.
This episode has long been one of my personal favorites. The kindness and festiveness and charm and long sentimental memories of all the old folks, many truly great actors given yet one more chance to shine with their distinctive talents. They absolutely glow as they help the young couple to rediscover their romance and re-cement their marriage. Yet hovering over it all is that atmosphere of something going to happen to which the old timers are all privy and quite ready to accept, whatever it is, but unwilling to impose upon the young couple as it could just about kill them. This foreboding atmosphere pervades even among the joy and cheer, and couple with the production as described here, projects a truly magical feeling. Even the abrupt ending is not really a problem but actually an asset, as it leaves it to the imagination as to what happens next to the old timers after the young couple are put off. Do they all sink the ship, going down with it? Do they just perpetually sail along with it like some floating (but not quite "flying") dutchman? Do they go off into some other dimension, like what happens in "The Arrival" or disappear like what happens in "And When The Sky Was Opened"? Are they and perhaps even their ship already ghosts, though nevertheless given enough substance to support the young couple until their debarkation? Is it something completely else which we have not and probably cannot imagine? One can only wonder. For me, even the abrupt ending, without any explanation of what is to happen, truly works for me, as any explanation would certainly cheapen the whole experience. How many things happen in the Twilight Zone for no apparent or discoverable reason? Can this not simply be yet one more, one where even the lack of explanation actually adds to the mystery and atmosphere of the episode?
Well, let's put it this way. A college friend of mine was putting together his final paper for a poli/sci class and couldn't figure out how to conclude what he was trying to say. So, the only concluding phrasing he came up with was: "...only the shadow knows." Sufficit to say, the professor was not amused and gave him a D. So, for Rod Serling, he could get away with something happening "for no apparent or discoverable reason." But for those of us in real life, we are left only with...reality, which sometimes is not as mysterious as...the shadow
Thanks for one of my favorite “The Twilight Zone” episodes. I had a “The Twilight Zone Book” back in the 1980’s that quoted the director saying he enjoyed filming this the best because of all the gossip from the old British actors between scenes. Have a great day!
I always felt like it was a suicide club type situation and they sailed the ship off course and deliberately sank it. Mass suicide wasn't really a palatable ending for 60's tv so the obscure ending......
Another one with a radio drama adaptation I heard before watching the episode (thanks Netflix lol) but one of my favorites. The relationship bickering and reconciliation worked pretty well, fitting for the time anyway, and it had a sweet ending. Though the radio drama also used Serling's stand-in (Stacy Keach) to wrap up the plot. Also just realized that Joker's most famous name up until the mid 2010s came from 1960s Alfred LOL.
This is one of the episodes i remember seeing as a child and really liking. I was always afraid of what was coming in the ending twist and the fact that this is one of the rare wholesome endings in the Twilight zone really endeared it to me.
Oh GOD! That was it!? The idea, the build-up, it was all GOLD. How could this possibly end so flat. This may just be the most frustrating episode of them all.
Definitely a rushed ending but the idea of the old ship, crew and passengers helping rekindle one last young relationship and sending them on their way after parting with so much loving advice, to know they will live a long and happy life together before sailing to a mysterious end rather than be dismantled and sold for scrap is fittingly beautiful and haunting. Whilst it can be theorised what happened to the ship I prefer to not think they intentionally sunk with it. Though it would be the most grounded; this is the Twilight Zone so I choose to believe the ship did have supernatural power, positive powers that brought people together in love and joy so I can't see them having a suicidal drowning. I think the ship carried them all to whatever afterlife was awaiting them together. Much like ancient stories of ships carrying the dead to the afterlife, they simply vanished into the fog and into eternity, carried to their final destination by their mystical and caring ship one last time.
This is actually one of my favorite season 4 episodes. While I can agree the ending is sort of rushed, I think it fits the story proper. While it might have been nice to have a more extended ending maybe touching on things a bit more - the fact they leave it ambiguous is better for me. Like most of the better TZ episodes after all :)
Who'd have guessed that boarding a ghostly ship where all the passengers had perished decades before could be just the ticket to saving a failing marriage?!
