Monday, January 1, 2007

Twilight Zone.


I'm just sitting here watching the Twilight Zone marathon on the Sci Fi channel. Its amazing to me that the originals are so much better than the remakes with Forest considering the fact that the originals are so dated. Having said that, I believe Dennis Miller was correct when he said that every movie has a fatal flaw. This is certainly the case with the Twilight Zone.
I came in the middle of this one so I'm not exactly sure how the sun got to be so intense, but the sun is overwhelmingly hot and people are droppin' like flies. The thermometer breaks at 120 and mercury is pouring over the face. Here is my gripe. The occupants of this apartment have the curtains wide open! Were people stupid in 1960 or just severe over-actors? Here is an example, in one episode the lady that is running around the house trying to barricade herself in as a little robot is trying to get into her cabin. The robot looks like a little toy robot I had when I was five. You gotta hand it to the lady. She is putting on quite the performance, but it is laughable that she is afraid of a stupid little toy. Overacting. I guess that's why they enlisted Shattner for several episodes, huh?
WE LOVE YOU ANYWAY TWILIGHT ZONE!!

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Or how about the episode where the murderer is exiled to an asteroid and they give him a female robot as a companion? He's showing her the constellations and showing her the constellation Orion. I'm thinking okay, maybe Orion would appear the same at a different location in the solar system or galaxy, but then he says, "There's the north star." Okay, maybe his asteroid is large enough to have a pole, and maybe it rotates on its axis so that it has a north star. I don't know. It just seemed convoluted to me. But you know what? They're still better than most the excrement that pollutes the airwaves in the 21st century.

Unknown said...

One other thing about Twilight Zone is that every episode has a philosophical message to it. I really liked the episode called "The Man In The Cave" where the people in a post-atomic war world get all their info from a man in a cave. Then some military men come to town and convince them that the man in the cave is keeping them from having fun. They go to the cave and destroy the "man in the cave" which happens to be a computer. The next day they're all dead except for Joseph Smith (I think that was his name.)

This episode really got me thinking about how we get information from the Bible and from prophets, but more and more people reject these words and advice and do things that make them happy for the moment but kill them the next day. "Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die." I think Rod Serling was a genius. It's quite obvious that he was very well read and a profound thinking. Check out his site at http://www.rodserling.com/