"The Twilight Zone" People Are Alike All Over (TV Episode 1960) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
29 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Welcome to Mars
Woodyanders30 May 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Antsy biologist Sam Conrad (well played to the fretful hilt by Roddy McDowall) and mission commander Mark Marcusson (a solid performance by Paul Comi) crash land their space ship on Mars. Marcusson dies in the crash, thereby leaving Conrad as the lone survivor who eventually discovers human-like beings on Mars.

Director Mitchell Leisen relates the absorbing story at a brisk pace and maintains an appropriately somber mood throughout. Susan Oliver lends sturdy support as fetching Martian seductress Teenya. Rod Serling's biting script makes a bitterly cynical point on how other lifeforms could be just like human beings in ways that aren't necessarily good and positive. The surprise grim ending packs a devastating punch. A worthwhile show.
23 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Is there Freakshow-life on Mars?
Coventry28 November 2016
One of the most popular and frequently repeated topics in the acclaimed "The Twilight Zone" was the conquest of space and the encounter with extraterrestrial life. This is almost a matter-of- course, as the series was primarily a Sci-Fi and mystery show, and obviously few topics lend themselves better for mysterious Sci-Fi than the unexplored planets of our galaxy and their potentially menacing inhabitants. Still, it certainly must not have been easy to script an episode for this series, because Sci-Fi/mystery is usually complex and detailed, and yet there were only 25 minutes of running time available for each episode! Knowing this, it's truly amazing how practically all entries of this TV-format are so intelligent and engaging. "People are alike all over" is a nice example of this, in fact, since it's a very smart and meaningful tale that is compactly narrated in less than half an hour; - not longer than necessary! A still very young Roddy McDowell ("Planet of the Apes", "The Legend of Hell House") stars as the insecure astronaut/biologist Sam Conrad, who's about to embark on his first major mission to Mars and feels very nervous about what he might discover there. His friend and co-pilot Marcusson comforts him by stating that, even if do stumble upon another species, it will undoubtedly look and act likes them because that's how God created the universe. The mission doesn't run all that smoothly, unfortunately, as they crash on Mars and Marcusson dies before they can open the hatch. Sam is all alone now, but he receives a warm welcome from the Martians who do – like Marcusson promised him – look and act like humans on earth. Actually, they act EXACTLY like human beings from earth would… The great thing about these TW episodes is that, no matter how hard you see the end conclusion coming your way, the show still manages to surprise you with it! Quite early in the episode already, I was fairly persuaded that "People are alike all over" would finish the way it did, but it nevertheless still felt as a minor rush of adrenalin. The portrayal of Mars and its inhabitant is very basic and implausible, of course, but it ideally suits with the underlying message of the story. People ARE alike all over, and the nature of our kind is questionable to say the least.
29 out of 33 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Good News & Bad News
AaronCapenBanner25 October 2014
Roddy McDowell and Paul Comi play two Earth astronauts on a spaceship mission to Mars that goes wrong when the ship mysteriously crash lands, killing Marcusson(Comi) and leaving Conrad(McDowell) alone and at the mercy of the seemingly friendly human-looking inhabitants who try to help Conrad by giving him food and shelter, and the promised visitations of a beautiful native woman(played by Susan Oliver) who has taken pity on him, though the reason why will become obvious to him when he draws back his window curtain.... Fine performances by the three leads make the difference in otherwise unsurprising tale, though the irony of the title is well put across.
11 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Star Trek Fans Should See This One
wurgeat13 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
OK Star Trek fans, let me know if you've heard this one before. (By the way this whole comment is one huge spoiler.)

A space traveling earth man is stranded on a strange planet, he is befriended by a beautiful woman (played by Susan Oliver) and is coaxed into a comfortable earth-like apartment which the earth man finds attractive, but which worries him somehow. Here's the real SPOILER: It turns out in the end, that he's on display in a zoo for the amusement of the aliens.

