It’s easy to remember The Twilight Zone as a show defined by its prophetic social messages. Suburban witch hunts scripted in the shadow of McCarthyism, a future in which plastic surgery makes everyone look the same, a naïve human trust of otherworldly beings who plan to cook you for dinner—these stories are still perfect. Even with the limitations of 1960s special effects, The Twilight Zone’s best horror is timeless and often the scariest thing you’ll confront in its murky universe is the fallibility of humanity.
Of course, The Twilight Zone was also often bad. For every episode that mines the worst of humanity for philosophical television gold, there’s another that’s entirely forgettable or bogged down by a cheesy premise. Who hasn’t fallen asleep during episodes like “From Agnes — With Love,” a dull story about an evil robot, or “Back There,” in which a man goes back in time to try and save Abraham Lincoln? Who even knows which episodes these are? There’s a lot to improve in the latest Twilight Zone reboot, premiering April 1 on CBS All Access, which develops relatively new stories inspired by past episodes. And it walks in the footsteps of its original, in that a few of its episodes fail to fulfill the best aspects of a great, timeless Twilight Zone episode.
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