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One Step Beyond

  • TV Series
  • 1959–1961
  • Approved
  • 25m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
2K
YOUR RATING
One Step Beyond (1959)
One Step Beyond
Play trailer1:29
1 Video
99+ Photos
DramaFantasyHorrorMysterySci-FiThriller

A collection of tales about paranormal events, horrifying folklore, and the world of the unknown.A collection of tales about paranormal events, horrifying folklore, and the world of the unknown.A collection of tales about paranormal events, horrifying folklore, and the world of the unknown.

  • Creator
    • Merwin Gerard
  • Stars
    • John Newland
    • Robert Douglas
    • Olan Soule
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Creator
      • Merwin Gerard
    • Stars
      • John Newland
      • Robert Douglas
      • Olan Soule
    • 56User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes97

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    One Step Beyond
    Trailer 1:29
    One Step Beyond

    Photos1611

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    Top cast99+

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    John Newland
    John Newland
    • Self - Host
    • 1959–1961
    Robert Douglas
    Robert Douglas
    • Gen. George Washington…
    • 1959–1961
    Olan Soule
    Olan Soule
    • Conductor…
    • 1959–1960
    Will J. White
    Will J. White
    • Corporal…
    • 1959–1961
    Francis De Sales
    Francis De Sales
    • Dr. Norton…
    • 1959–1960
    Jeanne Bates
    Jeanne Bates
    • Edna Gibbs…
    • 1959–1960
    Rudolph Anders
    Rudolph Anders
    • Dr. Heinrick Swansen…
    • 1959–1960
    Albert Salmi
    Albert Salmi
    • Peter Hurkos
    • 1960
    Barbara Lord
    Barbara Lord
    • Delia Huston…
    • 1959–1960
    Norma Crane
    Norma Crane
    • Emily Harkness…
    • 1959–1960
    Alfred Ryder
    Alfred Ryder
    • John Marriott…
    • 1959–1960
    Joanne Linville
    Joanne Linville
    • Aunt Minna Boswell…
    • 1959–1960
    Charles Aidman
    Charles Aidman
    • Carl Archer…
    • 1959–1960
    Harry Townes
    Harry Townes
    • Dr. Alexander Slawson…
    • 1959–1960
    Jean Allison
    Jean Allison
    • Carol Jansen…
    • 1959–1960
    Betty Garde
    Betty Garde
    • Madame Lola…
    • 1960–1961
    John Kellogg
    John Kellogg
    • Dr. Llewellyn…
    • 1960
    Robert Ellenstein
    Robert Ellenstein
    • Capt. Peabody…
    • 1959
    • Creator
      • Merwin Gerard
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews56

    7.82K
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    Featured reviews

    deemo31

    Better, but let's not forget.

    One commenter offered the proposition that "The Twilight Zone" was not a very good show and "One Step Beyond" was much better. There is truth to the latter statement. Step was a truly wonderful show, and I might add, MUCH freakier and scarier to a little kid. "The Burning Girl" episode killed me. And the one they did about the San Francisco earthquake was awesome. Suffice it to say that I spent a few nights awake wondering about this stuff. Unlike the Twilight Zone, Step featured stories that were somewhat based in fact, or at least believable to people who believe. But I have to take the original poster to task. He made it sound as if Twilight Zone sucked. I can assure you, it did not.

    These shows aired when television was still in it's infancy. As was the writing, the directing, the acting and all that goes with it. In both cases, there were experiments. Nobody knew how it would turn out. But one thing is certain. BOTH shows helped to create the sci-fi dramas we accept as so commonplace today. There was NOTHING commonplace about the "Willoughby" episode of the Twilight Zone. Nor was there anything commonplace about the Burning Girl episode of One Step Beyond. They were both wonderful shows that broke ground for the future. That being said, when are the One Step Beyond episodes coming back for viewing? I sure miss them.
    BrentCarleton

    Worthwhile program deserves to be on view again.

    This is a very worthy program that deserves revival, (preferably on DVD from 35 mm stock or original negatives). Comparisons with "The Twilight Zone" are really not terribly helpful inasmuch as they each have separate entertainment objectives.

    "One Step Beyond" purports to dramatize actual psychic experiences. In this sense, its writers would have been working to depict (allegedly anyhow) first hand experiences with ESP etc.

    Irrespective of the truth of this, the show possesses a very singular, outre quality, quite unlike "TZ". Anyone seriously interested (academically or otherwise) in the paranormal would likely find this show of interest.

    A great deal of the oppressive mood of the episodes can be credited to Mr. Lubin's music, (some of which was released on LP--this is definately a record you should seek out)most especially the title theme.

    Mr. Newland made for an urbane and elegantly clad host, whose nebulous persona fit the mood of the episodes snugly. Not only was he personally interested in the paranormal, but he had a long stage, TV and film career already underway by 1959. Amongst other things, he was frequently featured on the excellent, "Loretta Young Show," and directed a film starring John Beale as a heart attack victim, (sorry the title escapes me at the moment).

    At all events, "Alcoa Presents One Step Beyond" merits reappraisal.
    TiminPhoenix

    Doesn't get the respect it deserves.

    This is a show that never gets the respect or attention of its' better known relatives, "The Twilight Zone" and "The Outer Limits".

