![]() Two cowboys named Red and Dell had gotten into a scuffle the night before and have unfinished business. She has a goofy helper that she sends out to go get supplies, namely firewood and maybe something else I forgot. An old lady named Maggie runs a small restaurant in the middle of crossroads between towns. The entire thing takes place in one room and only four people. This is my favorite episode so far of the three I've watched at this point. This episode doesn't have any big names in the cast familiar to me, and it's also the same episode that made me realize that almost every single person on this show is now dead. He is actually responsible for murdering his father four years ago and has just escaped an asylum he was never living in Paris. The plot twist in this one is that Kim's premonition is just his memory coming back to him. He finds his father's final resting place inside the cabin just by the fireplace. He treks up to the mountains to a cabin in hopes that his father is actually in hiding from his twisted family. Soon he learns that his father is dead and suspects dishonesty, especially after finding his father's hunting license which makes the death story illogical. He notices his father's gun collection is collecting dust and demands to know where his gun-loving father is. He is not welcomed home by the family attorney, who he bumps into first, nor is he welcomed by his own brother or sister-in-law. He returned to his hometown with the intention of making amends with his father as they did not get along throughout the years. This one is about a guy named Kim who left home to live in Paris for four years to focus on his music career. Frances Bavier (gardener lady) was also Aunt Bea from the Andy Griffith Show. This episode starred Vera Miles (Elsa) who also starred in Psycho & Psycho II. It was pretty clear that Elsa was unstable, and I predicted the plot twist that she was going to pick out someone else because she has no clue what's going on in the world around her anymore. What he should have pointed out is that the gardener lady was most likely the attacker. Hitchcock fades in and explains that the man went to jail. The man looks over at her then back straight ahead as police sirens are heard and the scene fades out. ![]() She then points to another guy in a grey suit with a suitcase and says "that's him". The man returns to Elsa in the vehicle and they pull off again. The car gets parked, the man follows the guy up to his hotel room and kills him with a wrench. ![]() Soon enough, Elsa points out a guy with a grey suit and a suitcase and says "that's him". He repeatedly asks her if anyone looks familiar. The man decides to take matters into his own hands and takes Elsa on a long drive. Having nothing else to go by, the investigation comes to a halt. When she comes to, she describes her attacker a man with a suitcase and a gray suit. When the man comes home from work, he's learned that Elsa has been attacked and that she had a flower in her grasp. ![]() We then see her interact with her neighbor gardener lady who gives her a smug look when Elsa strips down to a 2-piece to sunbathe. He says she'll be alright and off to work he goes. On the man's first day back to work, Elsa begs and pleads for him to stay with her. There's a couple who just relocated from wherever to a trailer park due to the woman, Elsa, having some kind of mental breakdown. Since there are 39 episodes, I'll divide this into a four-parter with ten episodes in the first three and the final nine episodes in the fourth and final blog. After all, each episode is designed to have a plot twist. I'm going to post quick summaries and reviews here for anyone interested in "watching with me". I recently stumbled upon AHP on Netflix, or at least just Season 1 of it, consisting of a whopping 39 episodes. When I was a little kid, my family had a Saturday Night family time ritual: We'd get Little Caesar's pizza and watch Morgus the Magnificent, Tales from the Darkside, and Alfred Hitchcock Presents.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |