Opening: Her name is the S.S. Queen of Glasgow. Her registry: British. Gross tonnage: five thousand. Age: Indeterminate. At this moment she’s one day out of Liverpool, her destination New York. Duly recorded on the 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 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 unseen periscopes of steel killers. Yes, the Queen of Glasgow is a frightened ship, and she carries with her a premonition of death.
This episode is short on plot and surprises, but itโs deliciously long on atmosphere. Honestly, give me a dark night and a ship sailing through fog, and Iโm happy. Sometimes just the ship will do it.
โJudgment Night,โ however, gives me more than a ship. This is an effective little chillerโpredictable, yes, but substantial. It also has a strong central performance from top-notch character actor Nehemiah Persoff (whose life and career make for interesting reading: he was an early student at the Actors Studio and is a familiar face from movies like Some Like It Hot).
Persoff plays Carl Lanser, who finds himself standing on the deck of a ship; itโs like heโs just woken up from a dream. Heโs dazed and a little out-of-it. He has a faint accentโjust faint enough that the people he talks to canโt place it with any real confidence. Another passenger guesses that heโs an old language professor, and you can see why: he radiates intelligence, and itโs easy to read as absentmindedness what actually turns out to be absences in his mind, gaps where his memory should be.
What Lanser doesnโt know is vastโโI donโt seem to recall getting on this ship. Or anything else, for that matterโโand what he does know is โฆ troublingly specific, for a mysterious man on a British ship in 1942. He speaks up automatically on โwolf packsโ and submarine strategy, almost erupting into explanation, as if saying it is inseparable from the knowledge suddenly breaking through the fog in his brain. He sounds, as someone points out, like a U-boat captain.
The British crew and passengers are amiable enough at first, but Lanser soon disturbs them. He says he was born in Frankfurt, and then reacts to the clarificationโGermany?โlike itโs an epiphany: ah, yes, Germany, thatโs the one. Miss Stanley rallies, assembling a kind of defense for him, asking how long heโs been in England, and Lanser simply excuses himself, claiming heโs not feeling well. You can see why the captain has a sudden interest in getting checking his passport, even if itโs all handled with brisk courtesy.
We can guess, however, that thereโs no official explanation for Lanserโs appearance on the shipโor his dรฉjร vu about the other passengers or his fatalistic paranoia: โWeโre being stalked. I know weโre being stalked. Thereโs a sub out there, a U-boat. I know. I know itโs there, I know it.โ
In short order, we see why. Thereโs a German naval officerโs cap in his cabin, one with his name stitched into it. He fixes on the idea that something horrible is going to happen at 1:15โthat when the engines break down, theyโre doomed to drift until the appointed time, when the U-boat will come.
Just like that, the episode turns half-dreamlike, leaving Lanser running through the ship, frantically trying to warn everyone. Thereโs something especially, movingly surreal about him looking down the corridor and seeing a tight knot of passengers and crew huddled together, staring at him gravely. Itโs not quite a human reaction to terror and confusion; weโll see enough of those in a moment. Itโs the revelation that theyโre apart from him. Whatever their fate is, theyโll share it with each other; Lanser is alone, with nothing to do and no one to save, with the meaning sucked out of his actions.
Because, of course, he already acted. When he looks through the binoculars, he sees himself on the U-boat, wearing the same cap that hangs in his cabin on the Queen of Glasgow. A German naval officer, calmly giving the order to fire.
The episode then makes the exact right decision in turning almost brutally realistic, ripping our focus away from Lanserโeither Lanserโand towards the damage he once caused and now cannot avert. We see people trying and failing to escape via lifeboat, people running around looking for escape and not finding it. A doll floats on the water. In a mini-sequence Iโm startled the show got away with, Miss Stanley tries to crawl out of a burning room via a porthole and simply stays trapped there, wreathed in flame. Itโs harrowing even now, let alone 1959.
We then move to the real Lanser of 1942โand heโs almost unrecognizable from the fearful husk of a man weโve been following. Heโs in his element, lively and hard-eyed, relishing his โgood catch.โ When his lieutenant, Mueller, broaches the idea that they should have warned the ship before they fired upon itโespecially since there were women on boardโLanser criticizes him: โYou have sentiment, Mueller, but no brains.โ
โIt makes me wonder if weโre not damned now,โ Mueller says. Lanser is cool, urbane, cynical, relativistic, still viewing it all as a sentiment and philosophy: โIn the eyes of the British Admiralty, we most certainly are.โ Mueller side-steps him: โI mean, sir, in the eyes of God.โ The Twilight Zone Podcast discussed the ideaโwhich I lean towardsโthat the following speech didnโt happen in reality, at least not like this, with this level of eloquence. If so, itโs part of Lanserโs hell. He suffers, then he revisits his calm indifference to the suffering of others; then he gets the speech about why heโs condemned to this.
