I'm 64 and been watching these my whole life..never get bored with them...what a brilliant landmark in tv entertainment...it didn't get much better...thank you Rod and all the fledgling stars...tons of memories...wow
The best "gotcha moment" to me was the one where a woman was waiting to see the outcome of surgery to fix her face. The big moment comes. The bandages are removed and she is beautiful but doctors and nurses are horrified. Then you see them and they are grotesque which apparently is the norm in The Twilight Zone.
The gorgeous Donna Douglas, in 1960, at 28 (1962-71, was "Elly May" on The Beverly Hillbilies) was the "ugly" one! Outstanding casting, ugly faces, and reverse psychology in "Eye of the Beholder" (aired Nov. 11, 1960) making it one of the best episodes, and certainly one of the most memorable! She lived to be 82 (Sep. 26, 1932 - Jan. 1, 2015).
The unapologetic manner with which Rod closed out that episode, as with so many others with that final thought to ponder on. I can only wonder about the families who saw that air around dinner time, and the thought provoking conversations on the subject that ensued.
There was an episode where an elderly woman is so afraid that death is stalking her that she won't open her door to anyone just in case it invites death in. She sees a young man played by Robert Redford beaten and hurt in the street and lets him in. HE is death and convinces her that death is not something to fear but to embrace. The conversation between them is so brilliantly written
Right Sterling was an absolute genius! The executives referred to him as “the angry Young Man“ because they would upset him by interfering with his shows. That is part of the reason why he decided to stop after five years… Burn out from dealing with all the BS. Then, a few years later, he was hosting the night gallery, but it was nowhere as good as twilight zone. Sadly, we lost him in 1975 at the age of 50 as he died on the operating table while they were dealing with his heart problems from smoking three packs of cigarettes every day. Damn, sad!
@@divinewon73 Very Sad! He was a wonderful man & person. He was also so fair to all in his employ. (Other Writers.) When he won the award, he said we will all get together and carve it up like a Thanksgiving Turkey. (Thanksgiving or Christmas. I forget!) I have to say, I loved the show's "Hocus Pocus and Frisby." Too Cute!! 🛸
@@divinewon73 Based on the description of when he returned from the war, I would add PTSD to the mix of stress and burnout. It was called "Shell Shock", the predecessor of PTSD. My Dad was in WW2, survived Peal Harbor and his ship getting torpedoed later on. I recognized my symptoms when I got back from Vietnam as the same symptoms he had. RIP, Rod...
@@divinewon73 Makes you wonder that had Sterling survived into the 1980s, would he have found vindication and a second chance in the post Star Wars,post Halloween SCI-fI,horror,fantasy revival of genre films of the 1980s,the way Gene Roddenberry did with Star Trek The Motion Picture, and Star Trek The Next Generation? Imagine Sterling working Steven Spielberg,John Carpenter, John Landis, Ridley Scott, and being reunited with Richard Donner on major films, or getting to do a syndicated show with no studio interference.
Absolutely loved all the episodes. And so well written that they impacted you differently at various phases of life. Like "Stop at Willoughby", "Kick the Can", and especially "Walking Distance"... all were good as a kid, but really resonated even more so as an adult in my 40s and 50s.. show is an absolute masterpiece
"Stop at Willoughby". . . . . .you know that guy’s finally enjoying the bandstand playing under a summer evening sky with a glass of ice cool lemonade right?
I loved it when one reviewer watching a present-day movie said, "Yes, it was a good idea, but it took him 2 hours to do what Rod Serling could have done in 22 minutes."
That's because today episodics contain two shows in one. The main show is the firemen, police, Doctors. The Secondary is their personal home lives. All the shows follow pretty much the same structure. A "soft" open with main characters talking about things cracking jokes interrupted by THE EMERGENCY! or THE CRIME! The heroes come near death as they battle the fire. The doctor shows use the old private eye trick where the police detective tolld the private eye not go near this crime. Of course he does and solves it despite pressure from on high. In the doctor shows, the doctor is told to stay off this patient for whatever reason. Of course he doesn't and saves the patient. To fill out an hour, personal lives are developed which also serves to make people identify with main characters so they will watch every episode. You could take the script of almost any of these shows and switch it to another cop/doctor/layer show with only minimal edits. Familiarity replaces creativity.
"Changing of the Guard" was and is my favorite Twilight Zone episode. Donald Pleasence played a boarding schoolteacher who thought that no one he taught through so many decades learned anything from him. When the ghosts of past students who were influenced in life by him came back to let him know that he made a difference in their lives. The only episode to make me cry!
I LOVED the Twilight Zone-- and I still think it was one of the very best, most imaginative, most thought-provoking TV shows ever created. Hats off to Rod Serling!
Couldn't agree moreNReeves...a body of creative work right up there. A benchmark series of creative writing and the cinematography was very strong too. Yes, an all time favorite of mine. Rod Serling - what he went through in war and possibly other significant events left us all with what emerged inhis writings from those experiences.
It's weird that the show suffered low ratings at points, and also could not attract sponsors. What the heck? It's such a creative show. Maybe viewers were scared, literally.
My father was a member of the 221 Airborne Medical Company in the 11th Airborne Division. He knew Rod personally during the war. So, when the beginning of any Twilight Zone episode started it was dead silence in the room so dad could hear what Rod had to say. Like Rod my dad had a cigarette in his hand constantly and died in his 50s of a different form of cancer then lung cancer. Many of the 11th Airborne Division were declared Nuclear Vets due to their occupation of Japan after the war and going to Hiroshima.
@@ultimateactivitiesdude2685 Do you actually hear yourself. You are thanking him for his dad in the military before he was born. You morons do not realize you say thank you to us Vets but its really a fuck you. It is quite insulting.
Changing of the Guard, one of the Christmas episodes. In which a forcibly-retired school teacher is visited by the ghosts of past students, informing him that he taught them loyalty, honour, courage, sacrifice, bravery, compassion, empathy. That their victories are also his, and sheesh, simply remembering the episode brings tears to my eyes.
@@iracordem Donald Pleasance often played a villain. He was one of the Ernst Stavro Blofelds in the James Bond franchise, and he was also the bad guy in Fantastic Voyage. But he played against type as the saintly Reverend Septimus Harding in Barchester Towers.
The one episode that immediately sticks out in my mind, and not necessarily the scariest, but was a combination of scary, humorous, and clever, is the one where the aliens were recruiting Earth people to go back home with them. After a book they provided to the humans was decoded or translated as, "To Serve Man". As the humans were boarding the spaceship, someone came out and said, "Wait, it's a cookbook!"
This was the most memorable episode for me as well. The way it started with the scientist in a room on the spaceship, trying to imagine what awaits him when the ship arrives at who knows where and being the only person to know that he is actually on the menu. I saw it in my teens on a late night re-run. It's hard for me to imagine that I am now 8 years older than Rod Serling was when he died, I tell myself to be happy that I am getting old, when so many other people are gone before they can be old.
Twilight Zone, Night Gallery and Outer Limits have all been on the cutting edge of thrilling storytelling. As a kid, I loved to be terrified by Twilight Zone! My older brother and I were enthralled! Each episode was unique. Characters were believable and the story stretched your mind into unlikely places. The people who acted in the stories went on to become stars. It’s fun to see the younger version of these well known personalities. I remember the stories, but I can’t recall the names of the episodes. I think Rod Serling was a terrific writer and it was a sad day indeed when these awesome shows were cancelled. There has never been another series of short stories that could equal these gems. Thank you for sharing this glimpse into the past. I loved it! ❤
100% Ditto my friend. All 3 that you listed were and still are some of the best, most creative short story platforms ever brought to television. Wonderful in my youth and still a treasure today.
That one was the most emotionally traumatizing to me. I tear up just thinking about it, it made me so sad for him! Even as a kid, I felt the weight of that cruel irony, and the tragedy of his fate. Heart wrenching, indeed... Although the one with the kid making someone's mouth disappear was kind of horrific, as an image, none of the others affected me as deeply as that one did, maybe because I was an only child who could not get enough of books! It was a pain I could relate to, both in the solitary existence and his dismay at not being able to read after so briefly feeling the joy of having so many just waiting for him alone to enjoy at last! Yes, that one might have hinted at the idea that God, if real, might just be a huge asshole...
@@amain325 Oooh, if I had thought of that, it might have minimized the legitimate trauma that ep put me through. My heart hurt for him -,such a cruel misfortune!
Burgess Meredith said he received more fan mail over that one episode than any other performance. Perhaps his character could have eventually found another pair of glasses, but the point is inescapable: in all-out nuclear war, there are no winners.
Like many of you, I have probably seen every episode of the Twilight Zone as a child or later as an adult. As a result, I can recognize every episode in less than :30. The 4 stories I've chosen may not be the scariest or as well known, but they have twisted surprise endings that are both thought provoking and disturbing. "The Howling Man" season 2, ep.5 - has one the most visually stunning transformations of the Devil incarnate on screen. "The Invaders" season 2, ep. 15 - This is the only story, to my knowledge, where the main and lone character (Agnes Morehead) has no dialog. It is a cinematic hypnotic experience. "Back There" season 2, ep.13 (my fav) - An answer to the question of cause and effect. When the main character, just by chance, travels back in time to the day Lincoln got shot. "Perchance to dream" season 1, ep.9 - Where the main character, in reality (Richard Conte), dies in the opening scene of the story. Submitted for your approval.
I was born in 1952. Our parents wouldn't have a TV in the house until we had graduated from public school in first place. My older sister didn't, but I did. The Agnes Moorhead episode cemented my interest in science fiction. I continued to sneak over to a girlfriend's house to watch Twilight Zone and Outer Limits on her .TV
:-) The Howling Man.. whew...you're right, as a kid, that transformation..hard to sleep at night after watching. As an adult I can appreciate the themes so much more..and still love that episode
I have every episode on disc and every winter I tell myself I'm going to marathon through and watch all of the twilight zone episodes but I haven't done it yet. I'll go pick out these though, the ones people have suggested and watch them...
I loved the episode with Agnes Moorehead... a woman terrorized by small invaders who were actually our astronauts. She never spoke a word... pure acting. I also loved the episode where astronauts landed on a planet and there were tiny people on there. Then giants at the end.
That's really wild that you mentioned those episodes together because, "The Invaders" starring Agnes Moorehead was the very first episode of the Twilight Zone I ever saw, when I was a kid, and my second episode was the other one you mentioned titled "The Little People" that starred Claude Atkins and Joe Maross.
@@elizabethblackwell6242 They could make that same hysteria about Russia today! Russia is NOT our worst enemy! Neither is China! The worst enemy of the people (wherever they live), is their own, lying government! None more so than the scheming, power-mad, money-hungry U. S. government! Liberal historian Howard Zinn, correctly noted and is quoted on YT saying, "governments lie, or they wouldn't last as a government for very long!
The Howling Man scared the heck out of me. The Lonely and The Rip VanWinkle Caper have to be my runner-up favorites. Time Enough at Last is my all-time favorite.
I'm in the camp of burned-bright. Nobody lives forever, and I think Rod Serling made his own choices. The dude did more great writing than 10 of his peers combined.
I loved every single episode that Burgess Meredith was in. 1. The Obsolete Man; where he's a prisoner who's crime is reading books. 2. Time Enough at Last, again the bookworm only this time he's a meek little guy whose love of books gets him abused by family and job until a nuclear war wipes them all out. 3. Printer's Devil, where he literally plays Satan and was really scary. These were all fabulous performances. 4. Twilight Zone: The Movie, where he was just the narrator. MY personal favorite, however, is the hilarious Mister Dingle, the Strong. A walk in the park for an actor of Meredith's skill, but so funny as the mild mannered, not-too-very-bright protagonist who becomes the center of a series of Alien experiments.
@@vogelstevAbsolutely the best episode of the entire series, by far. It’s Greek tragedy. I first saw the episode when I was maybe 4 or 5 years old. It haunted me so for many, many years. Even when I could only remember vague aspects of it, it disturbed me, even in my dreams. To this day I rewatch it whenever I can during the TZ marathons on Sci Fi network. Also, strangely, I have always had a somewhat compulsive need to handle my eyeglasses very gently and protect them at all costs… my wife says I’m maniacal about it. I always blame it on this episode, and she eases up on me. 🤓
@@robdykejr Yeah they really need to stop trying that. There's nothing wrong with the old school 50's voice but writing over that kind of destroys American culture - his voice set the tone for the whole series. I never want to see anybody else try it in general now. The writing and directing in hollywood is too awful. Will take an avante garde writer to take it over. The irony is Serling was actually too progressive for producers. They censored a lot of his African American characters (such as based on Emmitt Till) for other fill ins (Jewish instead, etc). So it's not as if he wasn't for equality. But forcing a whole style change with a completely different host was indeed woke.
@@robdykejr I didn't watch all the eps but I disagree. The one with the cop with an itchy trigger was great,,, it is good that Jordan Peele used the platform to write intelligent shows with social commentary, That's exactly what Rod Serling did too as alluded in this video, he would have approved
The episode "Litle Girl Lost" in Season 3 scared me for years as a kid. A time warp or portal had opened up on the wall of a little girl's bedroom. Her parents hear her cries "mommy where are you?" but they can't see her. Eventually they get her back in the bedroom before the time warp slams shut forever. I could not sleep next to my bedroom wall for years after that show.
