Favorite Scene from one of The Twilight Zone episodes

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  • Опубликовано: 7 янв 2013
  • Created by: Rod Serling
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 805

  • @paulkersey1007
    @paulkersey1007 3 года назад +129

    When we are young, all we think about is growing up. When we are grown up, all we want is to go back to a certain time in our lives where we had peace and find a reprieve from all that is the now.

    • @basilmarasco1975
      @basilmarasco1975 3 года назад +3

      So true. What's wrong with us?

    • @paulkersey1007
      @paulkersey1007 3 года назад +7

      @@basilmarasco1975 I think if Rod Serling was alive and he was to answer your question I think he would sum it up to it being just the evolution of man. Or human beings and that is just the process of life. I think very few people in this world have the luxury of being able to return back to a simpler time before the world burdens us. And I think that in the scene it's really to say that you can't change your past but you should look towards the future.

    • @basilmarasco1975
      @basilmarasco1975 3 года назад +5

      @@paulkersey1007 Yes. An objective, non-sentimental look at the past life shows that it was just another challenging time, for the grown-ups of that era, if not for the kids. I am *really* glad to have been too young for the draft during the Vietnam War, for just one example.

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines 2 года назад +6

      *"Martin Sloan, age thirty-six, vice-president in charge of media. Successful in most things but not in the one effort that all men try at some time in their lives-trying to go home again. And also like all men, perhaps there'll be an occasion, maybe a summer night sometime, when he'll look up from what he's doing and listen to the distant music of a calliope, and hear the voices and the laughter of the people and the places of his past. And perhaps across his mind there'll flit a little errant wish, that a man might not have to become old, never outgrow the parks and the merry-go-rounds of his youth. And he'll smile then too, because he'll know it is just an errant wish, some wisp of memory not too important really, some laughing ghosts that cross a man's mind, that are a part of the Twilight Zone."*

    • @paulkersey1007
      @paulkersey1007 Год назад +3

      @@basilmarasco1975 For a lot of people, this scene is so relatable because the pressures of the world: bills, family, jobs, demands, etc have run our lives. We live a rat race and the world is unfortunately unforgiving. Most of us can not stop to enjoy what they work hard for being because it's always something.

  • @CheersNE
    @CheersNE 2 года назад +24

    "You've been looking behind, try looking ahead."
    I needed that.

  • @kenonash9356
    @kenonash9356 10 лет назад +535

    The best part of this episode was dear old dad, still giving good advice over the distance of time. One of the best scripts written by Rod Serling himself.

    • @fredsawyer9845
      @fredsawyer9845 5 лет назад +24

      Brings a tear to my eye every time and makes me think of my Dad and my time as a boy during the summer

    • @Roger85able
      @Roger85able 4 года назад +8

      More Merry go rounds....

    • @johnjarou2357
      @johnjarou2357 4 года назад +5

      @@fredsawyer9845 me too fred

    • @macjig5148
      @macjig5148 4 года назад +21

      Everybody at some time wants to go back and live those young years one more time. Remembering that Jr. High flame and the relationship that was so innocent and yet so mature at the same time. Remembering mom and dad as those heroes who did everything and could do anything. The boyhood friends, holding her hand for the first time, the summer fishing trips at the Thousand Islands; all things we want again in the midst of adulthood struggles but, alas, will never have. Only one summer per customer. Mine came in the sixties never to be had again. One of life's sad realities. Long live those good memories.

    • @rockyracoon3233
      @rockyracoon3233 4 года назад +8

      The line from the Wonder Years finale says it best, "The memories of childhood stay with you for the long haul."

  • @bobthebuilder914
    @bobthebuilder914 10 лет назад +360

    I can never go home to 1973, with both parents alive, and my biggest worry was collecting a complete set of baseball cards. This episode haunts me, and is my favorite. Now I have as many friends who have died, as who are still alive. I am in the middle ground, and it is slipping away. Thank you for posting.

    • @Scripturegirl.
      @Scripturegirl. 10 лет назад +20

      I wish I COULD GO BACK 2 2002, WHEN MY LATE GRANDMA was ALIVE. :,0(

    • @Scripturegirl.
      @Scripturegirl. 10 лет назад +14

      MY LATE GRANDMA DIED IN JULY OF 2002. R.I.P. GRANDMA.!!. :,0(

    • @JustAnnie51
      @JustAnnie51 10 лет назад +8

      I feel the same

    • @hankberumen1399
      @hankberumen1399 6 лет назад +8

      bobthebuilder914 I can totally relate; well said my friend

    • @eddiemunster4094
      @eddiemunster4094 3 года назад +6

      Same here my Mom passed away when I was 6 in 1978 my Father in 1984 how time passes 😢

  • @jerseyirish
    @jerseyirish 3 года назад +117

    It's summer, June 2021. I am 36 going on 37 next month. A few days ago I took a short trip to my childhood neighborhood - Little Ferry, New Jersey. I parked, walked around my old stomping grounds on Liberty Street. I hoped to fall into the Twilight Zone and fall into a time warp like Mr. Sloan. But alas, this is real life. Everything I knew is gone. The old Chinese restaurant up the block is now a new-age burger spot. What was the empty, deserted lot across the street where I used to go sledding in the icy winters is now a Dunkin Donuts and Laundromat. What was Sal's Pizza, owned and operated by actual Italian immigrants is now Craig D's. The Garden State Deli where my dad would go every morning to get his newspaper and egg sandwiches/bagels is now a Subway. Mr. Serling was right, you can't go back. We all need to look ahead.

    • @DaDitka
      @DaDitka 2 года назад +18

      I had the same thing happen to me a few years ago.
      I lived near a small farm town in north central Illinois when growing up. It was about an hour or so west of Rockford, IL. The last time I went there to visit friends and family, I drove around the places where I used to hang out. And like you, many of the places I knew were no longer there.
      The big one for me was that there used to be an RPG and board game store in Rockford called Tomorrow is Yesterday. It was a favorite place to go when I had a little money to spend on a West End Games Star Wars RPG or some miniatures. When I last was there, they had converted the place into a comic book store. No more RPGs or board games or even the used book section off to the side. Now, I always knew that the past on many levels was gone, but it was at that moment when it really, really hit me.
      Friends and family in the area were either dead or had moved away. Pizza places I used to haunt are gone. Even my old junior high school building was now just an open lawn, with my old high school now massively expanded to include junior and grade school.
      That was then, and that was "his time" (referring to my younger self). Now it's just a ghost of a memory. But I won't let this stop me from living the remaining years of my life. However many there may be.
      I am a two-time cancer survivor. Maybe number 3 will get me. Maybe it won't. But that's in the future as well. In the meantime, let's keep going.
      I wish you all my best.

    • @boneeatingsilicate580
      @boneeatingsilicate580 2 года назад +4

      My favorite Mexican restaurant in okc lost forever in the Twilight Zone

    • @hijodelaisla275
      @hijodelaisla275 2 года назад +1

      LOL - "actual Italian immigrants" - as opposed to imaginary ones?

    • @hijodelaisla275
      @hijodelaisla275 2 года назад

      LOL - "actual Italian immigrants" - as opposed to imaginary ones?

    • @brainliberius9530
      @brainliberius9530 2 года назад +3

      I grew up in Garfield NJ, and had an aunt and uncle in Little Ferry. We used to spend holidays in your neck of the woods. Although it was over 30 years ago, still feels like yesterday.

  • @rxonmymind8362
    @rxonmymind8362 7 лет назад +307

    "This is HIS summer. Just as it was yours once... Don't make him share it. That line was profound and have always stuck in my mind.

    • @jamesbloomfield8038
      @jamesbloomfield8038 3 года назад +5

      Really does stick with me as I'm getting older

    • @zombienomicon9682
      @zombienomicon9682 2 года назад +7

      it sums up the awfulness of the boomer. perpetual adolescents who cling to the stage long after the universe wants them to move on.

    • @abrahamissacjocab2544
      @abrahamissacjocab2544 2 года назад +1

      💖💖💖 Me Too

    • @abrahamissacjocab2544
      @abrahamissacjocab2544 2 года назад +3

      @@jamesbloomfield8038 I'm 42 and I can remember the first time like it was only yesterday 💖💖💖

    • @abrahamissacjocab2544
      @abrahamissacjocab2544 2 года назад +1

      Willoughby is just (PROFOUND)... IT'S One of the best but that line in specific will go down as one of the best I've ever heard 💖💖💖

  • @RodSerling.
    @RodSerling. 2 года назад +19

    This was always my dads favorite episode. He would cry while watching it. So glad he taught me about the Twilight Zone

    • @tinasan3870
      @tinasan3870 Год назад +3

      You are so lucky to have had a dad who would cry in front of you.....

    • @billking1751
      @billking1751 Год назад +1

      @@tinasan3870 Tell me about it. When i was about 25, and went to stay with my father for awhile in another state, because me and my wife, had just broken up, i once was about to tell my father, that i had always thought, of him as someone i looked up to as a child, and wanted to be like.
      Just as i was starting that off, he told me, "🤬OH I DON'T WANT TO HEAR THAT PUNK SH*T, THAT OLE GAY SH*T! So i said, "Okay, fine." Then he said, ooohh go ahead and finish what you were going to say.
      I said, "naw, that's alright." Later on, about a couple months later after that incident, and a couple others, i said TO MYSELF, "I'm getting out of here, and dude, you're going to miss me before i miss you." And didn't see, write, nor talk to him for a good 14 years, and another 10 years after that. He was later sorry for saying that, and a few other things, concerning the way he treated his by then only son. So, after apologizing to me, shortly before his passing, i felt bad about it. Sometimes parents need to understand that's what they are like it or not, and understand the power of words, and actions.

  • @KenPotter
    @KenPotter 7 лет назад +289

    Rod Serling was a genius.

    • @RodSerling.
      @RodSerling. 2 года назад +4

      Even that’s an understatement. One of a kind

    • @redfox574
      @redfox574 2 года назад

      @@RodSerling. twilight zone is extremely good, its almost scary 😂

    • @Nklassen08
      @Nklassen08 2 года назад +1

      Definitely, he’s a genius.

  • @RedTango
    @RedTango 10 лет назад +665

    This is one of the most beautiful and haunting moments ever created for TV. It just so sums up the human condition- the yearnings for what was, the safety and security of childhood, the struggle to find happiness with our choices in life. I've been watching these episodes for years, never tired of them.

    • @patriciagullickson9591
      @patriciagullickson9591 7 лет назад +31

      RedTango nobody can play it nowadays....the acting is so Superior...and of course the music !!!

    • @fredsawyer9845
      @fredsawyer9845 5 лет назад +30

      So true and well said . In so many of the Twilight Zone episodes there was a subtle message or a hidden lesson for us . Serling was a genius

    • @briancoleman1835
      @briancoleman1835 5 лет назад +25

      You are so on point thank you I dream for those days again

    • @boblackey1
      @boblackey1 4 года назад +23

      @@patriciagullickson9591 I think you are correct. I can't think of two actors working today who could do this scene with the tenderness Gig Young and Frank Overton do here. Just can't see Tom Cruise or Tom Hanks matching this. We just don't have actors like that today.

    • @improcat1
      @improcat1 4 года назад +28

      @@boblackey1. You are so right. One of my favourite episodes, it touched on something very deep. Great acting with haunting mood and soundtrack. You could never see anything like this on TV today, now it's just churned out piles of rubbish...talent not required anymore.

  • @octopibingo
    @octopibingo 8 лет назад +246

    We spend our adult lives trying to get home.

    • @williammorse8330
      @williammorse8330 5 лет назад +12

      yes, and we wind up going in circles.... alas!

    • @Tejaye777
      @Tejaye777 4 года назад +8

      Like me.I wish I could go back to my past.

    • @vanreliant5584
      @vanreliant5584 4 года назад +8

      I can't go back, but I have a memory full of good times to revisit in my mind. Sadly many people's childhood was not good at all, which doesn't even leave them happy memories to remember.

    • @mikesmallarz5269
      @mikesmallarz5269 3 года назад

      How true

    • @Cole-ek7fh
      @Cole-ek7fh 3 года назад

      eh, i just worked hard to make a new home with traditional values i learned as a kid.

  • @jaymorgenthal9479
    @jaymorgenthal9479 5 лет назад +439

    I was stuck in a rut after my wife died more than 14 years ago. Then I saw this episode and this scene and I cried for an hour on and off .Now i’m happily with another person in my life almost 7 years. thankful for Rod Serling for turning my life around by making me stop looking behind me and instead look ahead.

