Series: | The Twilight Zone |
Season: | 2 |
Episode: | 29 |
Production: | 173-3661 |
Director: | Elliot Silverstein |
Guests: |
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Music: | Stock |
Season Article: | The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series, season 2) |
Episode List: | List of The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series) episodes |
Prev: | Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up? |
Next: | Two |
"The Obsolete Man" is episode 65 of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone, starring Burgess Meredith as Romney Wordsworth, the accused, and Fritz Weaver as the Chancellor (and prosecutor). It originally aired on June 2, 1961, on CBS.[1] The story was later adapted for The Twilight Zone Radio Dramas starring Jason Alexander as Wordsworth.
In a future totalitarian state, Romney Wordsworth is put on trial for being obsolete. His professed occupation as a librarian is punishable by death, as the state has eliminated books. His faith in God is taken as further proof of obsolescence, as the atheist state claims to have proven God does not exist. Following a bitter exchange, the Chancellor finds Wordsworth guilty and sentences him to death within 48 hours, allowing him to choose his method and exact time and place of execution. Wordsworth requests that he be granted a personal assassin, who will be the only one who knows the method of his death, and that his execution be televised nationwide from his room at midnight on the following day. Although Wordsworth's demand for privacy is unprecedented, the Chancellor grants both requests.
At 11:15 the following night, the Chancellor visits Wordsworth in his now-monitored room, responding to the latter's invitation out of curiosity. Wordsworth reveals that he has chosen to die in a bomb explosion at midnight. The Chancellor expresses approval until Wordsworth further states that he has locked the door, and the Chancellor will die with him. He also points out that, as the events are being broadcast live, the State would risk losing its status in the people's eyes if it chose to rescue the Chancellor. Wordsworth brings out an illegal, long-hidden copy of the Bible, reading Psalm 23 and portions of several other psalms aloud to express his trust in God.
In the final minute before midnight, the Chancellor breaks down and begs to be let go "in the name of God". Wordsworth agrees to do so and gives him the key to unlock the door. The Chancellor flees from the room just before the bomb explodes, killing Wordsworth. Due to his cowardly display in Wordsworth's room and invocation of God, the Chancellor is replaced by his own subaltern and declared obsolete. He protests against this verdict and tries to escape, but the tribunal's attendants overwhelm him and beat him to death.
Unusually, Serling appears on camera to deliver the closing narration.
Usually Serling delivered his closing narration off-camera. But for the earlier episode ("A World of His Own"), Serling delivered the closing narration of that episode on-camera, as he would for "The Obsolete Man" and season three's "The Fugitive". Serling's original narration was longer, but the middle section was cut for broadcast. As scripted, the original narration reads as follows (with the cut section in italics):
Serling's opening narration is sampled in the song "Thieves! (Screamed the Ghost)" by American hip-hop duo Run the Jewels on their 2016 album, Run the Jewels 3.