Every major talent starts out small. That's just the way things work around here. Stories like
The Iliad and
Odyssey or an epic like
Beowulf aren't the best demonstration of what the normal trajectory of artistic talent is like because while Homer managed at least two great works to his name, the story of Grendel and the Dragon all seem to have been complete one-offs. We don't even have the original author's byline, or biographical details that might help tell us who the Beowulf Poet was, what his artistic temperament was like, what was his imaginative life of the mind as a creative talent, and what sort of early influences went into the shaping of how that creative gift would later be expressed for all time. These are the questions that any half-way competent critic has to ask if they want a fuller portrait of the artist as a developing talent. A careful and competent approach to digging up the facts of the artist and their art always tends to tell the same story: big things have small starts. Even the mighty Charles Dickens began his career with just a handful of slice-of-life newspaper essays that showcased a series of snapshots of life on the streets of Victorian England as they happened to catch his fancy. He'd hock these wares to whichever newspaper would take them just to find lodgings and food for the night, and his first book was a collection of these articles titled
Sketches by Boz that he mostly had to help create out of his own pocket. It was the success of this sketchbook that made other journals publish his first efforts at tackling the short story format, and these were later gathered into
The Pickwick Papers, and things really took off from there.
The point is the kind of trajectory just described for Dickens is sort of the template for the way all genuine talent develops, or else fails to. Part of the package deal that comes with this growth of the artist's mind is the occasional discovery that sometimes our favorite fantasists began not just in places, but also in the sort of modes or genres of storytelling that we might not have expected from. It can be a surprise, for instance, to realize that someone like Gene Roddenberry really didn't emerge full grown as someone whose mind was already reaching for that fabled, Final Frontier. Instead, when we first meet the future Great Bird of the Galaxy, he's just this retired airline pilot who's swapped his wings and flyer's license in for a badge with the LAPD, and whose speech writing for his chief get the attention of department liaisons for Jack Webb's Dragnet series, and so Gene gets his first start in TV Land with Police Procedurals, then Westerns, and even some Comedy Variety Shows, until at last he begins to construct an idea for his own Science Fiction oriented program, and at last NBC buys his pitch (web).

It's the same pattern of start out small, build up big. The same thing happened to Rod Serling. Just like Roddenberry, the inventor of the Fifth Dimension doesn't begin his creative life in the realm of the Fantastic, but rather the world of gritty social drama. It's very much as Gordon Sander writes in the preface to his biography of the mind behind the
Zone. What Sander has to say here is very pertinent to the background context of Serling's early career, which is part of the focus of this review. For that specific reason, it's worth quoting the biographer at some length here. "A child of the 1930s,
when social concerns and realist aesthetics dominated the arts, Ser-
ling was an early devotee of Norman Corwin and the other angry
young men who populated the airwaves during the Roosevelt era.
Like Corwin, Arch Oboler, and Orson Welles, as well as Clifford
Odets and the agitators of the legitimate stage of that era, Serling
fervently believed that the theater of the air, like the other literary
arts, in addition to being entertaining, should be both relevant and
provocative. Serling saw the dramatist’s role in American society as that of an agent of change and a spark to controversy. Or, as he
put it in a speech to the Library of Congress in 1968: “The writer’s
role is to menace the public’s conscience. He must have a position,
a
point of view. He must see the arts as a vehicle of social criticism
and he must focus on the issues of his time." With television, Serling
was able to fulfill the writer’s role as he defined it.

"And menace the public’s conscience he did, during television’s
golden age, with such powerful plays as ‘“‘The Strike” and ““The
Rack,” his antiwar diptych; ‘‘Patterns,”’ his no-holds-barred look
at the corporate jungle; ‘“‘Requiem for a Heavyweight,” his stomach-
turning take on the fight game; in both ““A Town Has Turned to
Dust” and ‘Noon on Doomsday,” his plays on prejudice; and ““The
Velvet Alley,” his semi-autobiographical critique of the television
industry itself. And just as Corwin’s ethereal masterworks helped
to
legitimize radio drama as an art form, so did Serling’s taut,
powerful, and wonderfully visual works, along with those of such
fellow video agent provocateurs as Paddy Chayefsky, Gore Vidal,
and Robert Alan Aurthur, help make TV one of the lively arts of
the 1950s.
"While Samuel Beckett and Edward Albee took Broadway on an
absurdist, nonrealist track, Serling and his fellow video litterateurs
made the television theater of the late 1950s the real spiritual successor of both radio and the legitimate stage of twenty years before.
Unfortunately, Serling’s Ibsenesque bent did not sit well with the
network tastemakers. At the start of the fifties, when TV had only
just begun its explosive growth, and was still an accoutrement of
the educated classes, there had been room for high populist art like
“Marty” and “Patterns” on the airwaves. However, the medium
proliferated, and sponsors and network officials began to worry
about alienating and losing their audience. As a result, this small
window of creative opportunity began to close, and TV playwrights
were faced with increasing censorship from timorous ad agencies
and broadcasting executives.
"Serling...complained loudest. In 1961, Television Age called him the industry’s leading critic. As Andrew Sarris
has written: ‘‘Television was the biggest sociological game in town,
and Serling wasn’t giving it up without a fight.’’ Unfortunately, it
didn’t do TV or Serling much good. By the end of the decade, with
the exception of Playhouse 90, Serling’s proscenium and bully pulpit, the dramatic anthology show, had entered extinction, giving
way to filmed western and detective shows. Most of Serling’s comrades had long since left television for other
less censorious and more “artistic” media, but Serling refused to
abandon video: he believed in television. And—unquestionably—
Serling liked the limelight. Television (contrary to what another
biographer has written) was not only the medium best suited to
Serling’s talents, it was also the one best suited to his intense, quirky
personality.
"And so Serling continued to badger and probe and moralize—
and entertain—as the guiding Aesop of
The Twilight Zone. As
media historian Peter Kaplan recently has written, "On
The Twilight
Zone...the nightmare side of American life was opened up. The
national soul was the subject, and its real villains were the selfish,
the shallow, the rapacious. If there was a real golden age of tele-
vision, its single commercial offshoot, never to die, was
The Twilight
Zone. It loved wit and had wonderful actors and a patina of writing
that is television’s answer to the short story (xvii-xix)". What this helpful bit of background context means is that Serling's creativity can be divided into two differing yet allied aspects. The first is the one we're all familiar with. It's the artist as the Twilight Man, Televisions own precursor to what we now think of as the Urban Fantasy and/or contemporary Horror narrative, with an occasional bit of Science Fiction thrown in for good measure. The other side of this same coin is the one Sander talks about. This is the part where Serling gets to showcase his skills as a straightforward dramatist without the usual genre centric trappings. Instead of a beleaguered protagonist haunted by ghosts or aliens, we're instead treated to the sight of
a boxer struggling with his personal life and career.
Instead of ghosts on Mars, we see a fresh made and naive young corporate executive as he gets a brutal schooling in the fact that being promoted to the upper class means spending the rest of your swimming around in a shark cage, and hoping to God you're not next on the menu. The point of such dramas is simple and declarative. They all count as rages against a very old machine. The same one that tries to manage a person's life by cementing their worth as a person to second class status, and that will then crawl across hot coals just to make sure things stay that way. In these moments, Serling resembles nothing less than an early small screen version of Martin Scorsese. Just like with the auteur of the Mean Streets, the other side of Serling's artistry is concerned with the various mindsets that cause chaos and suffering in modern American life. What makes Rod's explorations of these same themes stand out from Marty's is that he'll choose to lighten things up with what's best described as a form of proto-Spielbergian humanism on occasion. Like with Taxi Driver Serling doesn't flinch away when taking a good look at the dark side of the mind of man. Unlike Scorsese, however, Serling always left room for enchantment into the mix. He seems to have believed that even the darkest corners can have just a little worth and light to them.

The story under discussion here today is somewhat unique in that it almost acts as a snapshot of the artist at a crucial moment of transition in his career. It's almost like seeing Rod's mind at work as it begins switching gears from the mode of Scorsese to that of Spielberg. When Television's Angry Young Man starts to think in terms that will one day inspire one of his fans to become the director of films like
Raiders of the Lost Ark and
E.T. Both of which films carry several degrees of resonance with the kind of narratives Serling once helped to tell. Before all that came about, however, Rod had a simple writing assignment to fulfill. He was commissioned to write a half hour script for a TV show known as
Suspense. It was a crime drama centric show, yet it's focus also allowed a certain amount of room for the Gothic macabre. Such is the case with an obscure Serling tale called
Nightmare at Ground Zero.