    • @Paddy_Roche
      @Paddy_Roche 2 года назад +21

      I pray you are still at peace Jay, I am still stuck where you were.

    • @barnabuscollins5038
      @barnabuscollins5038 2 года назад +13

      I hope you've found your own peace of heaven since then man. I

    • @laurencelevine3955
      @laurencelevine3955 2 года назад +9

      I lost my wife eleven years ago. I’ve remarried and keep going.

    • @angelworlds9588
      @angelworlds9588 2 года назад +11

      Jay you gonna make me cry.

    • @angelworlds9588
      @angelworlds9588 2 года назад +10

      @@Paddy_Roche Prayer and patience is the answer while keeping yourself busy helping others. Before you know it a door will open and your new life will begin. PUSH - Pray Until Something Happens

  • @tiffanyd.4832
    @tiffanyd.4832 6 лет назад +312

    I have seen "The Walking Distance" at least 30 times and this scene makes me cry everytime, it is so brilliant.

    • @TheUsualSuspekt
      @TheUsualSuspekt 5 лет назад +17

      I'm seriously glad to know its not just me.

    • @matthewbosco9190
      @matthewbosco9190 4 года назад +16

      Tiffany D. Yea me too plus I’m some form or way I’m like Martin Sloan too I miss my past everyday I wish I had what he had a chance to go back just once to feel nostalgic and meet my father just once I wish I could have had at least one conversation with him before he passed away I never got to know my father this episode this character super super lucky he got to do what a lot of us wish a thousand times a chance to revisit the past

    • @paulfischbach474
      @paulfischbach474 4 года назад +16

      It is easily my favorite episode and makes me cry like a child every time. Bernard Herrmanns music is so dark and beautiful. I’m so glad as others said that we aren’t alone.

    • @TomTimeTraveler
      @TomTimeTraveler 3 года назад +11

      Me, too. The BEST TZ episode of all time. Great writing, casting and acting.

    • @dianehenkel9088
      @dianehenkel9088 3 года назад +11

      I tear up too. It’s one of the best Twilight Zone episodes.

  • @martinsloan8170
    @martinsloan8170 5 лет назад +89

    His father, showing love, telling his son to live his life to fullest.

    • @st.charlesstreet9876
      @st.charlesstreet9876 2 года назад +1

      Very well said.

    • @kathleenking47
      @kathleenking47 2 года назад +3

      At least, he recognized him..

    • @PabluchoViision
      @PabluchoViision 2 года назад +6

      This episode has the quality of a dream… Just as we might see a dead parent in our dream, and that parent will talk to us, give us a message of love or encouragement. Sometimes, it’s a parent who during their lifetime didn’t give such messages. These experiences can be very moving, can really fill a hole within us.

  • @pintificate
    @pintificate 7 лет назад +94

    Serling was a true genius. This is one of his best. And I'm sure he's still out there, hovering somewhere between the pit of our fears and the summit of our knowledge . . . somewhere . . . in the mystical realms of the Twilight Zone

    • @shogun0127
      @shogun0127 2 года назад

      he's rotting in his grave

    • @joantrezza
      @joantrezza 2 года назад

      Well spoken!

    • @markcoleman9892
      @markcoleman9892 2 года назад +3

      Wishing he was here to add share his perspective on current times... although The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street makes a respectable substitute.

  • @cristabelle1207
    @cristabelle1207 8 лет назад +75

    Rod Serling was nothing less than GENIUS

  • @jillibeens57
    @jillibeens57 3 года назад +14

    The greatest gift and greatest curse mankind has, is memory.

  • @georgefarrell6988
    @georgefarrell6988 2 года назад +13

    I relate this episode to this quote, “At some point in your childhood, you and your friends went out to play for the last time and no one knew it.” I think about that quote a lot and this episode reinforces the notion that one can never truly go home again.

  • @TSM8088
    @TSM8088 8 лет назад +242

    If The Twilight Zone had ended after only one season, it would still be the greatest series ever to have aired on television. Serling's work is recognized to be more than just a "TV show." Rather, it is a series of profound essays on human self-reflection and discovery, each episode a masterwork of poetry, prose, and concerto combined. I believe "Walking Distance" to be the artists's best work in every sense. It is Mr. Serling's Opus.

    • @PennPearson
      @PennPearson 8 лет назад +17

      Great comment and I agree completely. This show was a masterpiece and deeply moving, as were many of the Twilight Zone episodes.

    • @MustafaJackson
      @MustafaJackson 6 лет назад +4

      Agreed.

    • @fredsawyer9845
      @fredsawyer9845 5 лет назад +7

      I agree , although the Changing of the Guard was another masterpiece he did ...That one was very touching as this was

    • @marcychan168
      @marcychan168 3 года назад +3

      I love the Twilight Zone still do since we all seem to be living in it at the moment
      God bless you all my Brothers and Sisters
      Have a Merry and Joyous Christmas
      Be safe
      God and Jesus love you
      🙏❤and Peace

    • @basilmarasco1975
      @basilmarasco1975 3 года назад +4

      @@fredsawyer9845 Yes, the episodes with thoughtful endings (i.e., not necessarily horrific or creepy or scary) were some of the best, like "Hocus-Pocus and Frisby", "The Hunt", "The Changing of The Guard", "Mute", "A Hundred Yards Over The Rim", and a few others.

  • @mikep.918
    @mikep.918 6 лет назад +78

    Just one of the best episodes, it encapsulates a longing so many of us have to turn back..unaware when those summers were ours, they would pass so quickly..and yet memories are always within "walking distance"..i miss you grandfather

  • @simplimusiclover7912
    @simplimusiclover7912 2 года назад +9

    “I’ve been living in a dead run and I was tired” anyone over 40 with kids…job…get’s it and why it hits home with so many!

  • @curttuckfield5565
    @curttuckfield5565 7 лет назад +110

    The episode for very nostalgic people who want to go back to their childhood.

    • @paulleckner8235
      @paulleckner8235 3 года назад +10

      In your mind, you can visit, but you can't stay there.

