I Shot an Arrow Into the Air

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I Shot an Arrow Into the Air
The Twilight Zone episode

Scene from I Shot an Arrow Into the Air
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 15
Written by Rod Serling (story by Madelon Champion)
Directed by Stuart Rosenberg
Guest stars Dewey Martin : Officer Corey
Edward Binns : Colonel Donlin
Ted Otis : Pierson
Harry Bartell : Langford
Featured music uncredited
Production no. 173-3626
Original airdate January 15, 1960
Episode chronology
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"Third from the Sun" "The Hitch-Hiker"
List of Twilight Zone episodes

"I Shot an Arrow Into the Air" is an episode of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone.

Contents

[edit] Opening narration

Her name is the Arrow One. She represents four and a half years of planning, preparation and training, and a thousand years of science and mathematics and the projected dreams and hopes of not only a nation but a world. She is the first manned aircraft into space. And this is the countdown, the last five seconds before man shot an arrow into the air.

[edit] Synopsis

A manned space flight crash lands on what the astronauts believe to be an unknown asteroid. Their expectations of survival or rescue are bleak. Only four of the crew survive, one of whom is barely alive. After he dies, the three remaining men, Corey, Donlin, and Pierson decide to trek out into the barren desert to see if there is anything — shelter, water — that might improve their chances of survival. When Corey and Donlin reconvene, it seems that Pierson is dead and Corey filched the water supply from his dead body. Donlin, the commanding officer, forces Corey at gunpoint to lead him to Pierson's body. They find Pierson, still barely alive, who with his last bit of strength draws a primitive diagram in the sand with his finger. Corey then kills Donlin and sets out alone, confident that he will survive longer now that he has all of the water supply. After wandering aimlessly for an extended period, he sees a set of power lines and realizes that that's what Pierson was attempting to draw. A highway and road signs reveal that the ship crashed on Earth and the men had been in the Nevada desert the entire time.

[edit] Closing narration

Practical joke perpetrated by Mother Nature and a combination of improbable events. Practical joke wearing the trappings of nightmare, of terror, of desperation. Small human drama played out in a desert ninety-seven miles from Reno, Nevada, U.S.A., continent of North America, the Earth, and of course the Twilight Zone.

[edit] Episode notes

When Serling first started collecting material for The Twilight Zone he offered an open call for scripts. Anyone could submit a script based on any science-fiction idea they had. The results of this open call were disastrous.

"I got fourteen thousand manuscripts in the first five days. Of those fourteen thousand, I and members of my staff read about five hundred. And four hundred and ninety-eight of those five hundred were absolute trash; hand-scrawled, laboriously written, therapeutic pieces of writing from sick people. Of the two remaining scripts, both of professional quality, neither fitted the show." —Rod Serling quoted in The Twilight Zone Companion

Despite this, Serling did end up producing an idea from an industry outsider when he paid Madelon Champion $500 for the idea on which this episode was based, an idea that came up in a social conversation between the two.[1] Though Serling was frequently approached with suggestions for the series, such a purchase was never repeated.

Much of this episode was filmed in Death Valley National Park.[1]

The title of the episode comes from the opening line of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's “The Arrow and the Song”: “I shot an arrow into the air, it fell to earth I know not where." Serling also used this title for a prospective Twilight Zone pilot episode that was eventually shot, in modified form, as “The Gift”.[2]

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Zicree, Marc Scott (1982). The Twilight Zone Companion, 2nd edition, Hollywood: Sillman-James Press, 98. 
  2. ^ Zicree, Marc Scott (1982). The Twilight Zone Companion, 2nd edition, Hollywood: Sillman-James Press, 277. 
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