Deaths-Head Revisited

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The Twilight Zone original series
Season three
(1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5)
Fall 1961 – Summer 1962
List of The Twilight Zone episodes

Episodes:

  1. Two
  2. The Arrival
  3. The Shelter
  4. The Passersby
  5. A Game of Pool
  6. The Mirror
  7. The Grave
  8. It's a Good Life
  9. Deaths-Head Revisited
  10. The Midnight Sun
  11. Still Valley
  12. The Jungle
  13. Once Upon a Time
  14. Five Characters in Search of an Exit
  15. A Quality of Mercy
  16. Nothing in the Dark
  17. One More Pallbearer
  18. Dead Man's Shoes
  19. The Hunt
  20. Showdown With Rance McGrew
  21. Kick the Can
  22. A Piano in the House
  23. The Last Rites of Jeff Myrtlebank
  24. To Serve Man
  25. The Fugitive
  26. Little Girl Lost
  27. Person or Persons Unknown
  28. The Little People
  29. Four O'Clock
  30. Hocus-Pocus and Frisby
  31. The Trade-Ins
  32. The Gift
  33. The Dummy
  34. Young Man's Fancy
  35. I Sing the Body Electric
  36. Cavender Is Coming
  37. The Changing of the Guard

“Deaths-Head Revisited” is an episode of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone.

[edit] Details

[edit] Cast

[edit] Synopsis

A former captain in the Nazi military, Captain Lutze, returns to the ruins of Dachau concentration camp to relive the memories. He meets Alfred Becker, one of the inmates that he knew from the war. As Captain Lutze reminisces about how he tried to implement the Nazi ways and was barely able to escape, he realizes that one of the last things that he did was to kill Becker. Becker tells him that he (Lutze) must atone for the atrocities that were committed under Lutze's command and that he and the other victims have risen up to serve justice. Captain Lutze is forced to undergo the same horrors as the inmates he tortured, and the experience renders him insane.

[edit] Trivia

  • This is the only episode where Rod Serling did not end with the words "...in the Twilight Zone."

[edit] Critical Response

Gordon F. Sander, excerpt from Serling: The Rise and Twilight of Television's Last Angry Man:

Serling meted out nightmarish justice of a worse kind in “Deaths-Head Revisited” (directed by Don Medford), Serling’s statement on the Holocaust, written in reaction to the then-ongoing Eichmann trial, in which a former Nazi, played by Oscar Beregi, on a nostalgic visit to Dachau, is haunted and ultimately driven insane by the ghosts of inmates he had killed there during the war.

[edit] References

  • Zicree, Marc Scott: The Twilight Zone Companion. Sillman-James Press, 1982 (second edition)

[edit] External link

[edit] Twilight Zone links