Summary And Response To 'The Lonely'

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Summary and Response to “The Lonely” In Season 1 episode 7 of The Twilight Zone entitled “The Lonely”, the main character, James A. Corry, was featured as exiled in a faraway place, nine million miles away from the Earth (Smight, 1959). Corry was described as a criminal whose punishment is to be exiled in a solitary confinement context without the privilege for human contact, except for the member of the supplies ship that regularly brings Corry supplies. As appropriate to the title of the episode, Corry was termed as the loneliest person in the entire universe. When the captain of the supplies ship arrived, Allenby, he pitied the lonely situation of Corry and brought with him a robot, Alicia, to keep Corry company. At first, Corry was aghast with the robot, who he pegged as a lie for being made to imitate the physical appearance and emotional capabilities of a woman. Eventually, Corry fell in love. With Alicia. When Allenby returned to give Corry the good news that he was pardoned for the crimes he committed, instead of serving 50 years, he would be made to return that instant. Nevertheless, being told that he could only take 15 pounds in addition to his body weight, he …show more content…

At the time the episode was created, by 1959, the concept of robotics might now yet be advanced. Nevertheless, the film makers convinced the viewers that a robot, in the likes of a human, could potentially be viable. Furthermore, the creators ensure that the robot they created, Alicia, was capable of emotional sentiments, including feeling joy, pain, and even loneliness. By asserting the capabilities of the robot as remarkably human, Corry eventually fell in love with the robot and his loneliness was eliminated by the companionship