I personally interpret the Lady Anne as taking the passengers to the afterlife, and it simply wasn't time for the Ransoms to die yet. They would have died if they didn't get off the ship.
So many gifted actors graced The Twilight Zone with their presence. I have a soft spot for Gladys Cooper's episodes because, as a classic movie fan, I know her best as the nasty, cold-hearted Mrs. Vale in 1942's "Now, Voyager," and it's a delight to see her in her more sympathetic TZ roles. When I singled out Patricia Breslin in Nick of Time as the only active heroic wife figure, I shamefully forgot about Joyce Van Patten's Eileen, a kind of mirror-image opposite to A Stop at Willoughby's vicious Jane Williams. This time it's the wife who wants her husband to slow down and enjoy life, and she stands her ground in order to make that happen. She has real spirit. I love the bit when her husband asks her why she wants to stand on the deck and wave as the ship disembarks, and she answers, "Because that's what people do! Haven't you seen any movies?" As to the ending, it could have been a simple fix: simply film the ship disappearing before their eyes, in such a way that it couldn't be explained with "fog." But instead of horror, the couple feels a sense of peace. They know by instinct that they've watched these couples enter Paradise together, hand in hand. That's their future.
im fine with the abruptness of the turn at the end but i do agree it needed more than Rod spelling out what they didn't have time to show, which is extra strange considering the hour long format afforded them plenty of time, I'm sure 2-3 minutes could have been edited out to include a proper pay off to their sudden departure
This episode had by far the largest number of current or past huge stars in it. I mean, many of the names had decades long careers long before this episode. Quite a few of them previously appeared on TZ also.
At the time, Gladys Cooper was by far the biggest star both in movies and on TV. Alan Napier is now considered biggest star thanks to his role on Batman TV show.
My interpretation of this was the Lady Anne was basically a ship of the dead. Taking those about to die to the afterlife, and the reason why the couple was forced off the ship, was because it wasn't their time yet to cross over.
There are some moments of promise here, but this one really drags its feet a lot. We get a struggling couple and a ship full of old people on a mysterious ship but neither idea gets fleshed out. It’s a lot of them just doing nothing, there’s nice bits with the other passengers but not enough really focusing on the couple even though that’s clearly meant to be focus more than the mystery. What we get is fine but not super strong. The ending is rather nice, and I suppose the ambiguity it has is fine but there’s so much deadspace that could have been filled by fleshing this all out more. It’s close to having the right idea but waffles around not really doing much with it. Even with the extra time adding more filler, they still could have done so much more here so...eh.
I love this episode. It really did touch me emotionally, or "sail through my heart." I think the ending itself was fine. The abruptness works, as that's how it was supposed to feel for the young couple. I think the problem lies in the middle. Before the Ransomes are told to leave, it seems to be implied that many days have gone by since Alan had his change of heart. If there were more in between scenes showing the couple finally enjoying their vacation, perhaps the ending wouldn't have felt so abrupt. Still, it's an amazing episode, definitely high on my tier list.
I always took this as the ship was the ferry to heaven kind of like the boat in Norse mythology and they all knew they had died and that the young couple shouldn't have been there.
I mean it would be very haunting is that they had like a younger version of the older couple on deck like having kind of a time slip going on to make you more eerie. But the whole I don't know where you are thing with a couple was kind of crappy in my mind a way of trying to fill run time.
I share your frustration that this episode is Zonus Interruptus: Just about every viewer watches the episode expecting the last scene in Titanic, where the old people are all the ghosts of previous passengers sailing on the ship’s last voyage….And then, what?? The writer wanted to do a metaphor where the old people are telling the young couple to live their own young life, but it needs that one more push into the Zone-And it’s a bad sign when the audience is writing a better story than the writers do,
This one might be a good one to be redone if it wasn't in the 80s version. Give it an ending where they return home and are stronger than ever and while things are going good maybe his wife asks randomly "Whatever happened to the Lady Anne?" and then it cuts to them exhausted with research that basically says no one knows, it never made port, it was never recovered or was anything found of what happened. And maybe have a few spots of unspoken "Missing Person" clippings around them with obvious, familiar faces. Then they can just exchange a look and hold each other? Idk if that's a BETTER ending, of course ...
