Mr. Charles Whitley (Ernest Truex) remembering a life forgotten. |
“Kick the Can”
Season Three, Episode 86
Original Air Date: February 9, 1962
Cast:
Charles Whitley: Ernest Truex
Ben Conroy: Russell
Collins
Mr. Cox: John
Marley
Frietag: Hank
Patterson
Mr. Agee: Earl
Hodges
Mrs. Summers: Marjorie
Bennett
Mrs. Densley: Lenore
Shanewise
Mrs. Wister: Anne
O’Neal
Mr. Carlson: Burt
Mustin
David Whitley: Barry
Truex
Nurse: Eve
McVeagh
Boy #1: Gregory
McCabe
Boy #2: Marc
Stevens
Crew:
Writer: George
Clayton Johnson (original teleplay)
Director: Lamont
Johnson
Producer: Buck
Houghton
Production Manager: Ralph W. Nelson
Director of Photography: George T. Clemens
Art Direction: George
W. Davis and Phil Barber
Set Decoration: George R. Nelson
Assistant Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Casting: Stalmaster-Lister
Editor: Bill
Mosher
Story Consultant: Richard McDonagh
Sound: Franklin
Milton and Bill Edmondson
Music: stock
And Now, Mr. Serling:
“For all of us, even the most young at heart, I
suppose there’s a little kernel of want having to do with reliving childhood,
that grand and glorious moment in time when the biggest guy around is the
patrol boy. Next week on the Twilight Zone this moment is recaptured in George
Clayton Johnson’s exceptionally sensitive story called ‘Kick the Can.’ It
co-stars Mr. Ernest Truex and Mr. Russell Collins.
“If the tobaccos in a cigarette are good enough, they
alone will give mellow richness and satisfactory mildness. Try Chesterfields
and you’ll discover twenty-one great tobaccos make twenty wonderful smokes.”
Rod Serling’s Opening Narration:
“Sunnyvale Rest: a home for the aged. A dying place. And
a common children’s game called kick the can that will shortly become a refuge
for a man who knows he will die in this world if he doesn’t escape…into the
Twilight Zone.”
Summary:
Charles Whitley is an elderly man who resides at a small retirement home called Sunnyvale Rest. He and the other residents spend their days knitting or watching television, talking about things that do not matter, and looking for anything that may remind them that their life is not yet over. Whitley announces one afternoon that he is leaving Sunnyvale and going to live with his son. His announcement is met with skepticism. His son arrives and tells him that he will not be able to house him and that he must stay at the rest home. Whitley walks through the vacant lot next to the facility. He sees a group of boys playing a game of kick the can and sits beneath a tree and watches for a while.
Later, in his room, Whitley tells one of the other
residents, Ben, that he misses his youth. He misses playing games like kick the
can. He wonders if there is a secret to staying young. Ben dismisses this as
wishful thinking and tells Whitley that he should accept his age and be
thankful that he has lived a long life.
That night, Whitley wakes up all of the residents and
asks them if they want to play kick the can. Perhaps youth is only an idea, he
says, and maybe acting youthful will somehow keep them young. He convinces them
to sneak past the night nurse and venture outside.
Alarmed that his friend may be suffering a mental
breakdown, Ben wakes the head caregiver and informs him that Whitley and the
others have broken curfew by going outside. When they arrive outside, however,
they find only children. Ben spots a boy playing tag and realizes that it is
Whitley. He begs Whitley to take him with them, to make him young again. But
the boy only stares back at him silently and then runs off into the woods with
the others. The old man picks up the can and walks quietly back into the empty
rest home.
Rod Serling’s Closing Narration:
“Sunnyvale Rest. A dying place for ancient people who
have forgotten the fragile magic of youth. A dying place for those who have
forgotten that childhood, maturity, and old age are curiously intertwined and
not separate. A dying place for those who have grown too stiff in their
thinking to visit…the Twilight Zone.”
Commentary:
“Kick the Can” is the fourth original teleplay from writer George Clayton Johnson. Unfortunately, it would also be his last. Before coming to write for The Twilight Zone Johnson had little experience writing professionally and had never written for television. Still, he hit a creative stride on the show that was unprecedented for even a seasoned veteran. His scripts were thoughtful and mature and they drew the audience in and convinced them to care about the characters, even ones like Jesse Cardiff and Ben Conroy. But his time with the show was more or less over. His work would appear on the program one last time during the fifth season but the experience would be a bitter one.
