Night Gallery S02E22 (The Caterpillar - Little Girl Lost) - podcast episode cover

Night Gallery S02E22 (The Caterpillar - Little Girl Lost)

Nov 12, 202328 minSeason 2Ep. 22
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Episode description

The Caterpillar: Laurence Harvey gives a devilish performance as an English expat in Borneo whose plan to kill a competitor is very unusual and goes very wrong.

Little Girl Lost: William Windom returns to the Gallery as a grieving father who refuses to believe his daughter is dead.


Mike White
http://www.projectionboothpodcast.com/
Chris Stachiw
WeirdingWayMedia.com
Father Malone
FatherMalone.com

Transcript

All right, listen up, Caves, I got your assignments, riga six four three wheeler one four eight not eight oh four, and only you you need to join host HP and fatherm Alone as they examine one of the greatest sitcoms in television history, Taxi in Knight, Mister Walters, a taxi podcast banda zero like your boxing record, Frank, mister Walters, we are giving way. We deal a eight pigure, light and shine, realism, surrealism, impressionism, edibles, storage, an interest in the d blog, a

pred of lunch toward the desire. And this place is nothing if it isn't bizarre. There's no admission, no require membership, only a stronger the flight of belief than the dark at the top of the stairs or things that go bump in the night. The name of this place you would commend your accidentally out of the rank is the Nightgown. And welcome back ourt lovers to Midnight Viewing the Night Gallery Podcast, where we discuss Night Gallery, Rod Serling's follow

up to the Twilight Zone. I'm Father Malone and with me here in the gallery are the projection booths. Mike White, ohay hoy and joining us as always as the culture cast Chris Statue, and I'm joined by my daughter Jenny. Jenny, please say hi to everybody. Oh Jenny, you're looking very lovely today. This is probably the most celebrated, talked about, written about, remembered episode of Night Gallery to its initial audience, syndicated as well.

Probably it is season two, episode twenty two. It aired on March the first, nineteen seventy two, and was split into two segments. Those are The Caterpillar and the Little Girl Lost. There are horror stories and horror stories elements of terror that take myriad forms, but this item has a built in

terror which can refrigerate even the most dispassionate amongst us. It has to do with a little beastie known as an earwig, a small bug that crawls into the human ear, and while inside it doesn't whisper sweet nothings, it performs quite another function. Over do you now on Night Gallery a brand new nightmare,

which we call the Caterpillar. The Caterpillar was written by Rod Serling from a short story called Boomerang by Oscar Cook, which is a better title, and it was directed by Jean Zoarc who I think this might be his best direction of the entire series, maybe his career. This one stars Lawrence Harvey, Joanna Pettitt. This is her third of four appearances on Night Gallery, Tom Hellmore, John Williams this is his second appearance, and Don Knight as

a He's a professional English scumbag. This guy was on every television show including Banichick, including Colombo. In Swamp Thing, the Trader is pricked that Australian traders prick. That's him, But I mainly know him from abandoning three adorable children and then just when Bill Bixby and Susan Clark have them settled into a comfortable life, he thinks he can swoop in and rip them away for what

money? How dare you separate the Apple Dumpling Gang? Anyway, this is a tale of jealousy and borneo and a most elaborate and simple plan with which to woo a prospective mate, Mike, what do you think of this one? Shouldn't it really be called the Earwig? Can we? That was really bothering me now all the problems in the episode. That's the dumbest one. Like Like Boomerang is a perfect title for it. Mean it means just as much as a caterpillar, because neither feature in the episode at all. Yeah,

yeah, it would have been nice if something. But yeah, I must have either seen this or seen one of the countless adaptations of this story or this feels like a It's like a campfire tale, right, this whole thing. We took out the thing, but the thing laid babies. And I think I heard Spider when I first heard this story. Okay, cool,

but that was well done. I really like the Lawrence Harvey. I find it very funny because Chris, we're going to be talking abou Lawrence Harvey again this week, So like Lawrence harveying all over the place right now, which is great. Yeah, but it was just like a blackout skit that was stretched very long. Again, but better than most of these ones that we've talked about lately. They're going out on a high note. How about

you, Chris? You know Father Malone. You and I used to do a show about Tales from the Crypt, and I think that this is in that wheelhouse. There are a couple episodes of that show that I can remember back. I want to say one there's a woman with her head and she's a zombie, and then there's a guy's head on a plate and they're in like Jamaica or something, and it's to be careful what you wish for type thing where he's a jilted lover or something. So I'm I love it.

