Anthologized
Dan Duryea gets a shave and a second chance.
Opening: Portrait of a town drunk named Al Denton. This is a man who’s begun his dying earlyโa long, agonizing route through a maze of bottles. Al Denton, who would probably give an arm or a leg or a part of his soul to have another chance, to be able to rise up and shake the dirt from his body and the bad dreams that infest his consciousness. [Intro: peddler.] In the parlance of the times, this is a peddler, a rather fanciful-looking little man in a black frock coat. [Intro: revolver.] And this is the third principal character of our story. Its function: perhaps to give Mr. Al Denton his second chance.
The prevalence of Twilight Zone Westerns is a detail of the show thatโs kind of slipped out of the public consciousness, but there are a lot of them, and several are quite good. (Post-TZ, Serling had an unfortunately short-lived Western series called The Loner.) โMr. Denton on Doomsdayโ1 has the honor of being the first.
It immediately wins my favor by casting the great Dan Duryeaโconsummate heel on screen, consummate nice guy off itโas Al Denton. Itโs an unusually sympathetic and textured role for Duryea, and he plays the hell out of it, selling Dentonโs ground-in-the-dirt humiliation and stunned reaction to even the smallest bit of unexpected respect. Before we know about his hard-edged past, though, thereโs the faintest shadow of it in how he chooses humiliation over charity. Heโd rather sing โHow Dry I Amโ in a cracked voice to get a young punk to buy him some whiskeyโand rather drink that out of a broken bottleโthan take someoneโs well-meant pity.
Thatโs no way to live, maybe, but it sets up Dentonโs psychological need for some form of self-respect. Alcoholics Anonymous tells people to accept that theyโre powerless over their need to drink; Serling believes that finding a little bit of power again could be Dentonโs way out of his sickness. On TZ, alcoholism is often implied to be the result of heightened, hurt sensitivity, with characters who are too attuned to their own and others’ suffering drinking to take away the edge of the pain. When they can find a helpful (or at least less agonizing) way to engage with the world again, their need fades.
So traveling peddler Henry J. Fate (Malcolm Atterbury) steps in, supernaturally providing Denton with a revolver. (Denton wakes up with it, so itโs a miracle, not a gift; he can accept that.) We have another series milestone here, as Fate kicks off the showโs delight in otherworldly characters giving themselves transparent aliases.
While it might be a stretch to call any magical gun episode anti-gun, itโs aged rather well in the regardโmuch better than you might expect from an opening that positions as a revolver as a defeated manโs potential savior. Even before we get to the excellent finale, Dentonโs revolverโwhich fires perfectly without him aiming it or even intending to shootโis non-lethal and even mostly non-violent. He bests town bully Dan2 by shooting the gun out of his hand and then bringing a chandelier down on his head, and thatโs enough to send Dan away with his tail between his legs and win Denton a little more dignity. The only real violence in the scene comes when Denton stares Dan down and slaps him, telling him not to call him โrummyโ anymore.
Here, the best-case scenario for guns is a kind of trick shooting, where you get to demonstrate skill without actually hurting anyoneโitโs what John Dall loved in Gun Crazy, essentiallyโand Dentonโs tragic back-story is the worst-case scenario. He was once very good with a gun in his own right, no mystical interference necessary, but: โI was so good that once a day, someone would ride into town and make me prove it.โ This version of the West is full of men eager to establish a name for themselves by shooting down the areaโs top gunfighter, andโas we soon seeโthey donโt like to take no for an answer. Denton kept getting presented with the choice of killing or dying, and he kept choosing to killโuntil he defended his title and life against a sixteen-year-old boy, started drinking, and never really stopped.
Thereโs something moving about how Denton immediately accepts that the cycle is about to begin all over again, especially since he believes that this time, thereโs no chance that heโll win. He knows that he didnโt have anything to do with the perfect shooting that humiliated Dan; he knows heโs lost his gift and that his hands arenโt steady anymore. Him using his drinking money to get a shave is partly a beautiful little look at him reclaiming some of his dignity, but itโs also profoundly bittersweet. As he says, โI want to look proper on the day I die.โ
And, indeed, a man named Pete Grant instantly sends his friends to set up a quick-draw shootout between them. Since it doesnโt seem like Pete Grant lives in town, this is hilariously quick. Did someone send him a telegram telling him that Al Denton got up off the bar-stool and is now back in the game? Did they ride to him at a breakneck pace? Who knows. The important thing is that it highlights the inevitability of Denton being forced back into one of these situations and gives him a nice line: โIt didnโt take any time at all. Just time enough for one shave.โ Serling has a gift for these bittersweetly resonant lines.
