Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Recap / TheTwilightZone1959S2E5TheHowlingMan

Go To

1[[quoteright:345:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tz_the_howling_man.jpeg]]
2[[caption-width-right:345:''[[FalseInnocenceTrick "Please, help me!"]]'']]
3
4->'''Creator/RodSerling:''' The prostrate form of Mr. David Ellington, scholar, seeker of truth and, regrettably, finder of truth. A man who will shortly arise from his exhaustion to confront a problem that has tormented mankind since the beginning of time. A man who knocked on a door seeking sanctuary and found instead the outer edges of the Twilight Zone.
5
6Air date: November 4, 1960
7
8The episode is presented largely as a flashback by David Ellington. While on a hiking trip through post-World War I Europe, Ellington becomes lost, and seeks shelter from the pouring rain in a nearby castle dubbed "the Hermitage". He is told by a monk at the door to leave immediately, but he collapses, shivering. Upon waking inside the Hermitage, Ellington hears a wolf-like howl and decides to investigate. In the bowels of the castle, he finds a bedraggled man in a cell. The man claims to be a prisoner of the monks, who he paints as an insane religious order, locked up because he kissed his sweetheart in public.
9
10As Ellington is seen talking to the prisoner, he is taken to Brother Jerome (Creator/JohnCarradine), the leader of the order, who explains that their prisoner is not a man, but the Devil himself. He has been locked in the room since the end of World War I, when he came to the local village to corrupt it. Jerome recognized him for what he was and imprisoned him, using what he calls the "Staff of Truth" to bar the door. Jerome claims that his actions have given the world five years of relative peace, but Ellington becomes convinced Jerome is insane. Fearing for his safety, he pretends to believe the old monk's incredible story. Jerome is not fooled, and assigns another brother to watch him.
11
12Ellington waits until his guard falls asleep and creeps down to the dungeon. Seeing that the staff holding the door shut is easily within reach of the imprisoned man, Ellington briefly wonders why he didn't remove it himself. At the man's urging, he removes the staff from cell door and releases the prisoner. When the prisoner exits the cell, he immedieately pins Ellington to the floor with a wave of his hand and begins to change, taking on the appearance of the Devil with each step, before departing the castle in a plume of smoke. Jerome finds the collapsed Ellington and sadly realizes what Ellington has done, explaining that the inability to recognize the devil has always been Man's great weakness.
13
14As the flashback ends, we see Ellington explaining to a hotel maid that he has spent all the time since that day hunting the Devil down to atone for his mistake, throughout World War II, the Korean War, and the development of nuclear weapons. Now he has finally succeeded, having locked him in a closet and intending to return him to Brother Jerome's keeping. He warns the skeptical maid not to remove the staff holding the door closed under any circumstances while he goes to make his final preparations. After Ellington leaves, the curious woman, disbelieving his story, removes the Staff of Truth barring the door, which opens only to reveal darkness.
15
16For the original short story this episode was based on see ''Literature/TheHowlingMan''.
17
18----
19!!The Howling Tropes
20* AdaptationalModesty: The titular howling man is described as naked and hairy in the original story. Obviously, Standards and Practices of the 60s would've took issue with this.
21* AdaptationDeviation: In the short story "Literature/TheHowlingMan" by Charles Beamount, David Ellington was uncertain for years whether he had truly released the Devil as the monks claimed. All doubt is eliminated when he sees photographs of "the carpenter from Braunau am Inn" in the newspapers and his invasion of UsefulNotes/{{Poland}} plunges the world into [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarII war]]. Although it is not specifically stated, the implication is that the Devil assumed the identity of UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler, who was born in Braunau am Inn, UsefulNotes/{{Austria}}. The brothers eventually recapture the Devil and imprison him in the monastery once again. In the television adaptation by Beaumont himself, David immediately realizes both the truth and his mistake when the prisoner transforms himself into a traditional depiction of Main/{{Satan}} and vanishes before his eyes. Many years later, Ellington captures the Devil, but his housekeeper stupidly releases him. Furthermore, the television adaptation gives the monastery's location as simply Central Europe, whereas the short story specifically states that it is in UsefulNotes/{{Germany}}. The short story also does not include the Staff of Truth.
22* AllForNothing: Ellington's efforts as TheAtoner are reduced to ashes thanks to his disbelieving housekeeper, who removes the Staff of Truth and releases the Devil again.
23* TheAtoner: After his mistake, David dedicated his life to finding the Devil and recapturing him. Unfortunately, his efforts are rendered moot when the maid releases Satan again.
24* CassandraTruth: Brother Jerome tells Ellington the absolute truth, but Ellington doesn't believe him. Ellington himself gets this when he tells his housekeeper his tale.