“Kick the Can” is the fourth original teleplay from writer George Clayton Johnson. Unfortunately, it would also be his last. Before coming to write for The Twilight Zone Johnson had little experience writing professionally and had never written for television. Still, he hit a creative stride on the show that was unprecedented for even a seasoned veteran. His scripts were thoughtful and mature and they drew the audience in and convinced them to care about the characters, even ones like Jesse Cardiff and Ben Conroy. But his time with the show was more or less over. His work would appear on the program one last time during the fifth season but the experience would be a bitter one.
Before we go any further let’s talk about “Dreamflight.”
At some point between selling “Kick the Can” in 1962 and the show’s
cancellation in 1964, Johnson co-wrote an original teleplay with friend and
frequent collaborator William F. Nolan called “Dreamflight," about a
woman living with a recurring nightmare in which she is a passenger on an
airplane that gradually begins to shut down before falling out of the sky.
Several days later she boards a real airplane and
notices the exact same sequence of events from her dream starting to unfold there. She begins to panic. The man sitting next to her does his best to distract
her from her thoughts and they develop a connection. By the end of the flight
she has forgotten the nightmare and is finally ready to move forward with her
life. The plane lands safely and the story ends. The fantasy element here is
ambiguous much like the supernatural abilities of the Mystic Seer in “Nick of
Time.” The protagonist chooses not to fall victim to her own mind and is
willing to take steps to prevent this from happening much like William Shatner
in the earlier episode.
There appears to be some confusion as to when “Dreamflight” was sold to the show. The dates given by past researchers vary
considerably, as do the reasons for why it was never made into an episode.
Many, including Nolan, say that it was submitted to the show near the
end of season three. This meant that Buck Houghton would have been the one to
decide its fate. No definitive reason as to why this one never made it past the
writing phase has ever really been given although many believe that the script
was not completed in time to be included in the third season and was abandoned
altogether once the show went off the air at the end of the season. However,
when asked about this project in interviews Johnson recalled selling it to
producer William Froug during the fifth season. Like the first scenario, the
timing was not in their favor and the show went off the air for good before the
script could be filmed. Another reason the producers may have been reluctant to
jump into production on the script was the show’s ever-growing catalog of
episodes dealing with airplanes or air travel, particularly Serling’s
“Twenty-Two” and Matheson’s “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” both of which
bear a resemblance to “Dreamflight.” On an interesting side note, Johnson said that he wrote the first draft of "Kick the Can" while he and Nolan were driving back to Los Angeles from Missouri where the filming of Roger Corman's The Intruder (1962) had just wrapped. The film was adapted by Beaumont from his novel and featured Nolan and Johnson in bit roles. Read more about "Dreamflight" in our interview with William F. Nolan here.
Logan's Run, 1967 |
Johnson found himself roaming the fifth dimension
throughout much of the 1980’s starting with the publication of a small collection of stories and essays called Writing for the Twilight Zone in 1980. In 1981 Rod
Serling’s The Twilight Zone Magazine began an impressive eight year run
with author T.E.D. Klein as its first editor. The magazine published several of
Johnson’s essays and short stories during its reign including his story “Sea
Change,” in which the protagonist loses his hand only to have another one grow
back in its place. Serling bought the story for the original series in 1960 but
had to sell it back to Johnson amid concerns that the sponsors would find it
too violent. The 1980’s revival series remade “A Game of Pool” using Johnson’s
original ending during its final season.
Most notable, of course, is the remake of “Kick the Can”
for Twilight Zone: The Movie in 1983.
In 1982 Warner Brothers contacted Johnson wanting to purchase the screen rights
to the story. Johnson was hesitant at first but after learning of Carol
Serling’s involvement and that Richard Matheson would write the screenplay he agreed
to let them adapt his story. But before he did so he met with Frank Marshall
and Kathleen Kennedy of Amblin Entertainment and gave them a short, three page
outline which contained a new ending to his story. Johnson felt that his
original teleplay was a bit irresponsible in that it failed to portray the
reality of the situation. These kids were now on their own with no one to take
care of them. The outline featured an additional sequence which began where the
original story ended, with the kids running off into the woods. It follows the
kids on their adventure through the woods, laughing and playing, lost in the
exhilaration of youth. As the excitement fades they grow tired and hungry and
scared. The consequences of their actions become a reality. They stumble upon
the rest home, unfamiliar to them now, and climb into the warm beds where they
are transformed back into their older selves. Matheson kept Johnson’s idea but
condensed it for time, eliminating the scenes of the children in the woods.