    • @katherinkeegan8601
      @katherinkeegan8601 2 года назад +2

      So is the other episode "Kick the Can"

    • @Mr.Goodkat
      @Mr.Goodkat 2 года назад +1

      @@katherinkeegan8601 Kick the Can was more about how there's no actual law in the universe preventing you from playing those games you so much enjoy (like kick the can) and "you grow old because you stop playing" sort of adage, different than the message of Walking Distance.

  • @JustAnnie51
    @JustAnnie51 10 лет назад +103

    I find myself living so much in the past,, this episode says it all,, for me at least. I couldn't wait to grow up, now, I want to go back to the 70's,, just can't look ahead to much these days

    • @ridethestorm1948
      @ridethestorm1948 10 лет назад +17

      I'm the same way JustAnnie51. The burden of being a grown up weighs heavy, I hate it! Life as a kid was adventurous.

    • @bestofthebest7823
      @bestofthebest7823 7 лет назад +10

      I have to agree with JustAnnie51 and many others in this thread. I travel back to the late 50s and 60s in my dreams often. I was surprised to see so many in here with the same thoughts. Guess I am not alone. Yes, this has to be the best scene and probably my all-time favorite episode of The Twilight Zone.

    • @robertsvorinich890
      @robertsvorinich890 5 лет назад +5

      I feel the same way. You can't go home again

    • @pinkbeatle2012
      @pinkbeatle2012 4 года назад +6

      Yeah the human tragedy of adulthood.

    • @Bethechange67
      @Bethechange67 3 года назад +6

      You feel that way partly because you don’t belong in this world. It is chaos and corruption and some of us just can’t tolerate it!

  • @martinsloan8170
    @martinsloan8170 4 года назад +10

    The love of a great father never fades. Spend time with pop before it's too late.

  • @ketank344
    @ketank344 2 года назад +16

    the background music, along with the conversation, makes this scene even more powerful

  • @Dayman90
    @Dayman90 8 лет назад +74

    I know people pick episodes like Nightmare at 20,000 Feet, Time Enough at Last, and The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street as their favorites but to me, this is my personal favorite.

    • @Scripturegirl.
      @Scripturegirl. 7 лет назад +3

      I Own monsters r due on maple street, and my pastor, literally lived on..MAPLE STREET.

    • @allansilverwood7091
      @allansilverwood7091 2 года назад +1

      Willoughby

  • @SarahH671
    @SarahH671 7 лет назад +44

    Man, I love the twilight zone but we can all agree this is the best episode. It made me cry the first time I saw this scene, and it still does. Rod Serling and his show are the best things on earth.

  • @jamesbaxterfromax
    @jamesbaxterfromax 11 лет назад +75

    I'm usually quite strong and cold when I watch film and television but this absolutely wrecks me and has me in tears, the whole episode pretty much has me bawling, the topic of entering your past and not getting to go back there must be an emotional trigger for me

  • @socco69
    @socco69 5 лет назад +75

    This is the only episode of any TV show ever, that brings tears to my eyes. It did so when I was younger and does so even more now.
    For anyone with an attachment to the past, or their childhood in particular, this hits so many nerves. I probably suffer to some extent with nostalgia and envy not just the beauty and simplicity of my childhood in comparison to life today but in general, the era of those times as opposed to the present. Not that the world was perfect back then, but as a child, one's innocent perceptions of it bring it close to perfection.
    The Father's humble words of advice, his paternal humility and loving concern for a son, adrift out of time and place, creates a lump in my throat and an incredible wave of emotion. It is sad yet very beautiful and in some ways reassuring........it tells me others have felt this way, travelled the same road and that lamenting the passing of years may be very personal but not exclusive.
    It's extraordinary that 25 short minutes of television from half a century ago can still have such an emotional impact on so many.

    • @strattt10
      @strattt10 5 лет назад +8

      Very well said. My favorite episode. Hits home!

  • @howiecricket52
    @howiecricket52 8 лет назад +98

    I'd love to be able to talk to my mom, dad, & baby sister, all in Heaven now, just to tell them that I love them so much, but, I do believe that they know that. I still have my other sister, and we enjoy our visits, she lives not too far away.

  • @ivanmcallister8546
    @ivanmcallister8546 2 года назад +5

    On a human being level . Rod serling was a truly wonderful empathic character about the human condition. Absolutely loved his twighlight zone series. Bless him a beautiful person. Way ahead of everyone. RIP Rod.

  • @howielisnoff
    @howielisnoff 3 года назад +7

    This is one of the best written and acted scenes from the Twilight Zone. I would have liked the older Martin and his dad to hug as they say goodbye to each other and go back to their lives.

  • @wonmoss0206
    @wonmoss0206 8 лет назад +109

    One of the most poignant moments on television. I'd love to have another conversation with my late Pop.

    • @neldanelson1029
      @neldanelson1029 7 лет назад +6

      John Moore my

    • @map3384
      @map3384 2 года назад +1

      Me as well.

    • @DonaldGerbino
      @DonaldGerbino 2 года назад

      If you like this see the movie frequency, it's really intense ,pulled at my heart

    • @danabrown4628
      @danabrown4628 2 года назад +1

      I think many of us would. My father has been gone thirteen years last February and I wish I could a conversation with him again.

    • @davidpoole7067
      @davidpoole7067 2 года назад

      You're lucky. There are those who do not miss their dads.

  • @antarcticorb9197
    @antarcticorb9197 3 года назад +9

    Pure unfiltered genius...

  • @ChicagoSouthDan
    @ChicagoSouthDan 8 лет назад +177

    "Maybe you haven't been looking in the right place. You've been looking behind you, Martin. Try looking ahead." I've always liked those lines. I got the impression at the end of the episode that he would try to do that. Like a lot of Twilight Zone fans, this is one of my favorite episodes.

    • @PennPearson
      @PennPearson 8 лет назад +15

      It is my favorite, by far. This was the most moving scene. I think Serling wrote the script and obviously it came from deep within him. The acting, by Gig Young and Frank Overton, was excellent. The music was done by Bernard Hermann, who did a lot of the music for Alfred Hitchcock's movies, including "Marnie" and the great "Vertigo".

    • @stuartsharman3055
      @stuartsharman3055 8 лет назад +9

      Gig Young was just fantastic, in this, my all time favourite episode. I had a dream something like this when I was twenty years old, or thereabouts. I time travelled back to 1960 and tried to stop my parents getting married, but i failed. It did not have, a happy ending. But it ended with me wanting to relive my childhood, and change things so that i could have the love of my parents that i felt i never had.