My number 58 episode. Wonderful use of older, veteran actors. As for the ending, the Ransomes (a wonderful name) didn't need to be told why they had to leave. Wasn't it obvious ? Like Martin Sloan, they didn't belong there. Having learned that, they could continue their life together. I wish that my parents had a similar realization when they went on a vacation to try and save their marriage 😢
I get a kick out of the fact that the McKenzies are both played by actors who went on to be in the film version of My Fair Lady. Wilfrid Hyde-White was Colonel Hugh Pickering and Gladys Cooper was Henry Higgins' mother.
I think the travel agent knew about the doomed voyage and knew the passengers would have reacted the way they did to them. He knew the ship would save their marriage and the passengers wouldn't let them die.
Alright, so, the description of the plot starts at 0:33 and by 1:20, I was able to correctly guess the twist of the episode. I just can't give too much credit to the quality of the writing when it's that easy to figure out the exact course the entire episode is going to take. Much like the episode "Five Characters in Search of an Exit," which took only a handful of seconds, I just find myself waiting for the story to get around to what I know is obviously going to happen. When everything leads up to the exact twist I was expecting with absolutely no deviation or surprises, it's a letdown. I just can't praise the writing on an episode when the twist is literally the single most obvious outcome.
The climactic fight scene between "Steel" and "Maynard Flash" was actually a bit scary, because you knew Maynard was played by a human but he still looked and moved a little robotic, and because the idea of a robot beating a human being to a pulp also is a little disturbing, something like "Frankenstein." The episode's premise of boxing having been outlawed as too barbaric is also interesting, as well as the idea that boxing robots took the place of humans.
There’s a story by William Townend called Sold Foreign (a short story in a compilation called The Ship In the Swamp) in which a group of British sailors agree to deliver the ship on which they served in WWI to the place where it will be taken by a German company. The sailors are joined by a young naval officer just before leaving and the young man, despite being a good sort, seems to be singularly disliked by the crew. Turns out the old crew plans to sink the ship rather than see it sold to the Germans. They end up taking the young man into their confidence in the end and they all end up in a lifeboat together, claiming the ship hit a mine leftover from the war. I suspect something like that is happening here, except the old folks plan to go down with the ship, which they would rather do than see it scrapped.
Yes I guess that ending is a little weird but I guess they were sailing into oblivion meaning into heaven they were living souls and the others were going to have it I guess
I can't believe twilight zone some actors few years later staring in batman 1966 one actor later shows up in batman 1989 like burgess Meredith who play the penguin Julie Newmar who play cat woman Alan Napier who play Alfred finally pat hingle in future will play commission Gordon in batman 1989
This wouldn't have been served well by having anything come after the couple watching the boat sail off into the fog. Suddenly cutting to them in their living room reading a newspaper would have totally killed the atmosphere... maybe this wouldn't feel like a "rushed" ending in the half-hour format.
I like the thought that the Lady Anne was truly on its last voyage. No supernatural elements, just a crew and a ship full of elderly passengers ready to go down with a ship that meant so much to them. And, that they cared for the young couple so much, they wanted the pair to live on and experience the same fulfilled life and happiness they had.
I was thinking something like that. That they had planned all along to scuttle the ship at sea and go down with it.
I agree with Walter about the ending being rushed, and coming out of nowhere. Then again, I liked the twist of the happily married passengers helping the young couple to rekindle their floundering relationship.
So true
I'm going to say I understand the rushed ending. The ending was obvious. I guessed it basically as soon as it was all old people asking them to leave. So, cut it short. It's what gave time for all those brilliant conversations and such.
My guess is that the Lady Anne was a ghost ship and that the passengers are already dead, having finally crossed over and found peace and happiness...in The Twilight Zone.
id buy that if one guy didn't say his wife was already dead. honestly with everyone who was clearly alive trying to persuade them away from boarding the boat, I think all the old folk were all going on a Sucid trip to go down with the ship that meant the world to them
@Gojiro7 I agree. I always thought it was a joint (self delete) pact.
@jrrr9219 I don't think it was a "suicide ship", not when supernatural stuff is involved here. I think they just "crossed over" or something like that to be together with passed love ones or to be together forever in the afterlife etc.
