Captain Gunther Lutze (Oscar Beregi, Jr.) is haunted by former Dachau prisoner Alfred Becker (Joseph Schildkraut). |
Season Three, Episode 74
Original Airdate: November 10, 1961
Cast:
Captain Gunther Lutze (aka Mr. Schmidt): Oscar Beregi, Jr.
Alfred Becker: Joseph
Schildkraut
Hotel Clerk: Karen
Verne
Doctor: Ben
Wright
Taxi Driver: Robert
Boon
Crew:
Writer: Rod
Serling (Original Teleplay)
Director: Don
Medford
Producer: Buck
Houghton
Production Manager: Ralph W. Nelson
Director of Photography: Jack Swain
Art Direction: George
W. Davis and Phil Barber
Set Decoration: H. Web Arrowsmith
Assistant Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Editor: Bill
Mosher
Story Consultant: Richard McDonagh
Sound: Franklin
Milton and Bill Edmondson
Casting: Stalmaster-Lister
Music: Stock
And Now, Mr. Serling:
“This is the lobby of an inn in a small Bavarian town,
and next week we’ll enter it with a former SS officer. It’s the first stop on
his road back to relive a horror that was Nazi Germany. Mr. Joseph Schildkraut
and Mr. Oscar Beregi demonstrate what happens to the monster when it is judged
by the victim. Our feeling here is that this is as stark and moving a piece of
drama as we have ever presented. I very much hope that you’re around to make
your judgement.”
Rod Serling’s Opening Narration:
“Mr. Schmidt: recently arrived in a Bavarian village
which lies eight miles northwest of Munich. A picturesque, delightful little
spot onetime known for its scenery, but more recently related to other events
having to do with some of the less positive pursuits of man. Human slaughter,
torture, misery, and anguish. Mr. Schmidt, as we will soon perceive, has a
vested interest in the ruins of a concentration camp. For once, some seventeen
years ago, his name was Gunther Lutze. He held the rank of captain in the SS.
He was a black-uniformed, strutting animal whose function in life was to give
pain. And like his colleagues of the time, he shared the one affliction most
common amongst that breed known as Nazis: he walked the Earth without a heart.
And now former SS Captain Lutze will revisit his old haunts, satisfied perhaps
that all that is awaiting him in the ruins on the hill is an element of
nostalgia. What he does not know, of course, is that a place like Dachau cannot
exist only in Bavaria. By its nature, by its very nature, it must be one of the
populated areas…of the Twilight Zone.”
Summary:
Former SS Captain Gunther Lutze, under the handle of “Mr.
Schmidt,” decides to revisit his past on a trip to Bavaria. It’s been seventeen
years since the Dachau concentration camp ceased operations as a haven of
misery and anguish. Captain Lutze, craving the power and pleasure of his former
life as an SS camp guard, decides to visit the abandoned facility and recapture
his former glory.
He walks the grounds and admires the lynch posts. He
strolls through the barracks and imagines rooms full of weak, half-starved
prisoners at his mercy.
Lutze
attempts to leave again but instead finds himself inside the prisoners
barracks surrounded by men that were once the subjects of his madness. They are
his jury. And they find him guilty of unspeakable crimes against his fellow
man. The punishment, Becker says, is his sanity. For the rest of his life
Captain Lutze will live with the pain and the memories of those that died by
his hands. Outside again, he tumbles to the ground, begging Becker to have
mercy on him. But mercy does not come.
Later.
Two men, a doctor and a taxi driver, kneel over the
sedated body of Captain Gunther Lutze. The driver says he dropped Lutze off
only two hours ago and he seemed fine. The doctor seems equally puzzled. He looks
at the empty buildings as if they might hold the answers. “Why do they allow
this place to remain standing?” He asks the driver. But the driver doesn’t have
an answer. So they sit in silence, listening to the wind softly whistling
through the abandoned ruins of a Hell once known as Dachau.
Rod Serling’s Closing Narration:
“There is an answer to the doctor’s question. All the
Dachaus must remain standing. The Dachaus, the Belsens, the Buchenwalds, the
Auschwitzes. All of them. They must remain standing because they are a monument
to a moment in time when some men decided to turn the Earth into a graveyard.
Into it they shoveled all of their reason, their logic, their knowledge, but
worst of all, their conscience. And the moment we forget this, the moment we
cease to be haunted by its remembrance, then we become the grave diggers.