He turns to Henry J. Fate, whose painted coach proclaims him to be a โdealer in everything.โ Dentonโs all set to run, but Fate offers him a potion that will ostensibly solve his problemโโJust so you might remember sometime the night Fate stepped in.โ (If my last name were Fate, I would say this all the time. I would be so annoying about it.) The potion will make him the fastest draw around and let him shoot incredibly well without even aiming, but its effects will only last for ten seconds, so heโll have to down it at exactly the right time and act quickly. Again, thereโs magic in the mix, but Denton has his own agency to hold on to.
Atterbury does a fantastic job with Fate, injecting him with the right amount of ambiguity for just long enough. In the end, heโs a variation on a guardian angel, but itโs hard to know that for sure from the jump: heโs played with just enough potentially sinister edge that he could have been a trickster figure looking to stir up some chaos and bloodshed. When we see that he sold the same potion to Pete Grantโwhen Denton and Grant down it at the same time and stare at each other, each of them suddenly understanding whatโs happenedโitโs a great little twist that at first seems to imply that Fate has screwed them both over.
By someone elseโs standards, maybe he hasโbut not by Dentonโs and not by Rod Serlingโs. When Denton and Pete shoot simultaneously, they both hit and ruin each otherโs gun hands, taking them out of the vicious circle forever, something Denton explicitly identifies as a blessing for them both. Itโs a gun story where the happy ending is having your gunfighter skills ruined, which is an unusual and oddly uplifting story beat. Losing the ability to take one simple, deadly action frees them to make any other choice in the books.3 Another show might play this as a kind of metaphorical emasculation, but Serling sees this injury as empowering, not taking away these men’s manhood but giving them the potential to express a fuller version of their humanity.
Closing: Mr. Henry Fate, dealer in utensils and pots and pans, liniments and potions. A fanciful little man in a black frock coat who can help a man climbing out of a pitโor another man from falling into one. Because, you see, fate can work that way, in the Twilight Zone.
Directed by: Allen Reisner
Written by: Rod Serling
Cinematography by: George T. Clemens
Up Next: The Sixteen-Millimeter Shrine
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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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Overall a fairly solid episode if a bit blunt. Serling both knows audiences cannot get enough of westerns at this time, and clearly likes them himself.
You don’t mention the quasi-live interest Liz, played by Jeanne Cooper (later a member of the cast of The Young and the Restless for 40 years). I don’t know how much the story needs her, but I kind of like the notion at that at least person can see him not as a gunslinger and not as a drunk but as a fellow human being. Liz is very much the standard issue “woman dressed in a fancy gown who might be a singer and might be a sex worker” but Cooper gives her a bit of dignity.
And Pete Grant is played by familiar face Doug McClure, who would start on The Virginian a few years later and get a star on the Walk of Fame.
The title of this one is curious, since it’s hardly doomsday, and since viewers in 1959 might have expected something more literal. Certainly people watching the show out of order years later would have figured this is one of Serling’s trips to the apocalypse.
I originally had a Liz mention with a footnote on Cooper’s lengthy soap career, in the Landau footnote, but it wound up getting trimmed between drafts, alas. Cooper does indeed give her dignity and considerable presence here, even if she doesn’t get much to do. As ambiguous as her literal job is–in, as you note, the style of this era of westerns–it’s probably looked at askance often enough that it makes sense that she’d have a real empathy for the town’s other misfit.
Serling’s westerns: I generally like what I’ve seen of The Loner, for what it’s worth, and it’ll probably show up in a WDWW thread at some point.
I never thought about the literal doomsday angle before, but I bet you’re right. Now I’m just picturing someone watching this wondering when Denton will decide to shoot out the sun or something like that.
Wow, what a cast! Love Duryea and Landau, and Atterbury and Cooper are good too. I mostly really enjoyed the episode although I think it wrapped things up a little too quickly – the guy immediately stepping in to declare that there’s no winner and everyone should go home, bye! just seemed a bit too tidy – and I wonder why they bothered introducing a new gunslinger when they already had the humiliated Landau right there with his great screen presence. I’ve not seen much Young Landau and now I think I should, he’s pretty electric here!
Reusing Landau for the final confrontation would absolutely make more sense! I almost wonder if that was the original plan, and maybe there was a scheduling conflict that led to him getting shuffled out partway through? Or maybe he’s such an aggressive bully here that there was the fear the audience wouldn’t buy that crippling his trigger finger would be enough to bring him around to a better life. But he definitely pops. I’d forgotten in the time since I last watched this that he wasn’t in the final showdown, even.
I’m amused now by the visual of the cast basically being hooked off the set to the Jaws theme at the end of the episode.