It's really tough to pick a favorite. The ones I talked about as a kid were the one with the beauty standards and ugly doctors, the one with Burgess Merideth and the books. and of course we all talked about "To Serve Man" regularly. My school had us read "Monsters on Maple St." aloud and do a report on it. Classic. But it was my dad, who was on set for a Twilight Zone episode but they didn't use him at the last minute... who made me think about the show and talked about his favorites, one being "The Invaders" (season 2, episode 15) --the one with Agnes Moorhead as a wordless victim of tiny robots or something but the twist ending was perfect. We loved that one. Dad also loved "Shadow Play" where the trial kept resetting. And the 5 characters trying to get out of the trap... he wanted me to watch that one when I was pretty little. -- I realized as I grew to adulthood that the ones that got me the most were the misdirection ones like where things get reversed at the end like "The Invaders" but more than that I loved the Time Travel ones. The WW1 Pilot showing up in 1959 and having to get back to his time... gives me goose bumps... the one where the 1861 guy heads over the ridge for medicine and arrives in 1961 - But I think my favorite one for time travel was "Walking Distance" from season 1... the one with Gig Young arriving in his childhood town and seeing himself at 10 years old.. and remembering things long buried. Fascinating. I also still love "the Lonely" Jack Warden stranded on a planet for being a nuisance back on earth... and getting a companion. That kills me.
I forgot to add.....The thing that made Twilight Zone so creepy was every episode was a assault on your mind. Almost no monsters. Mr. Serling got our attention and just as he has us watching a plot line, he reverses everything at the end to make you think.........."WOW"!!
Agreed. Another thing that made the Twilight Zone so creepy was US. Those shows had the ability to shine a light on us humans at our most violent, bigoted, greedy, petty, egomaniacal, illogical, on and on. A story with those kinds of creatures will always be scarier than any made-up monster will ever be.
They were all scary when I was a kid! As an adult, I was unsettled by the episode that starred Billy Mumy as a child who could 'do' things. Including get away with murder and worse! It did prove that he was an incredible child actor though!
An episode that made an impression on me as a kid was the one where this traveler stumbles on some monks who claim to have captured the devil and have him imprisoned. Of course, the guy doesn't believe them and lets him out. There's a memorable scene in which the prisoner transforms from an ordinary looking man into the devil in stages, as he walks past some pillars in the monastery after being released.
The one with Billy Mumy in it was classic. I was about 5 or 6 when that came out and Billy was my hero. Especially when he turned one of his antagonist into a jack in the box. The fear in the adults that had to deal with him was palpable.
The name of this episode is "It's a Good Life" and is IMO the most frightening, unsettling and hardest to watch TZ episode of all because of the utterly omnipotent power it ascribed to the selfish, unthinking, uncaring and completely capricious whims of a 6 year old! While many TZ episodes had an ending that left the characters & the viewers with some degree of hope for the future/survival if the story were true, this episode left both with no hope at all!
Billy was not doing it in a good way, either; He was drunk with power, and the entire town feared, and hated him. In the opening scene, He makes a playmate disappear. It was interesting that this episode, and many others, were set in Ohio; Ohio at that time, was considered as American Middle Class, as you can get. Serling also attended Kenyon College, in Gambier; about 50 miles northeast of Columbus, and about 30 miles, north of Newark. The Movie, "Children of the Corn", was filmed in New England-influenced Northeastern Ohio, east of Cleveland and Akron; and some scenes from "Brubaker" were filmed at the now-closed Junction City State Prison, east of Lancaster, and south of Newark. Incidentally, Billy Mumy reprised his Role, as a grown man, who had a daughter, with his "power" on one of the newer "Twilight Zones". As I remember it, They ended up destroying the town, and its residents, and Billy tells his daughter, somewhat ominously; "Let's go, to the City" (Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati? Maybe a city, in a nearby State, or in Canada?).
Death's Head Revisited was pure horror genius. The acting was incredible. The subject matter was horrific. Joseph Schildkraut rarely blinked in the episode. As Alfred Becker, the ghost of a concentration camp inmate, he acted extremely ghostly. It was pure genius.
@@TheBuck1283 The set where Deathshead Revisited was filmed was a set constructed for a western movie that was never finished. The set fell into disrepair and became weathered. It was perfect to shoot his episode because it was supposed to be abandoned since the end of World War II.
I do not remember the title but I can quickly describe the episode that I remember the most. It takes place in a cabin/lake house. All shots are from within the home. An old woman (70s?) is home alone at night, the lighting in the home is pre-electric. Anyway, she is being attacked by 4" tall space-suited creatures and is in the fight of her life. You, the viewer are with her. Cheering her on. When she finally kills the last creacher you are rewarded with your first look through the window. On the ground is a 'flying saucer' with "USA" inscribed on it's side.
I'm sorry, but there were a few shots where she was on the roof, trying to fight off/scare away the invaders. It starred the great Agnes Moorhead in her pre_Endora/Bewitched days. She also never had a single line of dialog except for a few grunts, groans and screams.
"Look, I don't belong in Heaven, see? I want to go to 'The Other Place'!" "HEAVEN? Whatever gave you the idea you were in 'Heaven', Mr. Valentine? THIS *IS* 'THE OTHER PLACE'!!!!!!!!!!"
My favorite episodes are "A Stop at Willoughby" which was truly horrifying. "Walking Distance" (another favorite) was so profound and I literally bawled the first time I saw it. The speech Gig Young gave at the ferris wheel was tragic. That show was way ahead of it's time and I adore it. I have seen every episode. The scariest for me would have to be "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet" and "The Hitchhiker" is the most haunting. How horrifying would it be to be dead and on a loop. Night Gallery was brilliant as well.
Interesting that you found "A Stop at Willoughby" to be horrifying. It was one of my favorite episodes and hardly horrifying to me at all. To me, it was so gratifying to see an unhappy, miserable man, running the rat race of commuting from the suburbs to the city and back again, find happiness in the bucolic little village of Willoughby. Of course he had to die to get there permanently, but, having found the love and happiness he so desperately wanted, I like to think he would have made the same choice again. As a 13 to 15 year old unhappy child at the time, perhaps I saw the episode quite differently than some may have.
