The Daily Telegraph

A 21st-century makeover for the Sixties TV thriller

The classic sci-fi TV show paved the way for Star Trek and Black Mirror. Now it’s getting a reboot,

- says Tom Fordy

Sixty years after The Twilight Zone was first broadcast, its influence on popular culture reaches far beyond the Fifth Dimension. Just imagine a parallel universe where the spooky anthology series and its creator Rod Serling never existed. There would be no Star Trek, no Twin Peaks, no Black Mirror, no twist endings, no breaking of the fourth wall, and no one whistling the “do-do-do-do, do-dodo-do” theme tune whenever something strange happens.

Originally broadcast from 1959 to 1964, The Twilight Zone told one-off tales of mystery, monsters and men from space, usually with a rug-pull twist in the final seconds – “They were dead all along! It was all a dream! The humans are the real monsters!” – a trick borrowed from other anthologie­s such as Alfred Hitchcock Presents.

Serling himself played its suitwearin­g, chain-smoking host, who wandered into the stories to introduce the week’s mystery and warn viewers they were about to enter The Twilight Zone.

Now it is set to return for 10 new episodes on streaming service CBS All Access from April 1, with Get Out writer-director Jordan Peele stepping into Serling’s role as “The Narrator”, producer and co-writer.

What gave the original show its power was its sharp-minded political allegory and social conscience, tapping into the anxieties of the day through probing moral quandaries. Is it the anxieties of our own politicall­y and socially turbulent era that make 2019 the right time to re-enter The Twilight Zone?

“I think that you could do The Twilight Zone in any era,” says Glen Morgan, a writer and executive producer on the series. “You always think, ‘This era is really crazy,’ but things are always crazy.”

The team of producers, which includes Morgan, Peele, Blackkklan­sman producer Win Rosenfeld and Carol Serling, the wife of Rod, who died in 1975 at the age of 50, have vowed to create stories for the 21st century using Serling’s tools – “mischief, allegory, paranoia”. They are also bringing back the original series’ iconic, unnerving theme tune.

“The original show has really been our guide,” says Morgan. “The great thing that Serling did was to [present] moral problems – if you were in that situation, what character flaws do you have that the cosmos would come down and challenge you on?”

The rebooted series promises to delve into such modern-day issues as celebrity, technology, race and terrorism. There’s also a modern tailspin on the original series’ most iconic episodes, such as Nightmare at 20,000 Feet – about a gremlin that torments William Shatner’s aeroplane passenger from out on the wing – which gets an upgrade-cum-homage in Nightmare at 30,000 Feet, gueststarr­ing Big Little Lies actor Adam Scott.

Other guest names on board for individual episodes include Seth Rogen, Chris O’dowd and Jacob Tremblay, the child star of Room.

But Jordan Peele remains the face of the show. He is horror’s man of the moment, the director of 2017’s Oscar-winning Get Out, the wellreview­ed Us, which is in cinemas now, and a remake of Candyman due to be released next year. After two previous mediocre Twilight Zone reboots – first from 1985 to 1989 and again in 2002, both sorely missing Rod Serling’s presence – Morgan believes Peele will finally get it right.

“Jordan has a vast knowledge of the genre,” he says. “His films are showing how to incorporat­e a social message into horror, the way Rosemary’s Baby and The Exorcist did. That’s why he’s the guy to do it.”

Serling himself confessed that he was “traumatise­d” into writing by his experience­s in the Second World War. He had been a paratroope­r in the 11th Airborne Division and fought in the bloody Battle of Leyte. He returned to the US in 1946 but he was left with both physical and mental scars: a shrapnel-injured knee that sometimes buckled beneath him and flashbacks to the battlefiel­d.

“He would say that he dreamt the enemy was coming at him,” says his daughter Anne, now 63, who wrote the memoir As I Knew

Him: My Dad, Rod Serling. “It was something he had to process his whole life.”

Serling became a scriptwrit­er, firstly for radio and then TV. But he became frustrated with executives who meddled with his stories, terrified that his morally progressiv­e scripts would upset conservati­ve viewers and advertiser­s. The Twilight Zone concept allowed Serling to slip in his social and political commentari­es via the Fifth Dimension.

“His quote was, ‘It’s the writer’s job to menace the public’s conscience’,” says Anne. “He was passionate about what was happening in the world – prejudice, mob mentality, that kind of thing. Through The Twilight Zone he was able to tell these stories, with the messages going under the radar. Another thing he said was, ‘A monster or alien could say what a Democrat or Republican couldn’t’.”

The Twilight Zone premiered on October 2 1959. The series wasn’t considered a ratings success at first, but connected strongly with a teenage audience. Over five seasons it broadcast 156 episodes, all in black and white.

The show had recurring themes: unlikely monsters tormenting lone protagonis­ts (a gremlin, talking doll, and even a fruit machine); microcosms of society on the brink of hysteria (white-picket suburbanit­es who fear there is an alien among them); careful-what-you-wish-for parables (a bookworm who prefers literature to people is the only man to survive the apocalypse, but breaks his glasses before he can enjoy a lifetime of uninterrup­ted reading); and blackly comic ironies (the humans in To Serve Man who realise the manifesto from a race of seemingly friendly aliens isn’t a manifesto at all, but a cookbook).

“It was primarily dealing with the human condition,” says Anne. “These issues that he talked about way back when are still sadly relevant and prevalent today. I can tell you unequivoca­lly that he would be deeply, deeply saddened by what’s happening [in America] now – and then he would be apoplectic.”

After The Twilight Zone was cancelled in 1964, Serling went on to host and write for the not-entirelydi­ssimilar horror anthology Night Gallery. He died 10 years later following a series of heart attacks. “I don’t know that he was aware of the impact he had,” says Anne. “He would be stunned that people are still talking about his work – stunned and humbled.”

Glen Morgan was overwhelme­d the first time he wrote down the classic “you are now entering another dimension” opening spiel.

“If you’re a scriptwrit­er, it’s like being an American baseball player and pulling on Yankee pinstripes,” he says. “The first time I wrote it I had to walk around my backyard and I was emotional. I know Jordan felt the same way. It’s sacred ground – The Twilight Zone is one of the great pieces of art of the 20th century.”

‘It’s the writer’s job to menace the public’s conscience’

 ??  ?? a Parallel universe: Eye of the Beholder, Twilight Zone episode from 1960, written by Rod Serling, below. Nightmare at 30,000 Feet, above right, updates one of the classic episodes
a Parallel universe: Eye of the Beholder, Twilight Zone episode from 1960, written by Rod Serling, below. Nightmare at 30,000 Feet, above right, updates one of the classic episodes
 ??  ?? Serling service: Jordan Peele is the presenter
Serling service: Jordan Peele is the presenter
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