- Deaths-Head Revisited
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"Deaths-Head Revisited" The Twilight Zone episode
Scene from "Deaths-Head Revisited"Episode no. Season 3
Episode 74Directed by Don Medford Written by Rod Serling Featured music Stock Production code 4804 Original air date November 10, 1961 Guest stars Oscar Beregi, Jr.: Captain Lutze
Joseph Schildkraut: Becker
Karen Verne
Robert Boon
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"The Midnight Sun"List of Twilight Zone episodes "Deaths-Head Revisited" is an episode of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone.
Contents
Synopsis
Gunther Lutze, a former sadistic captain in the SS, returns to the ruins of Dachau concentration camp to relive the memories of his time as its commandant during World War II. He revels in the recollections of the torment he inflicted on the inmates, remembering with a cold smile the suffering he was responsible for. As he walks around the gallows and prepares to leave he is surprised to see Alfred Becker, one of the camp's inmates. Becker relentlessly dogs Lutze with the reality of his grossly inhumane treatment of the inmates, while Lutze stubbornly and unemotionally insists that he was only carrying out his orders and had no idea that the Third Reich planned to exterminate Jews. Lutze eventually remembers that he killed Becker 17 years ago on the night before US troops reached Dachau, and realizes that he is facing the man's ghost. Becker and the spirits of many other inmates put Lutze on trial for crimes against humanity and find him guilty. As punishment and atonement, Lutze is made to undergo the same horrors he had imposed on the inmates. He is not physically touched; rather, he experiences the pain in his mind, culminating near the detention room, where he screams in agony. Lutze has been driven insane.
Before departing, Becker's ghost informs him, "This is not hatred. This is retribution. This is not revenge. This is justice. But this is only the beginning, Captain. Only the beginning. Your final judgment will come from God." Lutze is eventually found and taken to a mental institution for the criminally insane in a straitjacket, leaving his finders to survey the remains of the camp in wonder and bafflement. As they prepare to leave and take Lutze to the asylum, the doctor who examined him looks around visibly upset and asks, "Dachau. Why does it still stand? Why do we keep it standing?"
Serling closes the episode with a powerful statement: "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 gravediggers. Something to dwell on and to remember, not only in the Twilight Zone but wherever men walk God's Earth."
Critical response
Gordon F. Sander, excerpt from Serling: The Rise and Twilight of Television's Last Angry Man:
- Serling meted out nightmarish justice of a worse kind in "Deaths-Head Revisited" (directed by Don Medford), Serling's statement on the Holocaust, written in reaction to the then-ongoing Eichmann trial, in which a former Nazi, played by Oscar Beregi, on a nostalgic visit to Dachau, is haunted and ultimately driven insane by the ghosts of inmates he had killed there during the war.
Cultural references
The band Anthrax sampled a few lines of dialogue for the introduction to the song "Intro to Reality" on the 1990 album Persistence of Time. The song "Belly of the Beast" by Anthrax was itself based on the episode's story.
The New Jersey hardcore band Rorschach samples some of the lines from the ending narration on the song "Lightning Strikes Twice" from their album Remain Sedate.
References
- Zicree, Marc Scott: The Twilight Zone Companion. Sillman-James Press, 1982 (second edition)
- A play on the title of the popular Evelyn Waugh novel, Brideshead Revisited.
- DeVoe, Bill. (2008). Trivia from The Twilight Zone. Albany, GA: Bear Manor Media. ISBN 978-1593931360
- Grams, Martin. (2008). The Twilight Zone: Unlocking the Door to a Television Classic. Churchville, MD: OTR Publishing. ISBN 978-0970331090
External links
- "Deaths-Head Revisited" at the Internet Movie Database
- TV.com episode page
- Full video of the episode at CBS.com
Categories:- 1961 television episodes
- The Twilight Zone episodes
- Works about the Holocaust
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