@jrrr9219 I don't think it was a ghost ship either, but I just don't think they killed themselves. That seems a bit much for a 1961 storyline I suppose, which is why I don't think they did that in the end. But, I guess that's one way of them crossing over as well.
@jrrr9219 Yes, but does that necessarily mean suicide at the end? I still think something supernatural is involved, but I guess it works either way in the end.
I can see 2 possibilities, either this was a variation of the story where a living person finds themselves riding a boat down what turns out to be the river styx, or this was an elaborate mass suicide plan on the part of the crew and passengers and when a young couple got mixed in by mistake they didn't want to take them down with them.
It is interesting after so many, "This episode shows how poorly the hour-long format was handled in season 4" complaints, we get one where we're basically left wishing for another 10-15 minutes to get proper closure (presumably with the couple trying to find out what happened to the Lady Anne, and maybe even getting a clue to the nature of the ship's mystery.
This feels like a spiritual successor to Changing Of The Guard, as you have a supernatural occurrence help show people what matters in life with others they know
Agreed, I loved the stories of the other passengers, and their tales could easily make a compelling spinoff.
Yep, those are my favorite type of Twighlight Zone episodes.
From what the ending feels like, rushed or not, is that the Lady Anne isn't necessarily a ghost ship from the start but it _became_ one, with the Ransoms being forcibly removed from the ship and set adrift at sea because the ship and everyone aboard is sailing off into the literal afterlife, subsequently vanishing without any trace like the SS Waratah or the USS Cyclops.
no episode of this show makes me cry more than this one
If everyone were ghosts it wouldn’t explain why the travel agent was trying to talk them out of going. Maybe all the people on the ship who were all old and at the end of their lives with such fond memories of the Lady Anne, planned a collective suicide pact to sink the ship somewhere where it wouldn’t be found and some people knew about it. Maybe all those people were dying of terminal illnesses and wanted to die on their own terms.
@jrrr9219they are referring to how some people in this comment section are theorising that all the passengers are ghosts. Also they is no definitive answer given so it is possible they were ghosts, but I don’t think they were.
I don't think the ship was sunk...rather, through some Twilight Zone magic, it was on a course for the afterlife.
@@danielclayton6772 I think its more plausible that they made some kind of scheme to just take the ship someplace else and not tell anybody where, and that's how the travel agent had a clue.
@jrrr9219 you really want them committing suicide lol. Goodness gracious. They were all on death’s doorstep already. This was a mirror to the greek myth of Charon ferrying people on the river Styx. It’s about people crossing over naturally at the end of their lives with fond memories of the ship. Nothing more.
@jrrr9219 touch grass
This is an unusual one for Charles Beaumont as it's more sentimental than you'd expect from him. According to his son Chris, the episode and the short story it was based on were inspired by a cruise vacation the Beaumont family took a few years earlier that had a lot of elderly couples on it.
Yeah, and in the original short story (which was told in the husband's first person POV), our main characters were a honeymooning couple, not a troubled one. But the change works well here, though the original was good.
One of the few sort of sappy ones I really like
Maybe the ending was rushed, but I think the tone, atmosphere, and acting really make this episode great!
Alternate Ending: We see the couple decades later, elderly, and they mysteriously learn of the Lady Anne having one last voyage (again). Understanding what it means, they go on for one last voyage, while seeing a lot of familiar faces on board.
In the next room, a young bickering couple, trying to work on their marriage. Another voyage of honoring/finding love. . .
In the Twilight Zone.
As soon as the captain pulled a gun on the younger couple, I thought, "Well, THIS escalated quickly."
I like the premise of a spectacular ghost ship ferrying its passengers to the afterlife.
(Almost as if Charon was at the helm.)
The idea of a young couple getting mixed up in all this and some of the elderly passengers trying to warn them also makes it interesting.
Of course the ending makes it seem ambiguous what really happened to the Lady Anne; but I just stick with “it was a ghost ship” idea. It’s fitting since all the elderly are enjoying their last moments on earth before passing on into the next life.
@jrrr9219 so what happened? Genuinely asking.
