I actually liked the fact that the same guy played all the male figures. She is essentially staring into the face of her father’s killer every time she sees that face.
@bloodmoon02052 ай бұрын
Me too. I think it also helped the episode feel more claustrophobic.
@RebeccaMayeHoliday2 ай бұрын
Also the all-white, limited cast erodes racial differences, ethnic differences and disability, suggesting that these demographics were all transformed white and able-bodied or perhaps simply don't exist... Dr. Sig's subtle hints at supporting eugenics, coupled with Rod Serling's own personal interest in addressing the Holocaust and racism in many Twilight Zone episodes, makes these implications even darker. The scene with a housemaid who is berated cruelly by Lana sadly also suggests that despite everybody looking exactly the same, classism still exists and some people in this world have much more power than others.
@TheAtemAndrew2 ай бұрын
It also goes without saying, but every one of them portrays a figure of authority, a father figure. The father of the technique and the new society, the brother of her father who may as well be her father now, the man who will help lead her into her new life by helping her through the surgery.
@mlbrooks40662 ай бұрын
I agree. That's one of the things that makes this episode so creepy. Each of Long's characters is a little bit more creepy than the last one. They are the same physically with that same smile, but each character that looks the same gets creepier and creepier as the smile looks the same but becomes more sinister. With just one man playing all the male parts, it made the creepy male domination more effective.
@charlirenner193Ай бұрын
Yeah credit to the actor for being able to portray these characters differently enough that you believe they're different people. At least, on the inside.
@ShawnRavenfire3 ай бұрын
One of the things I love about this episode is how none of them explicitly say that the transformation is mandatory, basically pushing the societal narrative that everyone WANTS the transformation.
@trinaq3 ай бұрын
@@ShawnRavenfire Precisely, none of the characters who are pushing the transformation on Marilyn are malicious, and are disappointed that she doesn't want to be like them.
@jensrettberg79683 ай бұрын
@@ShawnRavenfire they can't even imagine or understand the possibility that someone would NOT want, and in the beginning when she says it have to ask "what you're talking about" as if the words don't make intelligible sense in this order, which shows how deep the view is in their brains
@KyleTheDalek3 ай бұрын
@@jensrettberg7968Do not want everyone to have good health? Good looks?
@gshaz73 ай бұрын
That was always what bothered me as well!
@TheNotverysocial3 ай бұрын
On other words, gaslighting people into conformity.
@Slayerzilla543 ай бұрын
I always found the ending of this episode to be much darker than Eye of the Beholder because despite getting exiled from society, Janet at least got to keep Her mind while Marilyn has to live the rest of Her life as a lobotomized automaton.
@Raximus30003 ай бұрын
It makes you wonder how can thei society function. If a system is incapable of addaptation it will naturaly lose to decay.
@derekstein61932 ай бұрын
@@Raximus3000 And it most likely does. The forced conformity makes everyone think alike. Since everyone that comes after them is forced to think the same way as them, there is never any meaningful innovation, creativity, or adaptability. A species that refuses to adapt to the inevitable march of time and change brought via entropy is doomed to extinction by its own inaction.
@Raximus30002 ай бұрын
@@derekstein6193 Here is the most likely scenario for this. The number of models will keep decreasing in order to force further conformity until one is left and then deviations that as we have seen are possible(her father could not handle his new identity ergo he was not like everyone else) until one being is left. That is the painless scenario the painful one is simply destruction via outside factors.
@louisduarte87632 ай бұрын
Like going full Stepford wife.
@kenlau4572 ай бұрын
I often thought the transformation really replace the person with a robot or android, hence explaining the side effects of longer life and immunity to disease, and why everyone in the end have the same vapid personality,
@emeraldend92313 ай бұрын
The worst way to kill someone without killing them, very horrifying.
@melissacooper87243 ай бұрын
In other words, Marylin lost her true identity after she went through the transformation!
