The Cold Equations (''The Twilight Zone'')

"The Cold Equations"
The New Twilight Zone episode
Episode no. Season 3
Episode 51
Directed by Martin Lavut
Written by Alan Brennert
Tom Godwin
Original air date January 7, 1989
Guest appearance(s)

Terence Knox: Thomas Barton
Christianne Hirt: Marilyn Cross
Michael J. Reynolds: Commander
Barclay Hope: Gerry Cross

"The Cold Equations" is the fifty-first episode and the sixteenth episode of the third season (1988–89) of the television series The Twilight Zone.

Opening narration

Plot

Thomas Barton is an astronaut who must deliver a vital cargo of vaccine to a plague-stricken colony world. However, a young girl named Marilyn has stowed away on his vessel with hopes of reuniting with her brother Gerry at the colony. Now the entire mission is in jeopardy as her presence on board was not calculated into the flight plan, which goes strictly "by the numbers" and there will be no way for the pilot to compensate for her added weight. They also discover that there are no other ships which can pick her up prior to arrival at their destination.

While she is distraught that she will never see Gerry again, and because their ship is on a crash course, they attempt to compensate by jettisoning all possible extra weight. They discover, however, that the extra weight jettisoned is only half of what they need to make it to the colony planet.

Barton suggests that the girl try to contact her brother so they could at least talk before the impending doom. She finally contacts him in time, but only to talk about how they cannot meet in person. Barton considers sacrificing himself so the girl can survive, but finds this is impossible since she would not be able to pilot the ship herself. Resigned to her fate, Marilyn enters the airlock and allows herself to be jettisoned into space, leaving Barton to grieve in silence.

Closing narration

Note

Based on the original short story by Tom Godwin, this was made into a longer feature for the SciFi channel starring Billy Campbell and Poppy Montgomery. It was also made into an episode of the radio series X Minus One in 1955.

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