I love the bunch of these studgy British dickens in Bonio, like I love

that. It's fantastic. The setting is great. I don't think they take too much advantage of it because it feels rather set bound, unfortunately, because it takes place inside of this plantation house with Lawrence Harvey just being horned up big time, like an erection popping through his fucking pants, Like the moment he sees her, and it's just like she to her credit, she is like hell no, Johanna Pettit is like hell no from moment one, which

is interesting because normally in these kinds of stories, there's like this in the air up in the airness about the female character's feelings towards the unrequited male love.

She's like, go take a cold shower, an ice your dick, bro I wrote in my notes finally a love triangle story where there aren't two people who are wrong right, And I absolutely loved that aspect of this because this, honestly, Father Blah, feels like the crescendo moment of having spent all those years watching Tales from the Crypt and they just kept doing that shit over and over again. You have to have one of the people on the love triangle say no at some point, and it totally works here. It

was very fresh. It was fresh, and the title is terrible. Yes, both things we can agree on. Oscar Cook, the author of the short story, apparently was in the military in Borneo wrote a lot of stories that took place there, which is why it's set here. And and himself said that this is a parable for rich White entitlement, that Lawrence Harvey's character is just this wealthy guy who just wants what he wants and he's gonna take it no matter what I do. Like that. Lawrence Harvey is one year

away from death here. He has stomach cancer. He's in the throes of it here, and evidently during the scenes when the earwig is eating his brain did not take his pain medication for that day of filming. So what you're seeing is actual genuine torment of Lawrence Harvey that, coupled with the makeup is fantastic. Here. If you look at his ear, you can see that

the hair all around the area has been scratched off. You can see where his nails have gouged at his own ears, thus necessitating him being tied to that bed. I thought that was really hard to watch and therefore really good. Also, he's wearing some fantastic button up boots when we first meet him. They were beautiful. The music in this episode was handled by a new

composer to Night Gallery. His name's Eddie Sauter. If you listen close in the background, there's an electric sitar and a marimba and these electronic squeaks. It's fantastic. Eddie Saunter used to be an arranger for Artie Shaw, Tommy Dorsey and the Benny Goodman Orchestra, and he will be providing the new theme for Night Gallery that we have with season three. In fact, Eddie Saunter will compose all of the music from here on out for Night Gallery. Yeah

right. I mentioned that I think this is Juark's best segment, is best directed segment. I agree, Chris. This is a bottle episode. It is definitely a one location episode, but I don't think it's set bound at

all. I think it's beautifully shot, very carefully lit and photographed. There's a shot where there's a wooden scrim on the left side of the screen and Lawrence Harvey and the husband's heads are both floating above it, and Joanna Pettitt steps into the frame on the right full frame, So these two floating heads of these two characters who want her, and then Harvey has that super creepy line that his appetite is increasing while he's staring at her. The camera slides

to the left. The husband is now gone, it's now Joanna Pennitt and Harvey in the frame together and in the background behind them are rifles and pistols. It's it's a beautiful shots. He should have been nominated for an Emmy for this thing. The day after the earwig has been inserted into the wrong ear or was it the right ear, everyone at breakfast is dressed like George

Ramira. They're all wearing the Safari jackets. It was so distracting for me because I know George Romia is just kind of wear that as a uniform, and I know that's exactly what everyone would be wearing in Borneo at this time period. But it was still a bit unsettling. Okay, the Don Williams character, I said, was it the wrong ear of the right ear?

Because do you think it's possible with that character intentionally had the earput heard the earwig put into Lawrence Harvey's ear, like hearing his plan and what he was doing. I thought that for a little bit, but I wondered that too. But that scene where he's like, oh, sorry, they put it in the wrong I paid some times, like fucking the most British guy around everybody, he had a fucking eel pie hanging out of his mouth, for

f's sake. I love that scene. You figured that out, Yeah, you figured it out a Britain. I am him, like, but I but there's like in that scene shirks conventions too, because I'm expecting him to show up at the window and be like, you know, tough shit, asshole, but he's like, I'm sorry, So I don't know. I

don't think. I think he was genuinely an accident and he feels bad because that scene's like now you say it's moving, but a couple that with Lawrence Harvey just going and like making the noises like you feel for both of the characters in the scene, which is not something I can say for a lot of the segments in Night Gallery. So I kind of feel like it was

an accident just based on that one scene alone. What's funny is I hadn't considered that it was intentionally put into Laurence Harvey's here until he comes up to apologize, and then I thought, he's really contrite about this. Did he do this? And now he feels bad because he's seeing the results of it. I don't know. Maybe I was working overtime on this one, but at least this particular segment begs these kind of questions and are conversation's worth having.

