He’s right. It’s not fair. He’s been criticized by his boss, bullied by his wife and when he finally gets a chance to enjoy his books, his glasses break. Poor guy
& there I WAS waiting for a twist in the tale, then some cretin comes along & spoils it for me. & HE PROBABLY WONDER'S WHY HE NEVER GETS TOLD ABOUT SURPRISE PARTIES FOR FRIENDS UNTIL AFTER THE EVENT
His wife was awful...she ruined his poetry book and discouraged and looked down upon his main source of enjoyment in life (reading). He should have kicked her to the curb!
@The Never One it's important that he doesn't have a "happy ending"--not because he's "anti-social," but because he's neglected all the other important things in his life (job, wife, etc) in the the pursuit of one passion.
His boss hated him, his wife despised him, and now all he has is a pile of books he can now never read. And of course, the black object lying around, representing his only way out.
Everyone is missing the point of this episode. It's not just that he has enough time at last to read, it's that he has enough time at last to see how much of his life he lost just reading instead of living life. There's nothing wrong with reading but when you spend more time in a book than you do in the real world you waste your life
funny you should relate that way,as god did a trick on us,this man in the portrayal he is insane already he hasn't face the one trial of any man or woman is living life alone,god put forever in our hearts,and he is the ultimate jester,how do you explain a duck bill platypus in any language,BURGESS MERIDITH RIP,i liked his westerns too
Because that isn't the point of the episode? What do you mean "lost?" If his greatest joy in life is reading, then how is reading...losing life? That's all he wants to do. His wife was horrible, his boss is mean, work is boring. If you're doing what you love, then you're not wasting your life. The whole notion of "wasting" your life also assumes that there is an actual metaphysical reason for existence. But there isn't.
I love how his reaction is so basic, and you can't help but agree with him. He doesn't rage and scream and carry on. Just remarks how unfair it is lol Fantastic.
+BendyPenguin64 I'd say this ranks up with the one where the woman goes on holiday but the stewardess says "Room for one more dear" and then the plane blows up. But, I think the best one Burgess Meredith did was the "Obsolete Man" episode story.
XTheVideoGamerGirlX The plane episode (Twenty Two) is one of my personal favourites and The Obsolete Man is my favourite episode of the whole show. It had a very important message about recognising the rights of other people. :)
BendyPenguin64 I loved Obsolete Man because it showed what history would become specially when they say stuff about Hitler etc, even Rod Sterling says "Not a future that may happen, a future that CAN happen". And if I recall, the people who made final destination based it upon Twenty Two where the plane blows up and they end up as the survivors.
Fallout 4 has a ref to this near the boston library and trinity plaza. Inside a pulowski preservation chamber is a skeleton clutching a book with two more books around it and a pair of eye glasses to its side.
When I saw this ending it shocked me. I was not expecting this to happen, and yet it was done so perfectly. The silence after his glasses break, the realization of what happened, and how tragic it is. It’s my favorite episode from this show
This is easily one of the greatest endings in television history, but what always gets me isn't just how sad and horrifying it really is, but how much it reflects Beemis' life. He'd spent his time shutting people out so he could read, to escape his reality and go somewhere better. And in the end, the one thing that keeps him from facing reality- the fact that the world has quite possibly ended and everyone he knows is gone- is a chance to do nothing but read. Then when his glasses smash, all he's left with is that reality. Harsh.
You’ve got it totally wrong. He didn’t “shut people out” - he was totally willing to let people in, and share his love of books with them. He was always trying to reach out to people and show them how wonderful books could be, it was everyone else who was shutting him out.
@@WillScarlet16 It can be both I think. He cared so much of his books, and wanting to read, he wasn't paying attention at his job, and he physically put himself into a vault so no one can disturb him. It can be both as well because after the bomb fell his first instances wasn't his books, he was looking for other people, his wife who even shut him off. He was ready to end it all until he refound that his books was still around. I think it helps that people are just, multilayered. Just like this right now, it's much more easier for me to type out and talk to you, than it is for me to even call a friend who wants to have lunch plans sometime. Humans are so...unique.
I just read a comment saying "The greatest Hell is to be just out of reach of Heaven", it's so true too, like winning the lottery and getting run over by a dump truck in the same day and being paralyzed for life. Bad luck sucks!
I saw this episode probably 30 years ago (I am 41 now), and it has always stayed with me as if I watched it fresh just yesterday. My friend and I were discussing how we have so many stacks of books to read yesterday and how we need more hours in the day and more days in the week to finish them all. Then I came on here to find "Time Enough At Last" to show her. It made such a lasting impression on me.
As a man with the strongest possible prescription glasses(thanks dad for the genes), this scene shook me. I know all too well how crippling it can be to lose one's glasses for even a short length of time. In that broken world it's a damn death sentence.
ya'know he coulda just picked up a piece of the broken glass and looked through that. too bad he likely starved to death since he can't find food or water, of course, without his glasses.
While logically there's probably a pair of glasses somewhere out there that would work for him (though it'd be harder to find with being unable to see), the whole point of this episode (and indeed many of the best episodes of Twilight Zone) is the way it tackles many frightening or under-looked topics (especially for the time when television was still an uprising kind of media) with much abstraction. The whole point of this episode is the main character let's everyone push him around and he's never in control of his life, he's unhappy because he never has time to do what really interests him (reading) and never stands up for himself, he lets himself be dictated by the world around him. And when he finally has time, he misses his chance to pursue his passions. It's a simple allegory in this day and age, but the message is still important I think about how too many let their lives pass them without ever really doing what they want to do with it until it's too late.