25* DidYouJustPunchOutCthulhu: Jerome and his followers (and eventually Ellington himself) managed to capture and imprison Satan himself. Unfortunately, he's never held for long.
26* DramaticThunder: A well-timed clap of thunder strikes when Brother Jerome tells David the truth about his prisoner.
27* DutchAngle: Used heavily throughout the episode, such as when Ellington makes his first entrance into the Hermitage, and when Brother Jerome tells him the story of his order's prisoner.
28* EasilyForgiven: Brother Jerome doesn't punish Ellington for freeing Satan, instead offering him comfort and sympathy. It's justified since he clearly believes Ellington's guilt is punishment enough.
29* FailureIsTheOnlyOption: Lampshaded in the closing narration.
30* FalseInnocenceTrick: The Devil's best trick is making himself seem like a helpless prisoner. Brother Jerome surmises that he always preys on man's greatest weakness.
31* FatalFlaw: Brother Jerome expresses regret for humanity's greatest flaws, all of which Satan can easily exploit.
32* FauxAffablyEvil: In true form, Satan is very persuasive, and is able to make himself seem sympathetic to those who don't know his true nature, dropping the facade the second he can.
33* FiveSecondForeshadowing: The Devil being unable to remove the simple wooden Staff of Truth that was within arms length and the only thing holding him was a hint that Brother Jerome was telling the truth. However, when Ellington questioned the prisoner of this, the prisoner said there was no time for questions and to hurry.
34* FourthWallPsych: At the beginning of the episode, it seems like Ellington is telling his tale to the audience. When the flashback ends, however, it's revealed he was talking to his hotel room maid the whole time, telling her why it was so important not to go near the door barred by the Staff of Truth.
35* HauntedCastle: The monks' castle, which they call the Hermitage, is dark and spooky, emphasized by the stormy weather in the episode, and the fact that Satan himself is imprisoned within it.
36* HereWeGoAgain: The episode ends with the maid releasing the Devil once again, leaving him free to unleash hell upon mankind again.
37* HistoricalRapSheet: Brother Jerome tells Ellington that the Devil is responsible for the Great War, the overwhelming pestilences, and the wholesale sin that is regularly inflicted upon the world. After Ellington releases him, he causes UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, UsefulNotes/TheKoreanWar, and the development of atomic weapons.
38* HistoryRepeats: After capturing the Devil, David unfortunately isn't savvy enough to realize the possibility of people (namely the maid) disbelieving him and setting Satan loose. Lo and behold, after he tells his story to the maid, she doesn't believe him and lets Satan go free.
39* IHaveManyNames: Brother Jerome says to David that the Devil is "otherwise known as the Dark Angel, Ahriman, Asmodeus, Belial, Diabolus..."
40* InCameraEffects: A version of the filter technique is employed to depict the Devil's transformation.
41* LargeHam: Brother Jerome is played by Creator/JohnCarradine, a man who wouldn't know the word "subtle" if it was the password to get out of his own house.
42* NiceJobBreakingItHero: Ellington inadvertently releases the Devil, the greatest evil in the world, from his imprisonment. He also leaves the maid alone in his room, not considering the possibility of her actually disbelieving him, just as ''he'' did with Brother Jerome.
43* NothingIsScarier: When the skeptical hotel maid opens the closet the Devil is locked inside at the end, the Devil himself isn't in the room, only pure darkness.
44* OffscreenMomentOfAwesome: Ellington manages to capture Satan and lock him in a closet decades after he freed him.
45* {{Satan}}: The howling man's identity, locked up in a dungeon by Brother Jerome and his monks.
46* SealedEvilInACan: Brother Jerome kept Satan locked in a dungeon for five years, and Ellington contains him in a closet after tracking him down. Unfortunately, disbelievers keep releasing him.
47* SmokeOut: After the Devil is released from his cell, he conjures up a cloud of smoke to cover himself as he disappears from sight.
48* SpannerInTheWorks: David's lack of trust in Brother Jerome and his sympathy for the prisoner results in the Devil escaping and wrecking havoc on the world. This also applies to the maid, who foils David's plan to return the Devil to the monastery when she unwittingly sets him loose.
49* TransformationSequence: After being released, Brother Jerome's prisoner undergoes one with each step, until he's in his true form as Satan, or rather a depiction of him.
50* UngratefulBastard: When Ellington frees the prisoner, the guy paralyzes him with a PsychicStrangle before making his escape. Then again, the prisoner is the ''Devil'', so it's not really much of a surprise.
51* WeaksauceWeakness: The Devil is able to be held captive by the Staff of Truth, a simple shepherd's rod.
52* WholeEpisodeFlashback: Ellington tells his maid the story of his visit to the Hermitage and releasing the Devil from his confinement in the 1920s.
53-----
54->'''Rod Serling:''' Ancient folk saying: "You can catch the Devil, but you can't hold him long." Ask Brother Jerome. Ask David Ellington. They know, and they'll go on knowing to the end of their days and beyond--in the Twilight Zone.
55

Top