I enjoyed the show quite a bit, but felt it was less like a "Twilight Zone" episode and more a romance novel you'd see brought to life on the Hallmark Channel. So is this episode any good? After all, you can't blame or lower the rating for the TV show for using a technology that was the norm at the time. It really is wild how things have changed so much in only two decades. It's NOT like a digital camera where you can turn on and off black & white and color modes. ![]() In other words, with digital photography becoming the norm, many younger viewers won't understand about how to use film, why you need to develop the pictures to see them, and, more importantly, how a color picture CANNOT appear on black & white film stock. Is Alec somehow trying to communicate with her? I have a strong feeling this episode will confuse many viewers now because practically no one uses film to take photographs. And, oddly, the rest of the roll is in black & white. So, she does.and when she later develops the film, one of the shots is a color picture of the house Alec wanted them to move to long ago. Her minister advises her to pick up her old hobby of photography to give her something to do and disrupt this unhealthy lifestyle. ![]() A year later, Edie is still grieving for Alec and she's not gotten on with her life. However, there's an accident and Alec is killed. Edie and Alec are planning on getting married and moving to a lovely home near the ocean.
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