This earned Johnson screen credit as well as story credit for his original
teleplay. After Matheson submitted his final script to Warner Brothers,
however, director/producer Steven Spielberg gave it to screenwriter Mellissa
Mathison for revision. Spielberg had just worked with Mathison on E.T. earlier that year and felt that she
could give the story a softer, whimsical quality. The result is a syrupy-sweet
disaster with unnecessary special effects which bears little resemblance to the
original episode.
"Kick the Can" segment in Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983) directed by Steven Spielberg |
Robert
Bloch’s official novelization of the film is quite different from Spielberg’s
version. As we mentioned in our review of the book, Bloch was given an early
draft of the screenplay. His version features a humorous opening scene in which
Bloom is checking into Sunnyvale and a dream montage which occurs before all of
the residents go outside to play kick the can. It is also void of the
overbearing visual effects, hideous set designs, and awkward dialogue that
saturate the film. Those who were disappointed with the movie may find Bloch’s
laid-back approach more enjoyable.
When
George Clayton Johnson wrote this teleplay he was 32 years old. Three of his Twilight Zone episodes, “Nothing in the
Dark,” “Ninety Years Without
Slumbering,” and “Kick the Can” all concern growing old, facing death, and
losing one’s self to fear and time. It is interesting that a young writer would
be able to create accurate and compelling characters that are significantly
older than he is. Johnson does not judge or exploit his characters and gives
them sympathetic personalities that are easily approachable. In fact, most of
the show’s regular writers were in their thirties at the time yet most wrote
about the aging process frequently. Matheson wrote “Night Call” and “Spur of
the Moment,” both rather bleak episodes about aging. Beaumont wrote “Static”
and “Long Live Walter Jameson,” both stories about escaping old age. He also
wrote “Passage on the Lady Anne” to the opposite effect. Serling wrote a
handful of episodes about aging most notably “The Changing of the Guard,” “The
Sixteen Millimeter Shrine,” and “The Trade Ins.” He also adapted “Of Late I
think of Cliffordville” from a Malcolm Jameson short story and “A Short Drink
from a Certain Fountain” from a story by Lou Holtz.
Johnson
said he got the idea for this episode while trying to remember the rules to
kick the can, a game he played frequently as a kid, and discovering that he
could not. This loss of memory caused Johnson to think that maybe he had lost
his youth to time and old age. After realizing that old age is not as black and
white as it is often depicted as being, Johnson came up with the idea for “Kick
the Can.” Ironically, his decision to approach the movie version with a more
mature philosophy directly contradicts the message of the original episode.
Director
Lamont Johnson, who added an immeasurable depth to George Clayton Johnson’s
previous episode “Nothing in the Dark,” lends his distinctive personality to
“Kick the Can” as well. This was his fifth episode of the show, all of which
were made within a few short months, and by this time Johnson had a definite
understanding of the show’s personality. He knew, almost instinctively it
seems, what type of direction was suitable for an episode simply based on the
script. Many of his episodes, like “Five Characters in Search of an Exit,” “The
Shelter,” and “Passage on the Lady Anne” are heavily stylized and feature unconventional
lighting and camera angles which give them an immediately noticeable quality. His
direction here is a bit more reserved but he still manages to use the camera to
his benefit in several places.
“Kick
the Can” is one of the best episodes The
Twilight Zone produced during its five year run and has become a classic
piece of American television. Writing about characters so far removed from
himself could have been a risky decision for George Clayton Johnson. But he delivers
a brilliant story that is equal parts sentimental and haunting. Even
when the action appears to be taking a turn for the hokey he and director
Lamont Johnson manage to keep it grounded in rationality. It is entertaining
but still accomplishes what every piece of superior art strives for which is to
show its audience a part of themselves that they were unaware of.
With a great cast, two fantastic leading performances, amazing direction and a
wonderful script “Kick the Can” can easily stand as an example of why The Twilight Zone remains one of the
best television programs of all time.
