This episode from "The New Twilight Zone" featured two okay segments yet neither were great they were titled "The Beacon" and "One Life, Furnished in Early Poverty".
The first "The Beacon" is a strange tale of a doctor whose car breaks down on a wooded and hill like California road. Only once he crosses a posted fence he finds a new land awaits with strange houses and crazy looking people. He certainly feels out of place the only good he feels as if he can heal the sick. Veteran actor Martin Landau stars too as an old village person. This ends rather strangely as a bright light of sun seems to give this place special powers and doom strangers.
Second a little bit better tale with a writer(Peter Riegert) who now living successful on the California coast decides to return back to his old childhood home in Ohio and face past secrets and find buried memories. This episode proves that many times people go back and face their past to finally achieve comfort and become at peace. Yet sending a strong message showing that our past problems and struggles with family and finding acceptance among our peers isn't what matters it's only that we must prove life to ourself and then we grow comfortable with who we have become by answering and being happy to our own life and way of living. Good segment.
The first "The Beacon" is a strange tale of a doctor whose car breaks down on a wooded and hill like California road. Only once he crosses a posted fence he finds a new land awaits with strange houses and crazy looking people. He certainly feels out of place the only good he feels as if he can heal the sick. Veteran actor Martin Landau stars too as an old village person. This ends rather strangely as a bright light of sun seems to give this place special powers and doom strangers.
Second a little bit better tale with a writer(Peter Riegert) who now living successful on the California coast decides to return back to his old childhood home in Ohio and face past secrets and find buried memories. This episode proves that many times people go back and face their past to finally achieve comfort and become at peace. Yet sending a strong message showing that our past problems and struggles with family and finding acceptance among our peers isn't what matters it's only that we must prove life to ourself and then we grow comfortable with who we have become by answering and being happy to our own life and way of living. Good segment.