Also, you mentioned the lighting in some of the scenes. The scene where they're in the bar and it's the first time that Lawrence Harvey and mister Britton meet with his hat and it's lit really darkly except for Lawrence Harvey's eyes. Yeah, that's called a halo eyelight, which Jean Jean Zik here like he uses on Lawrence Harvey at every opportunity. And why wouldn't you Lawrence Harvey's faces. Look, I know he's sick here, but what a face,

man. He always had those cheek bones and that gaunt, stony kind of stare. This is a guy who too often, in my opinion, got cast as a hero in movies, and that's what kept him from getting further, I think, because if you cast him as a villain, he's fucking aces man, just like you see him here. That's why he was perfect in mentoring because he didn't know is he this or is he bad? Like everybody's fawning over him. But you know something's that right? I love his

eyebrow raises. It's the eyebrow raises. I mean it's his eyeline really, it's that tease zone area. But those eyebrows, man, he's like he can do like a John Philip Law eyebrow raise like he he would be the American diabolic. That's exactly. I could not put my finger on who he was reminding me of, but yes, John Philip Law. Holy lord. Here's here's a fun fact that ruins the entire episode. There are no pain receptors in the brain. But other than that, I really really liked it,

which is a fact. This is an episode I knew about long before I had ever seen it, because Stephen King chronicles it in his book Dance Macabre his his fiction Book of Horror from nineteen seventy nine or so, where he kind of he kind of lays into the series as not being anything very good, but he singles this particular episode out as even the highest level of horror that he thought the series would ever get to. Yes, yeah, I can see, I would agree. Well, we haven't seen the rest

of the season or the series, so that doesn't boat Will. But the Master of Horror. There's so many books at half price, books with Ks on them that are just even King and no other horror writer, so he must be right. I hope not. But at the same time, I mean, this is I guess this is scary. I don't know. I don't to sit and think about. The ending. Is the ending of this scary ending? He's just gonna die, that's it. Like he's just gonna

his head's gonna explode and he's gonna die. Oh is that all? We watched him with one in his ear, writhing and not being able to vocalize at all from the horrendous amount of pain he was enduring. And now he's going to have at least a dozen or so more of them in there. Yeah, and they'll kill him right. The only ending for him is a pistol, right, just take it off of the wall. That be too good for ye, may you'll have to sit in and do all the pain.

Here's what I really liked. He goes through this entire ordeal. It's a miracle. John Williams shows up to tell us that the ear would came out to the other ear, and then Laurence Tarvey immediately reverts to being a cocksucker in the face. Miracle. Yes, oh so in this case this come up and still absolutely genuinely earned. You're going to have me arrested at the dock, aren't you? No, we're not oh so good? Yeah. Yeah, there were some good bits to this definitely, but like I

said, it just felt a little long. I guess it was those writhing and pain scenes, Like it felt like it just went on for a long time. If you've watched the recent one, this is probably the one off of the DVD that the episode is thirty three minutes, But that's technically like a director's cut, because when it was originally aired, I think like six minutes were cut out of it. So we definitely got to see the full length of maybe had we seen the original and what ended up on syndication version.

Like a lot of our problems might have gone away with the episode. Our next painting, A Knight Gallery, tells the story of an illusion, an invisible specter which guides and motivates and drives. And though you will never see her as Childish Wraith, you'll know she's there, and we venture to suggest that you'll be chilled by the knowledge. Our painting is called Little Girl

Lost. Little Girl Lost. This was written by Stanford Whitmore, based on a short story by Richard Matheson. Oh No, that was the Twilight Zone. Little Girl Lost, That's what I was written by a short story written by author E. C. Tubb. It was directed by Timothy Galfuss, stars Tim Riley himself, mister William Wyndham, ed Nelson I, Franti Ivor Francis and the painting, which is a beautiful painting. At the beginning of

this ethereal ghostly small girl floating in a negative space. That's Chanelle, right, Tom Wright's daughter. She's the model for that when she was also the model for the boy who predicted earthquakes. She had I don't even really have a description of this story. This is a you guys want to describe this one, Well, it's very appropriate that we started with the boy who predicted

earthquakes this season then ending with this one. It really feels if I didn't know better, it feels like they had a plan and that these were the perfect book ends for this whole season. But can I described the plot? No? I really cannot tell you what the central stuff was hinging on. Chris. I know you said he watched these three times each. What the

hell is going on with this? Okay? So we have a scientific genius who is being tasked with developing fission or fusion I guess fission, right, and his daughter dies, and so the guy starts losing it because he is imagining his daughter, and another scientist is sent in to be a confederate as it were, and say, oh, I see her. She's here. And that's why I did the whole intro the way. I was like,