This is pretty much the same plot as the Star Trek pilot a/k/a The Cage. And the kicker is that the same actress plays the beautiful woman (the bait) in both this Twilight Zone episode, and Star Trek. So, who wrote these episodes?
30 out of 36 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Hospitality knows no bounds.
mark.waltz20 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
There are a lot of surprises in this ironic but serious steamed expose of what happens when a normal Earthling (astronaut Roddy McDowall) visits a new world and discovers to his delight that Mars is populated by human beings just like him. Or are they? As he learns quickly, the language on Mars is transferred simply so he can understand that, with him being told that he is actually being spoken to in their native tongue. He is given a habitat just like a typical American home and just as he is settling in, he learns the shocking truth about why martians are being so hospitable to him. All the wild he keeps exclaiming, people are all the same! People are all the same! How right he is and how ironic he will feel when he realizes that.

This has a twist towards the end that will have you in hysterics when you realize the truth, and she just one of those twist. Twilight Zone did not allow the viewer to see coming. He assumes that what he is looking at with the Martian Grieder is essentially exactly what human beings on the planet Earth look like. And indeed, they may look like that on the outside but who are they really on the inside? Paul comi plays his fellow astronaut who unfortunately doesn't get to discover the Martian secret (or fortunately in his case), and Susan Oliver show some tenderness as a martian girl who is enchanted by the visitor to her world. There are some profound lessons and morals given in this episode of The Twilight Zone, although 60 years later, I don't think anything has been learned.
17 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Looks can be deceiving
nickenchuggets31 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The Twilight Zone is a show with such a wealth of episodes that it can be difficult to remember all the classic ones that aired during its five year run. One episode that many people have never heard of is People Are Alike All Over. It's one of the episodes that includes a certain moral at the end, which is subtle, but can still be interpreted by cerebral viewers. The story begins with a rocket ship preparing to leave the earth in order to travel to Mars. Onboard are two men, Sam and Marcusson. Marcusson is injured during the landing and dies soon after, telling his crew mate how he wants him to remember how people are everywhere the same, even on other worlds. Sam doesn't think the way his friend did and regards the martians he later encounters with suspicion, despite them appearing to be friendly. It's also strange how they are actual humans and not some grotesque alien species. Later on, the martians give Sam a gift in the form of a full sized house made to resemble the ones they have on earth. Eventually though, Sam realizes something is wrong because the house inexplicably has no windows. Shortly after trying to break out of the house (which he can't accomplish), a wall is lifted upward to reveal a set of vertical metal bars and a crowd of martians staring at Sam in amazement and interest. He's in a zoo. A martian girl named Teenya (Susan Oliver) who was attracted to Sam but couldn't bring herself to tell him what they would do to him runs away in embarrassment. People Are Alike All Over is an adaptation of a story called Brothers Beyond the Void by Paul Fairman, with some slight changes, mostly regarding the appearance of the mars inhabitants. This is probably one of the most ironic TZ episodes, because Sam starts the space voyage as someone who is afraid of visiting other planets, but Marcusson tells him the inhabitants (if any) will be just like earthlings. This helps make him less nervous. An interesting fact about this episode is that one of the martians is played by Vic Perrin, who would later go on to be the narrator for the Outer Limits, another show that epitomizes quality when it comes to strange or outlandish stories, but with a bigger focus on science fiction.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Intense story with a strong ending.
vitoscotti15 December 2022
This is one I asked myself if I ever had seen before? Wasn't sure until the surprise ending. Roddy McDowall gives a strong performance as the apprehensive scientist Sam Conrad on the mission. You just have a feeling from the beginning he's destined for trouble. "The Andy Griffith Show" fans get a treat seeing knockout Susan Oliver from "Prisoner of Love". She's absolutely mesmerizing as a female Martian here also. The top dog Martian was Bryon Morrow who also did TAGS and many classic TV shows. I really enjoyed the story's tense uncertainty throughout. What worse could happen then to have the spaceship's captain bite the dust in the crash landing? They seem all like such nice people.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Spaceship Interior
garagefullojunk1 January 2008
Note that the some of the spaceship interior components, specifically the Pac Man light boxes, appear to be leftovers from "Forbidden Planet". These appear in a couple other TZ episodes also: "Elegy" and maybe some others.

I never realized this was the same girl from "The Cage/Court Martisl" before. Maybe she got typecast as an attractive alien seductress.

Finally got Tivo So I can record the TZ New Yeat marathon. Now I can leave my TV room on New Year's eve/day!

What's up with the 10 lines of text minimum? I can't think of anything more to say!
17 out of 42 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
"If it's an illusion, a guy can live with it".
classicsoncall21 March 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Roddy McDowall's character utters the line in my summary above upon seeing his new Martian home, but the sentiment only lasts as long as the episode. In one of those classic last minute ending twists the Twilight Zone is noted for, astronaut Sam Conrad (McDowall) learns he's to remain a specimen on display rather than a welcome guest. I can't quite reconcile to the idea that the Martians would actually do that to him, even if he was an alien. He posed no apparent threat and for all intents and purposes, lived up to the premise of the title - people are alike all over. I hadn't noticed before in Rod Serling's voice over narration how disdainful he could be about this species called Man, almost to the point of contempt here. Not that he didn't often have good reason when making the point, it just seemed a bit out of character the way it came across - those "flimsy little two-legged animals with extremely small heads". If that's the standard, then the Martians depicted here would be of the same DNA. Science fiction writers have often theorized about how far advanced alien civilizations might be compared to our own, but the tragedy would be that they're just like us after all.
24 out of 30 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Roddy McDowall saves the day.
joegarbled-7948227 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
A decent episode of "The Twilight Zone" where we get men in space once again. A two-man mission to Mars. The stiff/wooden Paul Comi plays the trained space man "Marcusson" (Roddy's accent might make it sound like MOCCASIN to the hard of hearing, and indeed, there might well have been more acting ability in a 200yr old dessecated piece of footwear, discovered under some rocks). It's just as well that Comi is killed off before we get to the meat and potatoes.

McDowall's character is a scientist and as they've crashed their ship, and Marcusson/Moccasin is fatally injured, McDowall is desperate not to be alone. There are alarming bangs on the ship's hull, someone is out there, and even with a loaded 45, McDowall is terrified. The ship's hatch opens without his say-so, then he sets eyes on the beautiful "Teenya" (Susan Oliver). He naturally claims "You're human....just like me." (just as Marcusson/Moccasin had predicted, before their flight, Martians were BOUND to look like us...) though they're dressed like Romans.

McDowall's character is immediately given an Earth style home, ciggies and "The best whiskey I ever tasted!". Though the Martian elders promise to repair the ship (and bury Marcusson/Moccasin) they have no intention of ever letting McDowall's character leave the house for he is a prize exhibit: Earthman in his natural habitat.

Only Teenya seems guilty about it, like many of us who "enjoyed" trips to the zoo as kids and we watched as others pulled faces at the poor gorilla. In fact, Susan Oliver just oozed sadness without saying a word, as everyone stared at our poor Roddy and she turns, slumps her shoulders and walks away. She was the one who promised in the softest, cotton wool voice that they'd never hurt him.

Though Susan Oliver was a divine beauty (with that voice) she isn't given enough to do, and Roddy McDowall is front and centre. He played this kind of role so well, the nice guy who wants to believe the best of everybody. The scene where he discovers the doors are locked and that there are no windows behind the drapes showed his ability to do claustrophobic terror, though the moment didn't last long enough.

