Stephen King’s The Dead Zone has been adapted into both a feature film and television series, the latter of which ended on a crushing cliffhanger that fans still haven’t gotten over. The Dead Zone is one of King’s earlier novels and involves a man, Johnny Smith, who wakes up from a coma after several years and learns he’s gained psychic abilities to see the future. The Dead Zone ran for six seasons and 80 episodes on the USA Network and effectively used King’s premise to reach even bigger places, with a nuclear Armageddon being chief among them.

The Dead Zone found a respectable audience throughout its run and became one of the more successful Stephen King television adaptations, but at six seasons there wasn’t considerable improvement and production costs continued to grow higher. This became the larger problem, so the USA Network decided to cancel both The Dead Zone and The 4400, two of their longer-running programs, in favor of giving their new series a greater opportunity to build audiences. This strategy to prepare for the future made sense for USA, but it also left The Dead Zone on its biggest cliffhanger yet.

Related: Stephen King's The Dead Zone: Every Difference Between The Movie & TV Show

The Dead Zone season 6, episode 13, “Denouement,” is full of major revelations for both Johnny Smith and the audience. Johnny learns that his father is actually still alive and being held hostage by the “Coalition for a Better America.” The evil organization’s agenda is clearly meant to fuel the next season, but it’s left as unrealized potential. The biggest twist of all involves Johnny and his son J.J. having new visions about the nuclear Armageddon, only it shows that Johnny is responsible for this dark future, not politician Greg Stillson.

Dead Zone - JJ and Johnny

Johnny is forced to question his mission and consider if he’s somehow the bad guy in this larger story. The Dead Zone expected to be able to explore this challenging territory in a season 7, but it was unfortunately canceled with no closure at the end of 2007. The disappointment that fans expressed over The Dead Zone’s cancelation led to brief discussions that perhaps a movie could be used to wrap up loose threads, but it never came to pass. The Dead Zone’s demise was over ten years ago, so it’s unlikely that the show will get revived. However, with canceled projects like Heroes being unexpectedly returned to years later and The X-Files revival happening over a decade past its conclusion indicates that there’s more of a market for this practice now than there would have been during The Dead Zone’s initial cancellation in 2007.

Additionally, The Dead Zone TV series struck at a time when there wasn’t the Stephen King Renaissance that there currently is. The Dead Zone also remains a property that hasn’t been adapted since the series’ cancelation so it’s not as if a more modern version has made a return to the series unnecessary or impossible. In fact, the apocalyptic tangent that The Dead Zone concluded on feels even more appropriate for modern television audiences. A limited series return that functions as both a continuation to the series’ story, but also a soft reboot that’s accessible for new audiences could be the perfect approach. Stephen King adaptations often turn to the creator’s scary monsters and murderers, but the psychic detective work in The Dead Zone remains an unfulfilled niche in the modern list of King adaptations.

Next: The Dead Zone: Johnny's Powers Explained (& Why They're TERRIBLE)