Hey, Jenny's here, because that's the girl's name in the segment. And then it turn guess I could just say what happens, And then it turns out that he is telling them the wrong thing intentionally because he wants to literally fucking destroy the world. So that he can die and maybe not the world but himself at least in a sizable portion of people around him, so that he can die and go be with his daughter and his wife, who he

knew weren't actually there. And he did this all on purpose because he felt guilty and he was stalling to come up with a way to make it intentionally bad. Wait. Okay, wow, that was the way I read it. Okay, here's my synopsis of the story. A scientist is working on what could potentially be a doomsday device and has gotten so to the formula that the military champion at the bit to get it. His daughter dies, he has a psychotic break. He still sees his daughter and will not deal with

the military at all. So they send in this psychiatrist guy to convince him that he should go back to work and finish the formula and that he'll take care of the daughter, and then that he does finish it, and he figures out the formula is a doomsday thing that if they use it at all, it's going to kill everything, and that snaps him back to reality and then and then the world ends. That's what I thought happened. Aw, Mike, what'd you think happened. Let's make us a rondelais a triptych synopsis.

Like I said, I really wasn't catching what they needed him for For some reason. I just went in one ear and out the other like an earwig or had a pillar. Ah. I still so mad about that. I just knew that they had to humor this guy, and he was going to give them something at the end. So then when the world blew up, I was like, oh, is that what they wanted? That's probably not what they wanted, but just the whole pantomiming of taking care of a

little Jenny, Oh my god, that gets old very fast. And especially I wanted the one scientist who can see Harvey. I wanted him to be like, no, Harvey's not there, Harvey's sitting over there. That's what I wanted to fuck with the other guy. But the other guy just picked up and went with it. Oh what a lovely red dress you have. And I wanted the other guy to be like red, that's green. It really has that nice cabin in the woods ending to it where we start panning

up and something just destroys everything in there. Oh my god. No, Yeah, I wanted a giant rabbit foot, just squish them. It's just it's I don't know, like it's a gag that goes on and on and on and on. At least it's not forty minutes. I guess this one is seventeen minutes, right, Yeah, And it is filled with cinematic pit peeves of mine, like the missing rear view mirror in the car when they're driving together. I fucking hate that. Just come on, do a little

extra work. Another was the constant brushing of the girls of the little girl's hair, like I know, like god, it's to establish the physical presence of the girl, like, we get it, But that big old, chunky brush, and how fucking long is that girl's hair anyway? Stop brushing her hair. That's another thing. That's another pet peeve, like the over attentive dad in movies's constantly brushing the girl's hair as if that's making up for

the lack of their mom or something. I don't know. It always bothers me. This is a like the segment had the opportunity to do something interesting and it attempted it, I guess, but it just again, it reminds me of the segment that we were just talking about the one with the robots. Like the ending just oh, the ending is like absolutely insane. It makes very little to no sense. And I'm not saying the segment is good in spite of it. I'm not saying that the ending ruins the segment,

but it doesn't help it. Let's just put it that way. No, it's a mash up. It feels like it's either about this crazy man and his potential ghost daughter or something or something to do with that, or it's about this guy who figured out a formula for the end of the world and

has gone insane. Like they don't show us what the psychotic break. I guess the daughter dying was the psychotic break to begin with, But is the moment where he snaps back to reality when that guy is rude to him at the restaurant he wants the chair because there's no one sitting at the table. That's what it felt, right, Yeah, That's kind of what it felt like to me too, And I was like, why that? Why was that the thing? Like has this just never happened before and it had to

have. He's been out in public with his daughter for how long? Like you know, right, why didn't they buy at one point, the attendant says, oh, let's go buy her a doll. He's trying to stall William Wyndham when he knows that he's getting suicidal and such. And that's a scenario that I wanted to see play out, like going to the toy store, picking out the doll, taking it out of the package, holding it

out to the air, and just dropping it to the ground. Like right, I guess one thing to have the brush in your hand, but like, how real is she if you like, let's go, I heard that doll? Does she want a lollipop? Here you go? Crack? I Yeah. I feel like they should have done that right, Like I feel like they should have gone all the way because like the gag with the brush is just overdone. Like at some point you're just like, can you do

anything else other than brush her hair? Yeah, it didn't like read to her or something, just do any other sort of activity that doesn't involve her hair. It's sort of weird. Yeah, it was very disturbing, and that's how they introduce it, and then they just keep doing it, which yeah, like again if that's if that factors into the story somehow, but it doesn't even factor into the story, it doesn't serve a purpose at all. And yeah, I again it goes back to this idea in my mind

of the show just does the same thing a couple times too many. And I do appreciate the circularity with a boy who predicted earthquakes being the first segment of the cition of this one being the last. If that's the story they were telling, It's just feels like they went, hey, you know, it would be cool if we ended this one just like we ended the first one of this season. Just put it on there. Like every episode ends the same way, with the world blowing out, no matter what episode it

is. It's just that's what happened. Season three is all armageddon. This season was all revenge. Don't forget. We're missing an opportunity here to mention our one of our favorite segments ever from Night Gallery, the last time we saw William Windham. Oh yeah, they're tearing down Tim Riley's barbie. Yeah, father, that's how fatheram alone introduced him. Yeah, and we somehow have slipped under the for he's a jolly goodfellow radar once. Yeah, boy,

doesn't it feel good? We made it through the whole season. There's no way we can have any in the next season, right unless William Windham returns. William Windham returns, Oh God, we're gonna have to bring it up one more time. I'm pretty sure we're gonna get one more Honestly, when you're talking about the new music for season three, I'm hoping it's a play end for He's a jelly. Oh wouldn't it be great if that was the opening titles? Now, God, and they did it enough and they're

tearing down Tim Riley's bar. They did enough times there, God, And that wasn't there tearing down to Mariley's bar. Wasn't that a forty minute long segment or something like it was? Oh dear God, I have re recularity here now in that that was the last season ender and this is this season and they both have William Linda, but this one's seventeen minutes as opposed to

that forty minute slog. Yeah, a breezy comparatively, and he's a jelly, good fellow, Honest to god, thought that was Twilight's on nineteen eighty five. That's how long ago that feels like when we did there tearing down Tim Riley's bar, that's like because that was the I mean that would like you mentioned that was end of the last season, so it's been an entire season since. It's good that we've put the trauma that far behind us prepare

for season three. Exactly, we're going to play a preview for our next episode and we'll be right back to wrap things up. On display, here is a painting showing the natural habitat of this species of black eyed practitioner, dark alley, murky light, a few sundry skulls, and the gentleman himself on the right of the picture with the upraised hand and the funny little goat

horns. Yes, indeed, this is a sorcerer, and for those of you who disbelieve his existence, we invite you to check this out for a little while. Our painting is called the Return of the Sorcerer, and we're a better place for him to return than right here in the Night Gallery. Our number one painting in the Night's exhibit is intriguing portraits of a young lady, curiously photogenic and pointingly formid. Year recall seeing this face. You've seen

it on billboards and magazine ads, on television commercials. Oh yes, you've seen it. But there are people who having seen it which they hadn't. Our painting is called The Girl with the Hungry Eyes? And should I have failed to mention it? This is the night Gallery. That's right on the next Midnight Viewing we're taking a look at season three, episode one and episode two. Those are the return of the Sorcerer and one of my favorite titles of all time, The Girl with the Hungry Eyes. Who can it be?

It's Joanna Pettit again. Midnight Viewing is a proud member of the weirding Way Media group. Our theme song was composed by HP. Until next time? What are you working on? Chris Dashue podcast, Weirdingwaymedia dot Com. But don't just listen to my show. Listen to Noise Junkies, which Bottom

Malone hosts with the aforementioned HP and Mondo. Heather's Teather Drain or Eighties TV Ladies hosted by one of the hosts of Rankin On Bess Richard HadAM, his wife and her co host talk all about you guessed at eighties TV shows featuring who Ladies check their show out? Check all those shows out Weirdingwaymedia dot Com. Folks, Yeah, sorry, you know what they say, you got to lay the red carpet on thicks so people have something nice to walk on.

What about you, Mike Me, Oh, not a whole lot, you know, just been kind of hanging around and stuff and working on the Projection Booth podcasts. New episodes every week, sometimes many. This is going to be the thing for a little while. A lot of bonus episodes, so go on and check those out. Had a nice interview with mister Eddie Deason today, so that was fun. It was a lot of fun to talk with Eddie. Check it out. Listen to all the archives over there

at the Projection Booth podcast. As for me, you want to see some of my nonsense, go to Fathermalone dot com. If you want to hear all of my nonsense, go to Weirdingwaymedia dot com. Thank you all for joining us here at midnight view. The gallery is now closed.

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