Solid 8/10.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Bold Statements In Changing Times
blandiefam1 January 2011
The subtlety of the episode is well crafted for those times I am sure most of the message is wasted on the similar plot like "The Cage" in Star Trek. The story, on the other hand, has a message about people and how we find any reason the isolate and ostracize others who look like us but have some unique distinction. Whether color, religion, or origin, we tend to keep people categorized when in fact we are all human beings. this message was boldly presented with McDowall's last lines. Many of the staff writers for TZ were victims of McCarthism and Nazism. The world was also turning upside down with equal rights emerging as a social concern. Writers like Roddenberry and Serling knew change was coming. They wrote these concepts of a world where everyone was considered equal and people accepted you as a peer based upon you and not what you looked like. On the other hand, the fact that the astronaut thought they were speaking English and instead he was speaking their language, maybe they only looked like humans from his point of view. Great episode which speaks volumes.
22 out of 28 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Wow!
hamadasari18 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I wish all the time to live a life like his, eat, drink and do my hobbies without any obligations, but now The situation is different

I wish all the time to live a life like his, eat, drink and do my hobbies without any obligations, but now The situation is different I wish all the time to live a life like his, eat, drink and do my hobbies without any obligations, but now The situation is different I wish all the time to live a life like his, eat, drink and do my hobbies without any obligations, but now The situation is different I wish all the time to live a life like his, eat, drink and do my hobbies without any obligations, but now The situation is different.
3 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Martians make a monkey out of McDowell.
BA_Harrison6 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
As a lifelong fan of Roddy McDowell (Planet of the Apes, The Fantastic Journey, Fright Night), I can't help but enjoy this episode, despite the fact that the twist in the tale is fairly easy to guess.

McDowell plays nervous scientist Sam Conrad, one half of a two-man mission to Mars, his fellow astronaut being optimist Mark Marcusson (Paul Comi), who believes that, should they run into life on Mars, they'll face no danger—after all, people are alike all over.

Marcuson never gets to see if he is right—he dies soon after the spacecraft crashes on Mars—but McDowell finds out just how perceptive his pal was when he encounters human lifeforms on the red planet. Of course, this being The Twilight Zone, there's a nasty surprise in store for poor Sam.

Well acted and well directed, this episode is a serviceable time-waster, albeit predictable in its outcome.
13 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Strange mission to Mars
kapelusznik184 November 2016
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** Blasting off into outer space on the US' first mission to Mars both astronaut biologist Sam Conrad played a 31 year old boyish looking Roddy McDowall and his much older looking partner Mark Marcusson played by Paul Comi, who's in fact four years younger then the youthful looking McDowell,crash land on the red planet with Mark later dying of his injuries. Sam soon finds out that Mars is populated by human looking people who, through mind control or manipulation, speak his own language:Modern English.

Friendly to the extreme the Martians treat Sam as he's a rock & roil or movie star personality with one of them the pretty blonde Teenya, Susan Oliver, falling madly in love with the lucky guy. whining and dining Sam the Martians soon build him a luxury home with all the things necessary for him to enjoy himself with including a kitchenette and bar fully stacked with the finest food and drinks, as well as boxes of Cuban cigars, for him to smoke drink and munch on. But as Sam soon finds out there's a price for all these goodies and it comes unexpectedly when he tries to step outside and get a breath of fresh Martian air as well as a hug and kiss from Teenya.

***SPOILERS*** As his friend Mark kept telling him people are the same all over if not on earth but in the entire universe. Being more or less a freak to the Martinas they decided, without Sam knowledge, to put him on display in a local zoo or monkey cage for all to see and throw bananas and peanuts at him. As for Teenya who fell in love with him and knew all along what her fellow Martinas were planning for Sam she breaks down and cries, as well as check out, in knowing that she was part of this scam in tricking Sam in setting this trap for him to both foolishly and voluntarily walk into.
9 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
All the Creatures Aren't in the Zoo
dougdoepke20 November 2006
In 1959, the Apollo program to send a man to the moon was only two years old, while the public was just starting to realize that space exploration was no longer a mere comic book fantasy. I suspect that is one reason a bold science fiction concept like TZ was finally picked up by sponsors long wary of how such themes would play with unchallenged 1950's audiences.