This was a favorite episode of mine. Learning how to live life well, from those older and wiser.
I can see what you’re saying about the ending, but I think I kind of appreciate how non-definitive it is.
Sometimes, you don’t get the answers you want in life 🤷♂️
~_~
A final scene in a Maritime Museum
Husband & wife walk through the museum hand in hand as the come to an exhibit. A banner reads, The Mysterious Disappearance of The Lady Anne. They see a model of the ship, They read from highlighted excerpt below the model, "The ship had been booked almost exclusively by elderly passagers that had sailed on the grand lady previously. She was crewed by the only most senior members and retired personnel. One oddity was the presence of a single couple that were seemingly on board for the first. The Lady Anne Sailed into parts unknown likely with all hands lost.
Eileen: How? Why?
Alan: Who can say? Perhaps, if they all wanted to enough... How many people get to decide how their story ends?
Eileen: I suppose the same number that are granted a second chance. [They kiss]
The reunited couple reminisce about the kind souls that spent their final hours instilling them with love & wisdom as they exit the museum and enter...
The Twilight Zone.
This episode has long been one of my personal favorites. The kindness and festiveness and charm and long sentimental memories of all the old folks, many truly great actors given yet one more chance to shine with their distinctive talents. They absolutely glow as they help the young couple to rediscover their romance and re-cement their marriage. Yet hovering over it all is that atmosphere of something going to happen to which the old timers are all privy and quite ready to accept, whatever it is, but unwilling to impose upon the young couple as it could just about kill them. This foreboding atmosphere pervades even among the joy and cheer, and couple with the production as described here, projects a truly magical feeling. Even the abrupt ending is not really a problem but actually an asset, as it leaves it to the imagination as to what happens next to the old timers after the young couple are put off. Do they all sink the ship, going down with it? Do they just perpetually sail along with it like some floating (but not quite "flying") dutchman? Do they go off into some other dimension, like what happens in "The Arrival" or disappear like what happens in "And When The Sky Was Opened"? Are they and perhaps even their ship already ghosts, though nevertheless given enough substance to support the young couple until their debarkation? Is it something completely else which we have not and probably cannot imagine? One can only wonder. For me, even the abrupt ending, without any explanation of what is to happen, truly works for me, as any explanation would certainly cheapen the whole experience. How many things happen in the Twilight Zone for no apparent or discoverable reason? Can this not simply be yet one more, one where even the lack of explanation actually adds to the mystery and atmosphere of the episode?
Well, let's put it this way. A college friend of mine was putting together his final paper for a poli/sci class and couldn't figure out how to conclude what he was trying to say. So, the only concluding phrasing he came up with was: "...only the shadow knows." Sufficit to say, the professor was not amused and gave him a D. So, for Rod Serling, he could get away with something happening "for no apparent or discoverable reason." But for those of us in real life, we are left only with...reality, which sometimes is not as mysterious as...the shadow
This is one of my favorite episodes, mostly because I am a sucker for these kinds of stories.
This is a favorite of mine just for the atmosphere
I was already happy and loved the review…then that clip at the very very end…I was like: “WOAH, WAIT, TIME FOR THE WHAT?”
Thanks for one of my favorite “The Twilight Zone” episodes.
I had a “The Twilight Zone Book” back in the 1980’s that quoted the director saying he enjoyed filming this the best because of all the gossip from the old British actors between scenes.
Have a great day!
I always felt like it was a suicide club type situation and they sailed the ship off course and deliberately sank it. Mass suicide wasn't really a palatable ending for 60's tv so the obscure ending......
I like that ending
Another one with a radio drama adaptation I heard before watching the episode (thanks Netflix lol) but one of my favorites. The relationship bickering and reconciliation worked pretty well, fitting for the time anyway, and it had a sweet ending. Though the radio drama also used Serling's stand-in (Stacy Keach) to wrap up the plot.
Also just realized that Joker's most famous name up until the mid 2010s came from 1960s Alfred LOL.
I love this The Twilight Zone episode!
Wow, there sure have been quite a few batman alumni in the episodes this year.
Pity Adam West never showed up.
The Penguin showed up in four TZ episodes: Time Enough At Last; Mr. Dingle The Strong; The Obsolete Man, and Printer's Devil.
5:27 😏 Ransom destinations?
9:35 to 9:52 Eleonora Gwyn/Aphra Behn: TAKE A CURTAIN CALL!
9:48 Interesting arrangement
Quite the 'skow'...
This is one of the episodes i remember seeing as a child and really liking. I was always afraid of what was coming in the ending twist and the fact that this is one of the rare wholesome endings in the Twilight zone really endeared it to me.
. The ghost ship angle is wonderfully executed with how weird and eerie and yet hauntingly beautiful the setting is.
Appreciate you sharing. I remember watching this episode🚢👻
I've Never Seen Joyce Van Patten That Young & I Always Liked Her! Thank You.
She was the sister of Dick Van Patten who lived on my block when I was growing up 😊
Oh GOD! That was it!? The idea, the build-up, it was all GOLD. How could this possibly end so flat. This may just be the most frustrating episode of them all.
Definitely a rushed ending but the idea of the old ship, crew and passengers helping rekindle one last young relationship and sending them on their way after parting with so much loving advice, to know they will live a long and happy life together before sailing to a mysterious end rather than be dismantled and sold for scrap is fittingly beautiful and haunting.
Whilst it can be theorised what happened to the ship I prefer to not think they intentionally sunk with it. Though it would be the most grounded; this is the Twilight Zone so I choose to believe the ship did have supernatural power, positive powers that brought people together in love and joy so I can't see them having a suicidal drowning. I think the ship carried them all to whatever afterlife was awaiting them together. Much like ancient stories of ships carrying the dead to the afterlife, they simply vanished into the fog and into eternity, carried to their final destination by their mystical and caring ship one last time.
The ship reminds me of the ferry boat in the Underworld that transports the souls to the Afterlife.
How many Comissioner Gorden make an appearance in the Twilight Zone? What's next, a young Gary Oldman?
I love how Cornell Pickery and The mother of Mr Higgins from my fair lady were a couple in this show.
This is actually one of my favorite season 4 episodes. While I can agree the ending is sort of rushed, I think it fits the story proper. While it might have been nice to have a more extended ending maybe touching on things a bit more - the fact they leave it ambiguous is better for me. Like most of the better TZ episodes after all :)
Who'd have guessed that boarding a ghostly ship where all the passengers had perished decades before could be just the ticket to saving a failing marriage?!
I don't think that was implied
We now go from the Catwoman to Alfred
Pennyworth !
Don't forget The Penguin (Burgess Meredith). He did the TZ x 4.
@@57highland Among those, Romney Wordsworth in The Obsolete Man .
@@fredrikcarlstedt393 And Henry Bemis in "Time Enough At Last."
Alfred was in this? I knew the tall man looked familiar...
I personally interpret the Lady Anne as taking the passengers to the afterlife, and it simply wasn't time for the Ransoms to die yet. They would have died if they didn't get off the ship.
So many gifted actors graced The Twilight Zone with their presence. I have a soft spot for Gladys Cooper's episodes because, as a classic movie fan, I know her best as the nasty, cold-hearted Mrs. Vale in 1942's "Now, Voyager," and it's a delight to see her in her more sympathetic TZ roles.
When I singled out Patricia Breslin in Nick of Time as the only active heroic wife figure, I shamefully forgot about Joyce Van Patten's Eileen, a kind of mirror-image opposite to A Stop at Willoughby's vicious Jane Williams. This time it's the wife who wants her husband to slow down and enjoy life, and she stands her ground in order to make that happen. She has real spirit. I love the bit when her husband asks her why she wants to stand on the deck and wave as the ship disembarks, and she answers, "Because that's what people do! Haven't you seen any movies?"
As to the ending, it could have been a simple fix: simply film the ship disappearing before their eyes, in such a way that it couldn't be explained with "fog." But instead of horror, the couple feels a sense of peace. They know by instinct that they've watched these couples enter Paradise together, hand in hand. That's their future.