Something to dwell on and to remember, not only in the Twilight Zone, but
wherever men walk God’s Earth.”
Commentary:
It’s no secret that Rod Serling possessed a special brand
of hatred for abusive authority figures for it is featured prominently throughout his writing and is the main reason he created The
Twilight Zone. He wanted an open platform for social criticism without the
interference of network censorship. What often got Serling in trouble with
networks and advertisers during his years as a writer of live dramas were his
thinly-veiled interpretations of real events. Two famous examples are his 1956
script, “Noon on Doomsday,” filmed for The
United States Steel Hour, and his 1958 Playhouse
90 script “A Town Has Turned to Dust” (directed by John Frankenheimer and
featuring William Shatner). Both scripts were based on the 1955
murder of Emmet Till, a black teenager who was lynched in Mississippi and whose
killers were eventually acquitted. Both stories received unyielding disapproval
from sponsors. So the networks, ABC and CBS respectively, took measures to set
the sponsors at ease by altering the script and eliminating any similarities to
actual events or people. The result both times was a story so far removed from
Serling’s intended idea that he could hardly take credit for it.
On The Twilight
Zone Serling had full creative control so if the network didn’t like a
particular script they couldn’t alter it without his permission. But because it
was a fantasy program the show oddly received little opposition from either the
sponsors or CBS despite the fact that many episodes—mostly Serling’s—are overtly
political. Many are even based on current events of the time.
Serling
had already touched on the recent Cuban Revolution earlier in Season Three in
“The Mirror” which features a fictionalized but deliberate depiction of a young
Fidel Castro. Actor Peter Faulk gives a brilliant but highly unflattering
portrayal of the controversial dictator and Serling’s script is filled with
violence, corruption, betrayal, cowardice, and the murder of the fictional
dictator’s chief officers (most of whom were based on real political figures). At the end of the episode the Castro lookalike commits suicide. It was a
bold choice in 1961 to say the least.
In “Deaths-Head
Revisited” he comments on the recent capture and on-going trial of Adolf
Eichmann, a former German Schutzstaffel
(SS) lieutenant colonel and head of the Gestapo Office of Jewish Affairs who
directly oversaw the mass deportation of Jewish Europeans into ghettos and
extermination camps. He is considered by many to be the most significant figure in the execution of the Holocaust. After the war he was captured by the United States military but managed to
escape and eventually took refuge in Argentina under the alias Ricardo Klement.
He was captured by Israeli forces in 1960 and executed for war crimes in 1962.
His trial was widely covered in the media.
It
seems appropriate that Serling, a Jewish-American war veteran, would have felt
a connection to this story. It feels very much like a Rod Serling script with
Eichmann, the man credited with the concept of extermination camps, as a
standard Serling villain who almost gets away with his crimes but ends up at
the mercy of a court of Jewish officials. In Serling’s version Captain
Lutze follows a similar path. Serling’s proclivity for turning current events
into television scripts was his way of making a statement that was relevant to
his audience but would also capture the atmosphere of the time for subsequent
generations. Because Serling wrote the script as the trial was taking place he
was basically commenting on a piece of history as it happened, one that was
still a sensitive subject even in 1961.
Serling
would return to the Eichmann story several years later in a prose piece called
“The Escape Route.” It was first published in a collection of novellas called The Season to be Wary (Little, Brown,
1967). It tells the story of Josef Strobe, a Nazi war criminal secretly living
in Argentina. His life after the war has been a miserable one spent constantly
on the run for the crimes of his past. He walks into an art gallery one day and
becomes engrossed in a painting in which he sees his face on the body of a
fisherman. The scene is a peaceful one and Strobe closes his eyes and imagines
himself in it. To his surprise he is briefly transported into the painting
where he can feel the sun on his face and the water beneath his fishing boat.