@Kari73 ай бұрын
It's called Ego Death.
@drewo.1272 ай бұрын
It’s like deleting/reformatting a Hardrive! Only much more horrifying…
@tcodes273 ай бұрын
So this is where the Uglies book series got its idea.
@trinaq3 ай бұрын
I wouldn't be surprised if that's where the basic idea spawned from, since many works are inspired by "Twilight Zone."
@jordansean183 ай бұрын
I love that series! I hadn't seen this twilight zone before but I can definitely see some similarities
@riftshredder54383 ай бұрын
I was just about to say that lol
@vgtrp3 ай бұрын
@@riftshredder5438Same here.
@bloodmoon02052 ай бұрын
The author of Uglies has said that this is where he got the idea from.
@Purplesubmariner3 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite of all time episodes of Twilight Zone, probably because I relate to it a lot. When Marilyn says "I'm not pretty, but I'm not ugly", I _feel_ that, but not everyone else understands...
@melissacooper87243 ай бұрын
In other words, she was a plain Jane!
@lainiwakura17763 ай бұрын
So, average basically, which most people are and that's okay.
@Darthquackius2 ай бұрын
I'm very ugly. But I'd never give up my mind to be physically attractive.
@maxwellhunke99993 ай бұрын
When I was really young and I stumbled upon my grandpa watching a rerun of this episode, he looked over at me, and basically had to explain the entire story so I could understand it. When I rewatched this episode some time in the near, the twist still hits just as hard knowing what’s going to come.
@joshDammmit3 ай бұрын
This episode is S tier twilight zone. The look of horror homegirl has in her face when she realizes she’s truly alone is EPIC
@LucianoThePig3 ай бұрын
The use of the small cast in this episode is genius
@RebeccaMayeHoliday2 ай бұрын
The cast is also all white, all western, all young, all English-speaking and all able-bodied... and the connotations of this are extremely disturbing, probably intentionally so.
@shaider19822 ай бұрын
@@RebeccaMayeHoliday perhaps not. This was the early 1960's after all and token characters were not yet a practice. You might be using a 2024 lens looking at a product from that erq.
@RebeccaMayeHoliday2 ай бұрын
@@shaider1982 You may be right, although Rod Serling never shied away from having a diverse cast if it suited the world of the story well. He was never much for "tokenism"; any story he featured that had a non-white or diverse cast member usually incorporated them in as just another regular part of the world they were in, unless race or ethnicity were directly brought up in the subject matter (some episodes did often address racism, antisemitism, christphobia and xenophobia). In this episode, it seems that racially-diverse people simply don't exist in this world, nor do disabled people, not necessarily even due to racism or ableism but for the mere fact that those demographics don't conform to the hegemony of the transformation.
@heidifedor2 ай бұрын
One of my favorites. And even though it doesn’t a happy ending, the ending narration is a bit humorous. “Portrait of a girl, in love with herself.”
@Darthquackius2 ай бұрын
all the best twilight zone episodes have dark endings. or at least grey.
@slyfox20222 ай бұрын
That turn and smile is freakyyyy
@trinaq3 ай бұрын
It's interesting that many of the characters are named after 50's and 60's Hollywood stars, to reflect the episode's themes about beauty and appearances. You have Marilyn, Lana, Grace, Eva, Valerie and Rex. Conversely, Jane and Doe, who have the surgery, now lack individuality.
@melissacooper87243 ай бұрын
Since everyone looks alike, they have all lost their true identities in the process!
@trinaq3 ай бұрын
@@melissacooper8724 Precisely, it's a really great subtle detail.
@RebeccaMayeHoliday2 ай бұрын
The word "Sig" means label, signature, or significant figure, whereas the name "Doe" is typically a made-up moniker used in legalese to provide anonymity, or to refer to a female animal species. This is eerie considering that Dr. Sig is in a position of authority and retains certain aspects of his unique identity (his European accent, his hand gestures and quirky mannerisms, knowledge of forbidden materials and what they're about), while the nurse named Doe is his subordinate and remains largely silent and lacking personality for the entirety of the episode.
@kenlau4572 ай бұрын
@@melissacooper8724 I think they were all actually replaced by androids. Why would the transformation had this side effect of long life and disease immunity?
@melissacooper87242 ай бұрын
@kenlau457 Excellent theory! Since they will never get old and grey after the transformation, it makes sense that they were replaced by androids.
@goodbyeisthenewhello3 ай бұрын
They only have 20 minutes to tell the story and drive the point home that everybody's the same. So the small cast was crucial. If it was a feature length film they could expand the cast to feature more models
@trinaq3 ай бұрын
As opposed to the original short story, where the protagonist is forced into the transformation by a Court, nobody in the episode is malicious. They genuinely believe that it's the right thing to do, and are hurt that Marilyn doesn't want to be like them.
@jensrettberg79683 ай бұрын
I think that change made it better
@Crow_Smith3 ай бұрын
I think that makes it feel more real. Because often a "I don't want to be like you" even if they're an amazing human, always comes off as hurtful.
@derekstein61932 ай бұрын
Some of the greatest evils in human history were performed by those that honestly believed that they were right in doing so.
@louisduarte87632 ай бұрын
For extra creepy points, everyone after the procedure is made to THINK it's a good thing and forget any objections they had.
@RebeccaMayeHoliday2 ай бұрын
@@louisduarte8763 Every one of these characters is a victim of the "wiser man than I" who Dr. Sig mentions to Marilyn, the scientific magicians who found a way to craft a genocide of anybody non-conforming, both physically and ideologically, a genocide without death, the only murder being the murder of the soul, but a genocide, all the same.
@brandoncameron26863 ай бұрын
This is another episode that I never saw in those old 24 hour Twilight Zone marathons back in the 1990s. But when I first saw it online years later, it was an instant classic.
@Markaintus2 ай бұрын
It's so crazy how when you look at these older shows and movies that warn of such a dystopian future, we find ourselves living more and more in that version of reality. Man, the writers and producers must have been psychic! Makes you wonder just how close we'll come to this or other versions of a dysfunctional society.
@claytonrios13 ай бұрын
As much as we admire attractive people would we truly want to look exactly like them in adulthood? This episode definitely has a topic that holds up to this day.
@melissacooper87243 ай бұрын
Well, a part of me wishes to look like Taylor Swift while the other part of me likes my true self better!
@trinaq3 ай бұрын
Precisely, six decades on, and the message about plastic surgery and true beauty still rings through.
@theheroneededwillette69643 ай бұрын
I mean is it really that hard to be attractive and be an individual? I mean really my only problems with this whole process is the pressure to look exactly identical to the point of needing name tags just to tell each other apart, and it clearly being just a cover for a government mandated deep physiological brainwashing procedure to strip individual will. If it was actually voluntary, allowed for significant individual personalization, and didn’t turn people into the government’s meat puppet drones it’d be amazing cosmetic procedure.
@hitmanmonaghan66333 ай бұрын
Being an average guy, and ignored by women, being attractive seems like a great change.
@KyleTheDalek3 ай бұрын
Yes? We could put breed bad genes. Disabilities, bad health, and more. If we all had good looks there’s less bullying, less mental health issues, stress and so on. But no not having a select group of people to look like. I think Sweden done this and had good results. But I don’t agree with forcing such an agenda on people.
@Rylie4053 ай бұрын
Hopefully you keep this up Walter. Maybe do tales from the crypt or the 80s twilight zone next year
@LucianoThePig3 ай бұрын
This episode is like the polar opposite of Eye of the Beholder
@kazuichisouda64793 ай бұрын
I remember watching this for a class assignment in middle school
@spectreagent003 ай бұрын
The scary thing is, its not like everyone ISN'T happy in this utopia. They are, but life should be more about just self-obsession and only living for yourself.
