Producers: John Landis & Steven Spielberg, Music: Jerry Goldsmith, Production Design: James Bissell. Production Company:Warners.USA 1983
Cast:
Prologue/First Segment
Director/Screenplay: John Landis, Photography: Steven Larner, Special Effects Paul Stewart, Makeup:Craig Reardon.
Cast
Cast
Dan Aykroyd (Driver), Albert Brooks (Hiker)
Vic Morrow (Bill Conner)
Kick the Can
Director: Steven Spielberg, Screenplay: George Clayton Johnston, Richard Matheson & Josh Rogan, Based on the TV series The Twilight Zone Episode Kick the Can Written by Johnston, Photography: Allen Daviau, Special Effects: Mike Wood.
Cast:
Scatman Crothers (Mr Bloom), Bill Quinn (Mr Conroy), Murray
Matheson (Young Errol Flynn), Evan Richmond (Young Mr Agee), Helen Shaw
(Mrs Dempsey), Christopher Eisenmann (Young Mr Mule), Laura Mooney
(Young Mrs Dempsey), Scott Nemes (Young Mr Weinstein), Tanya Fenmore
(Young Mrs Weinstein)
It’s a Good Life
Director – Joe Dante, Screenplay – Matheson, Based on the TV Series The Twilight Zone episode It’s a Good Life
Written by Rod Serling (Based on the Short Story by Jerome Bixby),
Photography – John Hora, Special Effects – Mike Wood, Makeup Effects –
Rob Bottin.
Cast:
Kathleen Quinlan (Helen Foley), Jeremy Licht (Anthony), Kevin
McCarthy (Uncle Walt), William Schallert (Father), Patricia Barry
(Mother), Nancy Cartwright (Ethel), Dick Miller (Walter)
Nightmare at 20,000 Feet
Director – George Miller, Screenplay – Matheson, Based on the TV Series The Twilight Zone Episode Nightmare at 20,000 Feet
Written by Matheson, Photography – Allen Daviau, Visual Effects –
Industrial Light and Magic & Peter Kuran, Makeup Effects – Craig
Reardon & Ed Verrieux.
Cast:
John Lithgow (John Valentine), Abbie Lane & Donna Dixon
(Stewardesses), John Dennis Johnston (Co-Pilot), Charles Knapf (Airline
Cop), Christine Nigra (Little Girl)
Surprisingly, Steven Spielberg’s episode Kick the Can is the weakest of the segments. It is Spielberg’s childhood obsessions perhaps at their most literally personified. The slimness of the premise never gives Spielberg much opportunity to open up. The sentiments engendered are corny and sentimental and the wistful tone aimed for shallow.
SYNOPSIS:
Prologue:- A driver
plays a game with a hitch-hiker, driving without lights to see who can
break first. The hitch-hiker then decides to show the driver something
really scary... First Segment:- A middle-aged bigot is suddenly
thrown through time where he is persecuted by the Nazis as a Jew and the
Ku-Klux-Klan as a Black Man. Kick the Can:- Mr Bloom becomes a
new resident at a geriatric home. He takes the other oldsters out at
night to play a game of ‘Kick the Can’, which causes them to be
magically transformed into children again. It’s a Good Life:-
Helen Foley accidentally knocks young Anthony off his bicycle outside a
diner. Concerned, she drives him home. She meets Anthony’s family who
seem to live in terror of him. She then learns that he keeps them
prisoner, as he has the power to manifest anything he wishes. Nightmare at 20,000 Feet:-
A man terrified of flying boards a plane flight. However, as the
journey gets underway, he is unable to convince anybody there is a
creature out on the wing tearing the engines apart.
COMMENTARY:
The tv series The Twilight Zone (1959-63) was a genre landmark. The Twilight Zone
was created, written and hosted by Rod Serling, a writer who had
delivered highly acclaimed and award-winning plays from the early days
of live television with the likes of Patterns (1956) and Requiem for a Heavyweight (1956). The Twilight Zone
used an anthology format to tell science-fiction, horror and fantasy
tales. Rod Serling was workaholic and wrote nearly three-quarters of the
92 episodes during the series’ run, as well as producing and hosting
the series. Serling’s dialogue often overburdened into shrill moralising
but when he wrote well – which was more often than not – his stories
ended on thoughtful O. Henry-esque twists that pulled the carpet out
from under one’s expectations. The science-fiction of the decade up
until that point had all been bombast concerned with alien threats from
outside – Rod Serling was one of the first to take this in more
internalised directions, where instead of the world being attacked and
humanity triumphing, stories ended in places of thoughtful uncertainty
where one’s original assumptions were not always what they seemed. Some
of the episodes are minor masterpieces of psychological tension. The
term ‘the twilight zone’, which Serling had intended as a nebulous
phrase meaning a place where all rules of reason are suspended and
anything can happen, has gone on to enter popular parlance.
