What’s cool and a bit sad about Eye of the Beholder is that it can be in any lifetime. The beautiful, that we associate with, are shunned and hauled off to live separate from that society. The ugliness that we would think isn’t beautiful is the most beautiful of all. Take that in the context of this episode where beautiful is turned fully on its head. It is created by the observer who decides what is beautiful to them. The Lesson: This episode follows in line with that old classic saying, “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” By saying this, it means that beauty exists in the eye of the person who is observing. They have duck like lips, shallow eyes and look like they came straight out of a toxic Whoville. While Janet’s face is beautiful (by our standards), the doctor and nurse are…. The doctor and nurse pin her down and this is when we see the different. She’s looks like Janet Leigh and Marilyn Monroe’s baby. We hope for triumph but the doctors and nurses jump back in horror. We follow her as the bandages unwrap around her and we are introduced to the light too. Slowly, but surely, Janet’s vision come into focus. The nurses unwrap the bandages from her face for the first time. Once we get to the shock of it all, we see the real face of what’s normal and what’s not. In very clever camera movements, we don’t see anyone else’s face either, including the doctors or nurses, until the last few minutes and it’s such a payoff when we get it. In fact, Janet’s face isn’t the only face we don’t see. We’re so used to looking at people when they’re speaking, looking at faces to analyze what they say and dissecting their facial expressions, but we don’t get that here. We hear her through the bandages and don’t know her facial expressions. As I’ve said before, most of the episode transpires with Janet’s face completely unseen. An incredible achievement throughout this episode is how much we are told just through dialogue, mainly though Janet’s monologues, tantrums and pleading with the doctors and nurses. Let’s talk about some things first within the episode first. We don’t see Janet’s face until the final moments of the episode when we see what is normal and abnormal in this world. With these surgeries, she strives to be a “normal” that everyone else is and that the state requires her to be. We’re introduced to her as she embarks on her 11th, but after this surgery, there are no more options for her except for one, to go to a place where her “kind” is joined together to keep out of the way of the normals. Janet is covered in bandages, lying in a hospital bed and pleading, almost starving, for any kind of interaction beyond the darkness she’s forced to see. Enter Twilight Zone’s Eye of the Beholder, one of the few episodes that puts your face first with the obsession with beauty and the need for conformity in its own upside perspective.Įye of the Beholder tells the story of Janet Tyler, a woman who has had up to 10 surgeries on her face to make it better. Some crave the beautiful that comes with just being normal, but in a society where “normal” changes every so often, we can’t really keep up. We see so many different things as beautiful, but then, and even now, there’s still these certain types of beauty that we tend to strive for within our own personal likes and dislikes. Beauty has always been something humans crave whether we know it or not. There’s something special about an episode that really shows you little, but tell you a lot about the human condition and how we treat the concept of beauty. The first episode we’re going to be learning from is Eye of the Beholder (S2E6). Also at to the first installment of Learning the Lessons of the Twilight Zone. Painted in greyscale to mimic the classic black-and-white television series, the Twilight Zone Eye of the Beholder Diorama is available for $29.99 at Entertainment Earth. The only thing that would make this better would be if an interchangeable head had been included to show the patient with bandages removed. Bernardi anxiously waiting to see if he was successful in curing poor Janet Tyler of her physical deformity. Twilight Zone fans sat on the edges of their seats when Eye of the Beholder originally aired, wondering about the horror that would be revealed when the doctors and nurses indicated the surgery had failed, and that moment before the great unveiling is captured with this 7 1/2-inch wide x 5-inch tall x 3 1/2-inch deep resin diorama that shows the sympathetic Dr. Well, the Twilight Zone Eye of the Beholder Diorama was probably a clue but it’s still an interesting fact. Quick! Think of a popular episode from television series where no faces were seen for the majority of the show.
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