He returns to the gallery several more times attempting to transport himself
into the painting permanently, each day getting closer and closer. Later in the
story Strobe’s cover is blown by a former Auschwitz prisoner who recognizes
him. When the elderly man refuses to stop antagonizing Strobe he drunkenly
strangles him to death. With Israeli agents closing in on him Strobe breaks
into the gallery. It’s dark inside. He prays to God to place him into the
picture and then vanishes. It is later revealed that the painting of the
fisherman has been replaced by one featuring a giant wooden crucifix at a
concentration camp. On the crucifix hangs Joseph Strobe, formerly of the German
Third Reich, his face screaming in agony for all of eternity. While
“Deaths-Head Revisited” focuses on Eichmann’s trial, “The Escape Route” concerns
itself life on the run in South America, eliminating many of
the plot conveniences present in the earlier version. However, by the time Serling wrote "The Escape Route" in 1967 several high profile Nazi officials had been captured and put on trial including former SS commandant Franz Stangl. Serling makes the point of mentioning Eichmann, Stangl, and several others in his story so Strobe is likely an amalgamation of several different people. Serling later adapted
this story into the final segment of the pilot episode for Night Gallery which first aired on NBC on November 8, 1969. It was
directed by Barry Shear and features remarkable performances from Richard Kiley
and Sam Jaffe. This later, often overlooked, story comes highly recommended for
those who enjoy “Deaths-Head Revisited.”
Historians often note the widespread media coverage of
the Eichmann trial for awakening public interest in the Holocaust, details of
which were still largely unknown. It is also credited with exposing several South
American countries as postwar refuges for former members of the
German military seeking to escape prosecution. Former Argentine President Juan
Peron lived in Italy for a short time and was a fascist sympathizer and admirer
of Benito Mussolini. In the years after the war, with the help of various
officials in the Roman Catholic Church, he secretly organized a system of
“ratlines” out of Europe. It is estimated that he
supplied refuge for thousands of Nazi war criminals. Many of these individuals
were never caught including Dr. Josef Mengele, nicknamed the "Angel of Death." Mengele conducted unspeakable
experiments on prisoners at the Auschwitz concentration camp. Other
socialist-leaning South American countries including Brazil, Chile, and
Paraguay also provided asylum for former Nazi officials. In 1976 Ira Levin published his political suspense novel, The Boys from Brazil, which centered around a revitalized Nazi party in South America and featured actual Nazi officials, including Mengele, in leading roles. It should be noted,
however, that many of the same countries that harbored German war criminals remained neutral during the war and were
also a safe haven for Jewish refugees and other Europeans fleeing Hitler’s reign such as
Oscar Beregi, Jr.
A German SS officers hat featuring the Totenkopf or "death's-head" emblem. |
The
term “death’s-head” is the English translation of the German word Totenkopf which refers to the skull and
crossbones insignia that appeared on the uniforms of various German officers
including the Schutzstaffel. It’s a
German military tradition that dates back to the eighteenth century.
Despite
the fact that setting the story at the Dachau concentration camp presents
certain problems with plot structure the ghostly camp setting is still quite
effective. The set that doubled for Dachau was a building on the MGM backlot
that was often used for westerns. Although Eichmann was briefly stationed at
Dachau for military training early in his career he was never a guard there. The Dachau concentration camp, located in
Bavaria in Southern Germany not far from the town that shares its name, was
opened in 1933 and was the first Nazi concentration camp in existence. It
became the model for subsequent concentration camps. It was liberated by
American troops in April, 1945. In the years immediately following the fall of
the Third Reich the camp was, appropriately, used to house political prisoners
including hundreds of former SS officers. It was officially converted into a
war memorial in 1965.
Serling
manages to deliver a script that is both compelling and historically
significant with “Deaths-Head Revisited” but it is certainly not without flaws.
It’s an episode that packs a heavy dramatic punch initially—via the ghostly
imagery and compelling dialogue—but in subsequent viewings the weak plot
structure becomes increasingly noticeable. It seems highly unlikely—almost
unthinkable—that a Nazi war criminal on the run for his life would revisit one
of the most notorious concentration camps of World War II—which, in reality,
would be heavily guarded by Allied forces. It also seems unlikely that Lutze
would recognize Becker so quickly but not remember murdering him until the end
of the episode when it is most convenient for the plot. It feels as if Serling
wanted to comment on the atrocities of the holocaust but also mirror the events
of Eichmann’s trial at the same time. The resulting plot seems weak at times which
unfortunately overshadows a strong political message and superb dialogue.
