The Invaders (The Twilight Zone)
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“The Invaders” | |||||||
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The Twilight Zone episode | |||||||
Agnes Moorehead in The Invaders |
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Episode no. | Season 2 Episode 51 |
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Written by | Richard Matheson | ||||||
Directed by | Douglas Heyes | ||||||
Guest stars | Agnes Moorehead : Woman Douglas Heyes : Invader (voice) |
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Featured music | Original score by Jerry Goldsmith | ||||||
Production no. | 173-3646 | ||||||
Original airdate | January 27, 1961 | ||||||
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List of Twilight Zone episodes |
"The Invaders" is an episode of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone.
Contents |
[edit] Opening narration
“ | This is one of the out-of-the-way places, the unvisited places, bleak, wasted, dying. This is a farmhouse, handmade, crude, a house without electricity or gas, a house untouched by progress. This is the woman who lives in the house, a woman who's been alone for many years, a strong, simple woman whose only problem up until this moment has been that of acquiring enough food to eat, a woman about to face terror which is even now coming at her from the Twilight Zone. | ” |
[edit] Synopsis
An old woman is apparently living alone in a very rustic cabin. She is dressed shabbily and there are no modern conveniences in evidence. After hearing a strange noise from the sleeping loft, she is accosted by small intruders that come from a miniature flying saucer that has landed on her house, equipped with two tiny people in spacesuits. In proportion to the old woman, the intruders appear to be only a few inches high.
She battles them for many minutes, finally killing one and following the other back to his ship. There she hears one of the space-suited intruders, speaking in English with an apparent American accent, send off a desperate warning to other potential invaders that the people from the planet are giants and very difficult to defeat, after which she destroys the ship with an axe.
The camera pans and we see the side of the ship display U.S. Air Force Space Probe No. 1.
[edit] Closing narration
“ | These are the invaders, the tiny beings from the tiny place called Earth, who would take the giant step across the sky to the question marks that sparkle and beckon from the vastness of the universe only to be imagined. The invaders, who found out that a one-way ticket to the stars beyond has the ultimate price tag. And we have just seen it entered in a ledger that covers all the transactions of the universe, a bill stamped 'paid in full,' and to be found, on file, in the Twilight Zone. | ” |
[edit] Episode notes
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- The original closing narration for this episode (as it appears in Richard Matheson's teleplay) reads: “This is one of the out-of-the-way places; until now, one of the unvisited places in our solar system—the planet Mars. Bleak. Wasted. Dying. But not quite dead yet.”
- The small ship is one of the miniatures of the saucer shaped United Planets Cruiser, used in the MGM film Forbidden Planet.
- Both the invader and the space ship used in this episode can be seen at Walt Disney World's Twilight Zone Tower of Terror, but only the invader is seen at Disney's California Adventure.
- Director Douglas Heyes provided the voice of the astronaut.
[edit] References
- Zicree, Marc Scott. The Twilight Zone Companion. Sillman-James Press, 1982 (second edition)
[edit] External links
- Escape: "The Invader"
- The Invaders at the Internet Movie Database
- TV.com episode page
- Full video of the episode at CBS.com