Kevin Costner plays the ship's captain, a young Keifer Sutherland plays radio operator "Static" (whose real name is Arnold, a reference to Spielberg's father) and Casey Siemaszko (of Stand By Me and NYPD Blue) plays the pivotal role of Jonathan. First, it features a few soon-to-be major stars. "The Mission" is notable for several reasons. At the last possible second, something miraculous occurs that saves Jonathan's life. With the landing gear refusing to come down and the plane rapidly running out of fuel, the pilot knows he's going to have to to bring the plane down as soon as possible on its belly but in the process Jonathan will be crushed. Based on a short story by Spielberg called "Round Trip," this hour long episode (the only one of the first season) written by Color Purple screenwriter Menno Meyjes, involves a WWII bomber flight crew who encounter a major problem when one of their gunners (a cartoonist named Jonathan whom they consider their "lucky charm") gets trapped in the plastic turret on the underside of the plane. "THE MISSION" (broadcast 10/3/85): The second and final episode Spielberg directed for Amazing Stories is not only better than "Ghost Train" it's actually better than a few of his feature films. The very least that can be said about "Ghost Train" is that it is far superior to the segment Spielberg produced for the Twilight Zone movie. The episode was shot with Spielberg's typical warmth and gloss ( E.T.'s Allen Daviau served as cinematographer) and John Williams provides a whimsical score but wisely chooses to leave the show's signature set piece, the exciting finale where the train bears down on the house, unscored. Consequently, the relationship between the old man and the boy is the real heart of the story. The characters of the mother and father, unfortunately, aren't nearly as strong or interesting. In the episode's spectacular climax the Highball Express number 407 crashes right through the family's living room and takes Old Pa away to his final destination.īlossom's gentle, sensetive performance as the grandfather is both sweet and touching (particularly when he recalls the day of the accident with great emotion) and Lukas Haas, fresh off his starring role opposite Harrison Ford in Witness, plays the loving, imaginative grandson. The problem is that the house in which they live is built right over where the old tracks used to be. Now living with his grown son, his daughter-in-law and his grandson (Lukas Haas), all of whom affectionately call him "Old Pa," Daniel awaits the night that the train will return to finish what it had left undone 75 years earlier. Spielberg channeled that memory into this story about an old man named Daniel Globe (Robert Blossom of Spielberg's Close Encounters and the upcoming Always) who as a child innocently caused a terrible train wreck that took the lives of everyone on board. "GHOST TRAIN" (broadcast 9/29/85): While living in a house in New Jersey a young Steven Spielberg would lie in his bed at night and hear train whistles blowing in the distance. My reason, however, for including Amazing Stories as part of "31 Days of Spielberg," is that two episodes (the debut "Ghost Train" and the hour-long "The Mission") were directed by Spielberg himself and therefore are worth a quick look. To this day I can hum the John Williams-composed main theme (while seeing the computer-generated opening credits sequence in my head) and like to revisit several of my favorite episodes ("The Main Attraction," "Mummy Daddy," "The Sitter", "Dorothy and Ben" and the Brad Bird-directed cartoon "Family Dog") which I still think hold up rather well tweny years later. This was particularly distressing to me as I loved the show when I was a kid. Although the show was nominated for 12 Emmys Awards (resulting in 5 wins) it was unfortunately not a hit and NBC chose not to renew it after the contractual two seasons were up. He produced a Twilight Zone-like anthology series called Amazing Stories (inspired by a popular science fiction magazine Spielberg loved as a kid). In 1985 Spielberg returned to the medium that had halped launch his career: television. Spielberg's latest venture would fit into that category quite nicely. Furthermore, as with Alfred Hitchcock and Walt Disney before him, "Spielberg" had come to represent a certain kind of product: namely, slickly produced, predominately family-friendly fanatasy entertainment. Many of the films directed and/or produced by him were among the highest-grossing of all time and his own production company Amblin-named after his amatuer short film-allowed him to develop projects not only for himself to direct but for other filmmakers. By the mid-1980's Steven Spielberg had become more than just another director.
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