@melissacooper87242 ай бұрын
That was what Marylin was trying to say all along! But everyone else has become so vapid and lack love and empathy that they just couldn't understand!
@caitlynsoto48633 ай бұрын
I've been pumped for this episode for years! It reminds me of the Uglies series which I am a huge fan of! I've noticed my fav Twilight Zone episodes have dark endings or are dystopic.
@sameaston95873 ай бұрын
"Life is pretty, life is fun-!" Life is beautiful and hard. Anyone who says otherwise is trying to sell you something.
@JFJD2 ай бұрын
Agreed-life is what _you_ make of it. Can everyone have the same (outer) quality of life? No, but learning how to cultivate your inner life will allow one to be happier in more circumstances (or at the very least content).
@jackatkinson36822 ай бұрын
I've always loved this episode. I've always said that it's one of the few originals that I wouldn't mind seeing colorized...or at least remade.
@SkorgeSlaps2 ай бұрын
I think the play on Sigmund Freud was the idea that they were tasked to get rid of all ugliness and instead of seeing it from the angle of hate and discrimination, they went a sexually charged route. Instead of the countless other paths you could take to "get rid of ugliness in the world", they went with "Let's make everyone, including myself, HOT!" lol I might be overthinking it, but that's my take.
@katydid-99962 ай бұрын
I was waiting for this one 🤩 Something that always struck me as so tragic is that, as empty and frivolous as Lana and Val are, their concern for Marilyn never read as fake to me. They hate seeing her unhappy and they want to understand what’s “wrong” with her, but they physically can’t. The State took away their ability to sympathize and understand, but not their ability to love, and that may be the cruelest thing of all.
@Torgo-and-the-Lucifer-Cat3 ай бұрын
Some things become even MORE relevant as time goes by. This is one of those things. ❤
@adiahaalexander93593 ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly😢
@KyleTheDalek3 ай бұрын
Yeah the pushing and forcing of the C vac, to make us all the same.
@CaptainCJ972 ай бұрын
Most definitely
@acimagination79822 ай бұрын
i agree.
@joyunicycle2 ай бұрын
This is actually one of my absolute favorite Twilight Zone episodes, and sadly among the most relevant nowadays.
@Darthquackius2 ай бұрын
indeed. why be an individual, you should decide what group you fit in best and mold yourself to that group! political, social, ideological, hobbiest, there's a group for every aspect of life. Find your group and your voice will finally have meaning, because who'd want to be an individual when they can be part of a group.
@mlbrooks40662 ай бұрын
Honestly, when I look at men in particular, on screen and around me, I can't tell them apart. The same haircut, the same close-cut beard, men of all color do it (except those who can't grow a beard). Put the same suit and tie on them and I honestly cannot tell them apart.
@katherinepfister41773 ай бұрын
Such a good episode. And still so relevant.
@nathanallingham90143 ай бұрын
This reminds me of a line from Silent Hill 3. The context is different but, it works well here. Douglass Cartland: "No this. No that. No nothing. A paradise for castrated sheep maybe. Sounds pretty boring."
@Kari73 ай бұрын
This is one of the best examples of "Ego Death" in media that I've seen.
@ianr.navahuber21952 ай бұрын
or death of the personality
@brycestrout91783 ай бұрын
Did anyone else think of "There is no war in Ba Sing Say" from Avatar?
@ciarameehanbravo76902 ай бұрын
@@brycestrout9178 i did and it definitely comes with the same eerie vacant smile !!
@LadyEvilest3 ай бұрын
The lack of variety in the way men look could be a commentary on fashion. Men's fashion tends to look more uniform while women's fashion has more variety. (Though not too much if you want to stay en vogue.)
@legomaniac2132 ай бұрын
The most disturbing monsters to me aren't the ones that kill you, but the ones that strip away your identity. The Borg, Zombies, the Cybermen, the Reapers, all take a living person with hopes, dreams and ambitions, and just turn them into empty husks.