“Time Enough at Last” - absolutely the best episode of the entire series, by far. I’m heartened to learn that it was Rod Serling’s favorite as well. It’s pure Greek tragedy. I first saw the episode when I was maybe 4 or 5 years old. It haunted me so for many, many years. Even when I could only remember vague aspects of it, it disturbed me, even in my dreams. To this day I rewatch it whenever I can during the TZ marathons on Sci Fi network. Also, strangely, I have always had a somewhat compulsive need to handle my eyeglasses very gently and protect them at all costs… my wife says I’m maniacal about it. I always blame it on this episode, and she eases up on me. 🤓
Time enough at last was to me a very wise cautionary tale that you can't take for granted that you will have all the time in the world to achieve all your bucket list items. You need to do some of those now while you can because you may not be able to in the future...even if you finally have all the time in the world...time at last ;)
That episode is one of my favorites, too. It's a testimony to Murphy's Law! Finally, having all the free time to indulge and losing the opportunity in a split second due to a careless mistake. 🤦
As a goggle-glassed bookworm I identified so closely with Burgess Meredith. I cried when I saw the original episode. Even now, as I write this, tears come to my eyes.
The scariest episode I remember was Little Girl Lost. The girl disappeared into another dimension. Although she was eerily crying throughout the house, her parents couldn't figure out where she was. They finally figured out how to enter this other dimension to rescue her, and they drew a door in chalk on her bedroom wall. It was frightening for me, thinking that such a portal existed - and in a bedroom! I was so afraid that I would disappear like she did!
I haven't seen that episode, but I have read the short story it was based on. Several Twilight Zone episodes were based on previously published, print stories, by some of the better writers out there at the time.
The most frightening for me was the one where the characters were lost by falling into the wall. Remember going to bed that night and scared as hell of the nearby wall.
Time Enough at Last is, for a reader like me, absolutely the most terrifying episode of The Twilight Zone. To have all the undisturbed time in the world, and all the books at your finger, and not be able to read? It gives me the shivers. (But I'll read the ingredients list on the cereal box if there's nothing else. I will NEVER understand the people who say they haven't read even one book in the last year as if it's something to be proud of. I can tear through two a WEEK, depending on difficulty level.)
I always thought of this episode’s ending as rather mean-spirited. In many Zone episodes, people get what’s coming to them. This guy hadn’t hurt anybody, done anyone wrong as far as we can tell, and yet he gets screwed in the end. What was that all about?
Fantastic presentation 😂! Being a Rochester native I was surprised to learn of Rod Serling's death here 😮. Rod Serling was a creative genius & national treasure 🤩.
There was an episode where a man and his dog go to the afterlife. He comes to a gate where the man in front describes a great existence. The dead man seems like he will go in, but then he is told no dogs allowed. He decides to go on. At the next entrance he asks the man guarding the entrance if he can bring his dog. The guardian says yes. The dead man says, "I couldn't bring him in at the other place." The guardian replies, "That was the 'Other Place'."
I think my scariest TZ episode was none other than "Talkie Tina" the pre-Chucky scary doll. That gave me nightmares when I was a kid watching this at my grandmother's in the early 80s reruns. Rod Seeking was way ahead of his time.
They showed "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" in my school, and it made a deep impression on me. Years later, I learned that it was based on a terrific Ambrose Bierce story. Both the original story and the short film are incredible.
This one was impressive! It moved me more than most any other episode. I'd say it is in the top five. There was one with a giant inflatable alien, the "real" aliens being tiny compared to us. Was that "The Invaders"? Another good one. . .
I saw this in school as well in central Illinois (nice to see they showed this in schools across the country) and it definitely struck something in me so that I’d remember it all these years later, every detail. It’s like I was that guy in the film and could think and feel everything he was.
At the conclusion of the opening scene in that one, I believe Rod stands taller than he does in any other ep with his comments and that coat in the falling snow. I think a church bell even rings. The concluding sentiments of that particular ep will always bring a smile to my face.
"The Night of the Meek". I have loved this episode since I first saw it. Art Carney was superb. John Fiedler was the perfect antagonist, redeemed by the miracle. See the rest of the cast on Wikipedia or IMDB, see who else you remember.
"The Monsters are Due on Maple Street", shows how quickly "mob mentality" can quickly overcome once friendly people. I loved "Nightmare at 20,000 ft", the original and the remake with, John Lithgow. Both were well done. Richard Matheson, my all time favorite scifi screen writer co-wrote it with Serling both (RIP).
Did you see the 3rd rock from the sun episode where Shatner played "The Big Giant Head", an alien overlord, and he rode on an airplane and apparently made a fuss because "there was something on the wing of the plane!", to which Lithgow's character proclaimed "The same thing happened to me!"
The remake with John Lithgow scared the living crap out of me! The special effects on the "gargoyle" was just magnificent! Really made me scared shitless of flying.
I watched Twighlight Zone regularly as a kid. The episode I remember best is when a young woman wants an operation due to being ugly in the culture she's in. "No change" from the operation as the doctors look at her in horror & reveal THEIR faces, truly horrific to us. BEAUTY IS IN EYE OF BEHOLDER. A great lesson for a 10-year-old.
"Eye of the Beholder" (aired on Nov. 11, 1960), with a gorgeous Donna Douglas, then 28, two years before her "Elly May" role on The Beverly Hillbillies (1962-71).
The Night of the Meek, starring Art Carney, 1960 is one of those 6 episodes originally recorded in videotape and then transferred to 16mm. Not a scary episode, unless perhaps you might see a bit of yourself in the main character, but definitely my very favorite episode and one that showcased Art's talent as a serious actor. "And a Merry Christmas, to each and all" - Rod Serling (1924-1975).
How to serve man? Wasn't that the title? Akitchen guide? Best ways to cook to serve us humans. But i dont rember seeing any actual recipes! Guess would depend on which culture as other countries have vastly different diets. Why usda allows so much unhealthy ingredients i can not guess,think a cash payout made all types of non sugarcane raw natural sweeteners too use items otherwise disposable ,but if they treat it well, now we can bottle and sell it to McDonald's for milkshakes as example. Greedy people. Until its their child in a bind,private jet to any other country privately of course..because heathcare is much cheaper along with same meds.but so very much less expensive. Yet we keep installing wealthy people or those with a long list of people who ready to help for a favor. Working class family that struggling to pay rent or mortgage working 2 parents 2jobs..lets give them 100k a year! Folks that help neighbors and dont tolerate b.s! Just a thought.