    The show has a simpler format than the above mentioned series but is, or as a result of, able to maintain an air of "hey it could happen" throughout each episode.

    Most of the performances are well done by the various actors, with only some being ham fisted.

    Newland's performance as the convert host also enhances the production as does the haunting music.
    lonelycozy

    One step beyond box set

    Anyone who has ever had a chance to see any of the original episodes of One Step Beyond has truly experienced great television, the way it should be even today in our so called "state of the art" world.

    It really doesn't take a whole lot to make a great, convincing program. The mood and music and stories behind each episode is disturbing even now. My hubby found a 2 CD box set of the series that only cost us $5.00! But what great episodes they are. I would really like to own all of the series, if they are still available.

    Once again, One Step Beyond was real television. Forget about the new reality shows of today. I'll gladly take one step beyond back to the way real great t.v. shows were meant to be.
    theowinthrop

    A Thought Provoking Show on Parapsychology, etc.

    I was born five years before Alcoa produced this wonderful series - and it is wonderful, even though I remain thoroughly skeptical about the "truth" of the stories that were presented. Hosted by John Newland, in a quiet, thoughtful, and urbane manner, it presented different types of occult phenomenon each week, in well produced half-hour shows. I did not see it until the 1960s, when it was in syndication as reruns. But it was certainly entertaining and creepy. I won't dare to rate it against THE TWILIGHT ZONE or THE OUTER LIMITS (in particular as they were outwardly fictional and frequently entered science fiction), but it was one of the top horror shows in television history.

    Newland would come out with his weekly introduction - just like Rod Sterling or Alfred Hitchcock on their shows. Sometimes he would bring a small prop or item related to the story. On one show he brings out an old watch, which he will look at several times in the half hour, telling the time on it. He says to the audience, when he first looks at it, "J.W.B. Those are the initials of the owner of this watch. They are the initials of a murderer." The episode that follows deals with the assassination of Abraham Lincoln (the watch being John Wilkes Booth's). It is not a simple retelling of the story of Lincoln's death. The episode describes the odd premonitions and signs that reportedly happened in Washington, D.C. on that date, and around the country. For example, Lincoln's relating several eerie dreams he had (one of which was of him in the East Room, being told that the visitors there were in mourning for the President - who had been assassinated).

    There were many odd stories. In one Donald Pleasance was a successful barrister, about to become a high court justice in Great Britain, when he is confronted by evidence that only he can understand that shows how he allowed an innocent man to be hanged years earlier at the start of his career (he was the prosecutor). Supposedly the truth was told to him by the so-called murdered woman (apparently not so murdered as she was supposed), but he never reported it to the authorities. Twenty years later and evidence that he destroyed reappears, forcing him to confess - and driving him insane in the end (he becomes a madman addressing the crowds in Hyde Park daily relating his evil act).

    An episode with Patrick Macnee about premonitions regarding the sinking of the Titanic ends with a reference which I can vouch for is true - that in 1898 Mr. Morgan Robinson wrote a novella, FUTILITY: THE WRECK OF THE TITAN, about the world's greatest ocean liner being sunk by an iceberg on it's maiden voyage with great loss of life. Another episode with Werner Klemperer dealt with an unrepentant Nazi, pursued by some malevolent spirit on a U-boat, who causes so much noise that the U-boat is forced to surrender to an allied naval craft or be blown out of the water. There was one curious episode about an evil aristocrat's diamond choker that picked up the vibes from her personality, and choked her to death (and later killed her maid who stole the choker as well). Elizabeth Montgomery played a young flirt on an old west cavalry post, who thoughtlessly forces a young officer to do a dangerous assignment that kills him, and yet, weeks later when the post has a regimental ball, is confronted before everyone by his ghost who dances with her until she dies.

    So it went on these episodes. Even if, like myself, you did not believe in the phenomenon that Newland's stories presented (and he never forced anyone to believe them) you got into the mood and watched some interesting stories, and some first rate acting (William Shatner, Charles Bronson, and Edward Binns were three other actors who appeared on the show). For a really spooky, but enjoyable experience, ONE STEP BEYOND was very hard to beat.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Through an oversight, Worldvision didn't renew the copyrights on most episodes of this series when they expired in the late 1980s, and they thus fell into the public domain. Since royalties didn't have to be paid to Worldvision, the result was a revival of the series on UHF and cable television and on VHS and DVD. Since well-worn syndication prints were and are typically used by those media, the results often leave something to be desired, quality-wise. Despite the public domain status for most episodes, the series' remaining copyrights belongs to its distributor CBS Television Distribution. CTD is the successor to the series' previous distributors, which include ABC Films successor Worldvision Enterprises and CTD's predecessor Paramount Domestic Television.
    • Quotes

      John Newland: [episode introduction] What you are about to see is a matter of human record. Explain it: we cannot. Disprove it: we cannot. We simply invite you to explore with us the amazing world of the Unknown... to take that One Step... Beyond.

    • Alternate versions
      When this was run on network television (ABC), it was titled "Alcoa Presents: One Step Beyond." The 16mm television syndication prints carry the title of simply "One Step Beyond."
    • Connections
      Featured in Television: The First Fifty Years (1999)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 20, 1959 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Alcoa Presents
    • Production companies
      • ABC Films
      • Joseph L. Schenck Enterprises
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 25m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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