    • @martinwimmer9262
      @martinwimmer9262 6 лет назад +13

      My Father died of a massive coronary when I was 11 and he didn't have a chance to say goodbye. Every time I watch this, I feel as if Frank Overton is my Father speaking to me.

    • @RonaldVaughan
      @RonaldVaughan 6 лет назад +1

      This,and LITTLE GIRL LOST.

    • @Kazyman
      @Kazyman 6 лет назад +3

      This was one of my faves, along with, 'The Trouble With Templeton,' 'After Hours,' 'In Praise of Pip,' 'The Hitchhiker,' and a handful of others. Serling had the knack for bringing the vibe to us with each moment which allowed us to FEEL what was transpiring. From the casting, to the direction and even the lighting....suPERB. Another incredible show from that time is, 'One Step Beyond,' with John Newland as host. Amazing.

  • @henryottis295
    @henryottis295 2 года назад +12

    I know that I speak for a lot of people when I say that I wish I could thank Rod Serling for all of the enjoyment and thought provoking moments his creation has given me.
    God bless you Rod.

  • @ryanowens4943
    @ryanowens4943 6 лет назад +24

    Makes me cry everytime... His old man telling him maybe things aren't so bad. Classic

  • @hectorsalcido4106
    @hectorsalcido4106 8 лет назад +63

    My favorite T.Z. ever, simply unforgettable, they should show this episode in psychology classes, why is it that we always yearn for the past?

    • @JackTheripper911
      @JackTheripper911 8 лет назад +27

      Maybe because it reminds us of comforting times. when we were young and innocent, when life was easier and you didn't care. its easier to look back and find happiness rather than look forward and face uncertainty.

    • @hectorsalcido4106
      @hectorsalcido4106 8 лет назад +7

      Makes sense..

    • @calvinjackson538
      @calvinjackson538 5 лет назад +11

      We can't yearn for a future we know nothing about. Its nothing but a blank wall. So all we can do is look back over the ground we have covered and most of us see some great times that happened and we want to go back to them. For me, I yearn to see my parents again, they way they were when I was 6.

    • @bubbastill2040
      @bubbastill2040 3 года назад +3

      I think it's when we let the negative start to overwhelm the positive in our lives that makes us temporarily forget all the good in our lives.Fortunately we can always choose to remember........like the old song says, "Try to remember and if you remember then follow,follow.follow"/peace and love and all good things to you and all!

    • @basilmarasco1975
      @basilmarasco1975 3 года назад +2

      Because it's now a safe place. We know everything that happened there.

  • @robertdegeorge9199
    @robertdegeorge9199 7 лет назад +59

    all men have a need to...go home again,...but they realize that it's not their home anymore,..it belongs to another boy or girl,.....and its time to just move on...this episode is my favorite, and rod serlings favorite too.

    • @Cinemabuff97
      @Cinemabuff97 5 лет назад +4

      What you just said adds more to this episode, and it's meaning and message. The words you just typed are truly haunting as they resonate with me deeply, and give me that realization that I have to move forward.

  • @1946nova
    @1946nova 11 лет назад +11

    Walking Distance I believe is the most poignant teleplay ever written and coupled with the haunting musical score if once seen will stay with you forever - especially among "Baby Boomers". I too, think about how 1959 was really not so different from 1935 - and compared to 2013 is terrifying. The soliloquy written by Serling in the final scene is again, haunting, "to go home again". Oh, to spend just one day again in 1954 Falls Church, Virginia walking the railroad tracks to the State Theater.

  • @grantchow13
    @grantchow13 2 года назад +7

    This episode and “ Next Stop Willoughby” are my favourite Twilight Zone episodes because it’s basically the same storyline.
    It’s true you can’t go home again, and you only get one childhood…

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines 2 года назад

      And then Rod did it again with "They're Tearing Down Tim Riley's Bar", on "NIGHT GALLERY".

  • @imissmycerealasmr1681
    @imissmycerealasmr1681 4 года назад +12

    Nostalgia is hard. I long for the days of past but at the same time look towards the future as with my kids. The thought of living in the 80s again as a kid. Playing outside, Nintendo, He-Man, transformers and morning cartoons. No responsibilities and more concerned with toys and having fun. Ahhhh to dream a dream :)

  • @johcafra
    @johcafra 6 лет назад +19

    Frank Overton and Gig Young...and Rod Serling and Bernard Herrmann...and the crickets in the background. And that's all.

  • @P38DLightning
    @P38DLightning 7 лет назад +23

    This is by far my most favorite episode of any show I have ever watched.

  • @JimKF
    @JimKF 3 года назад +14

    I know we all have our favorite TZ episodes. I have several, but Walking Distance (written by Rod Serling) is at the top of the list. I think most people in my generation have that fantasy of going back in time to our youth. This scene always gets to me, emotionally. Maybe because I wish I could talk to my dad one more time.

    • @viewtiful1doubleokamihand253
      @viewtiful1doubleokamihand253 2 года назад

      Mine's "When The Sky Was Opened". I love the mistique and the way reality shifts around the main characters. No sadness, no emotions, other then terror. Reality just corrects itself. Mercilessly, coldly, without care or human touch. Love it. There is something infinitely realistic about it all.

  • @globalspiritualrevolutionmedia
    @globalspiritualrevolutionmedia 2 года назад +7

    This is my very favorite TZ Episode!
    Every single time I watch this episode I cry - not for sadness - but remembering the pure joy of my childhood - the purity of life and when America was Truly America🇺🇸

  • @79steelymatt
    @79steelymatt 10 лет назад +20

    This is the best TZ episode ever and this scene is one of the greatest scenes that was ever put on film period-movies or television-completely magical-whenever I am sick over the years or even a little sad I put on this episode and this scene just gets me everytime-Serling's masterpiece and the score is majestic.Rod Serling was the most incredibly talented man I have ever come across in my lifetime-an American icon.

  • @st.charlesstreet9876
    @st.charlesstreet9876 3 года назад +9

    I love this scene so much. I wished I could talk to my Dad. GREAT Twilight Zone! Will be in my Heart Forever ❤️

  • @thomasmcdaniel6264
    @thomasmcdaniel6264 3 года назад +5

    I have watched this on my DVD numerous times. A good friend told me a few years ago...with this great analogy. Our cars have a small rear view mirror, and a larger windshield. We can occasionally look at those things behind us, but our focus should be what is in front of us. Martin learned this from his father.

