"One Step Beyond" The Last Round (TV Episode 1961) Poster

(TV Series)

(1961)

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6/10
"If you see Paddy, you die!"
classicsoncall16 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Even during the Second World War the fight goes on in the boxing ring. In London's East End Arena, aging American boxer Yank Dawson is getting ready for his match against English fighter Tiger Jones. It's September 7th, 1944. Dawson's manager Chipper White (Felix Deebank) relates the story of a former boxer named Paddy (last name sounded like Cahoon) who died in the very same ring that night's match will take place in. Local legend states that anyone who sees Paddy's ghost will die before the next sunrise.

Dawson's not the superstitious type, but upon waking up from a short nap, the silent ghost of Paddy is standing next to the rub-down table and puts Dawson into a sweat. He frantically calls for his manager, who pins down rival Sanderson (Ronald Long), the manager of Dawson's opponent for the evening. Sanderson admits he put up a former boxer of his to put a scare into Dawson, but later during the match Dawson's knocked down by his opponent when he's distracted once again by Paddy sitting in the stands. It can't be Sanderson's guy Davis because he's been in the local lockup for being drunk and rowdy for the past hour. This time, Chipper White, Sanderson and boxer Jones also see Paddy in the stands, even though the promoter of the bout who enters the ring with them can't see the 'ghost'.

The episode ends with the legend of Paddy's ghost coming true, as a bombing raid over London destroyed part of the arena and all four men who saw the apparition perished, they being the only ones left in the arena after the spectator crowd had left following the matches. Correction, the promoter was also in the building and he survived - he was the only one who didn't see Paddy's ghost.

Whether this event actually happened or not, what intrigued me about the story was the appearance of Charles Bronson in the role of Yank Dawson. It reminded me of an earlier appearance by Bronson in a 1952 episode of "The Roy Rogers Show" called 'Knockout'. Bronson was a boxer in that show too, though a decade earlier he was lighter in weight and much less muscular than in this story. The credits following the earlier program listed Bronson using his real name - Charles Buchinski!
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7/10
The Boxer
AaronCapenBanner18 April 2015
Future action superstar Charles Bronson makes an early TV appearance as a professional boxer named Yank Dawson, who, in 1944 London, is preparing for a major bout with a rival boxer, but is distracted by an old superstition that if you see a long deceased boxer named Paddy you will die soon, as it is an omen of death for some reason. His manager scoffs at such tales, but Yank isn't so sure, and when he catches a glimpse of Paddy in person, becomes quite worried, threatening to cost him not only the fight, but perhaps his life... Bronson is good here, and his distinct presence is obvious, with the twist at the end coming as an abrupt surprise.
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6/10
See Paddy and Die!
sol121815 April 2010
**SPOILERS** In London's East End Arena Trying to get himself ready for his bout with Alfie "Tiger" Jones American boxer Yank Dawson is worried about a story his manager Chipp White told him about the ghost that's been haunting that place for the last ten years Paddy Terhound. That's after Dawson's opponent's manager Sanderson burst into his dressing room with the story about Paddy, in order to psych Dawson out, that the severely brain damaged, from taking too many shot to the head, Dawson started having second thoughts about boxing Tiger Jones.

You see the story about Paddy Therhoun a boxer who died, from a blood clot, after participating in a bout in the East End Arena back in 1931 is that if anyone, boxer or spectator, sees him at the East End Arena before a boxing match they won't live the see the next sunrise. You can just imagine what Dawson felt when after waking up from his nap in his dressing room he sees in the flash, with his name sewed into his sweater, non other then Paddy Terhound looking right at him! With him now scheduled to fight Tiger Jones Dawson is far more afraid of the dead ghostly and invisible, to everyone but himself, Paddy Therhound then his flesh and blood opponent in the ring Tiger Jones!

***SPOILERS*** It's at the end of the bout that you realize what a strange quirk of fate Paddy pulled off among those he allowed himself to be seen by. Thinking at first Paddy was an actor that Sanderson hired, which in fact he did, to impersonate him in order to spook Dawson it soon becomes apparent to everyone that the person who was to impersonate Paddy was nowhere in sight when Dawson or anyone else saw him! He was in the police station charged with being dead drunk in public! So who did Dawson in fact see in his dressing room that night! And now if he did see the ghostly Paddy Therhound what's Dawson to expect to happen to him before the evening is over!

P.S Even though it's been considered by many to be a rip off of the far more famous "Twilight Zone" the series "One Step Beyond" premiered on TV a full six months earlier in February 1959. And overall was a far better program then the "Twilight Zone" in its 97 episodes about the mysterious unexplained and the unknown.
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10/10
Fighting The Darkness
telegonus23 October 2017
The Last Round is one of the best efforts of the One Step Beyond series, and it production values are superior to most entries in this modestly budgeted show. Set in and around a boxing arena, its offices, locker rooms and corridors, in London's East End, during the early days of World War II, when the city was under siege due to the Blitzkreig,--air attacks from the bombings of the Luftwaffe--the fear of imminent death permeates the episode from start to finish. Its qualities are such as it plays more like a mini-movie than a television show.

An overage American boxer, Yank, as portrayed by Charles Bronson, is in the fight of his life, and to make matters worse there's a folk legend in the arena that if someone sees the image of Paddy, a fighter killed in the ring many years earlier, it is an omen that one's own death is near at hand. There is also a problem of a man who closely resembles Paddy who is sometimes hired to spook boxers by a rival manager.

Under the circumstances, given what London and England in general were going through in 1940 Britons didn't need ghosts or apparitions to fear that death was imminent. Such fears were already in the air and coming from the air. This added element of danger hangs like a black cloud over all the characters in The Last Round, making it one of the darkest and most morbid episodes of One Step Beyond. The mostly British players act superbly, and the sleazy atmosphere feels real, as one can practically smell the cheap cigars and beer.
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4/10
Charles Bronson Goes One Step Beyond
wes-connors4 July 2011
Boxing on London's East End in 1944, light heavyweight Charles Bronson (as "Yank" Dawson), feels like he's getting to old to fight. "Life is sure crummy," he says, hoping he'll return to America and open a bar. Before a major bout, Mr. Bronson receives a muscle rubdown from manager Felix Deebank (as Chipper "Whitey" White), then dozes off thinking about a ghost story stirred up by rival manager Ronald Long (as Sanderson). If you see a ghost named "Paddy", you die. Is it real, or psychological warfare? Before Bronson's next fight, he thinks he sees the legendary ghost...

**** The Last Round (1/10/61) John Newland ~ Charles Bronson, Felix Deebank, Ronald Long, Wally Cassell
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