My favorites include the first one I ever saw, "Kick the Can" where old folks discover they can become young again if they will only play Kick the Can. I was a little freaked out a few years later when we moved to a neighborhood where they actually played Kick the Can. We played as if our lives depended on it. Billy Mumy in "It's a GOOD Life." I first read this as a short story, maybe in a book of Twilight Zone stories, about a kid who just has way too much influence on the things and people in his town. You sure don't ever want to get this kid angry at you. There was the one about the old lady who lives alone in a small cabin way out in the wilderness who hears really strange noises outside. She's scared to death, especially when she hears more spooky sounds and some banging up on her roof. She takes an ax up into her attic and finds a smallish flying saucer on her roof and has at it with the ax. Then we see the American Air Force insignia on the broken saucer and hear frantic radio calls back to Earth about the terrible monsters they have encountered. That one gave me nightmares. Oh, but it was "The Green Hills of Earth" that really gave me nightmares. A small group of people are stranded on a barren planet, where a kid sits on a rock and asks the old guy to tell him what Earth was like. The old guy talks about crowds of people, pushing and shoving, fighting and hurting one another. Great machines belching smoke that darken the skies and make it hard to breathe. The kid says he would still like to see it if he ever got a chance. The old guy argues that they've made a pretty good place for themselves here, but some of the others argue that it still doesn't compare to Earth. Then a rescue ship arrives to take them all home to Earth. The old guy says he doesn't want to go because they've built too much here to just give up on it. They end up leaving him behind, but he goes over to the rock the kid used to sit on and talks about the green meadows, clear rushing streams, the bright blue skies with beautiful clouds, it's all just so wonderful! So he turns back to the swiftly receding spaceship and yells, "Wait! Come back! I want to go too! Please take me back!" But it's too late. That one haunted me for a LONG time.
On Thursday We Leave For Home was horrifying in that it portrayed a man (James Whitmore as William Benteen) so stubborn that he couldn't let go of his power and authority. He chose to stay behind rather than be rescued from a desolate planet. When the rescue ship took off, and he realized he'd made a huge mistake, it took a long time for me to forget the image of him running after the ship, crying for it to come back, come back.
Scariest episode had to be the one where people had gathered for the reading of a will but they all had to wear hideous masks. At the end when they took off the masks they had taken on the appearance of the mask they were wearing.
I remember the Twilight Zone film accident quite well having worked at the studio. It was a very intense time for everyone working in production. Likewise I was involved in the reboot of the series at CBS and all of the background issues, both costwise, production issues, etc. There were very few stories which came remotely close to the original series. It was one of the first series to use the EditDroid, a precursor to computerized editing, which the Exec Prod continually changed story lengths and episodic placement in each episode practically missing delivery every week to the Network for the weekly broadcast, as well as other issues.
I sat on the couch in the living room wrapped in a quilt, peeking out through a slit. (that protected me from ghosts, aliens, and scary people and monsters.) I watched them all. Rod Serling's voice would make me shiver. I LOVED IT! Dear Gods, has it been FIFTY odd years? I'm only now seeing familiar tv/movie stars in them! I'm enjoying them all over again. Thank you!!!! The Encounter!!!! George Takai!!!! I saw that one before discovering star trek fan. I STILL read everything he posts! (yes, 05/06/2023.) I thought Vic Morrow was a very sexy man when I was a kid, couldn't believe he was doing a Twilight Zone episode! I couldn't WAIT to see it......Ugh. Oh. That sucked. The accident, not the film. I still watched it in his memory, to see what he wanted to create. Loved the night gallery but it was a little less...Rod. Loved all the monster movies. I have since learned from Scooby Doo. People are the real monsters. Throw me all the vampires, mummies, and werewolves, I can take it and scarf down popcorn at the same time. It's the news that scares the crap out of me.
I can’t believe that this show wasn’t as popular when it first started. I remembered falling in love the first time I came across this show during NYE re-runs.
Thank you for the look back in time on our behalf, as viewers. I was a preteen when I started watching "The Twilight Zone," and I believe it was on Friday nights at 9:00 p.m. Occasionally, in the summertime, I would have a campout in our backyard with friends, but first we would go in and watch "The Twilight Zone," get scared, and then go out and sleep in the tent. This was in Columbus, Ohio. It was a time when our imaginations ran wild.
Ha! I literally did the same thing as a pre teen in Columbus, in my cousins backyard, they were my best friends at the time '71-'77. Good times! I also thought it so cool that RS incorporated Ohio towns in more than a few episodes!
My favorite episode has always been "Time Enough At Last" with Burgess Meredith. I can relate because, I need glasses for reading/needlework/computer use (I can walk around seeing things just fine, just need glasses for close work) and to see blind as a bat, Meredith not able to see anything when his glasses fell off his face just broke my heart. There is a great episode highlighting mob mentality/hysteria: "The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street". There is a cul-du-sac I drive past every day where the homes remind me of that episode and I can visualize the homeowners banding together to blame the weird goings on on someone on the street.
I''ve never thought that much of this episode. If the books have survived. Why wouldn't have other opticals and glasses. He's just the laziest of whiny bastards.
Twilight Zone is one of my top 5 favorites. The one with Agnes Moorehead scared the pants off me. The Time Enough episode hit me because I was a kid when it aired and I loved reading and was nearsighted and there was still the threat of Russia nuking us, so I identified with the main character. I started off enchanted by fairy tales and moved on to sci-fi. The old black and white sci-fi movies used to be on tv Fridays and Saturdays. The ones with the 50 foot tall woman, giant spiders, giant ants. The Japanese sci-fis. Wonderful stuff. Sci-fi addresses our fears. There’s so much change going on in the world. And some of those fears actually come true in real life. I saw a movie a few years ago about a society where just about everyone was connected through brain implants and libraries were a thing of the past but some people’s brains were incompatible with that so when the glitch occurred in the “net” the unconnected guy figured it out by consulting old library books and saved the day. So now we have people like Musk pushing something like implants and I’m laughing and thinking, Yeah what could POSSIBLY go wrong and it’ll be a cold day in hell before I go THAT far. So sentimentally. I’m putting twilight zone first.
My all time favourite show… ever. Started watching about 14 or 15 years ago, when my son bought a Twilight Zone DVD boxed set. I have been a huge fan ever since. His genius, and originality and influence over future writers, and future tv shows, is and was endless. Rod Serling gave us an endless catalogue of original and great stories that have gone unmatched , to this day. Thank you Mr. Serling!!
@@Robert.Martyr sometimes them bullfrogs be taking off, whenever I have time they shuck them up a bit, but consequently the hummingbird was the one the got away
So many great ones. One of my favorites of all time was when they had the devil locked up in a castle and a stranger doesn't listen to the brothers of the castle and release him. Scary and intriguing episode. Loved Twilight Zone and couldn't get enough of them even though they aired years before i was born.
The Obsolete Man episode is to this day quite brilliant. "To serve man" I think may be the most psychologically terrifying one. Rod was a brilliant storyteller. I loved the the show as a kid watching it in re-runs late at night. Good video. 👍
“To serve man” i was a 70’s baby. I remember watching a few of these. But let’s just say. If aliens show up and invite us to their world. I will stay right here.
