6:54 I thought she was gonna give Ernest a bite too 😄 I wish the servants had at least one dialogue. They probably knew all along. Thanks for the upload.
How bizarre, a visiting exchange professor seemingly pacifist, in his white suit stalks, enters the presidential palace and attempts to kill the president of his host country. Bizarre indeed.
Maybe it is too late to say it but that is not the Grande Vals Brillante (Chopin) but some other one , and yes extraordinary melody... anyone knows the name of it ?
Yes, you missed all the fun when we were figuring that out a few years ago: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-8U8t2iQ5Mvo.html and ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-IT1OnRJyvzE.html
@@one-step-beyond-1959 Woow, you are not going to believe how fool I am, hehe... occasionally, from time to time I would come back and watch this episode and would again and again be intrigued to know the name of the waltz, I like it so much! thanks much really..
Just watched the last one. Fascinating series, much better than most of the tosh ther is on TV today. I think that the reason it's not been refreshed like Twilight Zone and Outer Limits is because the stories don't stand up to scrutiny...as I've been watching these wonderful stories I've kind of fact checked most of them and found no real evidence apart from hearsay and anecdotes. Doesn't stop these shows from being entertaining!
Why do I see this episode influencing Tales from the Darkside, which would come many decades later? It has that creepiness, the build up, that twist, etc. Surprised Tales from the Darkside didn't reboot this ep.
@@one-step-beyond-1959 I have another: A B&W program about a man falling (or pushed) down a residential elevator shaft and breaking his back, leaving him paralyzed. The antagonist, a woman, looks down upon him without empathy and closes the door.
Are you certain it was broadcast in B&W . . . or did you maybe only have a B&W television at that time (?) If the former, it would be before about 1965. I've looked at some TV history websites, but they weren't able to help me in my episode search. It's a WW2 story in which (as I recall it) French partisans are hopelessly holed up in a basement and the Germans send wave after wave of near-suicidal attacks to dislodge them. I thought it might be an episode of the "Combat" television series, but it turns out not to be . . .
I cannot fathom the terrible grief of losing a bright, inquisitive daughter. Even though it's the spirit of the dead girl inhabiting the body of another girl, you can see how her bright, sparkly personality must have so greatly enriched the lives of her mother and father, and to lose her in a drowning accident would be overwhelming in misery and anguish.
I have always loved that music because it was the one time my mother, Dad, and I would watch TV together. In fact it was one of the few times that I had my parents to myself.
Love this! Reincarnation makes total sense to me. BTW, Jean Cadell who plays the old woman in the village who recognizes him also played Mrs. Micawber, wife of W. C. Fields’ character in the great classic film David Copperfield!