Serling
should be commended, however, for creating compelling characters that basically
represent the two ideological sides of the holocaust which is surely no easy
task. Gunther Lutze is the malevolent face of Nazi Germany as Eichmann was to
the general public in 1961. And like Eichmann he attempts to justify his crimes, claiming that he was only following orders. Alfred Becker is the voice of every victim of the
holocaust and of the growing public sentiment as the Eichmann trial drew more
and more attention. Becker’s dialogue is uniquely compelling and is some of the
best Serling ever penned for the show. These characters are brilliantly brought
to life by Oscar Beregi, Jr. (1918 – 1976) and Joseph Schildkraut (1896 – 1964).
Despite being on opposing sides in this episode the two Hungarian-born actors
were actually close friends and had known each other for many years. Beregi
left Hungary (along with his father, actor Oscar Beregi, Sr.) in 1939 as
Hitler’s forces began to spread across Europe. He settled for a time in Chile
before moving to the United States. Given his physical stature and thick
Hungarian accent he was frequently cast as a Nazi. Schildkraut (son of an actor
Rudolph Schildkraut) was a veteran of stage and screen. In 1937 he won an
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in The Secret Life of Emile Zola. He also famously portrayed Otto
Frank in both the stage (1955) and screen (1959) versions of The Diary of Anne Frank. Although most
of his well-known roles were sympathetic characters he usually gravitated
towards villains and devious characters. His performance as Alfred Becker is
remarkable.
While
“Deaths-Head Revisited” has its setbacks it remains an important episode of the
show and one of Rod Serling’s personal favorites. Serling’s combat experiences
during World War II influenced his writing considerably throughout his career
and the social repercussions of war and of the holocaust are featured prominently
in his work. He felt that every creative medium, especially television, had
an obligation not only to entertain but to discuss complex political
topics that were often avoided by networks and advertisers. By keeping his
finger on the pulse of social consciousness he was able to capture specific
moments in time with a dramatic flair that was uniquely his. “Deaths-Head Revisited”
should serve as a historical television benchmark and a testament to Serling’s
stand on intolerance and his belief in the basic human rights of all people.
Grade: B
The Twilight Zone: Unlocking the Door to a Television
Classic by Martin Grams, Jr. (OTRPublishing, 2008)
Notes:
--Oscar Beregi, Jr. also appeared in the second season
episode, “The Rip Van Winkle Caper,” and the fourth season episode, “Mute.”
--Joseph Schildkraut also appeared in the third season
episode, “The Trade-Ins.”
--Ben Wright also appears in the first season episode,
“Judgement Night,” and the third season episode, “Dead Man’s Shoes.”
--Don Medford directed four other episodes: Season
One’s “The Passage for Trumpet,” Season Two’s “The Man in the Bottle,” Season
Three’s “The Mirror,” and Season Four’s “Death Ship.”
--“Deaths-Head Revisited” was adapted into a graphic
novel by Mark Kneece with art by Chris Lie as part of a series developed by the
Savannah College of Art and Design (Walker Books, 2009). You can also listen to
the Twilight Zone Radio Drama starring H.M. Wynant.
--Brian Durant
Thanks for the interesting post. Seeing these episodes only in syndication, it's easy to miss the topical references, such as the Eichmann trial. I've been to Dachau and it's a haunting place. This is a hard episode to forget!
ReplyDeleteI have never visited Dachau but have read accounts of the incredible power of the camp to affect the psyche of visitors, with some people even being driven to self harm due to the depressive effects of the memorial. Rod Serling was always very aware of currents in the social and political structure of the nation and was therefore the most moralistic and political of the Zone writers. He was capable of writing some very effective episodes pertaining specifically to contemporary events and this one stands as one of his most memorable.
ReplyDeleteWhile I agree with your estimation of the episodes flaws,I would still have to give DEATHS -HEAD REVISITED an A rating and place it in the front rank of TZ episodes for sheer power. Nothing I have ever seen-no film, no lecture, has ever driven the point,the horror of the Nazi Holocaust home like this single,half hour program. As Serling put it,I have NEVER ceased to be haunted by it's remembrance.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you, Dale. It's definitely a powerful story and I was on the fence about the grade. This one had a huge effect on me the first time I watched it. But I've seen it three or four times and when I watch it now I find that the weak spots in the plot are a bit more noticeable. I think I may just prefer "The Escape Route" to this one. Sam Jaffe has really powerful lines in that one. But they are both really good. I also enjoy Serling's script, "In the Presence of Mine Enemies," that he wrote for PLAYHOUSE 90 in 1960. Very powerful story.