"Wait, I can still read the large print books if I put them really close to my face ." (eyeballs fall out and break) "It's not fair! It's not...wait, I can read the braille books." (hands fall off and break)
Burgess Meredith played both Henry Bemis in this episode and three more unrelated characters inother episodes (Mr Dingle the Strong, Obsolete Man and Printer's Devil) and 20 years later he played Micky Goldmill in first three Rocky movies.
This is one of the greatest scenes in the history of television. I saw this episode when it was first broadcast, and I will never forget the shock my family received at the end. Looking at it again today, I think the decades have done nothing to diminish its power.
He could always wander the wasteland till he finds a corpse with unbroken glasses with a prescription similar enough to his own It might take a few days.
Matt Duczeminski His glasses aren't so thick that he's legally blind or anything. He could make out corpses. A nuclear holocaust just happened. There'd be a lot of corpses.
In this story the guy has survived because he was in the bank vault when a nuclear bomb detonated, I'm not an expert but I'm pretty sure every piece of glass outside vaulted areas like that wouldn't stand still to a nuclear explosion. His glasses were more than likely the last ones around.
They would have changed the story with him wearing a hearing aid. That fell out of his ear. Then he stepped on it. The story was determined to screw an avid book reader. If he could have used braille then the scene would have ended with a malfunctioning truck brake release and a truck rolling over and crushing his fingers!
I love this episode. In the span of about 25 mins, I experienced most of the human emotions, and this episode turned from a humorous comedy to a dystopian tragedy.
I watched this episode over four years ago and I always remembered it as being the most saddest moment of television. The character had hopes and dreams which were smashed to bits in a matter of moments. this episode really stuck with me to this very day.
@@stevejordan7275well I’d wager plenty of canned food and water survived. Also I think he would actually be fine dying earlier if his last few years were filled only with pleasure.
@@ryankey1793 LMAO! Let's also not forget that he was the penguin on TV's Batman, STARRED in 3 other Twilight Zone episodes besides this one and had numerous film and stage appearances. Hmm....yep, never got that big break. Too bad
This is what being isolated during COVID is like. Me "I finally can watch all my Netflix shows and play my PS4 games" My kids "Dad I'm bored, can we use the TV" My wife "why don't you fix the dishwasher and mow the lawn" Me "That's not fair, there was time, there was all the time I needed" Twilight music starts playing with my face in horror fading out to black.
He thought of the building when it had been whole. He remembered the many nights he had paused outside its wide and welcoming doors. He thought of the warm nights when the doors had been thrown open and he could see the people inside, see them sitting at the plain wooden tables with the stacks of books beside them. He used to think then, what a wonderful thing a public library was, a place where anybody, anybody at all could go in and read. He had been tempted to enter many times. He had watched the people through the open doors, the man in greasy work clothes who sat near the door, night after night, laboriously studying, a technical journal perhaps, difficult for him, but promising a brighter future. There had been an aged, scholarly gentleman who sat on the other side of the door, leisurely paging, moving his lips a little as he did so, a man having little time left, but rich in time because he could do with it as he chose. Henry had never gone in. He had started up the steps once, got almost to the door, but then he remembered Agnes, her questions and shouting, and he had turned away. He was going in now though, almost crawling, his breath coming in stabbing gasps, his hands torn and bleeding. His trouser leg was sticky red where the wound in his leg had soaked through the handkerchief. It was throbbing badly but Henry didn't care. He had reached his destination. Part of the inscription was still there, over the now doorless entrance. P-U-B-C L-I-B-R--. The rest had been torn away. The place was in shambles. The shelves were overturned, broken, smashed, tilted, their precious contents spilled in disorder upon the floor. A lot of the books, Henry noted gleefully, were still intact, still whole, still readable. He was literally knee deep in them, he wallowed in books. He picked one up. The title was "Collected Works of William Shakespeare." Yes, he must read that, sometime. He laid it aside carefully. He picked up another. Spinoza. He tossed it away, seized another, and another, and still another. Which to read first ... there were so many. He had been conducting himself a little like a starving man in a delicatessen-grabbing a little of this and a little of that in a frenzy of enjoyment. But now he steadied away. From the pile about him, he selected one volume, sat comfortably down on an overturned shelf, and opened the book. Henry Bemis smiled. There was the rumble of complaining stone. Minute in comparison which the epic complaints following the fall of the bomb. This one occurred under one corner of the shelf upon which Henry sat. The shelf moved; threw him off balance. The glasses slipped from his nose and fell with a tinkle. He bent down, clawing blindly and found, finally, their smashed remains. A minor, indirect destruction stemming from the sudden, wholesale smashing of a city. But the only one that greatly interested Henry Bemis. He stared down at the blurred page before him. He began to cry.
When I first saw this episode in seventh grade, I TOTALLY understood his love of books! ^^ And it pains me every time to see/hear this reference, because it truly isn't fair. Finally having the opportunity to read for the rest of his life,caught in by the ecstasy moment (WHO WOULDN'T BE EXCITED IN READING FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE! XD) he forgot to hold the glasses together, Dam, this episode is traumatic. Going to stop remembering it, it just too depressing....
***** OOOOOOOOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHHHHHH! I see then, thanks for the explanation there, I was in agreement there too much with him that I guess I was a bit vainly in human life as well. XD
Oh no, I watched this last year and was recently reminded of it. I thought I was prepared to face it again... I was so wrong. He's so happy! But his utter defeat at the end. It hurts my soul. May you find all the books and time somewhere else, Henry.