    • @apollo-ec2pm
      @apollo-ec2pm Год назад

      Hi, Thomas. when looking thru your rearview mirror as your move, you're looking back into the past, and when you're looking thru your windshield, you looking at the future. Take care.

  • @terrytragianopoulos9345
    @terrytragianopoulos9345 3 года назад +9

    You can watch TZ episodes 100x and they never get old This is one of them A testament to the genius and Art of Rod Serling who I consider the Shakespeare of Television

  • @PacRimJim
    @PacRimJim 11 лет назад +12

    Such simple words.
    So simple, yet so profound.
    A father's last advice on the battlefield of life.

  • @Reoko77
    @Reoko77 7 лет назад +35

    Such a powerdul scene that echos even till today.

  • @martindavis205
    @martindavis205 11 лет назад +11

    I loved the Zone but this was by far my favorite episode. I was born in 55 and spent summers in Marthas Vineyard our house was a block from the beach. We walked barefoot and could be unsupervised to the Flying Horses and had plenty of candy on circut ave,skimmed rocks and swam all day.My life since was never easy if I could just go back for 1 hour.

  • @IamZardoz
    @IamZardoz 8 лет назад +44

    Still hard to believe Frank Overton was only 49 when he died. This was his best role but he was great in Fail Safe, To Kill a Mockingbird and on 12 OClock High as well.

    • @57highland
      @57highland 6 лет назад +6

      He also did well in the TZ episode "Mute" (season 4, the hour-long episodes). He plays the good dad in that one too, though quite a different situation.

    • @chess1458
      @chess1458 4 года назад +4

      Hard to believe Gig Young was actually older than Frank Overton

    • @russellcampbell9198
      @russellcampbell9198 3 года назад +3

      Yes, he always looked a lot older than his years. Loved his voice.

    • @danielstadden1149
      @danielstadden1149 2 года назад +1

      Star Trek "this side of paradise" died a month after it aired.

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar 2 года назад +2

      @@danielstadden1149 Yes. Star Trek, The Virginian, and Bonanza were his last three television appearances.

  • @lilybond6485
    @lilybond6485 2 года назад +3

    I started watching The Twilight Zone when I was a kid. Many of them served somewhat as a learning experience. They made an impact to me. This one was # 1 on the list.

  • @lancecampbell4323
    @lancecampbell4323 2 года назад +4

    A great episode that resonates more and more the older I get. Another fabulous Frank Overton performance, one of the most underrated actors of all time

  • @NoOne-sc1ox
    @NoOne-sc1ox 4 года назад +6

    "You've been looking behind you Martin try looking ahead."

  • @jameshersonjr3905
    @jameshersonjr3905 3 года назад +4

    Rod Sterling was a paratrooper in WWII and fought in the Pacific. What a brilliant man and true American.

  • @keithdanish7973
    @keithdanish7973 5 лет назад +10

    I first watched
    this episode at age 12. Now at 70 I'm happy that there still are carousels and ice cream sodas to look forward to.
    .Don't look back!

  • @boneeatingsilicate580
    @boneeatingsilicate580 3 года назад +5

    Life in the corporate world had me feeling the same many times over..the Willoughby episode was even more brutal on this topic

  • @geo386
    @geo386 2 года назад +4

    I relate to this so much now that I am older (near 60). This just tugs at the heart strings and how much I miss the carefree days of my youth. I was moving and discovered a photo of myself around age 8 or 9 with my favorite dog watching from our gated fence. It's true you might only have that one Summer, the first love or just the care free feeling of innocence. We often would like to believe that life and its journey would go on forever. I have come to realize that there is and ending and life is finite. We must embrace and appreciate the here and now. I would however would enjoy a chance to see my younger self, even if it was just for one more day. 😢

  • @matthewbosco9190
    @matthewbosco9190 4 года назад +5

    This episode touched me I too yearn to go home back to the past where it all made sense everyday I wish I could go back relive some classic nostalgia and see my father and just have at least one one conversation with him just one before I have to go i never knew my father he died when I was 8 seeing this episode touched me

  • @57highland
    @57highland 6 лет назад +12

    Gig Young .... remembered fondly.

    • @johnnypastrana6727
      @johnnypastrana6727 5 лет назад +2

      lindsey lefrois yeah, Gig Young's role in 'Teacher's Pet' is my favorite...

    • @57highland
      @57highland 5 лет назад +1

      @Johnny Pastrana: His role in "Kid Galahad" (the Elvis version) is mine. He plays a heel in that one but becomes a hero before it's over.

    • @tracysimmons3860
      @tracysimmons3860 5 лет назад +2

      lindsey lefrois How about They shoot horses don't they?

    • @57highland
      @57highland 5 лет назад +1

      @Tracy Simmons: I never saw "Horses" (and I soon should) but I know he won an Oscar for it.

    • @DanielOrme
      @DanielOrme 3 года назад

      Almost all of Gig Young's movie roles were in comedies (he was always the guy in romantic comedies who didn't get the girl). But in this (and "They Shoot Horses, Don't They," his truly-deserved Oscar win) he shows what a fine serious actor he could be. Such a beautiful, touching performance.

  • @Cupcakes76
    @Cupcakes76 3 года назад +21

    If I recall, Rod Serling did an interview around the time this episode aired and he said something along the lines of “You can never truly go home” which was referring to how he would like to return to his younger years. I still believe to this day that Walking Distance was based off of that feeling he had

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines 2 года назад +3

      Of course. The merry-go-round was a staple of the park he played in as a youth in Binghamton, New York.

    • @timothyschumacher7707
      @timothyschumacher7707 2 года назад +2

      Yes Rec Park (Recreation Park) was indeed wakking distance from his childhood home. Still is… word is he used to drive the streets once in a while…
      Class of ‘43 saw a large portion of young men go straight into WW2.
      Wow.

    • @timothyschumacher7707
      @timothyschumacher7707 2 года назад +1

      Walking not wakking (sorry)

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines 2 года назад

      That's okay.

    • @gaynorpatterson2915
      @gaynorpatterson2915 Год назад +1

      You’re right. His daughter Jodi confirmed this episode had a personal connection to him.

