The Silence
- Episode aired Apr 28, 1961
- TV-PG
- 25m
Annoyed by a club member's constant chatter, a man bets him he cannot remain silent for a year, living in a glass enclosure in the club basement.Annoyed by a club member's constant chatter, a man bets him he cannot remain silent for a year, living in a glass enclosure in the club basement.Annoyed by a club member's constant chatter, a man bets him he cannot remain silent for a year, living in a glass enclosure in the club basement.
- Club Member
- (uncredited)
- Club Member
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- Club Member
- (uncredited)
- Club Member
- (uncredited)
- Club Member
- (uncredited)
- Club Member
- (uncredited)
- Club Member
- (uncredited)
- Club Member
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- Club Member
- (uncredited)
- Club Member
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- Club Member
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFranchot Tone filmed the club sequences in the early part of production before suffering a facial injury (Liam Sullivan claimed that he had fallen off a terrace to a driveway while picking a flower for a girlfriend; Rod Serling said that a jealous romantic rival had attacked him). Even though the left side of his face was swollen, it was decided not to hire a different actor and re-shoot the previously filmed scenes, but to film him with only his right side exposed to the camera. Interestingly, it caused Tone's character to be denied eye contact while mocking Sullivan's, which made his character more sinister and added an extra dimension of emotion to the plot.
- GoofsNear the end George Alfred asks Archie Taylor what was written on the note when in fact he is standing next to Taylor and can look down at the note.
- Quotes
Rod Serling - Narrator: [Opening Narration] The note that this man is carrying across a club room is in the form of a proposed wager, but it's the kind of wager that comes without precedent. It stands alone in the annals of bet-making as the strangest game of chance ever offered by one man to another. In just a moment, we'll see the terms of the wager and what young Mr. Tennyson does about it. And in the process, we'll witness all parties spin a wheel of chance in a very bizarre casino called the Twilight Zone.
- ConnectionsEdited into Twilight-Tober-Zone: The Silence (2021)
In a hugely exclusive men's club, one elderly gentleman is enormously disturbed by one of the members' constant, constant babbling. It's clear that all of the men are more than a little irritated by this one man and his unending, horizonless barrage of nonstop speaking, but one of them much more than anyone else. So much so, in fact, that he bets the man $500,000 that he can't keep his mouth shut for a year. One IMDb user states that this was a huge amount of money for the time period. I'm going to go ahead and suggest that this might be an enormous amount of money for ANY time period. And for ANY bet.
It reminds me of a particular sentence from one of my favorite books (Mark Twain's "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court") that, for some reason, managed to stay with me. The main character is describing a rather unfortunate relationship he is in with an intensely uneducated woman who never seems to stop talking. One day he wanted to say something to her (generally he would just let her talk and let his mind wander), so he says something like, "One afternoon I interrupted her in the middle of a sentence that she had begun that morning..." You get the idea. This guy is one of those people.
I hear that the main actor suffered an injury that prevented him being filmed in anything other than profile from the right. This sounds like gossip to me, probably generated by an unusual filming style, although not exactly impossible, I suppose.
What I love about this episode is how confident at the beginning the man who suggests the wager is. He is absolutely certain that this man won't be able to be quiet for a year, saying that he might last several weeks, maybe even a couple months, but the idea that such a man could last a full year was preposterous to him (and maybe to us).
As the end of the bet gets closer, the man gets increasingly desperate, even offering the guy $1,000 and then $5,000 to just quit the bet and walk away, even though there was only a couple months or weeks left by then.
There is one thing though, I was curious about what kind of a guy would not only accept this kind of bet, but what kind of guy had the free time to drop everything in his life and lock himself in a glass room for a year. Didn't he have a job? The exclusiveness of the gentlemen's club suggests that many of its patrons were independently wealthy, but if that was the case, why accept the bet in the first place?
At any rate, the show makes a great comment on upper class superficiality and the lengths people will go to in order to make money and, even more, boast their wealth and social status. Both, Serling says, can lead to disaster...
- Anonymous_Maxine
- Jul 21, 2008
Details
- Runtime25 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1