I remember seeing this episode on British television when I was a kid in the 1980s. Always stuck with me because my dad was really bookish and this will have been his worst nightmare.
I was a child when I saw this. Six, maybe seven years old. It stuck with me. I had no idea what show it was, only where I was when I saw it….which enabled me to establish my age. I Googled “Man who broke glasses, last man alive, library” and sure enough, there it was. It had to have been a rerun, as I was not born when it first showed on The Twilight Zone, but I never forgot it or the absolute sorrow I felt for this man.
That sad moment when you realize that you will never have the time to accomplish everything you want to , and that there will never be enough time , and that you are powerless to do anything about it.
This episode feels particularly relevant now. With the pandemic, we're more lonely than ever, but now we finally have time to do all the things we've wanted to do.
As an 80's baby and a 90's child, this one episode was particularly sad for me you see. My mother worked at American Library Association in downtown Chicago. She would take me to work with her on the weekend while she did what was called "Booklist." I LOVED reading. From the posters where everyone was encouraged to read, to the "mind is a terrible thing to waste," and so on. I often thought as a child, "how come no one read that?" Especially since in that era, radio and reading were a HUGE part of the way that people collected their news. SMH! THEN, to add insult to injury, at the end, those big thick glasses BROKE! WOW
This is essentially me when lockdown is in effect because of the Coronavirus giving me the opportunity to play videos games, only for my PC to break without any fix
For anyone who thinks this ending is too sad, here's a theory I've devised: Bemis at first gives into despair, wanders the charred Earth for a few days.... then finds a group of survivors, one has a pair of glasses, gives them to him, so he goes back to the library so he can read those books to the others... and one of them features the stories told in the Twilight Zone Movie.
For a guy who was blacklisted throughout the '50's, Burgess Meredith sure came back with a vengeance! Between his great performances on 'Twilight Zone', his iconic turn as the Penguin, his portrayal of Mickey in the 'Rocky' movies, and the countless voiceover work he lent his unique voice to, he has left a deep imprint on at least a couple of generations. And best of all, he's from my home town! Burgess Meredith, the Pride of Cleveland, and too cool for school.
....and he appeared FOUR TIMES during the series- three of the scripts [including this one] were written by Rod Serling, who didn't give a ---- about "the blacklist". He KNEW great talent, and made sure Meredith appeared whenever possible.
I saw this episode one early Easter morning when I went into the living room to sit on the couch with my dad, I remember it playing a little differently, but that's just my bad memory.
I felt so sorry for him. He spent most of his life miserable, then got what he finally deserved, but then it was taken away again. This is rod serling saying fuck this character
iconic ending, man what an episode. this stuck with me ever since I was a kid. reminds me of how much I held stuff like books (or eventually non-material subjects, lol) so close to me, and the fear of them or the freedom of enjoying them being taken away from me.
I can't say how much I LOVE this episode. I first heard it on an old time radio show, then I saw the original TZ episode. So epically heartbreaking. Sure these days we'd figure out other ways for this guy to get his stuff fixed or what he can do later on, but when it first aired, it was the best way to show how dreams can be smashed in a moment.
Its a sad ending. I always hated endings like this, especially if endings like this happened to old people. Whenever old people would have these types of endings or would die, I would always fell guilty. Like if you agree
2:28 my reaction when the pull tab on my can of Pepsi came off while trying to open it just now. I had to come find this video to match my feelings inside.
There was one Twilight Zone marathon where this episode was followed by a commercial for LensCrafters, with the slogan "if you're lucky enough to need glasses."
I finally moved to hawaii to live out a long held dream of surfing and fitness only to immediately end up with crippling sesamoiditis in both feet. I remembered this scene from when I was a kid and had a dark laugh.
The way he stumbles over as the camera pulls away, his vision too blurry to even see the steps in front of him, or the stacks of books he carefully arranged. Unable to find the gun to end it all, unable to see his hand in front of his face or the hands of the clock, forever stopped. Forever stuck in place with nothing but time. Time enough at last... in the Twilight Zone.
Great acting, but in my opinion, he should have had some few seconds of silence between him realizing the glasses are broken and the line "That's not fair", so it could sink in. I'm just nitpicking, Burgess did a great job.
This episode is a metaphor and a warning for life - if throughout your life you follow the path you think you're 'supposed' to follow, or a path that others tell you you *should* be following, when you finally retire from the job you hate in your old age - you may just end up dying before ever truly getting to do the thing you love.
As someone who wears glasses, I always wonder how he didn't notice them slipping at all. If I even suspect my glasses aren't secure, my hand instantly goes to hold them in place before I realize it.
"Tomorrow is always uncertain, so we live for today. Though Mr. Henry Bemis walks among the shadows of the past, he is constantly reminded that despite the fact that things can change in an instant, some things do not. One of those things is that war... War never changes. Not even here... In the Twilight Zone."
On a side note, Adam West said that he couldn't say enough wonderful things about Burgess Meredith. Adam said that Burgess was always very wonderful to work with.
That's actually pretty terrifying if you really think about it. Blind to the end of your days with no human connection or at least a dog to keep you company.
Finally there's time at last all the time I need..." One of my favorite episodes with one of my favorite actors that I grew up with via Batman 66' as The Penguin thee incomparable Burgess Merrdith..." He played this masterfully..."
Poor lost alone, lonely man broke his only pair of eyes, besides the ones he was born with and they don't actually work without the pair he broke. "It's not fair" he says.
He’s right. It’s not fair. He’s been criticized by his boss, bullied by his wife and when he finally gets a chance to enjoy his books, his glasses break. Poor guy
This was a true story.
George Statham during... Lunchtime... Okay.
& there I WAS waiting for a twist in the tale, then some cretin comes along & spoils it for me. & HE PROBABLY WONDER'S WHY HE NEVER GETS TOLD ABOUT SURPRISE PARTIES FOR FRIENDS UNTIL AFTER THE EVENT
@@GotScout Correction: 9 months later it's becoming a true story.
His wife was awful...she ruined his poetry book and discouraged and looked down upon his main source of enjoyment in life (reading). He should have kicked her to the curb!
This ending crushed my soul
Ben NCM the ending "punishes Bemis for his antisocial behavior, and his greatest desire is thwarted"
Yea, I cried 😢😢😢
@The Never One it's important that he doesn't have a "happy ending"--not because he's "anti-social," but because he's neglected all the other important things in his life (job, wife, etc) in the the pursuit of one passion.
It's like getting into heaven but having your wings cut off
His boss hated him, his wife despised him, and now all he has is a pile of books he can now never read. And of course, the black object lying around, representing his only way out.
The greatest Hell is to be be just out of reach of Heaven.
Everyone is missing the point of this episode. It's not just that he has enough time at last to read, it's that he has enough time at last to see how much of his life he lost just reading instead of living life. There's nothing wrong with reading but when you spend more time in a book than you do in the real world you waste your life
funny you should relate that way,as god did a trick on us,this man in the portrayal he is insane already he hasn't face the one trial of any man or woman is living life alone,god put forever in our hearts,and he is the ultimate jester,how do you explain a duck bill platypus in any language,BURGESS MERIDITH RIP,i liked his westerns too
Wise words indeed.
Because that isn't the point of the episode? What do you mean "lost?" If his greatest joy in life is reading, then how is reading...losing life? That's all he wants to do. His wife was horrible, his boss is mean, work is boring. If you're doing what you love, then you're not wasting your life. The whole notion of "wasting" your life also assumes that there is an actual metaphysical reason for existence. But there isn't.
Nicely put!
I love how his reaction is so basic, and you can't help but agree with him. He doesn't rage and scream and carry on. Just remarks how unfair it is lol Fantastic.
He should've called off work that day.
@@lifeisactuallyveryboring.7771 if he did that, he would be dead
@@DeuzFazbear So what.
As true as that is, realistically I would’ve screamed and raged in his shoes
hey i haven't watched this why cant he just read the books up close
I adore how surreal the whole story was up to that point, only to have a plot twist that is so simple, yet so effective.
Its so funny
This is one of the most horrifying endings I've ever seen. Life was just the way he wanted it to be and it was taken away from him just like that. ;_;
I cry too ;_;
+BendyPenguin64 I'd say this ranks up with the one where the woman goes on holiday but the stewardess says "Room for one more dear" and then the plane blows up.
But, I think the best one Burgess Meredith did was the "Obsolete Man" episode story.
XTheVideoGamerGirlX The plane episode (Twenty Two) is one of my personal favourites and The Obsolete Man is my favourite episode of the whole show. It had a very important message about recognising the rights of other people. :)
BendyPenguin64 I loved Obsolete Man because it showed what history would become specially when they say stuff about Hitler etc, even Rod Sterling says "Not a future that may happen, a future that CAN happen".
And if I recall, the people who made final destination based it upon Twenty Two where the plane blows up and they end up as the survivors.
+XTheVideoGamerGirlX I have the obsolete man.
Fallout 4 has a ref to this near the boston library and trinity plaza. Inside a pulowski preservation chamber is a skeleton clutching a book with two more books around it and a pair of eye glasses to its side.
+Jean-Paul Allee (Ravenwolf Foxtrack) Awesome! I'll have to look for that. Thanks for that.
Omg, I found that and didn't make the connection at the time. What fun!
I think I found the 18th layer of hell here. As a bookworm with a heavy eye prescription I don't think I've ever seen anything so traumatic.
I'm not even a book worm and I agree with you...it is truly devastating for that poor man
@@ryandooner1440 The fool didn't have a spare set around! I have two backup glasses in my car =D
When I saw this ending it shocked me. I was not expecting this to happen, and yet it was done so perfectly. The silence after his glasses break, the realization of what happened, and how tragic it is. It’s my favorite episode from this show
Seriously though, that isn't fair.
for real
Poor guy 😢
nothing is fair, when you step into the twilight zone
Fr-
@@Fershizzal You forgot to leave a pause before mentioning... The Twilight Zone.
This is easily one of the greatest endings in television history, but what always gets me isn't just how sad and horrifying it really is, but how much it reflects Beemis' life. He'd spent his time shutting people out so he could read, to escape his reality and go somewhere better. And in the end, the one thing that keeps him from facing reality- the fact that the world has quite possibly ended and everyone he knows is gone- is a chance to do nothing but read.
Then when his glasses smash, all he's left with is that reality. Harsh.
You’ve got it totally wrong. He didn’t “shut people out” - he was totally willing to let people in, and share his love of books with them. He was always trying to reach out to people and show them how wonderful books could be, it was everyone else who was shutting him out.
@@WillScarlet16 It can be both I think. He cared so much of his books, and wanting to read, he wasn't paying attention at his job, and he physically put himself into a vault so no one can disturb him. It can be both as well because after the bomb fell his first instances wasn't his books, he was looking for other people, his wife who even shut him off. He was ready to end it all until he refound that his books was still around.