My favorite was the the one starring Burgess Meredith , when he survived an atomic bomb blast ,discovering a treasure trove of books at the library but accidentally crushed his glasses. I was 8 years old in 1959 watching the Twilight Zone BCTV . My second favorite episode was when the devil tricked a man into freeing him from his cage..
After having cataract surgery and needing to wear reading glasses for any close viewing, that episode with Burgess Merideth became very personal for me.
Burgess Meredith was in four or five episodes, all which are memorable. One episode with Jack Warden, who played a prisoner on an asteroid was financed by Sterling himself after the original actor who was to play the prisoner died. Many actors who were not known at the time took parts, Robert Duval in 'Everything in Miniature,' Robert Redford, Cliff Robertson, Cloris Leachman, Jonthan Winters, Charles Bronson, Elizabeth Montgomery, Agnes Moorehead, Bill Mumy, Donna Douglas & my favorite episode - A Kind of a Stopwatch with Richard Erdman who also was in Stalag 17 as the Allied POW commander.
Burgess was a powerful actor! "The Obsolete Man" was really something I thought......Rod's commentary before and after was also extremely thought provoking.
@@glendanielson9006 LMAO, you have never had thought one, and you don't even know it. You have yet to answer the most obvious question there is: "is the ground there?" If you had, then the Time: 4,600,000,000 years it has "recorded" as being there would be "now playing" in your conscious moment, only you have never had a conscious moment or a thought of your own. You sit at your dish of time 2023 put in front of your mind. Your dog sits at its dish too, except your dog knows there is bag ( 10,000,000,002,023) that fills its 2023 dish, and you don't. YOU DON"T! I just proved your dog is more conscious than you! nana nana. If you were more conscious than your dog, it would be picking up your poop.
When I was a boy, stayed up and watched it with my Dad, I miss him. And I do agree with Serling, "Time Enough". was my favorite and Bergous Meredith was a great and powerful actor. - thanks for the frightening memories
I grew up watching The Twilight Zone... and have so many favorite episodes. My absolute favorite is "Nightmare at 20,000 feet" and I also loved "Next Stop, Willoughby", "Time Enough At Last", that one where the mannequin came back to the dept store to find out she wasn't a real person on vacation, the one where the kids went swimming and escaped to a different place/time with nice people instead of their selfish arguing parents. So many more! I would love to see "The Encounter" some day, it looks like it is really great and I love George Takei.
“The Howling Man” (season 2, episode 5) stands out in my mind as the personification of the idea that the Devil’s greatest trick is his ability to appear and disappear at will. The transformation sequence (camera follows him walking past several pillars and slowly transforming into the classic devil) was an impressive use of special effects on a very low budget that produced the desired result.
Watching that great episode on cable it seems to me the transformation has been trimmed - edited shorter than it’s full length. I recall the different shots of the transition were each a little longer and therefore scarier. It would be interesting to find out.
Serling was a compelling storyteller. Don't think he did movies or at least did very few. Amazing talent and with a conscience. The cliché: "never will be another" is appropriate here. How we need him today.
Long before The Twilight Zone (1959), he was known for writing such high-quality scripts as "Patterns" and "Requiem for a Heavyweight," both later turned into films (Patterns (1956) and Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962)). "Patterns", was broadcast live and it won Serling an Emmy Award. He won a second statuette the following year, 1957, for "Requiem for a Heavyweight", which starred Jack Palance as a washed-up prizefighter.
Serling was the sole screenwriter behind SEVEN DAYS IN MAY, a great political thriller. He also wrote THE MAN, a great foreshadowing of Obama's election. Yup, the film dared to ask.... COULD A BLACK MAN ACTUALLY BECOME PRESIDENT?! Being an early 70's film, this subject matter was still taboo.❤
Night Call is my favorite episode. The eerie voice on the phone and the revelation at the end still gets me every time. I actually watched The Encounter for the first time about 2 years ago. I've always been a fan of the show and assumed it was just one I had missed as a kid. I had no idea it was banned.
Rodman Edward Serling (December 25, 1924 - June 28, 1975) was an American screenwriter, playwright, television producer, and narrator/on-screen host. I think he was a genius. So it's hard for me to pick a fave episode. But "Little Girl Lost" would have all the ingredients of future episodes. Also, each show was well acted and filmed. Kudos to the whole creative team.
My favorite episode was is “ Walking Distance” with Gig Young. I am a native of Binghamton NY and grew up here and spent many days riding the Carousel at Recreation Park in Binghamton which is right near the old Serling Family Home. So it has a very special meaning for me. So when I moved back to Binghamton after being away many many years I went to Recreation Park to ride that carousel and I truly felt like I was part of that episode. It’s great to be home again! By the way they plan on putting up a bronze statue of Rod Serling in Recreation Park I believe sometime this year if I remember correctly from the local newspaper. Just an FYI the Triple Cities area is the Carousel Capital of the USA. There is also the Twilight Zone Museum here in Binghamton as well. Better Known as the Bundy Museum
The episode was "The Fever". I was about 10 at the time. I will never forget the slot machine calling "Franklin" over and over again. I may be misremembering it all, but the word franklin still sends chills up my spine. Great writing, acting directing. Plus: Rod Serling.
"The Grave" gave me chills at the end , The wind was blowing the opposite way so he came out the grave . Also, "Room for one more honey" had me shook to the bone
One that scared me when I was a kid was the one about Martha White shopping for a gold thimble for her aunt or grandmother. She had to go to the 13th floor in a department building which actually wasn't there. When she got there, these mannequins became alive and started swarming her...... scared the heck out of me, LOL
It was the "9th floor"- which the store didn't have. Actual buildings don't have "13th floors", because they're considered "unlucky". They skip between "12" and "14".
Used to watch it every week with my late father in the early 60's. It was one of his favourite programmes. Nightmare at 20000ft scared the crap outta me as a 7year old,72 now and can still remember William Shatner being dragged off the Plane in a straight jacket and the cowelling of the engine being torn back.
To me the scariest episode featured Billy Mumy as the kid who wished his neighbors out to the cornfield because he randomly chose those he believed had failed to please him or somehow offended him.
That episode was chillingly ahead of its time. Fifty years later, there are things we cannot say, even though they may be true, or we will get "banished to the cornfield." And what's right and wrong changes and is decided capriciously.
The Encounter was a very deep introspective view of veterans of war from opposing sides. I fail to understand the controversy, as we must all understand what vets go through. Sometimes Rod skips the sci-fi & offers a dark reality of men. Good episode my friend !👍👍👍
From what I remember reading back in the 70s, the reason for the episode being pulled was the scene where Takei's character reveals that his father had carved arrows into his field to guide the Japanese planes. This was a commonly repeated accusation after the attack, but was quickly debunked by investigators that couldn't find any evidence to support the claim. But like every other conspiracy theory that's been proven to have no basis in fact, it lived on for years. Japanese-American groups quite rightly protested the episode for perpetuating the lie, and the episode was pulled.