This episode is an average one among the exploration themes. It's basically a one gimmick plot, moving toward an ironical ending. However the spaceship interior comes across as an impressively complex and cavernous one, while the director holds interest with some imaginative camera angles. The mysterious pinging on the ship's hull also adds a nice dollop of suspense.. Nonetheless, the fey Roddy McDowell makes for an unconvincing astronaut, while the half-togas worn by the supposed Martians made me think the ship had crashed in ancient Greece. Even so, the many nice touches, along with the haunting mood music, add up to a very watchable half-hour's entertainment.
21 out of 46 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
I love Roddy McDowell so much in this
lbowdls9 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Well I just love Roddy McDowell period. But I can't believe it took me around 50 years to see him in this remarkable role which is nothing like I'd seen him in any later roles! He's was as cute as a button until his dying day and a fantastic actor to me. But this was well wow! With him doing a solid American accent too. Not that I mind his English accent because I literally fell in love with that voice - while he was doing Planet of the Apes in fact. It's ironic -and I'm amazed no one has mentioned in trivia etc - that people haven't compared this to his famous Planet of the Apes roles where they locked up humans! So futuretous in so many ways. Okay I've spent a lot of time talking about Roddy but I can't help it and can't believe this is a role I never even knew he did.

To the story - it's actually remarkable too with great messsges in the dialogue and the twist that the show is famous for! Brilliant!
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
'People...on Mars?'
darrenpearce11116 January 2014
Sam Conrad (Roddy McDowall) and Mark Marcusson (Paul Comi) go to Mars as imagined in 1960. Now we know that the planet could not have anyone like Susan Oliver on it so perhaps Barack Obama is right not to bother with going there.

I like the way the start prefigures the end of the story (visually too) with the question of whether people are the same everywhere? McDowall plays the reluctant adventurer of the two astronauts, well aware that he will have to make his home on Mars. The Martians are attired in an ancient Roman looking way and have a pleasant appearance (especially Susan Oliver).

One of the odd and enjoyable episodes but not one of the greatest. The contrast between the two astronauts is good. Well played by both actors. Rod Serling wrote the teleplay based on a story by Paul W Fairman, whose other writing credits are for z rated sci-fi films and TV. Serling went on to co-write the screenplay for 'Planet Of The Apes'. Will he make a monkey of Roddy McDowall in this?
10 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
What A Piece Of Work Is A Man!
rmax30482312 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Roddy McDowall's space ship crashes on Mars. McDowall survives but his partner does not. McDowall is terrified of what he might find outside the craft but, as his partner tells him with his dying breath, "People are alike all over." When McDowall finally opens the door he finds that it's true. A dozen or more ordinary people dressed in togas are standing around and staring at him. McDowall finds that he can speak their language. "It's what you might call hypnosis." (Hmmm.) And, without being particularly expressive about it, they seem friendly enough. "We've been waiting for one of your kind to come here." Among the amiable crowd is the luscious, platinum-haired, glossy Susan Oliver, who appears to take a shine to him. She wears a kind of off-the-shoulder toga. McDowall relaxes by increments but he must still be a bit wary since he shows no interest in finding out if Susan Oliver is alike all over -- and him a biologist.

The guide him to a house they've prepared for him, hoping that he finds the earth-style house comfortable and familiar. He does. The scotch is great and the house has everything he needs. A good thing too, because, after his hosts leave, he finds there are no windows and all the doors are locked. The wide living-room wall slowly parts and reveals iron bars. All the Martians stand around outside, staring at him. And McDowall finds a sign near the bars: "Earth Creature In Its Natural Habitat." From this experience, McDowall concludes that his departed partner was right after all. People are alike all over. Except that his partner was probably wrong. If a Martian landed on earth, the first thing we'd do is kill him.
11 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A two man mission to Mars
bkoganbing25 October 2018
This Twilight Zone episode features Roddy McDowall and Paul Comi as the two men on the first mission to Mars. Sad to say it is one of many stories on the big and small screen that have become dated with the knowledge we now possess about the red planet.

