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"Time Enough at Last" is an episode of the s yet is surrounded by those who would prevent him from reading them. Following Bemis through The End Of The World , the episode touches on such social issues as Anti-intellectualism , the dangers of reliance upon Technology , and the difference between aloneness and loneliness. SYNOPSIS The episode opens on Burgess Meredith's character, a bank teller who presently takes a break to read. : As Bemis's day progresses, it turns out both his wife and his boss think reading is a waste of time. At one point, his wife, as a cruel joke, asks Henry to read her Poetry from a book. He eagerly obliges, but when he opens the book he finds that she has blacked out all the pages. The following day, Henry takes his lunch break in the bank's Vault . As he reads the newspaper, he notices the foreboding headline: "H-Bomb Capable of Total Destruction". Loud explosions can be heard from outside, violently shaking the vault and knocking Bemis unconscious. In the aftermath of the apparent war, he regains consciousness and emerges to find he is the last person alive on Earth. As he wanders through his town he sees devastation everywhere. Bemis searches desperately for his wife as : Bemis finds himself in a world of abundance and emptiness, with food to last him a lifetime sheer loneliness taking its toll on his sanity. As he loses hope and is about to commit Suicide , he discovers the ruins of the public Library with all of its books still intact and readable. All the books he could ever hope for are his for the taking, and he finally has all the time in the world to read—and no one to stop him. Sorting books he plans to read by month, Bemis proclaims he has enough to last several years and time enough at last to read them. Just as he reaches to pick up his first book, he stumbles and his reading glasses fall off and shatter. In tears, he picks up the remains of his glasses and utters, "That's–that's not fair. That's not fair at all. There was time now. There was, was all the time I needed... ! ''It's not fair!''" : PRODUCTION INFORMATION Inspired by a ''.During a ''Twilight Zone'' marathon in 2006, various promotional spots featuring Serling were featured in between episodes on the Sci Fi Channel in the United States. John Brahm was awarded a Directors Guild award for his work on this episode.2 Footage of the exterior steps of the library was filmed several months after the rest of the episode. These steps can also be seen on the exterior of an Eloi public building in MGM's 1960 version of '' The Time Machine ''.Zicree, Marc Scott. ''The Twilight Zone Companion''. Sillman-James Press, 1982 (second edition). THEMES are among the episode's themes.]] Although the overriding message may seem to be "be careful what you wish for", there are other themes throughout the episode as well. Paramount among these is the question of aloneness versus loneliness, as embodied by Bemis's moment of near-suicide; the portrayal of societal attitudes towards books also speaks to the current decline of traditional literature and how, given enough time, reading may become a relic of the past.3Sarris, Andrew. ''Rod Serling: Viewed from Beyond the Twilight Zone''. At the same time, the ending "punishes Bemis for his antisocial behavior, and his greatest desire is thwarted."Stanyard, Stewart T. and Gaiman, Neil. ''Dimensions Behind the Twilight Zone: A Backstage Tribute to Television's Groundbreaking Series''. Ecw Press, 2007. Rod Serling 's conclusion alludes to the Scots poem " To A Mouse " (for which '' Of Mice And Men '' was also named) in the conclusion. The original quote is, "The best-laid schemes o mice an men / ''Gang aft agley''" (translation: "Often go awry"). Thus, as Serling says, Bemis has become "just a fragment of what man has deeded himself". Adds Jason Warren of Scifilm.org, " there be a hint here that it's such men [as Henry Bemis , men who bury themselves in books, who unwittingly create weapons that can destroy us all?"4 A suggested lesson plan accompanying "Time" for Cable In The Classroom includes an opening discussion about what "makes life worth living", what students value most, and what they would miss most if it was lost. During the episode, students are to observe Henry Bemis' feelings and the Symbolism employed "to demonstrate man's subjugation to commerce, anti-intellectualism, the nuclear threat, and the elevation of ideas and learning". The lesson plan also recommends a group activity surrounding a hypothetical situation similar to that of Mr. Bemis.5 Although it is implied that Nuclear Warfare has destroyed humanity, Film Critic Andrew Sarris notes that the episode's necessarily unrealistic format may have been what allowed its production to commence: In the era of the Internet and EBook s, the irony depicted in "Time Enough at Last" has an Information Age counterpart according to Weston Ochse of ''Storytellers Unplugged''. As Ochse points out, when Bemis becomes the last person on Earth, he finally has time to read, with all his books at his fingertips and the only impediment is technology when his medium for accessing them—his glasses— breaks. In a hypothetical world where all books are published electronically, Ochse observes, readers would be "only a lightning strike, a faulty switch, a sleepy workman or a natural disaster away from becoming Henry Bemis at the end of the world"—that is, a Power Outage , which would cut off access to distractions that normally keep readers from their books, would give them time to read, yet like Bemis, they too would lose their medium for accessing their books—namely the computer. Similar episodes Episodes of ''The Twilight Zone'' were well known for exploring the same or similar themes from different angles or perspectives.6 "Time Enough at Last" has strong thematic ties to a number of other episodes in the series, starting with that of isolation, first explored in the series Pilot , " Where Is Everybody? ". In a plot very similar to that of "Time", " The Mind And The Matter " tells of a man who uses his mind to erase humanity, only to find that existence without other people is unbearable. The notion of being an Outsider , lost in a sea of Conformity , was one of the most common themes of the series. Other thematic elements can be found throughout the series, as well. ". This notion, akin to Bradbury's " The Pedestrian ", is also alluded to in " Number 12 Looks Just Like You ", in which a perfect and equal world contradictorily considers works like those of Shakespeare "smut". IMPACT '', a Show-within-a-show on ''Futurama'', pokes fun at the Suspension Of Belief in "Time Enough at Last". When the man in the episode loses his glasses, he realizes he can still read large print; his eyes fall out, but he declares he can read Braille ; his hands fall off, and as he screams, so does his tongue and then his entire head. Bender comments, "Cursed by his own Hubris ."]] Today, "Time Enough at Last" "remains one of the best-remembered and best-loved episodes of ''The Twilight Zone''" according to Marc Zicree, author of '' The Twilight Zone Companion ''. When a poll asked readers of ''Twilight Zone Magazine'' which episode of the series they remembered the most, "Time Enough at Last" was the most frequent response, with " To Serve Man " coming in a distant second.7 Indeed, in TV Land 's presentation of '' TV Guide '''s "100 Most Memorable Moments in Television", "Time Enough at Last" was ranked at #25. Of the episode commentator Keith Olbermann remarked, "It is as fine a piece of theatrical bitter irony as has been constructed. Greek playwrights would look at that and go, 'Pretty Good'!"8 American '' (" Return Of The Nanobots "); '' The Drew Carey Show '' (" Y2K You're OK"); '' Family Guy '' (" Wasted Talent "); '' Futurama '' (" A Head In The Polls "); and '' The Simpsons '' (" Strong Arms Of The Ma "). In a more subtle homage, the PC game '' Fallout Tactics '' includes a librarian in a desolate world who wants the player to find his missing glasses so he can read his books.10
MEDIA of the short story "Time Enough at Last".]] "Time Enough at Last" has been released in numerous formats over the years. As early as 1988 , it was available on VHS as part of a ''Twilight Zone'' collector's edition.12 Two releases were made in 1998 and 1999 as part of a more widely available two-episodes-per-tape release scheme.1314 Although similar individual multi-episode DVD s were released, it is now exclusively available as part of ''The Twilight Zone - The Definitive Edition'', the first volume of which was released December 24, 2004. Included is an audio-only interview with Burgess Meredith as well as the clip of '' The Drew Carey Show '''s parody of the episode. However, as part of Sci Fi Channel 's participation in Cable in the Classroom, it airs commercial-free from time to time and may be recorded and publicly exhibited for educational purposes; it first aired in this form in 1999. The episode has also been released on non-traditional media. For instance, the story which inspired it has been released in EBook and MP3 form, capitalizing on the success of the episode. In 2005, "Time" became one of the first ''Twilight Zone'' episodes offered for download via Google Video , and later on sites such as Amazon.com .15 Along with other ''Twilight Zone'' episodes, "Time Enough at Last" has been adapted to formats other than television since its original publishing and broadcast. In 2003, the Falcon Picture Group produced a series of Radio Drama s based on the series—stating, "In the 1950s many radio series were turned into television series – so why not the reverse?"—which were broadcast on about 200 stations through the USA; "Time" was included in volume six.16 EXTERNAL LINKS REFERENCES AND FURTHER READING |
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