6 Episodes of 'The Twilight Zone' That Still Have Something to Teach Us
The Twilight Zone begins by warning its viewers of where they're going: "the middle ground between light and shadow, between science and superstition," "a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind."
It's easy to think that this dimension, the Twilight Zone, is defined by its sci-fi trappings—spaceships, futurism, Hollywood-style monsters, all which indicate that this world is not our own. In actuality, viewers are entering a carefully curated space, designed by Rod Serling to be just different enough from Earth as we know it. Because elsewhere, Serling couldn't say what he needed to.
"He felt that by escaping into outer space, so to speak, he could get these stories across—and he did," Serling's widow, Carol Serling, explained to the New York Times. In the Twilight Zone, he "get his points across—his social feelings that he wanted to talk about."
At its best, The Twilight Zone broadcasted parables about McCarthyism, nuclear war, social injustice, and human frailty. With a coat of other-worldly paint, people could digest otherwise unpalatable tales. And maybe, they'd learn.
Decades later, The Twilight Zone is back, and in the very capable hands of Jordan Peele. In honor of the new version's recently-debuted second season—which certainly contains its own messages—here are six episodes from the original that still have something to say.
A clown, a ballerina, an army Major, a homeless man, and a bagpipe player find themselves in a small, circular room. They have no memory of who they are, where they came from, or how long they'll be there. It's an existential crisis of the highest order, and one not made any more comforting by the final scene.
In a future where each person must, at the age of 19, choose a model-worthy "pattern" to be molded into, doctors come across a rare dissenting patient. Marilyn's family, friends, and physicians can't understand why she doesn't want to be beautiful—just like them.
After a night of heavy drinking, a young couple awaken in an empty home, with no memory of how they arrived. Outside, they find an equally deserted suburban street, full of fake trees and cars that don't run. Stopover in a Quiet Town is a parable about the dangers of drunk driving, but it's also a dive into the uncanny that ends with a delicious twist.
The first-ever episode of The Twilight Zone has a similar set-up to Stopover in a Quiet Town, except this man doesn't have a partner-in-crime to accompany him as he explores an eerily empty suburb. Despite echoing Stopover's premise, Where Is Everybody? sets up an entirely different twist. The message is clear: like it or not, human companionship is as essential as food or water.
The beginning is, admittedly overwrought (we get it Rod, books are good, Fahrenheit 451 is bad), but it's later in The Obsolete Man that the episode reveals its real conceit.
6 Episodes of 'The Twilight Zone' That Still Have Something to Teach Us
The Twilight Zone begins by warning its viewers of where they're going: "the middle ground between light and shadow, between science and superstition," "a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind."
It's easy to think that this dimension, the Twilight Zone, is defined by its sci-fi trappings—spaceships, futurism, Hollywood-style monsters, all which indicate that this world is not our own. In actuality, viewers are entering a carefully curated space, designed by Rod Serling to be just different enough from Earth as we know it. Because elsewhere, Serling couldn't say what he needed to.
"He felt that by escaping into outer space, so to speak, he could get these stories across—and he did," Serling's widow, Carol Serling, explained to the New York Times. In the Twilight Zone, he "get his points across—his social feelings that he wanted to talk about."
At its best, The Twilight Zone broadcasted parables about McCarthyism, nuclear war, social injustice, and human frailty. With a coat of other-worldly paint, people could digest otherwise unpalatable tales. And maybe, they'd learn.
Decades later, The Twilight Zone is back, and in the very capable hands of Jordan Peele. In honor of the new version's recently-debuted second season—which certainly contains its own messages—here are six episodes from the original that still have something to say.
In honor of the reboot's second season, a tribute to the stories that have stood the test of time.
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