![]() Edwin Max as the Television Deliveryman.When the Twonky attempts to stop the woman’s reckless driving, it precipitates a crash that destroys itself. His relief at having escaped is soon negated by the woman’s erratic driving, and by the discovery that the Twonky was able to hide in the trunk. Spotting a vehicle parked alongside the road, West pulls over and abandons his car, hitching a ride from the other driver, an elderly Englishwoman. Luring the device into his car, he attempts to crash it by a variety of means but is frustrated by the Twonky’s ability to control the vehicle. After his wife returns to see a visiting bill collector driven from their home by the machine, West decides to take action. ![]() When the law enforcement officers attempt to arrest West, though, the Twonky places all of them in a trance, and they leave without complaint.įrustrated, West escapes the house and returns drunk, only to have the Twonky return him to sobriety with a light beam. ![]() As the now-fixed Trout attempts to leave, police storm into the house in response to a call made by the device seeking female companionship for West, followed by Treasury men tracking down the bogus $5 bills manufactured by the set. Upstairs, Trout theorizes that the Twonky is from a future “super state” that uses such machines to control the population, which the Twonky soon demonstrates by walking into the room and altering his mind so that he no longer believes there to be a problem. Upon being awakened by West, they appear to be in a hypnotic state mumbling that they have “no complaints,” a condition the Twonky soon inflicts on the deliveryman as well. West arrives with the television deliveryman and his replacement set, only to find the players passed out in front of the machine. Meanwhile, at West’s house, the coach summons members of the college's football team and orders them to destroy the Twonky. Frustrated, West goes to the store from which his wife had ordered the television and demands that they take it back or exchange it. When West attempts to give his lecture the next day, he finds himself unable to do more than ramble on about trivialities. After tending to the coach, West attempts to write a lecture on the role of individualism in art, but the Twonky hits him with beams that alter his thoughts and censors his reading. When he tests this hypothesis by attempting to kick West, the Twonky paralyzes his leg. Trout concludes that the Twonky is actually a robot committed to serving West. After West demonstrates the television to his friend Coach Trout (Billy Lynn), the coach declares the television set to be a “twonky”, the word he used as a child to label the inexplicable. Yet the television soon exhibits other, more controlling traits, permitting West only a single cup of coffee and breaking West’s classical music records in favor of military marches to which it dances. When the television deliveryman (Edwin Max) returns to settle the bill, the television materializes copies of a five-dollar bill in order to provide payment. West soon discovers that the television can walk and perform a variety of functions, including dishwashing, vacuuming, and card-playing. Absentmindedly unaware of what has taken place, it is only when the television subsequently lights his pipe that West realizes that his television is behaving abnormally. Sitting down in his office, he places a cigarette in his mouth and is about to light it when a solid beam of light shoots from the television screen, lighting it for him. ![]() After seeing his wife (Janet Warren) off on her trip, Kerry West ( Hans Conried), a philosophy teacher at a small-town college goes inside his home to contemplate his new purchase: a television set.
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