The_Howling_Man The_Howling_Man

The Howling Man - Definition

Related Words: Acute, Amok, Bark, Barking, Berserk, Call, Cry, Crying, Delirious
The Twilight Zone original series
season two

Fall 1960 – Summer 1961
List of The Twilight Zone episodes
Episodes:
  1. King Nine Will Not Return
  2. The Man in the Bottle
  3. Nervous Man in a Four Dollar Room
  4. A Thing About Machines
  5. The Howling Man
  6. The Eye of the Beholder
  7. Nick of Time
  8. The Lateness of the Hour
  9. The Trouble With Templeton
  10. A Most Unusual Camera
  11. Night of the Meek
  12. Dust
  13. Back There
  14. The Whole Truth
  15. The Invaders
  16. A Penny for Your Thoughts
  17. Twenty-Two
  18. The Odyssey of Flight 33
  19. Mr. Dingle, the Strong
  20. Static
  21. The Prime Mover
  22. Long Distance Call
  23. A Hundred Yards Over the Rim
  24. The Rip Van Winkle Caper
  25. The Silence
  26. Shadow Play
  27. The Mind and the Matter
  28. Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?
  29. The Obsolete Man

The Howling Man is an episode of the television series The Twilight Zone.

Contents

Details

Episode number: 41

Season: 2

Production code: 3642

Original airdate: November 4, 1960

Writer: Charles Beaumont from his story of the same name, originally published in his 1960 collection Night Ride and Other Journeys

Director: Douglas Heyes

Music: stock

Cast

David Ellington:H.M. Wynant

Brother Jerome: John Carradine

The Howling Man: Robin Hughes

Synopsis

American David Ellington gets lost in a storm while on a walking trip through post-World War I Europe and seeks shelter in a nearby castle. The religious order occupying the castle reluctantly accepts him in, and while wandering the castle halls he comes upon a man locked in a prison cell... a man that Brother Jerome claims to be the devil himself. Ellington is skeptical and frees the man, only to find that he is the devil.

Trivia

This was the first aired episode of the second season which was not written by Rod Serling.

Themes

A European setting between the wars might suggest an allusion to Adolf Hitler, another "evil" man who was granted freedom and power after making an appeal from a prison cell claiming that he was a victim (Mein Kampf or "My Struggle"). This interpretation is further strengthened by a line in Beaumont's original story, which reads [in first person narrative from Ellington]:""When the pictures of the carpenter from Braunau-am-Inn began to appear in all the papers, I grew uneasy; for I felt I'd seen this man before. When the carpenter invaded Poland, I was sure." If this is the case, Beaumont may be warning viewers not to repeat the same mistake, to deny future dictators "man's weakness and Satan's strength," which is mankind's reluctance to see evil for what it really is. Similar themes are explored in He's Alive.

References

  • Zicree, Marc Scott: The Twilight Zone Companion. Sillman-James Press, 1982 (second edition)

Back to: The Twilight Zone, Episode List, Season 2

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