  • @marklisa9967
    @marklisa9967 3 года назад +3

    One of the most brilliant scenes in the history of TV.

  • @swissarmytenor
    @swissarmytenor 3 года назад +4

    Frank Overton (Pop) had great roles in (among others) "Fail Safe" and "To Kill a Mockingbird" with wonderful casts. A great actor. He passed unexpectedly of a heart attack, age 49, in 1967.

  • @adamdude58
    @adamdude58 10 лет назад +74

    I just started watching this series, and this episode in particular hit me like a ton of bricks. Almost like a psychedellic experience. I dont know how to describe it, but there is something very special about this episode. I cant wait to see what else im in store for..

    • @johnjarou2357
      @johnjarou2357 10 лет назад +14

      oh yeah,the original twilight zone series was one of a kind. even the fact that it was filmed in black and white gives it a certain feel. if you're just now starting to watch the series you're in for some great viewing.

    • @georgepowell6345
      @georgepowell6345 6 лет назад +5

      You said it! "Walking Distance" is indeed special.

    • @JimBischoff1184
      @JimBischoff1184 Год назад

      Watch the episode “The Hunt” !

  • @BillyBronco73
    @BillyBronco73 4 года назад +4

    Rod Serling understood the human condition. His writing was touched with genius.

  • @Dion1957
    @Dion1957 6 лет назад +15

    That's Frank Overton as the Father. A really good actor. Also in "Fail Safe" and "To Kill a Mocking Bird"

  • @D.N..
    @D.N.. 3 года назад +3

    ""Don't look back, but look ahead .!! "' Dad gives him wonderful advice 😌

  • @timlove1
    @timlove1 9 лет назад +34

    My favorite episode! Hands down!

    • @Scripturegirl.
      @Scripturegirl. 8 лет назад +1

      +Tim Love👐🏼 👇 1-5-1962.

    • @Miketheman926
      @Miketheman926 8 лет назад

      +Tim Love Mine too,You have good taste

    • @PennPearson
      @PennPearson 8 лет назад +3

      I agree. In fact, it was the best episode of any series that I have ever seen on TV.

    • @georgepowell6345
      @georgepowell6345 6 лет назад

      Mine, too.

  • @riddlemethis34
    @riddlemethis34 4 года назад +4

    This episode made me cry automatically

  • @jeffreygrossi2800
    @jeffreygrossi2800 3 года назад +5

    Agree! This is one of my top Twilight Zone episodes.! Still gives chills and a valuable lesson about life.

  • @thegentlementor
    @thegentlementor 3 года назад +11

    Every time I watch this scene, I go through a box of Kleenex. I know what it's like to not have band concerts anymore. There's only one place, back there. I can go home again "in my mind" and that's what I do. I often dream of getting in Rod Taylor's time machine, pulling the lever back to 60+ years ago, getting off, and destroying the machine. Anyone else feel this way?

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines 2 года назад +1

      Ironically, the makers of Kleenex- Kimberly-Clark - was the alternate sponsor of "THE TWLIGHT ZONE" at the time. And they just didn't understand episodes like this. They were used to co-sponsoring Steve McQueen in "WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE". Eventually, they pulled out of "TWLIGHT ZONE" at the end of the first season, and continued with the other series they bought ad time on.

  • @chuckstephens7992
    @chuckstephens7992 2 года назад +5

    Agreed, best scene in the Twilight Zone story lines, done by two really good actors.

  • @retroray58warby98
    @retroray58warby98 3 года назад +3

    Gig Young brings to this role a world weariness and a yearning for the past that is so powerful. One of my favourite episodes of not just ‘The Twilight Zone’ but of any television show. RIP Mr Young and Mr Serling.

  • @elusiv3butterfly
    @elusiv3butterfly 5 лет назад +6

    This one hits me in the gut every single time. Best episode hands down.

  • @TSM8088
    @TSM8088 8 лет назад +30

    Sometimes it's hard not to look behind and to wonder if those truly were the best days, if somehow they might still exist somewhere... I'll try to look for tomorrow's Merry-Go-Rounds, ice cream sodas, comic books, and games in the park, but it's hard some days... Anyway, Happy Father's Day Pop.

    • @jamessilva7991
      @jamessilva7991 2 года назад +1

      Yes. I sometimes wonder if the past is still out there and perhaps someday there will be a way to recapture it. I would settle for just being able to view the past as if you were watching a video. You couldn't interact or change anything. That would be good enough for me but most likely it would never be possible.

    • @DaDitka
      @DaDitka 2 года назад

      @@jamessilva7991 I wouldn't mind that, either. For me, there were bad times, but there were good times as well. I wouldn't mind at all watching the good times.

  • @ChicoEdge
    @ChicoEdge 10 лет назад +49

    Such powerful writing from a time when CGI and Michael Bay's explosions couldn't be done on a weekly tv show. How painful it must have been for the father to see his grown-u son unhappy and unable to "look forward" in his life.

  • @brianyoung7854
    @brianyoung7854 2 года назад +7

    My favorite twilight zone episode, and this scene is so powerful , especially for those of us that long for simpler times and the way things “used to be.” For me , it was coming of age in the 1980s, An amazing time I still long for …When his father says , “Maybe there’s only one summer to every customer “ it hits me in my chest every time .

  • @Commanderbacon2012
    @Commanderbacon2012 6 лет назад +9

    I watched this episode for the first time tonight. This scene made me cry. Well done.

  • @athene2006
    @athene2006 4 года назад +12

    Whatever they paid Bernard Herrmann for the music, it wasn't enough.

    • @boneeatingsilicate580
      @boneeatingsilicate580 3 года назад +1

      There is a letter found on the internet from Rod to Bernard thanking him for his contribution to this particular episode

  • @frankburrows9850
    @frankburrows9850 3 года назад +4

    Worth mentioning about Bernard Herrman's sublime music for this scene too.

  • @peace-yv4qd
    @peace-yv4qd 3 года назад +9

    I sometimes wish I could go back in time and spend just one day with my family and tell them how much I loved them. They're all gone now. And I regret that I didn't say the words that now I wish I had.

    • @jamessilva7991
      @jamessilva7991 2 года назад +1

      I feel the same way. Actually I would settle with having them back for an hour.