Grade: A
Grateful acknowledgement to:
Archive of American
Television:
The Twilight Zone Definitive Edition DVD, Season Five (Image Entertainment, 2004)
--Video Interview with George
Clayton Johnson
Twilight Zone Scripts and Stories by George Clayton Johnson (Streamline Pictures, 1996)
All of Us Are Dying and Other Stories by George Clayton Johnson (Subterranean Press, 1999)
All of Us Are Dying and Other Stories by George Clayton Johnson (Subterranean Press, 1999)
Dimensions Behind the Twilight Zone by Stewart Stanyard (ECW Press, 2007)
Forgotten Gems from the Twilight Zone: Volume 2 edited by Andrew Ramage (BearManor Media, 2005)
More Giants of the Genre by Michael McCarty (Wildside Press, 2005)
Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Forgotten Gems from the Twilight Zone: Volume 2 edited by Andrew Ramage (BearManor Media, 2005)
More Giants of the Genre by Michael McCarty (Wildside Press, 2005)
Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Notes:
--Ernest Truex also appears in Serling’s adaptation of
Henry Kuttner and C.L. Moore’s “What You Need” in the first season.
--John Marley also appears in Serling’s adaptation of
Henry Slesar’s story “The Old Man” (as “The Old Man in the Cave”) during the
fifth season.
--Marjorie Bennett also appears in season one’s “The
Chaser” adapted by Robert Presnell, Jr. from the story by John Collier and in
Serling’s season four episode “No Time Like the Past.” She also appeared in a
season two segment of Night Gallery called “Deliveries in the Rear” which was
written by Serling.
--Hank Peterson also appears in the fifth season
episodes “Ring-a-Ding Girl” and “Come Wander with Me.” He also has a role in an
episode of The Loner called “The Sherriff of Fetterman’s Crossing.”
--Burt Muslin also appears in “Night of the Meek”
during the second season.
--The role of Charles Whitley’s son David Whitley is
played by Ernest Truex’s son, actor Barry Truex, although he receives no screen
credit.
-- Eve McVeagh also appears in the season five episode “I
Am the Night—Color Me Black.”
--Lamont Johnson directed eight episodes of the show
including “The Shelter,” “Five Characters in Search of an Exit,” “Nothing in
the Dark” and “Four O’Clock” for season three and “A Passage on the Lady Anne”
for season four.
--George Clayton Johnson wrote four original teleplays
for the show: “A Penny for Your Thoughts” for season two and “A
Game of Pool,” “Nothing in the Dark” and “Kick
the Can” for season three. His stories “All of Us Are Dying” (“The Four of Us
Are Dying”) and “Execution” were adapted by Serling for the first season and
Charles Beaumont adapted his story “The Prime Mover” for the second season. As
mentioned, his fifth season episode “Ninety Years Without Slumbering” was
re-written by Richard DeRoy as per producer William Froug which prompted Johnson to use the pseudonym
Johnson Smith as his by-line.
--“Kick the Can” was famously made into the second
segment of Twilight Zone: The Movie by Steven Spielberg in 1983. Johnson
received story credit and shared screenplay credit with Richard Matheson and Mellissa
Mathison (writing as Josh Rogan). This segment was also adapted into prose form
by Robert Bloch in his official novelization of the film, released by Warner
Books.
--"Dreamflight" was finally published in Forgotten Gems from the Twilight Zone: Volume 2 edited by Andrew Ramage (BearManor Media, 2005).
--"Dreamflight" was finally published in Forgotten Gems from the Twilight Zone: Volume 2 edited by Andrew Ramage (BearManor Media, 2005).
--Listen to the Twilight Zone Radio Drama starring
Shelley Berman and Stan Freberg.
--Brian
That was a great article. Who doesn't love "Kick the Can"? I love Russell Collins, here and in his many Hitchcock TV roles. He's just such a great, cranky old man.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jack. Collins is fantastic in this episode. I have to admit that I am largely unfamiliar with him outside of "Kick the Can," a few Hitchcock episodes, and his Outer Limits episode but I am interested in watching more of his work. If you have a recommended Hitchcock performance from him definitely let me know!
