From the Escape and Suspense website:
Escape's "A Passenger to Bali" begins in a Shanghai harbor onboard a freighter named The Roundabout. The ship is about to depart when a man named Mr. Walkes convinces the captain to allow him to purchase passage to Bali. The Reverand Mr. Walkes is a Dutch missionary bound for Bali to distribute bibles and religion. Captain English allows him to travel on The Roundabout although technically, the freighter isn't supposed to take on passengers.
Soon afterwards, Captain English realizes he has made a horrible mistake. Manipulative, drunken, and murderous, Mr. Walkes slowly takes control of the ship by purposely inciting trouble between the British officers and the Kanaka crew.
When the ship arrives in Bali they learn that Mr. Walkes is an anarchist, unwelcome in any port in Indonesia. Everywhere Mr. Walkes has gone, he has caused trouble. No port will allow him to land. Now The Roundabout is doomed to wander from port to port with an evil passenger who can never disembark.
"A Passenger to Bali" became a 1940 Broadway play directed by John Huston and starring his father, Walter.
http://www.escape-suspense.com/2007/07/ ... -pass.html
Comments on the 1950 "Studio One" TV presentation, with EG Marshall as the Captain (Available on DVD Horror Collection from Mill Creek, which produced an excellent "Lady From Shanghai" DVD earlier this year):
"The story concerns a man who almost forces himself onto a cargo ship to be a passenger to Bali, hence the title. Unknown to the ship's captain or crew,he is a sea Jonah which no country wants and none will allow him off the ship and back on land. The reason is a bit unclear, we are told he has some 'inflamatory pamphlets' which could start trouble,as this was filmed during the 'red witch hunt' era in America's history,I assume it is the 'plague' of communism. It does seem all a bit silly from a modern day point of view, then again, there is the fear of Islam stalking the land now, so, perhaps not...
Berry Kroeger as the man without a country does a decent job, although you can see he has been watching too much Orson Welles when he gets into full flow and chews the scenery at times.
The ending is inconclusive and you have to add your own finale."
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"...at one point, Mr. Walkes is seen reading "The Decline of the West" by Oswald Spengler. This book, which purports that the developed counties of the West (England, Western Europe and the Americas) were headed toward a new phase of civilization. This phase would be dominated by mega-cities, and money; and, that atheism would become ascendant. Following a progression, this would lead to Caesarism (cult of personality); and, a long period of stagnation in the arts and sciences."
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Ellis St. Joseph's "A Passenger to Bali" originally aired as a "Mercury Theater" radio show in 1938, with the foreboding Orson Welles as the ship's mysterious passenger. At that time, the drama could have been argueably a warning against Fascism - but, by 1950, the evil was updated to Communism.
http://www.millcreekent.com/tales-of-te ... ovies.html
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0712371/reviews
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"Civilization is rotting because it's origin is fear. In order to entrap the strong, the weak entrap themselves."
- A Passenger to Bali