I think it helps that people are just, multilayered. Just like this right now, it's much more easier for me to type out and talk to you, than it is for me to even call a friend who wants to have lunch plans sometime. Humans are so...unique.
One of the greatest television masterpieces of all time. Absolutely timeless.
It's my first time seeing it!
@@ryandooner1440 Have you enjoyed your time in The Twilight Zone?
💯
It's time for me to take more time to read, while there's still time.
Favorite episode of the scary door.
Fast Forward Videos you don't get it
Fast Forward Videos Futurama
Jackz Gamez lol
Jackz Gamez hey! My eyesight’s not so bad, I can still read the large print books!
@@flargarbason1740 And if your eyes fall out, at least you can read braille!
When you forget to back up your games on your memory card on older game consoles and it gets destroyed and you lose all you progress.
Terrible analogy
OMG!!! YES!!! LMFAO!!!
So it's been two years since this post. Did you get out of the basement yet?
@@eduardolomeli3926 hey its been 5 months, let it go
Yep...That's a real ball kicker alright!
I just read a comment saying "The greatest Hell is to be just out of reach of Heaven", it's so true too, like winning the lottery and getting run over by a dump truck in the same day and being paralyzed for life. Bad luck sucks!
This ending...this stayed with me for a long time and it's never quite left...I actually gasped when his glasses fell.
I saw this episode probably 30 years ago (I am 41 now), and it has always stayed with me as if I watched it fresh just yesterday. My friend and I were discussing how we have so many stacks of books to read yesterday and how we need more hours in the day and more days in the week to finish them all. Then I came on here to find "Time Enough At Last" to show her. It made such a lasting impression on me.
I say it anytime my phone battery dies while im doing something
As a man with the strongest possible prescription glasses(thanks dad for the genes), this scene shook me. I know all too well how crippling it can be to lose one's glasses for even a short length of time. In that broken world it's a damn death sentence.
ya'know he coulda just picked up a piece of the broken glass and looked through that. too bad he likely starved to death since he can't find food or water, of course, without his glasses.
While logically there's probably a pair of glasses somewhere out there that would work for him (though it'd be harder to find with being unable to see), the whole point of this episode (and indeed many of the best episodes of Twilight Zone) is the way it tackles many frightening or under-looked topics (especially for the time when television was still an uprising kind of media) with much abstraction. The whole point of this episode is the main character let's everyone push him around and he's never in control of his life, he's unhappy because he never has time to do what really interests him (reading) and never stands up for himself, he lets himself be dictated by the world around him. And when he finally has time, he misses his chance to pursue his passions. It's a simple allegory in this day and age, but the message is still important I think about how too many let their lives pass them without ever really doing what they want to do with it until it's too late.
"dont put off doing today, what you cant do tomorrow"
Twilight zone was the Black Mirror of its day
AestheticGamer I think it’s about how we take others, who write the book and make the glasses, for granted.
AestheticGamer the ending "punishes Bemis for his antisocial behavior, and his greatest desire is thwarted"
AestheticGamer didn’t the creator say this guy was supposed to be punished for “not being normal”?
"Wait, I can still read the large print books if I put them really close to my face ."
(eyeballs fall out and break)
"It's not fair! It's not...wait, I can read the braille books."
(hands fall off and break)
Presumably he wouldn't know Braille anyhow...
@@TallSilentGuy It's a reference. ua-cam.com/video/QMGUWboWmos/v-deo.html
man... poisoned by his own hubris
"it's not fair! it's not...wait, i can fix the glass by using the remainings of it and put it all together."
(glass fall off and turns to sand)
@@TallSilentGuy presumably you haven't ever seen the show Futurama
Then he trains Rocky for the rest of his life.
lol
+Elliott Smith i dont ge tit...
+HeavyDonkeyKong The guy in this episode is Micky, the guy who coached Rocky in the movie Rocky.
Burgess Meredith played both Henry Bemis in this episode and three more unrelated characters inother episodes (Mr Dingle the Strong, Obsolete Man and Printer's Devil) and 20 years later he played Micky Goldmill in first three Rocky movies.
Actually Rocky(1976) is 17 years after this role.
This is one of the greatest scenes in the history of television. I saw this episode when it was first broadcast, and I will never forget the shock my family received at the end. Looking at it again today, I think the decades have done nothing to diminish its power.
How old are you?
What's the story? Why is it so poignant?
You remember seeing this in 1959? Damn.
@@shitpostmalone5341He must be 80 or something...
He could always wander the wasteland till he finds a corpse with unbroken glasses with a prescription similar enough to his own It might take a few days.
+Matt Duczeminski He'd be looking for a corpse. His nose would be useful there.
+Matt Duczeminski He can make out shapes, as shown in the video. And he has all the time he needs :)
Matt Duczeminski His glasses aren't so thick that he's legally blind or anything. He could make out corpses. A nuclear holocaust just happened. There'd be a lot of corpses.
If building had totally crumbled. I doubt there would be an glasses that survived.
In this story the guy has survived because he was in the bank vault when a nuclear bomb detonated, I'm not an expert but I'm pretty sure every piece of glass outside vaulted areas like that wouldn't stand still to a nuclear explosion.
His glasses were more than likely the last ones around.
How we ALL would feel when the Apocalypse occurs and the Internet is down permanently...
That's not fair... there was time to fap now... THAT'S NOT FAIR
dandypajamas XD perfect!
Wat is FAP.?.