DeleteRegarding "Johnson Smith", George Clayton Johnson's pseudonym for the "Grandfather Clock" story:
ReplyDeleteBack in the day there was Johnson Smith & Co., which manufactured cheap novelties and tricks, the kind you'd find advertised in the back pages of comic books; they also put out a mail-order catalog which was hugely popular among several generations of kids.
The Writer's Guild allows screenwriters to register pseudonyms, to guarantee their payments and royalties, while at the same time signaling to their friends that the script in question had been tampered with at the production level.
I don't know this as a certainty, but Mr. Johnson might just have used "Johnson Smith" as such a signal to his friends about "Ninety Years Without Slumbering".
While I'm here:
That's Hank Patterson as one of the oldsters.
His best known gig was on Green Acres, as Farmer Fred Ziffel, custodial 'parent' to Arnold the pig.
Russell Collins had a showy role in the 1963 feature Fail-Safe, as one of the officials at SAC Headquarters who had to contend with the airborne SNAFU.
Hey thanks, Mike. I corrected the misspelling but thanks for bringing it to our attention. You are absolutely correct about Johnson's source for his pseudonym for "Ninety Years..." As he explains in his Archive of American Television interview he took the name Johnson Smith from Johnson Smith Company, a toy company out of Chicago. The name was registered with the Writer's Guild. He felt it was close enough to his real name that friends and associates would know it was him but that "Smith" left just vague enough.
DeleteAnd Fail-Safe has been on my list of films to see for a while now. The cast is pretty incredible. Thanks for the comment!
Mention of Fail Safe reminds me of "A Little Peace and Quiet," the second episode of the 80s Twilight Zone, when the nuclear bomb is frozen in the sky and you can see the marquee at the movie theater, the two movies being shown are Dr. Strangelove and Fail Safe.
DeleteThose Archive interviews are great, if a little dry, and loaded with info like the origin of the Johnson Smith pseudonym. For those interested, Matheson and Hamner also provided interviews and spoke at length about their work on the Zone. All available on YouTube.
ReplyDeleteIt's a shame so many scripts from the great Zone writers were scrapped in the final season. Besides the Johnson scripts, you had Matheson's "The Doll," Jerry Sohl's "Pattern for Doomsday" and "Who Am I?", Beaumont's "Gentlemen Be Seated," the Arch Oboler script and on and on. All passed on. It should have been a time for bringing in those talented writers associated with The Group like William F. Nolan, Robert Bloch, Harlan Ellison, and Theodore Sturgeon, but instead producer William Froug decided to bring in his own group of writers and, frankly, it killed the show.
I hate to be the skunk at the church picnic, but, lifelong "Twilight Zone" lover that I am, I can't stand "Kick the Can". Fantasy, to really work, has to illustrate an aspect of human life that is, in itself, real ("Nick of Time", by dramatizing how pitifully insecure even so-called "go-getters" can secretly be, does that to perfection). "Kick the Can" not only doesn't do that; it runs directly counter to it. I am 64 years old myself, and, over the years, I have had the privilege of learning a great deal from men and women who were far wiser, and much older, than myself -- people as diverse as a splendid husband-wife acting team, a veteran of the early years of the American occupation of Berlin, and a leader of the anti-Nazi resistance in Vienna who saved 600 lives. None of these people, in their old age, ever fantasized about, or longed for, a return to their childhoods. They certainly wished that they could be rid of the pains and ailments that accompanied old age, and that they could be more physically active as they used to be; but the experiences that they had passed through over the years (and not only the good ones, by any means) were the crown jewels of their existences. They all HAD stayed young (as I flatter myself that I have) in the most important way: by never losing the ability to appreciate a good joke, or be awestruck by the beauty of art and nature, or to still be able to enjoy so-called "kid stuff" like comic books (and "The Twilight Zone"!) into their 80s and 90s. When the (wonderful) lady in my life turned 75 in December 2018, I gave an elaborate party for her, and asked "Do you mind if your friends know WHICH birthday this is?" "Certainly not. I regard each and every one of those years as an accomplishment." For me, "Kick the Can", by proposing to treat the lives of its characters as if they were Etch-A-Sketches, to be blithely erased and rewritten, isn't an exercise in wish-fulfillment: it's a fantasy version of Alzheimer's disease. Take away all of those years of striving, and failing, and succeeding, and loving -- and you have destroyed the person. No thanks.
ReplyDelete