    • @danabrown4628
      @danabrown4628 2 года назад +1

      Oh, how I wish I could do that! This episode so reminds me of Thornton Wilder's play, "Our Town", in which the nostalgia of returning to one's past is explored.

  • @mias4696
    @mias4696 3 года назад +5

    Very emotional episode and the music really captured the sadness of missing a wonderful childhood if we are blessed enough to have had one. My favorite episode.

  • @MustafaJackson
    @MustafaJackson 6 лет назад +7

    As improbable as it is to have a favorite TWILIGHT ZONE episode, WALKING DISTANCE is my favorite. I want to thank two amazingly talented men, Rod Serling and Bernard Herrmann who collaborated on this television production to create a Masterpiece.

  • @thetooginator153
    @thetooginator153 3 года назад +5

    I doubt it’s a coincidence that “Martin Sloane” is the same age Rod Serling was at the time. This was an awesome episode.

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar 2 года назад

      Of course it isn't. "Walking Distance" was one of Rod Serling's most personal TZ scripts, another being "The Purple Testament".

  • @luvs2cover
    @luvs2cover 7 лет назад +33

    It's like he was talking to me wow

  • @splerth3771
    @splerth3771 2 года назад +3

    Scene never fails to choke me up- Kudos to writer Rod Serling, actors Gig Young, Frank Overton, and composer Bernard Herrmann for THE most beautifully haunting musical score ever written for television.

  • @dianehenkel9088
    @dianehenkel9088 3 года назад +4

    Walking Distance is my favorite Twilight Zone. When Martin gets advice from his Dad, I cry because my Dad is dead. To be able to see and talk to your Dad one more time is something I would wish to have happen. Rod Serling understood. He was definitely a genius.

    • @viewtiful1doubleokamihand253
      @viewtiful1doubleokamihand253 2 года назад +2

      Yeah... It helps remembering all the worst things about our fathers, once they pass. It numbs this profound pain somewhat. Fathers are just human beings, after all.

    • @dianehenkel9088
      @dianehenkel9088 2 года назад +1

      @@viewtiful1doubleokamihand253 I don’t think his father had done things wrong, that’s why Martin wanted to go back to where his life was simpler and he wasn’t all alone. He had parents to talk to, give advice or just be there for him.

  • @ScoobyDooIsDead
    @ScoobyDooIsDead 2 года назад +4

    Walking distance is a masterpiece

  • @antisocialsocialist5716
    @antisocialsocialist5716 9 лет назад +24

    No doubt one of the best scenes in TW history!

  • @brucedavis3816
    @brucedavis3816 3 года назад +3

    Yea i guess we all have our walling distance moment. I tried going back to my old college ironically at about the same age as the caracter in the story. Fortunately I didn't remember going there i still recognized the place but realized that part of my life was over. I know everyone who watches this video has experienced this sometime in there lives thats why your watching this video right now.

  • @CaesarInVa
    @CaesarInVa 9 месяцев назад +4

    This is such a beautifully written and acted scene....so poignant and touching. The background music adds an inexpressible sense of lament to the moment. Father giving future son final words of wisdom and future son realizing just how wise and right his father was. I remember watching this episode on rerun late one summer's evening in the summer of 75 or so. I was only 14 or 15 at the time, but as I sat there in the living room's late night darkness, I felt I was part of the scene. I could feel the central character's melancholy and his desire to go back to happier times...and realized that, as I sat there in our family home in the suburbs just outside Washington, DC, that these were MY happy times. As an adult, there were so many times when I realized, too late, that my father was, more often than not, like Martin's father here, correct in his counsel; yet I was too stupid and arrogant, to confident in my false belief of knowing better than my father, to listen to his wise and prudent guidance. Sometime in my early 30s, I awakened bolt upright one morning at around 3am to the thought "Did you think your father would lie to you???". In that late night epiphany, one of my rare moments of clarity and understanding, I realized that he was only trying to give me the benefit of his hard learned experiences. Although he died only a year or two after that realization, I did have the opportunity to thank him for all he had done for me and all that he had tried to do....and apologize for being such a block-headed ass. He looked kindly at me and said "That's ok. Its what most kids do". Dad was a master of the understatement. That precious moment of mutual respect and acknowledgement between father and son was over 30 years ago. I'm 62 now and would just like to say, once more....thanks Dad. You were the best father a kid could ever have. I love you.

  • @marcus10
    @marcus10 9 лет назад +64

    I cried at this one. AND I NEVER CRY because of movie/series.

    • @Scripturegirl.
      @Scripturegirl. 9 лет назад +2

      Long distance call..MAKE'S ME CRY.!!.

    • @hanoc101
      @hanoc101 9 лет назад +2

      Scripturegirl1990 That's a good one. A really creepy episode.

    • @Scripturegirl.
      @Scripturegirl. 9 лет назад +2

      The 1ST time I CRIED AT the MOVIE THEATER..BRIDGE 2 TERIBITHIA. I cried 4 ABOUT 2 HOUR'S STRAIT..EVEN AT HOME, when I was on the phone that NITE..I COULDN'T STOP CRYING.

    • @cristabelle1207
      @cristabelle1207 8 лет назад +3

      +marcus10 what's even sadder is the player here (GiG Young) killed himself and his wife, at a relatively young age

    • @marcus10
      @marcus10 8 лет назад +1

      Scripturegirl1990 Well, it is quite similiar with "My Girl", so I was not that shock with that one. But it was definetly sad.

  • @Narnian78
    @Narnian78 6 лет назад +5

    This was a wonderful episode and one of the most moving from Twilight Zone.

  • @AsYourCruiseDirector
    @AsYourCruiseDirector 11 лет назад +4

    Thanks for posting my favorite scene as well, from my favorite episode. No one else could have performed these roles like Gig Young and Frank Overton.

  • @williammorse8330
    @williammorse8330 5 лет назад +53

    Fatherly advice... priceless... in an age that mocks fathers and their crucial role in
    holding things together.... a very powerful scene...

  • @mikjazz
    @mikjazz 8 лет назад +17

    Great episode..

  • @d.b.4062
    @d.b.4062 Год назад +3

    This was the saddest scene in all the twilight zone episodes. The more you age, the more you get this.

  • @takewhole
    @takewhole 9 лет назад +18

    sums my life up