Scripturegirl1990 F.A.P. = Find A Partner. ANYONE WHO TELLS YOU OTHERWISE, DON'T LISTEN TO THEM.
Y not.?.
Love how Serling's closing narration paid homage to Burgess Meredith's starring role in the 1939 film adaptation of "Of Mice and Men". Well done!
As an avid reader, THIS IS MY WORST NIGHTMARE
I agree.. No one like us deserve this kind of torture
+Ashton Farmer It isn't fair!
Lol sucks to need glasses to read!
Or you could just listen to audible
They would have changed the story with him wearing a hearing aid. That fell out of his ear. Then he stepped on it. The story was determined to screw an avid book reader. If he could have used braille then the scene would have ended with a malfunctioning truck brake release and a truck rolling over and crushing his fingers!
I love this episode. In the span of about 25 mins, I experienced most of the human emotions, and this episode turned from a humorous comedy to a dystopian tragedy.
Rod Serling's ending narration is always ice cold.
Look for it in the file cabinet under M for Mankind in the Twilight Zone 🥶
It’s the most human reaction.
Calm and collected but he starts to slowly break down.
Is it weird that I teared up a little?
+Wandering Child I don't think so... *high five*
+nouvellelune21 *high five*
+Wandering Child you think the genius would have tied his glasses with twine
Joeel Gaucin
That's the (other) frailty of genius : lack of foresight in the simplest areas :)
I cried this was so sad 😢
I watched this episode over four years ago and I always remembered it as being the most saddest moment of television. The character had hopes and dreams which were smashed to bits in a matter of moments. this episode really stuck with me to this very day.
If you stop watching at 2:02, this is actually really cute and heartwarming.
I have to say, I think the story would have worked if it had just ended with Burgess saying: 'Time enough at last."
@@eternalhalloween1 Well...until he gets hungry...or thirsty...or has to contend with fallout...or other survivors...
@AcehighLawnmowers He looks so happy at 2:03 (I clicked just a bit late.)
I think I'll just close this tab with that on the display.
True, but it wouldn't have the same impact I feel.
@@stevejordan7275well I’d wager plenty of canned food and water survived. Also I think he would actually be fine dying earlier if his last few years were filled only with pleasure.
Burgess Meredith, one of the great American actors of all time who never got the big break he deserved.
It's not fair...it's not fair at all...
Never got the big bre....The man's career spanned SIXTY years!
Yeah he got a role in some movie about a boxer in 1976 but it never panned out.
@@ryankey1793 LMAO! Let's also not forget that he was the penguin on TV's Batman, STARRED in 3 other Twilight Zone episodes besides this one and had numerous film and stage appearances. Hmm....yep, never got that big break. Too bad
Rocky???
* French accent *
Henry Bemis has learned the first lesson at the wasteland: Always bring a spare pair of glasses.
I watched the episode with my dad, he said the same thing just now. I legit looked at him blankly with a ‘really dad?’
This is what being isolated during COVID is like.
Me "I finally can watch all my Netflix shows and play my PS4 games"
My kids "Dad I'm bored, can we use the TV"
My wife "why don't you fix the dishwasher and mow the lawn"
Me "That's not fair, there was time, there was all the time I needed"
Twilight music starts playing with my face in horror fading out to black.
Hate this ending. He finally gets what he wants, and then BOOM. Can't see.
"BOOM can't see" I see what you did there :p
missmilliz what did he do?
Joe McKenna "BOOM" because of the nuclear apocalypse
Teddy Li ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
I agree, scariest part is how he went from having everything he ever wanted to having nothing at all in a matter of seconds.
Always bring an extra pair of glasses.
Reminds of Spongebob...always bring another pencil (or a pencil sharpener)...Frankendoodle episode
He thought of the building when it had been whole. He remembered the many nights he had paused outside its wide and welcoming doors. He thought of the warm nights when the doors had been thrown open and he could see the people inside, see them sitting at the plain wooden tables with the stacks of books beside them. He used to think then, what a wonderful thing a public library was, a place where anybody, anybody at all could go in and read.
He had been tempted to enter many times. He had watched the people through the open doors, the man in greasy work clothes who sat near the door, night after night, laboriously studying, a technical journal perhaps, difficult for him, but promising a brighter future. There had been an aged, scholarly gentleman who sat on the other side of the door, leisurely paging, moving his lips a little as he did so, a man having little time left, but rich in time because he could do with it as he chose.
Henry had never gone in. He had started up the steps once, got almost to the door, but then he remembered Agnes, her questions and shouting, and he had turned away.
He was going in now though, almost crawling, his breath coming in stabbing gasps, his hands torn and bleeding. His trouser leg was sticky red where the wound in his leg had soaked through the handkerchief. It was throbbing badly but Henry didn't care. He had reached his destination.
Part of the inscription was still there, over the now doorless entrance. P-U-B-C L-I-B-R--. The rest had been torn away. The place was in shambles. The shelves were overturned, broken, smashed, tilted, their precious contents spilled in disorder upon the floor. A lot of the books, Henry noted gleefully, were still intact, still whole, still readable. He was literally knee deep in them, he wallowed in books. He picked one up. The title was "Collected Works of William Shakespeare." Yes, he must read that, sometime. He laid it aside carefully. He picked up another. Spinoza. He tossed it away, seized another, and another, and still another. Which to read first ... there were so many.
He had been conducting himself a little like a starving man in a delicatessen-grabbing a little of this and a little of that in a frenzy of enjoyment.
But now he steadied away. From the pile about him, he selected one volume, sat comfortably down on an overturned shelf, and opened the book.
