twilight_zone

The original five-season show The Twilight Zone (’59-’64) has been reborn in multiple incarnations: two additional television series, in 1985 and 2002, multiple book anthologies and comic books, and a disastrous movie released in 1983. (Not to mention a pretty amazing pinball machine, which is where the article’s image originated.) Now, according to Variety, Leonardo DiCaprio’s company Appian Way is moving forward with a new Twilight Zone film, and has just hired a writer: Rand Ravich, writer/director of The Astronaut’s Wife, producer of Confessions of a Dangerous Mind. What shape will his version of the series take?

The original series, created, hosted and often written by Rod Serling, featured a mixture of original screenplays and stories adapted from authors like Richard Matheson, who also wrote many of the show’s scripts. Remakes of episodes from the original series have dominated the brand since. The two televised revivals featured both new stories and remakes of classic episodes, and the 1983 feature had four stories, three of which were remakes of original episodes. So it’s easy to assumed that Rand Ravich will go back to Rod Serling’s well for some of his material. At this point, differentiating the name The Twilight Zone from Serling’s influence and those original stories is almost impossible (And foolish — Serling was the show’s identity). Indeed, when so many other forms of sci-fi and unusual television storytelling have taken the series’ ideas much further, returning to The Twilight Zone seems almost quaint.

That’s leaving out the fact that the last time a Twilight Zone movie came to screens, things didn’t work out so well. Three actors - Vic Morrow and two illegally-hired children - were killed when a setpiece involving a helicopter went horribly wrong on the set of the segment directed by John Landis. That makes an adaptation of the television series a loaded prospect, as an accident like that isn’t something Hollywood ever forgets.

Watch some of the classic episodes from original seasons one, two and three at the CBS website.

  • K_McNamara
    Hmm, Serling was born and raised and spent much of his time in my hometown of Binghamton, NY. There are even a few stories that were inspired from here and one even filmed. It'll be interesting to see what Leo cooks up for this, I just hope its going to be worth it. Don't fuck this up.
  • Name
    I'm from Binghamton as well! If this does follow through, Leo better include some local street names/monuments in the film. I remember Serling mentioning streets such as Schubert, Mozart, etc, in the series.
  • ArsenioBillingham
    Am I the only one who actually kind of liked the film?
  • RussFischer
    The movie is OK. Has some watchable moments, but on the whole isn't very memorable. I mean 'disastrous' in the literal sense that three people were killed on set.
  • ArsenioBillingham
    Oh, I totally agree that the production aspect of the film was an absolute mess, but on the whole, the film was quite interesting and made for good viewing.
  • The alien creature waving his finger at John Lithgow is classic. I saw the film once in the theater as a kid and on TV some time later. That scene in particular stuck with me through the years. Guess its time to add it to the Netflix queue.
  • whsmith
    I'm a huge fan of the original show, but I gotta say... meh.... without Rod Serling, it just isn't the Twilight Zone. They can never truly recapture what he created - it was a product of it's time: the black and white photography, the way it captured the mentality of America in the early 60s. The mixture of cold war-esque paranoia and innocence - it's a pure artifact IMO... a stunning and still entertaining artifact - but one that simply can't be revisited in any remake.

    Now, it's remotely possible that they'll create something compelling and call it "Twilight Zone"... but it won't be the same, not by a mile
  • Well this is out of hand. And worse than a Rocky Horror remake.
  • I bet Frank Darabont would do a new Twilight Zone justice - especially if it was released in black and white. His b&w version of The Mist reminds me alot of something one would see in a new and true Twilight Zone film.
  • quintushalls
    I think DiCaprio could do a decent opening. But it would need to take a really good psychological thrill to scare audiences these days and make them think.
  • dufresne
    There's something on the wing!
  • NickN328
    Russ, just curious, what EXACTLY was the Vic Morrow joke you told in front of Jon Landis?
  • doug
    My curiosity must be satisfied. Is the accompanying artwork for this post taken from the Twilight Zone pinball game?
  • i bet it'll be effin awesome. i cant wait. i want something futuristic clever creepy and will make me trip the fuck out. yay im excited.
  • any ideas about casting??
  • I'd love for this to be good. I'm a big fan of the original series and consider Rod Serling to be a hugely underrated creative influence on modern TV/Cinema.
    Like I said, I'd love for this to be good....but meh, I don't know.
  • horrorboy
    I'd be far more interested in an update of NIGHT GALLERY.
  • evanz
    Why couldn't David Lynch direct this? I've always wanted to see that.
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