@@dsnitris2007 😁👍 I didn’t know about those factors, you mention, but I know that they suppressed it due to the hard-core racism from the white guy… Of course, they were actors, but also that George committed suicide after murdering the other man was quite a lot for people to deal with As this was telecast, May 1, 1964, so it was less than 20 years since the end of WW II, and most people remembered much of the hatred and horrible treatment to millions of people.
@@dsnitris2007 Are you aware of the Niihau incident? That was the basis for the concern regarding Japanese allegiance in Hawaii. I believe the "planting crops in the shape of arrows" story originated in California, not Hawaii.
Funny how the general public has come to accept the terrible treatment of Japanese/Americans in WW2 yet still have trouble with the gay population....both of which George Takei is a member.
@@259Den3 The basis was the attack itself, which resulted in Marital Law on the Islands, they were, after all, 5,000 miles from the mainland. Subs were off the California coast and oil fields were attacked, weakly, but still a fact, as were incendiary balloons floated to start fires in the Western States. Fu-Go balloon bombs.
I saw "The Encounter" only 10 years ago on Netflix. I was blown away by that episode. George Takei and the other co-star were magnificent. The intense moments were well done and the writing was excellent. It portrayed the amount of hate of a time period that we hope to never revisit.
I also saw "The Encounter." Unfortunately the "WOKE" crowd is promoting the kind of hate you are talking about. I thought as a country we were past that, but those who want to control everyone else can do a better job of it if we are fighting with each other. I pray we all wake up and stop fighting with each other before it is too late.
I loved that show. For my scariest, my choice is "Nightmare as a Child" where a woman is visited by a man who killed her mother years earlier. A young girl seems to know all about the murder and forces the woman to confront her suppressed memories. The woman narrowly escapes from being killed by the same man. Great example of horror without gore.
I have several favourite episodes, but don't find all that many of them actually scary, as much as just wonderfully twisted. For pure fright value, I think that the episode entitled "22" is the one that creeps me out the most. It's the one where the professional dancer, who has been hospitalised for exhaustion and stress, has a recurring nightmare about being invited into the morgue by a mysterious nurse who always says, "Room for one more, honey." The dream turns out to be more than just a simple dream, but that episode definitely stands out in my mind as one that makes my skin crawl every time I see it. For scariness, I'll also give a runner-up nod to "Death Ship", where a crew of space explorers, captained by Jack Klugman, land on a planet and find a copy of their own crashed ship, complete with their own dead bodies, and have to try to solve the mystery of whether the situation is real or illusion.
I was watching the reruns in the late 70's. Serling knew how to hold the audience and weave a tale. So many faves but I loved - "Will the real martian please stand up" from 1961.
Twilight Zone was a much anticipated family watch in our home. Rod Serling as the host created fear and suspense so casually. I was probably 10 years at the time and we go to bed after watching it sometimes scared but mostly astonished by these thought provoking and highly imaginative story ideas. The stories never disappointed. The ones that left the biggest impact on me were the Hitchhiker, with a woman driving alone seeing this Hitchhiker on the road over and over…following her and always there no matter how far she drove, yikes! Another was “ The monsters on Maple street” the lights go out except one house, people begin to blame and suspect and accuse each other and start fighting etc And then you see Aliens watching from above causing the problems waiting for them to kill each other so they can move in, and “Little girl lost” , when the parents can only hear the voice of their daughter in the wall somewhere and have to try to get her back through a shrinking portal. Most stories had a good messages displayed in unforgettable unimaginable conclusions that left you wanting more…and wondering about the consequences to the characters in these highly unusual stories. 😮 Rod Serling was such a talent. S
One of the great things about TTZ was that unlike its contemporary "The Outer Limits" it very rarely relied on a kind of "monster of the week" type of plot device. Perhaps Serling recognized the limitations of having a character reduced to a guy in a rubber suit or a puppet with eyes and how that would affect the story. Also, it differed from TOL in that it had no real problem with humorous stories which are not infrequent (Cavender is Coming, Once Upon a Time, From Agnes with Love). Admittedly often the humor is quite dark, and some episodes are fundamentally a joke with a twist punchline (The Man in the Bottle, A Most Unusual Camera, The Chaser). Even episodes like "Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up", and "To Serve Man" sort of fall into this last category even if as portrayed, the other characters find nothing funny in this episode at all. The fairly good satire on the Simpson's with regard to "To Serve Men" pretty much attests to this. Moreover, even as strange and fantastic as the situations were often portrayed, the characters themselves were readily identifiable as people with some depth. In fact some criticism might be applied to a certain over sentimentality to some of the stories, but it made the characters real people who dealt with envy, regret, guilt, and joy pretty much like anyone else. It's here that credit should given to Rod Serling's to not just for the teleplays for many of the episodes, but also for the production of good stories by other writers, perhaps most notably Richard Matheson and Charles Beaumont (whose own tragically short life could have been adapted for a TTZ episode itself).
Serling knew that the scariest monsters were humans, and he also knew how to manipulate humanity's fears through allegorical stories. Despite all that, he truly loved people, and hoped the human race would stop destroying itself and the planet.
"Mirror Image" is one of the episodes that spooked me the most. Woman at a bus station sees evidence of someone who looked just like her, yet she is alone most of the time. "When The Sky Opened" is my second favorite for its creepiness. Third is "The Howling Man".
My favorite original TZ episodes are, ironically, 'The Grave' and 'Mr. Garrety and the Graves'. Both are western themed episodes, but the first was a chilling ghost story while the second was a rare comedic episode. I really liked the 1985 TV revival of TZ. There were some really stories in the first season. I think its biggest problem was it carried the Twilight Zone name, and some couldn't look past that to give it a chance. I'd recommend it to any looking for a good horror/fantasy/sci-fi anthology.
One of my favorite episodes was "The Grave," with Lee Marvin as the bounty hunter, and with Elen Willard as the witchy Ione Sykes. My favorite scene is at the end, with Ione standing at her brother's grave, laughing as the wind blows her cloak.
I can’t imagine anyone else voicing The Twilight Zone other than Rod Serling. It’s hard to believe he wasn’t the first several considerations. I loved The Twilight Zone as a child growing up in the 60s. Eye Of The Beholder scared the crap out of me. They won’t ever make smart TV like this again. I also remember Serling doing a show called Night Gallery, but The Twilight Zone is the show that voice makes me quickly recall.
Nightmare at 20,000 Feet is for me the best episode because it perfectly captures what TZ was - the gray area between reality and unreality, between known and unknown. We are never told if Shatner's character was a lunatic who almost got all the passengers killed, or did he really see that creature and save everyone? It scared the audience and left us wondering.