Henry Bemis smiled.
There was the rumble of complaining stone. Minute in comparison which the epic complaints following the fall of the bomb. This one occurred under one corner of the shelf upon which Henry sat. The shelf moved; threw him off balance. The glasses slipped from his nose and fell with a tinkle.
He bent down, clawing blindly and found, finally, their smashed remains. A minor, indirect destruction stemming from the sudden, wholesale smashing of a city. But the only one that greatly interested Henry Bemis.
He stared down at the blurred page before him.
He began to cry.
A man who only wanted time, now finds that time is the only thing he has left
When I first saw this episode in seventh grade, I TOTALLY understood his love of books! ^^ And it pains me every time to see/hear this reference, because it truly isn't fair.
Finally having the opportunity to read for the rest of his life,caught in by the ecstasy moment (WHO WOULDN'T BE EXCITED IN READING FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE! XD) he forgot to hold the glasses together,
Dam, this episode is traumatic. Going to stop remembering it, it just too depressing....
***** OOOOOOOOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHHHHHH! I see then, thanks for the explanation there, I was in agreement there too much with him that I guess I was a bit vainly in human life as well. XD
@RunningOnEmpty He was bullied by everyone.
Anyone else think it's a miracle how the whole place is in ruins but the books are like brand new?
The pain on Henry’s face is so real and so crushing I feel it like it’s my own...
Oh no, I watched this last year and was recently reminded of it. I thought I was prepared to face it again... I was so wrong. He's so happy! But his utter defeat at the end. It hurts my soul. May you find all the books and time somewhere else, Henry.
I would've burst into tears myself if this ever happened to me! I love books and that was royally f'd up man!
I remember seeing this episode on British television when I was a kid in the 1980s. Always stuck with me because my dad was really bookish and this will have been his worst nightmare.
I was a child when I saw this. Six, maybe seven years old. It stuck with me. I had no idea what show it was, only where I was when I saw it….which enabled me to establish my age. I Googled “Man who broke glasses, last man alive, library” and sure enough, there it was. It had to have been a rerun, as I was not born when it first showed on The Twilight Zone, but I never forgot it or the absolute sorrow I felt for this man.
That sad moment when you realize that you will never have the time to accomplish everything you want to , and that there will never be enough time , and that you are powerless to do anything about it.
This episode feels particularly relevant now. With the pandemic, we're more lonely than ever, but now we finally have time to do all the things we've wanted to do.
Enough time _in theory_ .
Yeah time but do we have the necessary in our home?
I got a feeling that when if a person like Beemis existed in the age of the Internet, he would be a happy camper.
But there will be no internet, and even if there was. There will be no way to get it.
No, he means that he would be able to read whatever he wanted.
Yeah, before his wife locked it, deliberately making sure that he couldn't read, just like she did before.
..and divorced
As an 80's baby and a 90's child, this one episode was particularly sad for me you see. My mother worked at American Library Association in downtown Chicago. She would take me to work with her on the weekend while she did what was called "Booklist." I LOVED reading. From the posters where everyone was encouraged to read, to the "mind is a terrible thing to waste," and so on. I often thought as a child, "how come no one read that?" Especially since in that era, radio and reading were a HUGE part of the way that people collected their news. SMH! THEN, to add insult to injury, at the end, those big thick glasses BROKE! WOW
This is essentially me when lockdown is in effect because of the Coronavirus giving me the opportunity to play videos games, only for my PC to break without any fix
This is literally me.
Now you can pick up some books and learn a new skill
For anyone who thinks this ending is too sad, here's a theory I've devised: Bemis at first gives into despair, wanders the charred Earth for a few days.... then finds a group of survivors, one has a pair of glasses, gives them to him, so he goes back to the library so he can read those books to the others... and one of them features the stories told in the Twilight Zone Movie.
For a guy who was blacklisted throughout the '50's, Burgess Meredith sure came back with a vengeance! Between his great performances on 'Twilight Zone', his iconic turn as the Penguin, his portrayal of Mickey in the 'Rocky' movies, and the countless voiceover work he lent his unique voice to, he has left a deep imprint on at least a couple of generations. And best of all, he's from my home town! Burgess Meredith, the Pride of Cleveland, and too cool for school.
....and he appeared FOUR TIMES during the series- three of the scripts [including this one] were written by Rod Serling, who didn't give a ---- about "the blacklist". He KNEW great talent, and made sure Meredith appeared whenever possible.
Why was he blacklisted?
Love that Northeastern Ohio accent, right?????
@@mushroomhead3619….He went to a funeral of a radical leftist.
I saw this episode one early Easter morning when I went into the living room to sit on the couch with my dad, I remember it playing a little differently, but that's just my bad memory.
I felt this in my soul.
Henry Bemis is the most tragic character in the series. And my favorite.
This was one of the first Twilight Zone episodes I saw and it hit me like a ton of bricks. Wonderful acting; fascinating storyline.
Haunting. A tragic end for one man, but a timely reminder for the rest of us that no one person is an island.
dont sya that!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
What Jack expected from his fans.
Dan Esp Who is Jack.?.
+Scripturegirl1990 jackflims
This literally makes me cry ;-;
Long distance call..MAKE'S ME CRY.!!. :,0(
Scripturegirl1990 Is that the one with the little boy and his Grandma calling him? Or is that the one with the old lady who's husband is calling her?
skyrim11243 The 1 with the boy, and his Grandma.
Scripturegirl1990 Yeah, that one is pretty sad. :[
The second 1 u mentioned is called. "NITE call."