ReplyDeleteExcellent review, and very enlightening. Although I'm fairly familiar with the Eichmann trial, I had never looked at the dates and made the connection that the trial would have been a contemporary event, although it obviously was. Thanks for making that link!
ReplyDeleteExcellent review, and very enlightening. Although I'm fairly familiar with the Eichmann trial, I had never looked at the dates and made the connection that the trial would have been a contemporary event, although it obviously was. Thanks for making that link!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mitchell! I was also unaware of the connection before researching for this article but I definitely find it interesting. Serling was always at the forefront of contemporary political and social events. I"m surprised he never tried his hand at journalism. He would have been great at it.
DeleteThis one works very well as a radio play, by the way. If you enjoy the episode, give the Twilight Zone Radio Drama a try.
ReplyDeleteSeems as if everything Mr. Sterling pens, becomes an "Ah ha" moment, that keeps us thinking way beyond the closing credits.
ReplyDeleteSeems as if everything Mr. Sterling pens, becomes an "Ah ha" moment, that keeps us thinking way beyond the closing credits.
ReplyDeleteVery true, Kevin, and that is a quality not only of Rod Serling but of all of the writers for the show, particularly Serling's three primary co-writers, Richard Matheson, Charles Beaumont, and George Clayton Johnson. One of the greatest strengths of the series I think is that it works so well on a deeper and more complex level while still remaining easily accessible. When speaking with other fans it is interesting to gauge how deeply an episode has remained ingrained in their memory. Thanks for reading!
ReplyDeleteSadly enough, Serling was even more dead-on accurate in "Death's Head Revisited" than he could have known at the time. At one point, Lutze refers to the Holocaust as an "unfortunate incident" of history. This was precisely the language used to describe it, many years later, by Jean-Marie LePen, the French neo-fascist leader. (Let's not even dwell on the fact that, in this year of grace 2018, an out-and-out Holocaust denier is running for public office in Illinois). Not only is "Death's Head Revisited" graced by two magnificent performances from Oscar Beregi and Joseph Schildkraut, but the staging and editing are extraordinary. One of the many gems of this remarkable series.
ReplyDeleteI agree. Serling's personal experiences in WWII seem to really resonate in episodes like this. His dialogue is touching and brilliant and the performances of the two leading actors are remarkable
DeleteDeath's Head Revisited is a moral tale about the juxtaposition of a Nazi war criminal (Lutze) and the prisoners whom suffered horrible atrocities at the concentration camp and for one night get their just retribution in trying Lutz for his war crimes and in the end scaring him to death which is is only partial retribution. The other point made in the episode at least unsaid was the Lutze would now have to face the final judgement from God as well! This episode reminds me of Judgement Night in a sense featuring Nehimiah Persoff as Cpt. Lanzer who is sentenced to spend the same night of horror experienced by the doomed HMS Glasgow by being sunk by his own self for eternity. Both characters play Nazi commanders. Rod Serling's experience with the Holocaust and being a paratrooper in WWII gave him first-hand expereince in the horrors of war and the staging and story lines for his war episodes were always on the mark (Quality of Mercy, The Purple Testament, and also He's Alive) which have that WWII movie feel which was less than 15 years before TZ went on air, so very fresh in the TV audience's minds. I would give this episode an "A" as well for the powerful message it conveyed and the scene structure and acting between Oscar Berregi, and Shildchrist). Yes, TZ had some duds but they were the exception, and this one ranks high on the top list of quality episodes.
DeleteI have cited "Death's Head Revisited" in several lecture courses I have taught on the Holocaust and the Nuremberg trials. I've pointed out that Rod Serling provided a fantasy image of the perfect, but utterly unattainable justice that the Nazi murderers (and the Soviets, and the Khmer Rouge, and....) should have had, and never could: judgment by a tribunal of their victims, followed by the infliction upon themselves of all the tortures and torments they had visited upon their captives. I might add that I have always opposed the death penalty, and would have done so for the Nuremberg defendants. Since Serling's "Lutze punishment" was impossible, the only way that these monsters could have been made to serve the cause of civilization was to keep them alive in Spandau, as living reminders of what they had done. (Every time over the years that their respective families applied for their release -- as they surely would have -- the German people would have been forced, through newspaper articles and news programs, to revisit that era and consult their consciences.)
ReplyDelete