The Twilight Zone was almost always imaginative, well-written and witty - The Outer Limits was occasionally so. It had its virtues, many of them matters of tone and style, but they were more limited than TZ.
The newer OL had too many downer endings for my taste. By this I don't mean a grim ending that was well foreshadowed or that the characters blindly earned through ignorance or foolishness. I just mean ones where no lesson or victory is even possible, and where the victory of the wrong side is foreordained almost solely by the writers, not the situation they set up.
What happened in 1975?
They had a recurring thing, which maybe was no more than an attempt to leave the audience with cold chills (not a bad thing, itself) involving the utter conquest or destruction of humanity by aliens. We are simply helpless failures, and often it's because of our most human emotional attributes including positive traits of hope, trust or affection. There's the Wil Wheaton episode, the episode that it was a sequel to, the episode where Brent Spiner played a brain-washing researcher working for alien overlords, the episode where these folks are buried underground as a last-ditch "doomsday defense" against alien invaders...if you totaled them all up, it might be the most common recurring theme on the new series.
It also had the atmospheric black-and-white cinematography of Conrad Hall and the wonderful music of Dominic Frontiere in its first season.. . . The original OUTER LIMITS was a smart, intelligent show that produced many classic episodes. "Demon with a Glass Hand," "Soldier," "Do Not Open Until Doomsday," "The Architects of Fear," etc.
Even the clip show was a major downer.
In my opinion, they made the show weaker by not letting the episodes stand out on their own.
The most common recurring theme I remember in the "aliens crush humanity" stories is that hope, trust and/or compassion doom us.
They also did some stories where we're done in by those old standbys distrust and violence of course.![]()
Yeah, I guess it's pretty rare when a show actually manages to use a clip show to its advantage and actually be good. Other times, they just seem forced. And it's even worse with an anthology show, because then they've got to find some way to tie some of the episodes together.
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