Thanks. I haven't seen that movie in ages, but I was sure the title had to be connected to the "dancing with the devil" phrase.*ITPM certainly sounds cool, but I've wondered where the title comes from. A Google search came up with a song by British punk band Leatheface, "Pale Moonlight". I don't know if this is where they took it from, but I hope it is, because the lyrics are fitting:
I would say it almost certainly comes from the first Tim Burton Batman film, where Jack Nicholson's Joker character uses this line like a catchphrase: "You ever dance with the devil in the pale moonlight?" The song you mention is probably quoting that...
By Any Other Name (Shakespeare - not sure it suits the episode, though...)
Deadwood had some good titles:
"Here was a man"
"Jewel's boot is made for walking"
"A lie agreed upon"
"Advances, none miraculous"
"The whores can come"
"Tell your God to ready for blood"
"I am not the fine man you take me for"
"Leviathan smiles"
"Tell him something pretty"
One word episode titles. Yeah.. Definitely.
Crackers Don't Matter!
Or maybe the song, the movie and the DS9 episode title have nothing to do with each other. I just happened to listen to Natalie Merchant's "Build a Levee" (from "Motherland" album) again and I noticed the same phrase used - it's a folksy song about a mother warning a daughter not to be seduced by the "devil", and she mentions she could meet the devil "in the pale moonlight". Based on all those different mentions, I presume that there is probably some old folk belief that you could meet the devil in the pale moonlight?Thanks. I haven't seen that movie in ages, but I was sure the title had to be connected to the "dancing with the devil" phrase.*ITPM certainly sounds cool, but I've wondered where the title comes from. A Google search came up with a song by British punk band Leatheface, "Pale Moonlight". I don't know if this is where they took it from, but I hope it is, because the lyrics are fitting:
I would say it almost certainly comes from the first Tim Burton Batman film, where Jack Nicholson's Joker character uses this line like a catchphrase: "You ever dance with the devil in the pale moonlight?" The song you mention is probably quoting that...
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