In cult television history, World
War II is often featured in very dramatic terms because the Nazi menace proved
so terrifying and existential, and because it conformed so easily to Hollywood definitions
of “evil.” In other words, the Nazis make great
villains in drama because of their horrible real-life acts. It's not hard to hate and fear them.
In one type of cult-television
World War II tale, surviving Nazi soldiers often face a comeuppance for their nasty
ways. In The Twilight Zone’s (1959
– 1964) “Death’s-Head Re-Visited,” for example, a Nazi soldier who escaped
justice after commanding the Dachau Death Camp returns to that grisly location only to
face trial by his ghostly victims. The
scales of cosmic justice are finally righted.
One Step Beyond (1959 – 1961) dramatized
a similar tale, called “The Haunted U-Boat.”
In this creepy story -- reportedly
based on fact according to host John Newland -- the crew of a Nazi
submarine in World War II is driven to distraction by a persistent, ubiquitous
banging noise. Finally, the ship
surrenders to the Allies, and it is learned that the banging was caused by the
ghost of a laborer who became trapped inside the boat’s hull during
construction. Again, the mechanisms of
the supernatural intervened with our affairs to punish a very real form of
human evil.
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The other brand of story about World
War II featured on cult television involves the dreaded resurrection of the
Nazi terror in the present (or future).
Both “He Lives” on The Twilight Zone and “Echo of
Yesterday” on Mission: Impossible (1966 – 1973) revive the frightening visage
of Adolf Hitler in the 1960s. And Star Trek’s (1966 –
1969) second season entry, “Patterns of Force,” similarly, involves a Nazi
takeover of a distant planet in the 23rd Century, courtesy of a very misguided Federation history teacher,
John Gill.
Star Trek occasionally returned to
the World War II milieu in the 1990s and 2000s, via the auspices of the
holodeck on Star Trek: Voyager (“The Killing Game"), and time travel on Enterprise
(“Storm Front.”) The latter
episode landed creepy non-terrestrials into Nazi, SS uniforms.
The X-Files (1993 – 2002) also
featured a World War II era episode in its sixth season, titled “Triangle.” There, Mulder (David Duchovny) passed into a
Bermuda Triangle-styled anomaly and encountered 1940s counterparts for his
friends and enemies. Naturally, the
Cigarette-Smoking Man was a Nazi officer…
I submit that World War II is so popular
a setting for cult television because it provides extreme examples of human
nature. In one conflict, we see both horrible evil manifested (in the form of the Nazis) and great good, in the form of those who resist
their war machine and ideology. Interestingly, V
(1983), V:The Final Battle (1984), and V: The Series (1985) all recreate some aspects of the World War II dynamic, only with
alien fascists rather than Nazis. In
this case – as in others in cult
television – the belief that “it can’t happen here” is proven dramatically wrong.
I'd love to see a TV mini-series adaptation of the classic Sinclair Lewis novel It Can't Happen Here or an adaptation of Phillip Roth's recent novel about a fascist takeover of America that results in the Jews of the United States being treated in a similar manner to their German and European cousins.
ReplyDeleteSome have said that America is sliding toward fascism despite the presence of Barack Obama as president, due to the current set-up of the Republican Party, the Tea Party, and Fox News, plus all of the extreme right-wing talk show hosts who do what they do-any thoughts on this, John?
BTW, you also forgot about the sequel to The Philadelphia Experiment, which involves time travel and the sending back of a F-117 jet back to the 1940's to aid America that ends up aiding the Germans, changing history....