Night Gallery – Dark Boy (S2E10)

ngdarkboy05New schoolmarm Judith Timm has just arrived by wagon.  Things get off to an awkward start when she asks what happened to the previous schoolmarm and gets no answer. This on top of a terse “Don’t Come” letter received before her trip make it clear, that was not the Welcome Wagon she came in on.

When Judith mentions having 17 children in her school, a couple of ubiquitous bitties are adamant that there are only 16.  Judith says she remembers the sole titular brunette child because there are 16 blondes in the class.  This is later seen to be clearly untrue, but it seems too be more of a casting faux pas than a plot point.

That night, Judith goes back to the school to put in a little overtime — as government workers, even on the frontier, are wont to do.  From the looks of that chalk board, she could use a little more time in a classroom — and not at the head of it.  Note the math on the first two problems.

As she is working, she sees the dark boy boy peeking in the window.  She waves at him to come in, but he runs off. That night the bitties bring her tea and a cookie.  She tells them about the dark boy.

The next night, she is burning the midnight oil again — literally.  Oddly, the same math problems are still on the board behind her and have not been corrected.  Again, the dark boy peers in the widow.  This time, Judith confronts him outside.  She has found that his name is Joel and he has been in the 4th grade for two years.  She offers to teach him at night if he can’t come to class during the day, but he runs off again.

The bitties bring her tea and a cookie again, which seems pretty fishy, but ends up just being neighborly.

She believes Joel is the son of a local rancher.  Upon visiting him, she learns that his son Joel was killed in a fall from a ladder at the school 2 years earlier.  The father and others have seen ghost-Joel.  Like a Milford Man, he appears but never speaks.

She goes to chew out the bitties for not warning her that the schoolhouse was haunted.  They expect her to run off like the previous teacher, but she wants to see Joel again first.  Also his father, as she pays him a visit that ends with a kiss.

She goes back to the schoolhouse that night where the same problems are still on the board like they’re waiting for Will Hunting to come by and correct them.  Joel appears again, this time coming inside the classroom.  While Judith reads Joel a story, his father peeks in the window at them.  When he enters, Joel stares him down.

ngdarkboy13

brown chicken, brown cow

Judith and Joel’s father walk hand-in-hand back to his place, Joel following a few steps behind.  When they get to the house, Joel’s father gives the whippoorwill whistle that they used as a signal.  He and Judith hear the whistle returned, but Joel is back in his grave having united these 2 lonely people.

Well done, just not really what I was looking for.

Post-Post:

  • Twilight Zone Legacy:  Directed by John Astin who was in A Hundred Yards Over the Rim.
  • Producer Jack Laird once again put one of his kids in the show.

4 thoughts on “Night Gallery – Dark Boy (S2E10)

  1. this is one of the most beautify and haunting stories of the night gallery, twilight zone, and probably rises to the level of unforgettable poetic feeling. why does the dark boy come back? he feels his father’s pain for his son. so he comes back again and again to find someone who can heal the pain in his father’s heart. then he is content to go to the grave comforted that his father will have someone to love him as the dark boy loved him. this story, if you get it, is essentially unforgettable. the love of a loving son for his loving father.

    • I totally agree with you, Richard. This is one of the top Night Gallery episodes, for sure. So atmospheric, spooky, poignant. I love the two sisters, very Walton/Baldwin sisters-like. Elizabeth Hartman has such a deft, but delicate touch. Great story. John Astin did a great job directing this little gem.

  2. Very beautiful idea. Not much in terms of surprise or suspense. We can surmise he’s a ghost early on. Nevertheless, very nice.

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