Love your content guys 😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤
That’s funny that that guy says “what’s the rush” and the ending is rushed
im fine with the abruptness of the turn at the end but i do agree it needed more than Rod spelling out what they didn't have time to show, which is extra strange considering the hour long format afforded them plenty of time, I'm sure 2-3 minutes could have been edited out to include a proper pay off to their sudden departure
This episode had by far the largest number of current or past huge stars in it. I mean, many of the names had decades long careers long before this episode. Quite a few of them previously appeared on TZ also.
At the time, Gladys Cooper was by far the biggest star both in movies and on TV. Alan Napier is now considered biggest star thanks to his role on Batman TV show.
This better not be another Titanic Situation O.O
The overlap between Season 4 and Batman is almost alarming 😂
My parents had a similar demographic on their honeymoon cruise.
Is kinda ironic that, Even when this episode was a Hour long episode, it still needed more time to properly wrap it up
As of December 2023, Joyce Van Patten is the sole surviving cast member of this episode.
My interpretation of this was the Lady Anne was basically a ship of the dead. Taking those about to die to the afterlife, and the reason why the couple was forced off the ship, was because it wasn't their time yet to cross over.
what a cast!
Reminds me of Ghost Ship
I still find it hilarious, that the german title is "the last passage of the lady anne" which kind of gave the whole twist away.
I actually like the ending. It did what it needed to do.
The ending to this video got me! 🤣
"Looks like we're in time for the orgy"
Other guy excited:"What's that?!" 😂
Awesome and cool! ^_^
There are some moments of promise here, but this one really drags its feet a lot. We get a struggling couple and a ship full of old people on a mysterious ship but neither idea gets fleshed out. It’s a lot of them just doing nothing, there’s nice bits with the other passengers but not enough really focusing on the couple even though that’s clearly meant to be focus more than the mystery. What we get is fine but not super strong. The ending is rather nice, and I suppose the ambiguity it has is fine but there’s so much deadspace that could have been filled by fleshing this all out more. It’s close to having the right idea but waffles around not really doing much with it. Even with the extra time adding more filler, they still could have done so much more here so...eh.
I love this episode. It really did touch me emotionally, or "sail through my heart." I think the ending itself was fine. The abruptness works, as that's how it was supposed to feel for the young couple. I think the problem lies in the middle. Before the Ransomes are told to leave, it seems to be implied that many days have gone by since Alan had his change of heart. If there were more in between scenes showing the couple finally enjoying their vacation, perhaps the ending wouldn't have felt so abrupt. Still, it's an amazing episode, definitely high on my tier list.
A ghost ship story with a happy ending its rare😅
What if.. This ship was a Titanic?
I hope they found all items and Pokemon on the Lady Anne before it sunk.
I always took this as the ship was the ferry to heaven kind of like the boat in Norse mythology and they all knew they had died and that the young couple shouldn't have been there.
I mean it would be very haunting is that they had like a younger version of the older couple on deck like having kind of a time slip going on to make you more eerie. But the whole I don't know where you are thing with a couple was kind of crappy in my mind a way of trying to fill run time.
I share your frustration that this episode is Zonus Interruptus: Just about every viewer watches the episode expecting the last scene in Titanic, where the old people are all the ghosts of previous passengers sailing on the ship’s last voyage….And then, what??
The writer wanted to do a metaphor where the old people are telling the young couple to live their own young life, but it needs that one more push into the Zone-And it’s a bad sign when the audience is writing a better story than the writers do,
This one might be a good one to be redone if it wasn't in the 80s version.
Give it an ending where they return home and are stronger than ever and while things are going good maybe his wife asks randomly "Whatever happened to the Lady Anne?" and then it cuts to them exhausted with research that basically says no one knows, it never made port, it was never recovered or was anything found of what happened. And maybe have a few spots of unspoken "Missing Person" clippings around them with obvious, familiar faces.
Then they can just exchange a look and hold each other?
Idk if that's a BETTER ending, of course ...
Reminds me of the racoons on Master Hage's ship.
Reminds me of "Ship of Ghouls" from The Thirteen Ghosts of Scooby Doo.
This ending reminds me of every part of Jojo. The story king of just ends.
