Cult Labs

Go Back   Cult Labs > Entertainment > Television > The Twilight Zone: Official UK Forum > Twilight Zone's Weekly Theme > Past Weekly Discussions
All AlbumsBlogs FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search


Like Tree2Likes
  • 1 Post By Sarah@Cult Labs
  • 1 Post By Nosferatu@Cult Labs

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 21st November 2011, 02:11 PM
Sarah@Cult Labs's Avatar
Newsletter Moderator
Forum Moderator
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Liverpool
Blog Entries: 2
Default Sci-fi in The Twilight Zone

This week I'd like to expand on David's excellent topic from last week. How exactly do you pick out sci-fi episodes in a series like The Twilight Zone - series that is predominantly thought of as sci-fi, but so often delves into other genres?

I've picked out "The Monsters are Due on Maple Street," "The Eye of the Beholder" and "The Gift" to try to explore this...

The Monsters are Due on Maple Street
Season 1 - available now at Amazon (DVD/Blu-ray), HMV (DVD/Blu-ray) and Play (DVD/Blu-ray)



A "meteor" flies over Maple Street and suddenly the electricity goes off and the cars all stop. The next thing you know, the residents of Maple Street believe that aliens posing as humans have come down to start an invasion and they begin turning on each other as they try to unearth who is human and who isn't - all because of one little boy's willingness to believe in science fiction stories.

An indictment of McCarthyism if ever I saw one, the residents of Maple Street turn on each other horrifically in their panic and paranoia, commiting assault and murder as they seek out those who are "different". Grown men accuse small children in their attempts to not be suspected themselves and the street eventually descends into chaos. The twist is, of course, that aliens (read: communists) are exploiting this paranoia to force humans to destroy themselves. Like a lot of great sci-fi of the period, "The Monsters are Due on Maple Street" acts as a brilliant allegory for the political tensions of the time, while bravely critiquing America's anti-Communist regime.

The Eye of the Beholder
Season 2 - available now at Amazon (DVD/Blu-ray), HMV (DVD/Blu-ray) and Play (DVD/Blu-ray)



A woman lies in a hospital bed, her face bandaged while she is treated by doctors and nurses whose faces remain in shadow. The woman is a "freak" who is waiting to see the results of an operation that will make her "normal" or else she will be exiled to a village with other "freaks". As it turns out, the woman is, by our standards, beautiful but the rest of the world is occupied by hideous, pig-like people.

Conformity is often the topic of great sci-fi. Think John Wyndham's novel The Crysalids, any of the versions of Invasion of the Body Snatchers from the 1956 classic to the 1998 re-interpretation The Faculty, or even Doctor Who's infamous antagonists: the Daleks and the Cybermen. "The Eye of the Beholder" deals with a dystopian society where everyone is encouraged - even forced - to look the same or else face exile.

Perhaps the scariest thing about this dystopia is that it's not a million miles away from the real world. It's just that here, everyone wants to look like pig-people, rather than the skinny beauties of glossy magazine culture...

The Gift
Season 3 - available now on Amazon (DVD/Blu-ray), HMV (DVD/Blu-ray and Play (DVD/Blu-ray)



"The Gift" takes a somewhat classic sci-fi premise of an alien coming to Earth, only to have his intentions grievously misunderstood by the humans he encounters - much like The Day the Earth Stood Still. The alien arrives in Mexico and accidentally kills a police officer. As a result, he is persecuted and killed while the "gift" he bestows upon a small boy - the chemical make-up of a vaccine for cancer - is burned before it is read.

The episode plays on humanities' mistrust of anything different, our assumption that all aliens must be coming to harm us. It highlights that these assumptions say much more about us and our nature, than the nature of any "invading" force. Great sci-fi as ever, shines the light not on the behaviour of the aliens, but on our own behaviour and makes us ashamed to be human. That the only person to trust and befriend the alien is a small child has almost biblical connotations - another running theme in great sci-fi (I again point to The Day the Earth Stood Still).

***

That the episodes I have picked out are all sci-fi in one way or another is debatable - but that is largely because they straddle a variety of genres which makes it difficult for them to be pinpointed. So what makes sci-fi? Is it the presence of aliens or alternate realities?

Or is it a plot that by its very nature makes us examine ourselves through the context of others?

I'd love to hear what others have to say about this so please do contribute to the thread!

***

Season 4 is also available now from Amazon (DVD/Blu-ray), HMV (DVD/Blu-ray) and Play (DVD/Blu-ray).

Season 5 will be released 6 February 2012 and is available for pre-order from Amazon (DVD/Blu-ray), HMV (DVD/Blu-ray) and Play (DVD/Blu-ray).
__________________
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 22nd November 2011, 10:17 AM
Nosferatu@Cult Labs's Avatar
Cult Don
Cult Labs Radio Contributor
Good Trader
Senior Moderator
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: The Land of the Prince Bishops
Blog Entries: 4
Default

Great selection of episodes, Sarah. I was tempted to mention the first two you cite but, because I was only going to choose three, some had to miss out.

As you mention in your horror episodes thread, there are numerous ones which have been parodied/referenced by The Simpsons. The first that springs to mind is The Little People, which was adapted so Lisa inadvertently creates a miniature civilisation which worships her as a God and that, in turn, was referenced in South Park when Cartman creates a civilisation from sea monkeys and semen!

It's amazing how prophetic some of the episodes are when 1960s science fiction becomes 21st century science fact, such as The Midnight Sun (also from season three), where the idea of the Sun's proximity to the Earth changing and having a drastic effect on the climate isn't too far removed from the climate change debate now, only taken several steps further.
Sarah@Cult Labs likes this.
__________________
Reply With Quote
Reply  

Like this? Share it using the links below!


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



Our goal is to keep Cult Labs friendly. If you feel discouraged from posting by certain members' behaviour then you can e-mail us in complete confidence.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2
All forum posts are contributed by members of the site; Cult Labs cannot take responsibility for all content posted on the site. If you have an issue with content posted on the site please click the 'report post' button.
Copyright © 2014 Cult Laboratories Ltd. All rights reserved.