@antonmassopust5683 ай бұрын
Shades of Brave New World add more or less than rods ending little speech at the end more or less gives us that this is very frightening and can be very real
@toshirodragon3 ай бұрын
I thought of Brave New World also when Val was rattling on in the hospital room.
@leahp84453 ай бұрын
I watched this episode when I was a child and I remember the ending didn't scare me but rather it broke my heart but I couldn't really say as to why because I was really young. Maybe a part of me felt the loss and injustice that happened to Marilyn but couldn't possibly articulate. Maybe I related to being a person who felt that she had to conform and change who she was just to exist. Who knows, yet I never forgot this one and the message got clearer as I got older.
@tremorsfan2 ай бұрын
I like to think of this as a prequel to Eye of the Beholder.
@Darthquackius2 ай бұрын
the difference today, is that they tell you that youre being the most individual you can by choosing which group you'll mirror exactly and never ever stray from agreeing with.
@CrypticCharm3 ай бұрын
when i read uglies, i thought of this episode. and this is so heartbreaking. it's so iconic, and Marylin's life, agency and choice was all taken away. and she was perfect how she was. in the decade, when this came out, i really hope others who felt like this, make them rethink and realise they were perfect as they and we all are. and I'm an advocate for surgery, as long as it's someone choice
@RyanBro2 ай бұрын
@@CrypticCharm yeah, that's what I thought of too. It's like a book length rumination on this idea.
@bloodmoon02052 ай бұрын
@@CrypticCharm The author of Uglies has said that he took a lot of inspiration from this episode.
@melissacooper87242 ай бұрын
I was thinking about how my grandma had proudly considered herself a plain Jane. I remember she once told me that God made us and God don't make no junk!
@TramiNguyen-oi3kp3 ай бұрын
Awesome Twilight Zone episode!
@electrolytes3 ай бұрын
The twilight zone creepy endings are a serious vibe! Reminds me of THAT PART from George Orwell’s 1984.
@marcushorton58473 ай бұрын
'The future, which, afterall, is the Twilight Zone.' Love Mr. Serling's foreshadowing. Mr. Tober, thank you so much for these recap videos. I hope you do the next TZ series starting next October.
@MichaelAarons17013 ай бұрын
I always interpreted the ending as being comparable to the old saying, “Oh, you’ll stop talking like that once you get laid!” and that Marilyn has been swayed just like everyone else which she also looks/resembles upon transformation. Therefore the twist would be that “evil” wins.
@Jenny_Metzelar3 ай бұрын
Last time I was this early this joke wasnt stale!
@job4892 ай бұрын
Whenever this episode is on TV, I stop everything to watch it.
@MrPhoenixQuill2 ай бұрын
This is one of the episodes of The Twilight zone that seriously scared me as a kid. It introduced me to the idea of killing someone's soul but leaving the body alive.
@Fabio-Jose-DragonKing3 ай бұрын
Love your content! Thanks For this ❤❤
@clicky19963 ай бұрын
I adore this episode. It might even be one of my favourites. You really feel for Marilyn because in reality the only one who seemed to understand her was her father, but the people around her are so numb to everything that they don’t see why she not only feels sad, but WANTS to feel sad. Marilyn would rather feel the grief and loss of her father for the rest of her life than be a smiling robot like everyone else. It’s heartbreaking seeing that after the procedure, there isn’t a trait of who she used to be. In a lot of ways, she dies, and her afterlife is spending the rest of her life in a soulless shell.
@ExplorerDS67893 ай бұрын
Ironically, he reviewed this one on the 12th.
@bbarrett7263 ай бұрын
I think you mean coincidentally
@ExplorerDS67893 ай бұрын
@@bbarrett726 Yep
@ACD19942 ай бұрын
Replying to your comment 12 hours later. 😮
@shainewhite27813 ай бұрын
1:42, I watched the movie BURN WITCH BURN from 1962 and he co wrote the screenplay with Richard Matheson and i thought to myself, "What if this was an attempt at a Twilight Zone movie in 1962?"
@sweeney602 ай бұрын
I figured out why it’s called Number 12 Looks Just like you and not number 8. She turns into number 8 at the end, so they couldn’t put that number in the title or it would have given away the ending. By putting her mother’s number in the title it gives the audience false hope that she might breakout and be free. Like she might be able to escape the same fate as her mother. It’s actually a really clever misdirect.
@garykuovideos3 ай бұрын
I love that almost all of the episodes were shot on film. These restorations/conversions look amazing! 📺🚬😃
@rdfarley892 ай бұрын
This is funny because my girlfriend put that new movie Uglies on and within the first five minutes I was like "This sounds an awfully lot like an episode of The Twilight Zone."
@Vivalarosa453 ай бұрын
This episode can be relatable today.
@user-te5nh3li3f2 ай бұрын
this is way better than Uglies
@Demonmack03 ай бұрын
oh god, i remembered this episode so well! it's so memorable. SEASON FIVE? I can't believe it was so late in the show...
@josephlosinno24562 ай бұрын
This episode is absolutely terrifying.
@dphylan3 ай бұрын
I love this series to bits man! I look forward to it every October!
@sebastianlevenson93643 ай бұрын
The ending to this episode is one of the most uncomfortable I’ve ever felt watching anything
@TheCreepypro19 күн бұрын
I like where this episode goes
@ilejovcevski792 ай бұрын
After all the decades, for me this remains the most quintessential TZ episode, and unfortunately yes, out of all of them, the one that has over time became only more and more relevant. Probably the first one that comes to mind when the show is mentioned.
@Grac3AndP3ac32 ай бұрын
I think the point of saying 12 looks just like you is referring to how 12 and 8 are the exact same just slightly different appearance on the outside
@SirPreyas3 ай бұрын
An excellent episode w/ excellent writing.
@cherylcampbell93693 ай бұрын
It's so nice to see Season 5 episodes here. Several I haven't seen in decades, if ever. They're hard to find.
@gluttonousmaximus90483 ай бұрын
Honestly, we should appreciate we still HAVE stories like this to refer to to remind us so even if a lot of us go to the deep end of conformity, enough people can resist on their own terms and fight for more causes. Don't get too cynical. Just keep our spirit going. Because there are places where these stories are deliberately inaccessible.
@wstine793 ай бұрын
Another great Twilight Zone episode.
@lucarocks7866Ай бұрын
I always suggest this episode to my female friends who have never seen TZ. 3 out of four lives it saying it left them deeply disturbed. The show still has its power!
@precious_muse3 ай бұрын
I believe this is the saddest, or at least most tragic, TZ episode, especially after what I learned about eugenics. It did kinda tickle me when Rod Serling said at the beginning, “Let’s say this is the year 2000.” Huh, I must’ve missed that part . . .
@cherylcampbell93693 ай бұрын
This could've influenced The Stepford Wives, too. Then there's the Harry Mudd episode on Star Trek TOS. 😅
@RasheedaParker-qn9ec2 ай бұрын
Awesome 🤩
@ashb78462 ай бұрын
Something that they vaguely alluded to in the episode but doesn’t get fleshed out is the concept of prejudice. The speech made by Dr. Sig about them achieving a level of equality by making everyone look the same and “beautiful” undercuts was causes prejudice and racism in the first place, which is a sense of fear, superiority, and power. Lana might look like every other number 12, but in an earlier scene she snaps at another 12 who is a servant saying, “I don’t know why you people don’t xyz,” still implying an underlying hierarchy and social status that causes people to belittle each other. It would have been interesting to explore that bit. There are a few season 5 episodes that would benefit from having been in the hour long ones from season four and vise versa.
@Jeff-gj7ko2 ай бұрын
I would like more of Dr. Sig hinting that 'Yes, it is our, the rulers,' opinion of beauty that matters, because we are the smartest and therefor the ones with the power to decide for you, isn't that nice of us?'
@MetroPolo12 ай бұрын
This was the first Twilight Zone episode I've ever saw. It was great.
@crakatoot54803 ай бұрын
That Number 12 was FINE….
@princessthyemis2 ай бұрын
oooh, i remember this one! it was so good!
@gojirafan78303 ай бұрын
I watched this episode in my English class during my senior year in high school
@gojirafan78303 ай бұрын
I’d also like to mention this is after reading brave new world
@Myself-yf5do2 ай бұрын
Now that you've done Disneycember, Dreamworksuary, Bat May, and this, you should do Nickuly/Aprilodeon.
@nvm90403 ай бұрын
Previous used idea but different concept pulled off perfectly with the twist making it absolutely terrifying and twisted
@tjtharp6032 ай бұрын
Finally we reach one of my top five favorite episodes
@That.Lady.withtheYarn3 ай бұрын
I love this episode! And eye off the beholder.
@alexoman71614 күн бұрын
I hope Walter will do a review of the 1963 Outer Limits episodes too after the end of the twilight tober zone since Doug placed both show intros in top 2 of his favorite show intros
@alasdairwatson7122 ай бұрын
The rhyme spoken by Val is like the one from “Brave New World” : Was and will make me ill, I take a gram and only am.
@selfaware76172 ай бұрын
I have the Mongrel CD in my car currently. (The highlight of the bands legacy). This is one episode I have seen and it was really great
@kdusel19913 ай бұрын
Love this episode!!
@CaptainCJ972 ай бұрын
I really like the music use in this video. Another thing i like is the shadows on this ep
@1manwalkingfreakshow2 ай бұрын
The real kick in the head? Rod Serling: “Improbable? Perhaps. But in an age of plastic surgery, bodybuilding and an infinity of cosmetics, let us hesitate to say impossible. These and other strange blessings may be waiting in the future, which, after all, is the Twilight Zone.” And right after: Announcer: “This show has been brought to you in part by Prell shampoo.”
@theproplady3 ай бұрын
The episode that poses the question: is Happiness and Health better than having free will? The scary thing is, there might be a lot of people out there willing to have the surgery in order to escape their own depression and health issues.
@mlbrooks40662 ай бұрын
A lot of people DO.
@isabellageier58863 ай бұрын
This is also my favorite episode, especially for its relevance mentioned in the video! However, I have one issue with the scene where Marilyn tries to escape from the hospital because I don’t understand two things. 1. Why does Marilyn suddenly pull back when she sees the door at the end of the hallway? Is that the hospital’s entrance? 2. Where did the note in Marilyn’s hand come from that the nurse takes and says, “She has chosen number 8”? Unfortunately, neither the _Twilight Zone Companion_ nor this video addresses this; only a Twilight Zone Wiki writes _“due to a post-hypnotic suggestion planted during her stay, she instead goes to the operating room”,_ which I find questionable since I see no signs of hypnosis in the episode.
@janeyrevanescence122 ай бұрын
I was 11 when I first saw this episode and it terrified me. I remember telling my mom to not force me to change like that. She laughed and told me I was being silly. As an adult? It scares me even more.
@Robert-hz9bj6 күн бұрын
One of the things that low-key disturbed me most was a statement made by the physician, who indicated that the procedure also has the effect of radically extending her life to as much as three centuries or longer, and in perfect health. Marilyn even asks if it were possible for her to get the life-extension without the change in appearance, which the doctor reluctantly concedes is possible. To me, this gave the indication that the original purpose of the procedure was a noble one to extend and improve the quality of human life during a more egalitarian and enlightened era, only to be ultimately twisted by the rise of an authoritarian government. Good intentions turned into a tool of oppression...
@mana_beast_beats1114Ай бұрын
Reminds me of the "Debbies" from The Oblongs!
@Shogun4593 ай бұрын
When everyone looks perfect and beautiful, nobody is.
@ricucci-hillmusic2 ай бұрын
Watching these old shows/movies and seeing what they considered beautiful and youthful is absolutely a trip. It's a much more... bulky form of thinness. Like, I love how even young men in their twenties are all barrel chested with thick mats of chest hair and very rectangular bodies to the point it almost looks like they're overweight. Youthful and beautiful a lot of the times is a very much more early-thirties version of beautiful in these films/shows of this time period.
@WebMonkey7413 ай бұрын
Collin Wilcox gave an amazing performance in "To Kill a Mockingbird"
@MaciSalmons-p5j2 ай бұрын
There wouldnt be any phrases from Dr Evil in this show, but there easily could be phrases and little quircks from this episode put in to the Dr Evil character
@mrbowbow95422 ай бұрын
maybe the episode title is to showcase that in the end she didn’t get a choice in the operation, my theory is that in days leading up to the operation she and her family and friends were discussing to opt into model 12. But after ste declined to have the operation entirely and found herself in the operating room, she was forced into a body she would have never chosen
@knottheory792203 ай бұрын
Go to a department store, look at the women's section, then at the men's. The point being if we had a society like this, there would definitely be way more female models than male ones. =D
@rogers10323 ай бұрын
Could you please do these as part of FanScription • What if Disney’s Peter Pan was killed by Captain Hook’s bomb (Disney’s Peter Pan 1953movie) • What if The Stabbington Brothers raised Rapunzel in Disney’s Tangled (2010movie) • What if Disney’s The Rescuers 3 happened? • RoboCop vs The Terminator • What if Disney’s The Great Mouse Detective 2 happened? • What if the 101 Dalmatian family got older (Disney’s 101 Dalmatians 2) • What if Luke Skywalker had joined The Dark Side • Batman vs Venom • Spider-man vs The Riddler • What if Shere Khan (from Disney’s The Jungle Book 1967movie) had won? • What if we fixed Hulk (2003movie)
@melissacooper87243 ай бұрын
I felt heartbroken for Marylin at the end of the episode because she lost her true identity forever after her transformation! 💔 There were times I wished that I would look like Taylor Swift. But the more I think about it the more I realize that I wouldn't be my true self!
@garethspotfur13 ай бұрын
evocative of harrison bergeron. "you haven't made everyone equal, you made everyone the same! and there's a big difference!
@ianr.navahuber21952 ай бұрын
explain please
@garethspotfur12 ай бұрын
@@ianr.navahuber2195 harrison bergeron is a story by kurt vonnegut. it tells of a future where everyone is made "equal" by hobbling athletes and using brain surgery to maintain a standard (low) level IQ. the govt decided it was easier to keep people dumb than spend effort on education.
@jbcatz52 ай бұрын
There’s another dystopian short story that comes to mind, Examination Day, where a mandatory IQ test when you reach 12 has death for those who score too highly on it. That was adapted for the 80’s Twilight Zone. It’s another variation on the theme of eliminating individuality as a means of continuing the status quo. We did this almost 15 years ago in English and I can still remember some of the analyzing we did. Stuff like the kid being called something a bit more childish and having comic books rather than proper chapter books being part of his parents limiting the kind of material he had access to that he’d properly learn from. Memory is weird.
@jlev10282 ай бұрын
@@ianr.navahuber2195Kurt Vonnegut wrote a short story where mediocrity is mandated by society. Talented dancers, singers, athletes, and so on are forcibly handicapped so that the average person doesn't feel jealous.
@Nasser8510003 ай бұрын
12 is better than the unlucky number 😆
@melissacooper87243 ай бұрын
They probably don't have a number 13 model because of the same reason there is no 13th floor in buildings!