Damnation, Mueller says, would mean having a fate like the people on that shipโโto suffer as they suffer and to die as they die. โฆ We could die a hundred million times. We can ride the ghost of that ship every night for eternity.โ The words start repeating as we zoom in on Lanserโs face and see them begin to sink homeโ
And then, of course, it starts all over again. Here he is, on a foggy deck, just coming back to himself.
I donโt usually like stories about hell, but โJudgment Night1โ works for me (even though it’s more “solidly good” than “great,” as far as TZ tiers go). That’s partly because of Persoff’s performance and partly because of the perspective: putting us in Lanserโs shoes makes it feel tragic as well as vindictive, and I like tragedy even more than I like ships. Lanser gets the fate he earned, and his punishment suggests that his sin was less firing on the shipโalthough, given its lack of military usefulness, thatโs horrific enoughโand more his refusal to feel anything about it or to even admit that he could or should. Mueller at least felt the weight of their actions. Lanser viewed the senseless deaths as simply a good dayโs workโand that lack of empathy condemns him to feel the suffering, over and over again, to live through what he wouldnโt acknowledge. When I talked about this episode with a friend, she pointed out that we donโt really see much of Lanserโs crew: maybe theyโre not blameless in all this, but the weight of responsibility falls differently there. This is Lanserโs choice and Lanserโs fate, with Mueller as the voice of it.
The Twilight Zone would later tackle Hitler and the Holocaust very specifically, but the hint of it hereโspecifically mentioning the Third Reich in the closing narrationโis Serling first broaching the subject. Itโs a stinging little reminder that this is all tangential to a much more immense horror and that Lanserโs actions are even more troubling considering the master heโs serving.
Closing: The S.S. Queen of Glasgow, heading for New York, and the time is 1942. For one man it is always 1942โand 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 Kapitan Lieutenant, Navy of the Third Reich, this is the penalty. This is the justice meted out. This is judgment night in the Twilight Zone.
Directed by: John Brahm
Written by: Rod Serling
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Lauren James
Lauren James is a writer who wears many different hats (and pen names). She lives in Connecticut with her wife and two cats.
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In general worth watching for Persoff’s performance and John Brahm’s direction.
There is some interesting stuff about Serling’s service in WWII. Basically he came home with PTSD and some of that comes out in how he addresses the war on TZ. But beyond that, it’s clear that he wasn’t one to accept any idea of German captains being able to say they were just doing their duty (I suspect movies like The Enemy Below did not go down well with him, while Lifeboat matched his thinking). At the same time, our captain’s fear and tension serves to humanize him just a bit. I don’t think we’re supposed to feel like he’s getting anything but justice, maybe it’s a little horrifying that he’ll relive this in eternity.
Add Persoff to the surprisingly long list of Jewish actors who have played Nazis (or at least German soldiers). But as was the case of Theodore Bikel in The Enemy Below, I don’t think a swastika appears anywhere on the uniform.
Two other familiar faces in the cast. James Franciscus, who would bounce around TV for the next three decades, is Mueller. And Patrick MacNee, two years from The Avengers and having played a similar role in The Battle of the River Plate, is the merchant ship’s first officer.
Serling’s WWII service had some really harrowing aspects: I think one of this closest friends was beheaded directly in front of him in a freak accident of some supplies coming down, if I’m remembering right.
And agreed on Serling’s POV, which comes through very clearly here: Lanser is human, which Serling conveys, but he also made his horrific choices and must pay for him, which Serling conveys just as well and even more imaginatively (I think that’s another thing that makes this work better for me than fire-and-brimstone hell stories: here the punishment truly fits the crime, so there’s a weight and humanity to it), and I would assume cathartically as well. I know Serling had a big problem with Hogan’s Heroes and the idea of painting Nazis as comic bumblers you’d invite into your home every week; stories like this and “Deaths-Head Revisited,” which is even darker and more powerful, are definitely taking a very different approach, and the hour-long “He’s Alive” has unfortunately aged very, very well in that regard, too.
I don’t think I have much to say about this one, it’s a fairly well-executed version of a kind of story I don’t generally go for. Persoff does good work for sure, that shift in his character when we drop back to his pre-hell self is done really well.
Yeah, suddenly seeing him calm and in control and amused by the destruction he’s caused (and the idea he could ever give a damn about it) is a great bit of work, but it’s not an episode I think of all that often.