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We live through a series of different cultures and events that appear to be different, with a series of stories ranging from tragedy to comedy to other exciting things. It is a group of events that may be scary or comic sometimes, as most episodes have unexpected ends and a moral lesson may embody us a hidden reality. Despite all of the above, this series is a journey in a different world we live in.
The episodes are still cut for commercial breaks (for foreign sales?) and run longer than the original's half hours, but strive to maintain a quality worthy of the name while so far not surpassing it.
So far, the new Twilight Zone is a little uneven, but so was the old one. It doesn't lack experimental energy or visual imagination; it just seems to be still developing its story voice.
Serling's formula doesn't have the freshness it did 60 years ago, and the creators of the new incarnation haven't quite figured out how to address that.
As for Nightmare at 30,000 Feet, it's a case of a competent TV thriller, but not a particularly memorable or unique one, with little to say about the human condition that isn't immediately obvious.
Not one of the four previewed episodes fully hits the mark established by the classic Serling series. They're too long, too slow to develop, and -- for the most part -- much too predictable.