It's an optimist and a pessimist on the trip. McDowall is skeptical, but Comi says if there's life there they'll be like us because people are alike all over which is as the Deity intended.

Comi is killed in a crash landing but it's McDowall who finds out the truth of that proposition.

This is one good story and sadly one cynical view of humankind.
8 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Weakish.
bombersflyup13 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
People Are Alike All Over is clever, but a whole episode of nothing to get the reveal isn't worth it. They need not trick him either, he's but one man unarmed. Acting's subpar as well.
4 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Good sci-fi tale with a surprise twist.
blanbrn16 April 2019
This "TZ" episode from 1960 features late great character actor Roddy McDowall(from 1980's "Fright Night" fame) as Sam a guy getting ready to go on a space mission to Mars. And his high hope is to find life of aliens and that of martians. Only when the spacecraft is one the planet Sam finds that life and the people are a little different it's not what he expected or what things seem to be. Overall okay episode that twist still it's entertaining with it's science fiction theme that involves aliens and space plus it's some good early work from Roddy McDowall.
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
The Human Zoo
Lejink30 November 2022
Another interesting and thought-provoking episode of "The Twilight Zone" starring Roddy McDowall as a biologist in space, partnering an astronaut colleague on a spaceship to Mars. McDowall is scared of what they'll find, but his partner assures him that if they find life on Mars (thanks David!), they'll be just like us, as people are alike.

Unfortunately their ship crash-lands, killing the astronaut, but McDowall is okay, only what's that knocking sound outside...?

The irony here of course is that years later McDowall would undergo a role-reversal of sorts to the eventual plight of his character here, in a planet full of apes. The moral of this episode is surprisingly modern and environmental in its implied criticism of keeping animals captive in cages and by inference the morals and ethics of the superior species.

Overlooking the fact that the native Martians all seem to be got up as if they're from Ancient Rome, I quite enjoyed this episode, directed by Hollywood veteran Mitchell Leisen, as it made me think about the time to come when zoos, rather like circuses, fox-hunts and bull-fights will finally fall out of fashion and indeed become extinct.
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Done many times before but still an entertaining TZ
sheenarocks4 July 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Astronaut crash-lands on a planet with friendly aliens who it turns out have an ulterior motive in creating a nice place for him to live--it's a cage in a zoo! OK, this has been done many, many times before in both visual and written SF but it is a fun TZ episode, especially for the time-capsule effect of the 1960 house and the ideas of what we might find on Mars.

Another poster mentions this episode as being just like the Star Trek episode "The Cage". Not really. However, the use of the same actress in both episodes is kind of strange... The only similarity in the theme of this TZ episode to the ST episode is that the protagonist is lured into a cage. Roddenberry wrote the ST episode and a writer named Paul Fairman wrote the original TZ story with the teleplay being written by Serling. There is no evidence that these are connected. You can find this theme of aliens with ulterior motives everywhere: Remember, "To Serve Man"? A fun TZ with MacDowell giving an eccentric performance and a Mars that no one would believe. Not the best episode but definitely not the worst.
12 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
More Astronauts
Hitchcoc1 October 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Another man victimized by aliens. It seems that the cold war presented us with the unknown, space creatures who represented the communists, with their dehumanizing political philosophy. Here Roddy McDowell trusts the aliens. He is treated kindly, falls in love, and chooses to make the best of his situation. The kindness is like that toward a puppy that has lost its way. Roddy doesn't get it. They seem to care about him but there are faces that say otherwise. The young woman is up to something. When the man asks if he will see her again, she says yes, but with a look of disgust. No one escapes happily on The Twilight Zone. We know he is on his way to trouble. He gets a nice home but it has no doors that open, nor windows that look out. They are going to try to keep him happy as we might a chimpanzee.
12 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Martians in togas
Calicodreamin31 May 2021
Solid episode of the twilight zone detailing the horrible propensity of mankind to lock up anything we don't understand. A strong message, decent effects, and a well developed storyline. Not sure about the decision to make the martians wear togas.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed