Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Recap / TheTwilightZone1959S1E10JudgementNight

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


!!Tropement Night:

to:

!!Tropement Night:!!Judgement Tropes:
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/judgement_night_1_6.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:''[[IronicHell It travels alone like an aged blind thing groping through the unfriendly dark, stalked by unseen periscopes of steel killers.]]'']]

->'''Creator/RodSerling''': Her name is the S.S. ''Queen of UsefulNotes/{{Glasgow}}''. Her registry: British. Gross tonnage: five thousand. Age: indeterminate. At this moment, she's one day out of UsefulNotes/{{Liverpool}}, her destination [[UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity New York]]. Duly noted on this ship's log is the sailing time, course to destination, weather conditions, temperature, longitude and latitude. But what is never recorded in a log is the fear that washes over a deck like the fog and ocean spray. Fear like the throbbing strokes of engine pistons, each like a heartbeat, parceling out every hour into breathless minutes of watching, waiting, and dreading. For the year is 1942 and this particular ship has lost its convoy. It travels alone like an aged blind thing groping through the unfriendly dark, stalked by the unseen periscopes of steel killers. Yes, the ''Queen of Glasgow'' is a frightened ship, and she carries with her a premonition of death.

Air date: December 4, 1959

A man named Carl Lanser (Creator/NehemiahPersoff) finds himself on a British cargo liner, the S.S. ''Queen of Glasgow'', without any knowledge of how he got there or who he is. Somehow, he knows something horrible is going to happen, although he doesn't know what it is or why it will happen, only when it will happen: exactly 1:15 a.m. Further compounding Lanser's worries is his seemingly firsthand knowledge of the hunting tactics of German submarines, as well as the realization that he was born in Frankfurt, which raises suspicion from the ship's captain. Further confusion is raised when upon searching his cabin, Lanser finds a Kriegsmarine officer's cap among his possessions, with his name written upon the inside.

At 12:05 a.m., the ''Glasgow's'' overworked engines break down, forcing the captain to stop the ship while repairs are made. This brings Lanser's distress to a boil, unable to shake the feeling of impending doom in his mind. As 1:15 approaches, he snaps and begins running through the ship's passageways in a panic, shouting an alarm that a German U-boat is about to attack, but the ship suddenly seems to have become deserted. Finally happening upon a group of passengers, he attempts to warn them in a near-mad, fervent state to abandon ship, but the passengers just stare at him silently before vanishing. Running back up on deck, Lanser spots to his horror the surfaced U-boat off the ship's side, and is even more horrified to see through a pair of binoculars, none other than himself in a Kriegsmarine officer's attire, sitting in the U-boat's command tower, right as he gives the order to fire upon the ''Glasgow'', exactly at 1:15 a.m.

Lanser experiences the horror of the attack firsthand as the ship is relentlessly bombarded by the sub's mounted guns, thrown overboard into the sea and drowning as the ship swiftly sinks below the waves. Later, in the U-boat's captain's quarters, Kriegsmarine Captain Carl Lanser cheerfully remarks on the success of the sinking to his second-in-command Lt. Mueller, who unlike Lanser, seems to be uncomfortable with the manner of the sinking. When pressed by Lanser to express his worries plainly, Mueller expresses a fear that for sinking an unarmed, disabled ship carrying many innocent men, women, and children aboard, that they're likely to now be damned in the eyes of God, forced to relive that night endlessly in their own private hell after their own deaths, a supposition that brings a degree of fear and worry into the formerly jubilant Lanser's eyes... especially since he appears back on the ''Glasgow's'' deck a moment later, his nightmare repeating again.