My number 58 episode. Wonderful use of older, veteran actors. As for the ending, the Ransomes (a wonderful name) didn't need to be told why they had to leave. Wasn't it obvious ? Like Martin Sloan, they didn't belong there. Having learned that, they could continue their life together. I wish that my parents had a similar realization when they went on a vacation to try and save their marriage 😢
Well done 👍🏻
I get a kick out of the fact that the McKenzies are both played by actors who went on to be in the film version of My Fair Lady. Wilfrid Hyde-White was Colonel Hugh Pickering and Gladys Cooper was Henry Higgins' mother.
I think the travel agent knew about the doomed voyage and knew the passengers would have reacted the way they did to them. He knew the ship would save their marriage and the passengers wouldn't let them die.
Alright, so, the description of the plot starts at 0:33 and by 1:20, I was able to correctly guess the twist of the episode. I just can't give too much credit to the quality of the writing when it's that easy to figure out the exact course the entire episode is going to take. Much like the episode "Five Characters in Search of an Exit," which took only a handful of seconds, I just find myself waiting for the story to get around to what I know is obviously going to happen. When everything leads up to the exact twist I was expecting with absolutely no deviation or surprises, it's a letdown. I just can't praise the writing on an episode when the twist is literally the single most obvious outcome.
This episode only stood up because of the ending!
🕛 0:00-11:44 lol ❤😂😅😅!
As a fan of the radio comedy show Men From The Ministry, I like to see Wilfred Hyde-White on TV shows.
It feels so weird to see Alan Napier without glasses on-
*TO the Twilight-Tober Zone: Could you please post a critique of "Steel," starring Lee Marvin and Joe Mantell?*
The climactic fight scene between "Steel" and "Maynard Flash" was actually a bit scary, because you knew Maynard was played by a human but he still looked and moved a little robotic, and because the idea of a robot beating a human being to a pulp also is a little disturbing, something like "Frankenstein."
The episode's premise of boxing having been outlawed as too barbaric is also interesting, as well as the idea that boxing robots took the place of humans.
Everytime I hear “Lady Anne.” I can’t help but think of Persona 5.
Kind of a reverse titanic love story
There’s a story by William Townend called Sold Foreign (a short story in a compilation called The Ship In the Swamp) in which a group of British sailors agree to deliver the ship on which they served in WWI to the place where it will be taken by a German company. The sailors are joined by a young naval officer just before leaving and the young man, despite being a good sort, seems to be singularly disliked by the crew. Turns out the old crew plans to sink the ship rather than see it sold to the Germans. They end up taking the young man into their confidence in the end and they all end up in a lifeboat together, claiming the ship hit a mine leftover from the war. I suspect something like that is happening here, except the old folks plan to go down with the ship, which they would rather do than see it scrapped.
Wow, this is the first time I could actually see the Up votes accumulate as I watched the review.
I would watch this one but the rushed ending might take out of the mood
It kind of feels like a group suicide story and maybe they weren't able to outright say that so they just rushed them off and had the boat "disappear"
Wow, he really said orgy in a 1963 TV show?
Maybe it had a different connotation back then?
Not entirely different, I think.@@jordanhunter3375
Yes I guess that ending is a little weird but I guess they were sailing into oblivion meaning into heaven they were living souls and the others were going to have it I guess
i wish you did the 80s version
So the episode about enjoying life slower has a rushed ending causing you to feel cheated. Interesting.
This is somewhat like the Ron Howard film Cocoon.
basically lady anne is ship about to become ghost ship
I can't believe twilight zone some actors few years later staring in batman 1966 one actor later shows up in batman 1989 like burgess Meredith who play the penguin Julie Newmar who play cat woman Alan Napier who play Alfred finally pat hingle in future will play commission Gordon in batman 1989
This wouldn't have been served well by having anything come after the couple watching the boat sail off into the fog. Suddenly cutting to them in their living room reading a newspaper would have totally killed the atmosphere... maybe this wouldn't feel like a "rushed" ending in the half-hour format.
It blows my mind that people think its a ghost ship....
🕔 5:00-11:44 die of boredom ❤😂😅😅!
I could see this episode getting remade as the final voyage of the Love Boat.
10:30 I need answers dammit.