Thanks for the great memory Great clip
He should look on the positive side, he'll never be short of something to wipe his ass
LOL
Toilet paper enough at last!
Oh lord- I mean well that is true-
watched this for the first time last night while high out of my mind, sobbed uncontrollably for about fifteen minutes. it really isn't fair man
I felt so sorry for him. He spent most of his life miserable, then got what he finally deserved, but then it was taken away again. This is rod serling saying fuck this character
ever since i was around 5-6 this has made me cry, all he wanted to do was read☹
iconic ending, man what an episode. this stuck with me ever since I was a kid. reminds me of how much I held stuff like books (or eventually non-material subjects, lol) so close to me, and the fear of them or the freedom of enjoying them being taken away from me.
I remember this episode from my childhood. Powerful and a good reminder that life is a vapor.
My heart just broke.
I cried watching this when I was little and my mom just reminded me of this; I'm sad all over again 😩
Just got a family guy joke 14 years later
+Subzeppelin1 Same here.
I've always known this existed but didn't see it till today. I'm watching all TZ episodes on Netflix.
What was it
I hope they keep the Twilight Zone episodes on there until all of humanity becomes extinct.
Yep. I too came here from Family Guy.
I loved this one and it made me and my mother cry...I am sure he would have moved those books out of the rain.
I can't say how much I LOVE this episode. I first heard it on an old time radio show, then I saw the original TZ episode. So epically heartbreaking. Sure these days we'd figure out other ways for this guy to get his stuff fixed or what he can do later on, but when it first aired, it was the best way to show how dreams can be smashed in a moment.
Its a sad ending. I always hated endings like this, especially if endings like this happened to old people. Whenever old people would have these types of endings or would die, I would always fell guilty. Like if you agree
Same here, I always feel bad for him. He finally got his wish and now his glasses are broken
2:28 my reaction when the pull tab on my can of Pepsi came off while trying to open it just now.
I had to come find this video to match my feelings inside.
That's not fair... That's not fair at all! D:
There was one Twilight Zone marathon where this episode was followed by a commercial for LensCrafters, with the slogan "if you're lucky enough to need glasses."
I finally moved to hawaii to live out a long held dream of surfing and fitness only to immediately end up with crippling sesamoiditis in both feet. I remembered this scene from when I was a kid and had a dark laugh.
I will never forget this episode...ever.
This pretty much sums up existentialism.
The way he stumbles over as the camera pulls away, his vision too blurry to even see the steps in front of him, or the stacks of books he carefully arranged. Unable to find the gun to end it all, unable to see his hand in front of his face or the hands of the clock, forever stopped. Forever stuck in place with nothing but time. Time enough at last... in the Twilight Zone.
Great acting, but in my opinion, he should have had some few seconds of silence between him realizing the glasses are broken and the line "That's not fair", so it could sink in. I'm just nitpicking, Burgess did a great job.
This episode is a metaphor and a warning for life - if throughout your life you follow the path you think you're 'supposed' to follow, or a path that others tell you you *should* be following, when you finally retire from the job you hate in your old age - you may just end up dying before ever truly getting to do the thing you love.
This is actually one of my worst nightmares...
My favorite episode of all time!!! Thank you for sharing.
"Wait, my eyes aren't so bad, I can still read the large print books!"
Took me years to realize, each author he names, did "social commentary" that was once rejected.
As someone who wears glasses, I always wonder how he didn't notice them slipping at all. If I even suspect my glasses aren't secure, my hand instantly goes to hold them in place before I realize it.
"Tomorrow is always uncertain, so we live for today. Though Mr. Henry Bemis walks among the shadows of the past, he is constantly reminded that despite the fact that things can change in an instant, some things do not. One of those things is that war... War never changes. Not even here... In the Twilight Zone."
On a side note, Adam West said that he couldn't say enough wonderful things about Burgess Meredith. Adam said that Burgess was always very wonderful to work with.
TRUE CLASSIC!!!.....Of all the original Twilight Zone Episodes...This is the most memorable...for a reason...
Just a piece of the rubble, Mr. Henry Bemis.
My sentiments exactly! The ending of this episode is a perfect representation of how I feel with the way my life has been going lately...
He was the original " Pinguin " in the BATMAN tv show , and MICKEY in the movie " Rocky " 🥊
I saw this when it first aired. Gave me nightmares and had me screaming. Still gives me nightmares today.
Why though? This episode is just more sad than horrifying.
I saw it when I was 2 yrs old; just as the Cuban Missile crisis was happening. I thought it was real and that it was going to happen.
@@WinnipegMedicalMJ That makes sense.
That's actually pretty terrifying if you really think about it. Blind to the end of your days with no human connection or at least a dog to keep you company.
Finally there's time at last all the time I need..." One of my favorite episodes with one of my favorite actors that I grew up with via Batman 66' as The Penguin thee incomparable Burgess Merrdith..." He played this masterfully..."
I wish the closing music was available somewhere, it’s a subtle but unnerving score & it really makes the scene.
This is a reminder to all of us to use the time we have. Don’t wait on those things you want to do or books you mean to read.
Me with my Steam Library, then the power goes out forever.
Burgess Meredith played this part so well!!
I don't feel sympathy for this dude. A few years later he ends up training a southpaw from Philly to be the world heavyweight champ.
Serling created that individuals personal
HELL🔥
Genius. Great writing & acting.
Poor lost alone, lonely man broke his only pair of eyes, besides the ones he was born with and they don't actually work without the pair he broke.
"It's not fair" he says.