!!Tropement Night:
----
* AnotherMansTerror: Lanser's punishment for ordering the ''Glasgow'' sunk is to remain trapped alongside the place of the people he killed, experiencing their deaths forever.
* AssholeVictim: Carl is revealed to be a pretty awful person in the grand scheme of things. He may seem meek and frightened in the afterlife, but that turns out to be justified retribution towards the arrogant and cruel U-boat commander he was in life.
* DeadAllAlong: Lanser is actually dead, stuck in his own personal hell for eternity.
* DeathEqualsRedemption: ZigZaggedTrope. After being damned for sinking the ''Glasgow'', Lanser finds himself onboard the doomed ship and interacts with the passengers with nothing but care for them, a sharp contrast to the heartless captain he was. Though by the time he showed compassion, it was too late for him to redeem himself.
* EmpathyDollShot: When swimming in the wreckage of the ''Queen of Glasgow'', Carl finds the doll he gave to the little girl earlier, signifying her death.
* FlyingDutchman: The ''Queen of Glasgow'' and all its passengers are ghosts, doomed to wander the seas and be sunken by a German U-boat over and over for eternity as Carl's punishment for sinking the ship without warning.
* {{Foreshadowing}}: When someone mentions the creepiness of being stalked by a U-boat beneath the surface, Lanser says they won't torpedo the ship; it would suit their purposes better to surface and sink the ship with other ordinances. Someone answers that Lanser's knowledge makes him sound like a U-boat captain. The end of the episode reveals that he was indeed such a captain.
** When Carl is begging the passengers to flee to the lifeboats, they stare at him with sheer contempt, as if they know something about him that's absolutely unforgivable.
* HeelFaceDoorSlam: By the time he wants to redeem himself for sinking the ''Glasgow'', Lanser has already been forever damned.
* HeelRealization: After interacting with the passengers and realizing he was the one who sunk the ship, Carl felt nothing but regret and horror at being the instigator of this atrocity, since he's been damned to be stuck on the receiving end.
* HereWeGoAgain: Carl is trapped in an endless loop of experiencing the terror he helped facilitate. The end of the episode has the loop restarting.
* IHatePastMe: Lanser is killed by his past self, a U-Boat captain.
* IronicHell: Carl is damned to relive being frightened and killed, as his victims were, over and over again.
* LaserGuidedAmnesia: Every night, all Carl can remember is being born in Germany, without any other details of his life.
* LaserGuidedKarma: U-boat captain Carl Lanser is forced to relive the sinking of a ship he torpedoed from the position of its passengers.
* AMillionIsAStatistic: The amnesiac Carl actually connects with the passengers, and is horrified to see them killed. His past self has no such regrets, dismissing them as targets instead of people.
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Carl likely thought this when he realized he was the cause of the sinking after interacting with the ship's passengers.
* NaziProtagonist: Lanser was a U-Boat captain who served Nazi Germany.
* NothingIsScarier: A passenger talks about how they'd rather that the Nazis sent a ship after them, rather than a submarine that lurks invisibly miles beneath the surface.
* OminousFog: The doomed ''Glasgow'' is perpetually surrounded by fog.
* PetTheDog: Lanser returns a doll to a little girl, a surprising moment of compassion from someone who we later learn seems to have none.
* SpoilerTitle: A very well-hidden one. Carl Lanser had actually died that ''night'', and being sent to his IronicHell was his ''judgment'' from God. While this is lampshaded in the closing, by that point the viewer has already figured out the truth.
* StockFootage: Footage of the titular ship from the 1959 film ''The Wreck of the Mary Deare'' is used to depict the S.S. ''Queen of Glasgow''.
* TemptingFate: When Lieutenant Mueller nervously asks him whether he thinks they might be eternally condemned, Lanser scoffs at it. Guess what happens to him?
* TitleDrop: In the closing narration: "This is judgement night in the Twilight Zone."
* TomatoInTheMirror: Lanser eventually realized his past self is responsible for the sinking.
* TookALevelInKindness: In his afterlife, Carl is a bit more compassionate and polite, as opposed to the heartless U-boat commander he was in life. Justified, as the amnesia about his identity clouds any of the personality that come with it.
-----
->'''Creator/RodSerling''': The S.S. ''Queen of Glasgow'', heading for New York, and the time is 1942. For one man, it is ''always'' 1942 - and this man will ride the ghost ship every night for eternity. This is what is meant by paying the fiddler. This is the comeuppance awaiting every man when the ledger of his life is opened and examined, the tally made, and then the reward or the penalty paid. And in the case of Carl Lanser, former Kapitänleutnant, Navy of the Third Reich, this is the penalty. This is the justice meted out. This is judgment night in the Twilight Zone.

Top