Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Series / OneStepBeyond1959

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/one_step_beyond.jpg]]
2
3->''“The amazing drama you’re about to see is a matter of human record. You may believe it or not, but the real people who lived this story –- they believe it. They know. They took that [[TitleDrop one step beyond]].”''
4-->--'''John Newland''''s OpeningNarration
5
6''One Step Beyond'', also known as ''Alcoa Presents: One Step Beyond'', was a TV anthology show created by Merwin Gerard that aired on Creator/{{ABC}}. It predated its better-known competitor ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'' by nine months (it premiered on January 20, 1959; ''Twilight Zone'' debuted in October). It was hosted by John Newland, who referred to himself on camera as "your guide to the supernatural" (he was also the series' director).
7
8Like ''The Twilight Zone'', the series presented stories that were supernatural and eerie in nature. Unlike ''The Twilight Zone'', the show claimed to be a {{Docudrama}}; every spooky episode was (supposedly) [[BasedOnATrueStory inspired by true events]] and was presented as a reenactment. Topics included death premonitions, astral projection, ghosts, PsychicPowers, unexplained phenomena and strange coincidences.
9
10Many [[RetroactiveRecognition soon-to-be famous actors]] guest starred on the show, including Creator/WarrenBeatty, Creator/CharlesBronson, Creator/ClorisLeachman, Creator/ChristopherLee, Creator/JackLord, Creator/PatrickMacnee, Yvette Mimieux, Creator/ElizabethMontgomery, Creator/EdwardPlatt, Creator/DonaldPleasence, Pernell Roberts, Creator/WilliamShatner, Creator/DavidWhite, and Creator/PeterWyngarde.
11
12!!One Trope Beyond:
13
14* BloodyHallucinationsOfGuilt: In "The Hand," Tom Grant, a piano player at a run-down dive, murders a beautiful young woman in a jealous rage with a broken-off beer bottle. After the police arrest a drunken derelict for the crime, Tom figures he's in the clear. Although he at first seems to have covered his tracks well enough, he soon discovers that, no matter how hard he tries, he cannot get the woman's blood off his hands. He forces a doctor to bandage the hand only to cause the blood to seep through. Eventually, he breaks down when he is called into witness for the murder and has to lay the hand on Literature/TheBible and swear to tell the truth.
15* {{Documentary}}: The series had one non-scripted episode that broke format: "The Sacred Mushroom", in which Newland went to UsefulNotes/{{Mexico}} to investigate rumors that "magic mushrooms" would give their users PsychicPowers. Newland talked to a local shaman, then took several of the mushrooms while his reactions were filmed. The episode became famous (and controversial) as an early example of the psychedelic movement being exposed to the mainstream.
16* FishPeople: "Ordeal on Locust Street" is about Jason Parish, a young man in turn of the 20th century UsefulNotes/{{Boston}} whose family hides him from the world because he has a deformity that gives him the appearance of a fish person. Or so we're told, because all we see of Jason is one scaly hand before [[spoiler:a hypnotist somehow psychically heals him, giving him a normal appearance]].
17* HistoricalDomainCharacter: The series depicts UsefulNotes/GeorgeWashington and UsefulNotes/AbrahamLincoln encountering the supernatural.
18* MirrorMonster: In "The Clown", a jealous, abusive husband kills his wife when he finds her in a circus trailer with a mute clown. He flees, leaving the clown as a suspect -- then everywhere he goes, he sees the clown in mirror/window reflections behind him reaching for his throat, and when he spins around the clown isn't there [[spoiler:''until he IS!'']]
19* MonsterClown: InvertedTrope in "The Clown". The titular character is the good guy, avenging a murder by haunting the killer.
20* MuggingTheMonster: "The Burning Girl" has an interesting version. Alice Deering is a quiet, put-upon young woman accused of starting fires and getting into (sexual) trouble. Fires do start when she's around, but not the way people think, and she doesn't remember what happens. It's only after a row with her aunt and an AttemptedRape by a local that the truth of [[PlayingWithFire her pyrokinetic abilities]] comes out.
21* OpenHeartDentistry: Used in "Brainwave", when a UsefulNotes/WorldWarII ship captain gets a shrapnel wound in the neck, and the only medically-trained crewman available is a pharmacist's mate. He's talked through the procedure via radio by a doctor from another ship, [[spoiler: who gets killed mid-operation when his own ship is hit. Yet his voice continues issuing instructions that guide the mate through a successful extraction and closure: instructions so precise, it's clear before TheReveal that ''something'' supernatural is happening, because he can evidently '''see''' the operation in progress.]]
22* ScrubbingOffTheTrauma: In "The Hand" Tom Grant, a piano player at a run-down dive, murders a beautiful young woman in a jealous rage with a broken-off beer bottle. After the police arrest a drunken derelict for the crime, Tom figures he's in the clear. Although he at first seems to have covered his tracks well enough, he soon discovers that, no matter how hard he tries, he cannot get the woman's blood off his hands. He forces a doctor to bandage the hand only to cause the blood to seep through. Eventually he breaks down when he is called into witness for the murder and has to lay the hand on Literature/TheBible and swear to tell the truth.
23* PropheticFallacy: The series seemingly used this PlotTwist every other episode.
24* RecycledSoundtrack: Harry Lubin's {{Theremin}}-dominated theme music had originally been composed for ''The Loretta Young Show'' -- and would be used yet again (in a modified form) for the second season of ''Series/TheOuterLimits1963''.
25* {{Revival}}: ''Series/TheNextStepBeyond'', a low budget FirstRunSyndication 1978 series that reunited John Newland and Merwin Gerard. About half of the stories were {{remake}}s of original ''One Step Beyond'' episodes.
26* SpaceWhaleAesop: "Forests of the Night" teaches us that dabbling in the occult will cause you to turn into a leopard.

Top