Writer Rod Serling scripted a longer version of the teleplay to be made into a feature-length film, but it was never produced.
Portrait of a bush-league Führer named Peter Vollmer, a sparse little man who feeds off his self-delusions and finds himself perpetually hungry for want of greatness in his diet.
Ernst Ganz, the elderly Jewish man that Vollmer has had a sympathetic, uncle-like relationship with since he was an abused and neglected kid, offers him shelter and compassion but not respect.
Ernst spent nine years in Dachau and recognizes that Vollmer's politics stem from a childish desire for the respect of others.
He also instructs Vollmer to arrange the death of one of his followers, Nick Bloss, thereby creating a martyr to rally everyone around (a reference to the 1930 murder of Horst Wessel, a low-ranking officer in the Sturmabteilung).
Hitler's shadow appears on the wall behind Vollmer as he gasps out, "There's something very wrong here... Don't you understand that I'm made out of steel?!"
Remember it when you hear a name called, a minority attacked, any blind, unreasoning assault on a people or any human being.
His extended script added a number of scenes and even a new protagonist, an FBI agent who investigates Vollmer's neo-Nazi movement, but with The Twilight Zone's budget already stretched to the breaking point, Serling's proposal was turned down.