In 1983, Steven Spielberg, then riding high on the successes of Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) and E.T. – The Extra-Terrestrial
(1982), purchased the rights to the series and made this anthology
film. Spielberg employed Richard Matheson and George Clayton Johnston,
who scripted many episodes of the original tv series, to deliver the
film’s script. Three of the film’s four stories (all but the first) are
remakes of episodes from the tv series. Steven Spielberg has also
brought in various contemporary fantasy directors – John Landis, who had
just made An American Werewolf in London (1981); Joe Dante, who was having success with his quirky B-budget genre homages Piranha (1978), which spoofs Spielberg’s own Jaws (1975) in no small part, and The Howling (1980); and Australian director George Miller who had just had a big hit with Mad Max 2/The Road Warrior (1981).
John Landis directs the prologue and the
first episode. The prologue with its quick-fire banter and short-sharp
twist ending works better than the episode that follows. The episode
itself buys into the just desserts moralistic tub-beating that typified
the worst parts about the tv series where Rod Serling liked to create
straw characters to moralistically pontificate about. While calling
someone racial names is certainly intolerable, throwing someone through
some of the worst racial persecutions in history seems somewhat of an
overreaction in terms of punishment. John Landis nevertheless directs
the episode with slick and exciting camerawork and there is one good
final image of Vic Morrow crying out through the slats of a train on its
way to the Nazi gas chambers as his buddies are seen emerging from the
bar on the other side. Much controversy surrounds the segment when Vic
Morrow and two children were killed when pyrotechnics caused a
helicopter to crash during shooting in 1982. John Landis and four others
of the crew were placed on involuntarily manslaughter charges, although
were later acquitted.
Surprisingly, Steven Spielberg’s episode Kick the Can is the weakest of the segments. It is Spielberg’s childhood obsessions perhaps at their most literally personified. The slimness of the premise never gives Spielberg much opportunity to open up. The sentiments engendered are corny and sentimental and the wistful tone aimed for shallow.
Joe Dante has clear fun with the It's a Good Life
segment. Both the piece and the original tv episode are adapted from
Jerome Bixby’s popular 1953 short story of the same name. The episode
emerges as a version of The Man Who Could Work Miracles
(1937) as directed by Steven Spielberg. All of Joe Dante’s films are
overrun with genre in-jokes and references – here Dick Miller makes his
customary appearance (as he does in all of Dante’s films) and most of
the characters are named after characters that appeared in various Twilight Zone
episodes (Kathleen Quinlan’s Helen Foley is even named after the high
school teacher that Rod Serling acknowledged as one of the influences on
his writing – how’s that for trivia?). As with any Joe Dante film, it
is the ability to have fun with the genre that has drawn Dante’s
attention. What clearly interests Dante here is being able to bring
cartoon characters to life and characters thrown into a cartoon universe
– an aspect completely added over the story or the tv version of the
story. The film predates Who Framed Roger Rabbit? (1988) in this regard – although unlike Roger Rabbit,
Dante crafts cartoon characters as three-dimensional rather than drawn
objects. [Dante later got to make his own feature-length toon film with Looney Tunes: Back in Action
(2003)]. Rob Bottin’s creation of a huge sinister cartoon rabbit is
wonderfully scary and inventive. There is also the marvellously ick
image of a girl imprisoned without any mouth. The episode works well
enough, although the maudlin ‘happily ever after’ ending with Jeremy
Licht causing flowers to sprout along the roadside as he and Kathleen
Quinlan drive off into the sunset is terribly trite.
George Miller’s Nightmare at 20,000 Feet
is the gem among the four episodes. It is a wonderful exercise in
jokey-scary claustrophobia. Miller whips his camera about, shooting John
Lithgow’s quivering face in wide, distorted angles and depicting the
other passengers with a paranoid weirdness. Using exactly the same
running time that all the other episodes do, George Miller manages to
run a rollercoaster ride between scares, pulling back to make us think
the character imagined it, paranoia and humour. This is one episode that
should have been made as a feature film.
Overall, Twilight Zone – The Movie is a disappointment. Only the Nightmare at 20,000 Feet segment stands out, while the other stories seem to miss the essence of the original tv Twilight Zone
and never inhabit that same haunted psychological space that Rod
Serling’s tales did. Only the prologue and epilogue come with the Twilight Zone-esque
sting in the tale. The film was only a modest success, not the
blockbuster that many other Steven Spielberg films had been. It did
however pave the way for a major revival of horror/fantasy tv anthology
series. There have been not only two revivals of the tv series, The Twilight Zone (1985-8) and The Twilight Zone
(2002-3), which both proved disappointingly bland shadows of their
eminent predecessor, but also of classic other anthology series of the
1950s and 60s – Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1985-9) and The Outer Limits (1995-2002), as well as various original anthology series such as Tales from the Darkside (1983-8), The Hitch-Hiker (1983-91), The Ray Bradbury Theater (1985-92), Monsters (1988-90) and Tales from the Crypt (1989-96).
Review: Richard Schieb
Images: Marcus Brooks
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