A Game of Pool

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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

“A Game of Pool” is an episode of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone.

[edit] Details

[edit] Cast

[edit] Synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

It’s after hours at Clancy’s Pool Hall, and once more pool shark Jesse Cardiff is alone, polishing his pool game. Jesse bitterly muses that he would be considered the greatest pool player of all time if it weren’t for the memory of the late Fats Brown overshadowing him. “I’d give anything to play Fats Brown, anything at all!” he declares aloud.

“At your service!” comes a sudden voice from the corner of the room. It is indeed James Howard Brown—“known to my friends as Fats”—who has been dead for 15 years, but who has now come from the afterlife itself to answer Jesse’s challenge. Fats tells Jesse it’s time for him to put his money where his mouth is and play a game of pool to see who the best truly is. But to make the game more intense, Fats ups the stakes. If Jesse wins, he will indeed be acknowledged as the greatest. If he loses...it means his life. So the ultimate high stakes pool game begins, with life and death as the stakes. But, just maybe, being the best carries its own special burden, as Jesse finds out when he wins.

All throughout the game, Fats has subtly tried to warn Jesse. He laments that Jesse seems to do nothing with his life, have no enjoyment from his life, besides pool. Jesse ignores Fats’ comments, convinced that Fats is just trying to protect his title by getting Jesse’s mind off the game.

When it comes down to one final, easy shot for Jesse to win and claim the title, Fats again warns him that he doesn’t understand the burdens that come with that title. Jesse is more convinced than ever, however, that Fats just doesn’t want to lose that title and is trying a last desperate ploy. Jesse sinks the shot and exults in his victory. He now is the best ever.

Fats’ response is to thank Jesse for beating him. Jesse is angered by the show of gratitude. He declares that Fats is a sore loser, so upset at having lost that he’s now trying to act like the victory would have been sour grapes. Jesse proudly dismisses Fats and claims his rightful title as the best.

Only years later, after he has died, does Jesse finally understands Fats’ warnings. Jesse, now being the greatest ever, is obliged to spend his afterlife doing nothing but continuing to prove that he is the greatest ever. His afterlife consists of nothing but going from pool room to lonely pool room, to play against challenger after challenger to his title, just as we now realize Fats must have had to do for Jesse’s challenge to him, and for the challenges of countless others whom Fats must have beaten before he finally lost to Jesse. Fats, on the other hand, having at long last relinquished his title to Jesse, is now enjoying his afterlife free of the burden of having to defend that title, and he has happily gone fishing.

[edit] Closing narration

Mr. Jesse Cardiff, who became a legend by beating one, but who has found out after his funeral that being the best of anything carries with it a special obligation to keep proving it. Mr. Fats Brown, on the other hand, having relinquished the champion's medal, has gone fishing. These are the ground rules, in the Twilight Zone.

[edit] Trivia

Johnson’s script originally featured an alternate ending in which Jesse loses the game. Seeing that Jesse is bedazzled that he has lost a life-or-death game and is still alive, Fats explains that he will die “as all second raters die: you’ll be buried and forgotten without me touching you. If you’d beaten me you’d have lived forever.” This ending was eventually filmed when this episode was remade in 1988, during the first revival of The Twilight Zone.

[edit] References

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

[edit] External link

[edit] Twilight Zone links

The Twilight Zone
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Series

The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series) | The New Twilight Zone | The Twilight Zone (2002 series)

Key People

Rod Serling | Buck Houghton | Charles Beaumont | Richard Matheson | Jerry Sohl | George Clayton Johnson | Earl Hamner Jr. | Reginald Rose | Ray Bradbury

See Also

Playhouse 90 | List of The Twilight Zone episodes | The Twilight Zone (pinball) | Twilight Zone: The Movie | The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror