Another improved episode from the 1990s Sci-Fi Channel release of OSB. The beginning title, end title, and first minute are from our existing channel copy. Everything other than that is the improved quality . . .
As a child I would always enjoy this program, and I recently found it again here! Thank you so much I'm72 years old now..And It's like I'm watching these for the very first time!!🌹😘.
This was a terrific show! - - Watching them at one and 2 AM in the morning in the dark, gives that added interest. - - As for this episode, it reminds me of that urban legend, about resurrection Mary. - Still a good story.
I consider this Channel as Family since it reminds me so much of my youth! ❤ Cheers and Blessings To ALL who pull up a chair as we watch The Memories together!
Wow!! That was an excellent story! Though a "fictional?" story it sent chills throughout by whole being. Thanks so much for making these episodes available.
This story was a take on the urban legend of the "vanishing hitchhiker". It goes like this: A person is driving a car (usually at night) when they encounter another person alongside the road who says they need a lift home. The driver graciously offers them a ride and the person gets into the car. After they've arrived, the driver turns around and sees that his passenger has disappeared. He knocks the door of the home and talks with the man or woman living there. They tell him that the passenger was a loved one who had died in an auto accident on this particular day x-number of years ago and that the driver isn't the only one who has experienced this.
I've not been much of a TV watcher most of life-Andy Griffith and Twilight Zone being the most notable exceptions- but the enjoyment I've had watching these episodes of One Step Beyond the last month or so has been sustained, something I've really looked forward to at the end of the day. Each setting is so different, each a period piece loaded with suspense. Thank you for making these available to us!
Not as good as the original 15mm film prints sitting in a Paramount warehouse somewhere . . . but it's the best we can do until we win the lottery and buy the studio.
@@one-step-beyond-1959 Me too, I have that 2009 Season 1 DVD set, and even the 70- episode Film Chest set from 2015, even if this episode (and 'The Death Waltz') aren't on it!
@@davidbixby8682 It's mostly the 3rd season episodes (which include 7 of the top 10 best . . .) that are missing from those syndication compilations. I've speculated before that it had something to do with different copyright laws for the thirteen 3rd season episodes filmed n Britain . . .
Thanks so much for posting this improved quality copy. I love the episode, it's very moving. I was nine or ten years old when One Step Beyond first aired and I had only seen a few episodes of the series back in the 60's. This definitely has to be a top five episode. Great cast and great acting.
Una gran trama aquellos años hermosos que nos tocó vivir este episodio quedó grabado en mi corazón como algo muy triste que me recordó la época de mi juventud
All 96 episodes of "One Step Beyond" are already here -- they're not making them any more. But we have "equivalents" which you can check out . . . and an entirely new channel "Beyond OSB", which has a more specific appeal.
One of our favorite episodes. "No one who leaves home ever really goes away." MOVING PARTS This was not our Sunday drive to the country. Mother, patient the seasons in their slow march would reveal in time a way forward, strengthened our belief such sojourns made life bearable. Father, unsure of where we were going, no longer interested which way was west, said nothing save, "Well, that’s that." His eyes said all he could have said as he closed the door. Leaving town we waved goodbye to its trees, well-known namesake, so rooted in place thought had it we could wait as long as needed, should we decide to return. But today we would be somewhere else. Later somebody remembered a window left open, a door unlatched, something we had forgotten. Though others would follow, no one who leaves home ever really goes away.
It's the same story as Resurrection Mary, just w/a different twist. When I was much younger these scared me so much when I watched, I would not watch alone.
@@trent3872 OSB is my favorite scary type of show from the 60's. There were others Twilight Zone, Thriller, Outer Limits, Alfred Hitchcock, etc. But these were suppose to be real stories. Have fun watching, you will be addicted soon. LOL!
THAT'S SAD WHEN A PARENT GETS TO THAT POINT OF BLAMING ONE CHILD FOR THE PASSING OF ANOTHER IT HAS TO BE HELL, ESPECIALLY WHEN THERE'S NO LOVE, POOR GIRL,