I agree this was a great episode. When Shatner pulled aside the curtain from the window and the gremlin's face was pressed up against the glass, my whole family jumped and gasped and my mom shrieked. However, your memory is a bit faulty regarding the conclusion. Next time it airs watch the ending more closely. As Shatner is being wheeled away he tells wife he's the only one who knows that everything's all right now. The camera then pans up to show the wing of the plane, and it clearly shows that a part of the wing over the engine has been pried up, thereby affirming that the gremlin was real. Further, Serling's narration mentions something to the effect that soon everyone will know.
That was my younger sister's fave too. She was born in '54 and always went for the "One Step Beyond" type genre... her fave TZ besides the monster at 20,000 feet, was the episode of the Department Store mannequins who once a year got to be real people and the tragedy and tears involved when they had to once again return to the Department Store to harden into the mannequins for which they existed. Crazy shit!
FAVORITE TWILIGHT ZONE EPISODE? 🤔
will the real martian please stand up
Time Enough at Last is my favorite. Still a book worm at 70.
"The Last Flight" is definitely my favorite.
To Serve Man
"The After Hours"
I grew up with the Twilight Zone. Today I think I am in one.
Me too!
Ditto, and the Internet has a lot to do with it. . .
@@davidflitcroft7101 Going...my way!?
I can completely relate to your comment.
The Brandon Zone?
I'm 64 and been watching these my whole life..never get bored with them...what a brilliant landmark in tv entertainment...it didn't get much better...thank you Rod and all the fledgling stars...tons of memories...wow
No it hasn't gotten any better than Rod Serling and the Twilight Zone in all these decades later
I’m with you. I never get tired of watching them.
I still watch the Twilight Zone reruns at the age 71
I''m 77 and watch them @@m.m.583
Im 69 and watching them now
The best "gotcha moment" to me was the one where a woman was waiting to see the outcome of surgery to fix her face. The big moment comes. The bandages are removed and she is beautiful but doctors and nurses are horrified. Then you see them and they are grotesque which apparently is the norm in The Twilight Zone.
That was a good one !
"Eye of the Beholder" -- it totally freaked me out as a young child.
I called them "the pig faces" traumatized the hell out of me when I was 8 yrs old !
Such a good lesson in judging people.
The gorgeous Donna Douglas, in 1960, at 28 (1962-71, was "Elly May" on The Beverly Hillbilies) was the "ugly" one! Outstanding casting, ugly faces, and reverse psychology in "Eye of the Beholder" (aired Nov. 11, 1960) making it one of the best episodes, and certainly one of the most memorable! She lived to be 82 (Sep. 26, 1932 - Jan. 1, 2015).
The Obsolete Man is my all-time favorite episode. It's message about the rights of man over government still resonates with us today.
Is that the one where Burgess Meredith is being judged by the government that is a little too much like ours today?
Romney Wordsworth. Great name
The unapologetic manner with which Rod closed out that episode, as with so many others with that final thought to ponder on. I can only wonder about the families who saw that air around dinner time, and the thought provoking conversations on the subject that ensued.
that is one of my favorite episodes
Ahead of its time . And 1984
There was an episode where an elderly woman is so afraid that death is stalking her that she won't open her door to anyone just in case it invites death in. She sees a young man played by Robert Redford beaten and hurt in the street and lets him in. HE is death and convinces her that death is not something to fear but to embrace. The conversation between them is so brilliantly written
I saw that show and I agree with you
Yep. One of the episodes that stays in my mind.
i liked "kick the can" and " the old guard"
The name of that episode is nothing in the dark
Propaganda for suicide.
As a kid growing up in the 70's Twilight Zone wasn't really that old. Now I'm old and the Twilight Zone is a reality.
You aint whisteling Dixi
THAT PART
TRUTH!!!
Yes, we are witnessing the twilight of the USA. If this situation (in particular this government) is not reversed soon, it will be too late.
I grew up in the 50s/60s so the Twilight Zone and the Alfred HItchcock Hour were my TV mainstays before mom made us go to bed.
Rod was so ahead of his time. I love the way he used the genre of horror/sci-fi to address social iissues.
Right Sterling was an absolute genius! The executives referred to him as “the angry Young Man“ because they would upset him by interfering with his shows. That is part of the reason why he decided to stop after five years… Burn out from dealing with all the BS. Then, a few years later, he was hosting the night gallery, but it was nowhere as good as twilight zone.
Sadly, we lost him in 1975 at the age of 50 as he died on the operating table while they were dealing with his heart problems from smoking three packs of cigarettes every day. Damn, sad!
@@divinewon73 Very Sad! He was a wonderful man & person. He was also so fair to all in his employ. (Other Writers.) When he won the award, he said we will all get together and carve it up like a Thanksgiving Turkey. (Thanksgiving or Christmas. I forget!) I have to say, I loved the show's "Hocus Pocus and Frisby."
Too Cute!! 🛸
@@divinewon73 Based on the description of when he returned from the war, I would add PTSD to the mix of stress and burnout. It was called "Shell Shock", the predecessor of PTSD. My Dad was in WW2, survived Peal Harbor and his ship getting torpedoed later on. I recognized my symptoms when I got back from Vietnam as the same symptoms he had. RIP, Rod...
@@divinewon73
Makes you wonder that had Sterling survived into the 1980s, would he have found vindication and a second chance in the post
Star Wars,post Halloween SCI-fI,horror,fantasy revival of genre films of the 1980s,the way Gene Roddenberry did with Star Trek
The Motion Picture, and Star Trek The Next Generation?
Imagine Sterling working Steven Spielberg,John Carpenter, John Landis, Ridley Scott, and being reunited with Richard Donner on major
films, or getting to do a syndicated show with no studio interference.
Rod Sterling was amazing
Absolutely loved all the episodes. And so well written that they impacted you differently at various phases of life. Like "Stop at Willoughby", "Kick the Can", and especially "Walking Distance"... all were good as a kid, but really resonated even more so as an adult in my 40s and 50s.. show is an absolute masterpiece
"Stop at Willoughby". . .
. . .you know that guy’s finally enjoying the bandstand playing under a summer evening sky with a glass of ice cool lemonade right?
I couldn't agree more completely. Well stated.
" To serve man".
"The last flight"
"Long live Walter Jamison"🙂
I loved it when one reviewer watching a present-day movie said, "Yes, it was a good idea, but it took him 2 hours to do what Rod Serling could have done in 22 minutes."
That's because today episodics contain two shows in one. The main show is the firemen, police, Doctors. The Secondary is their personal home lives. All the shows follow pretty much the same structure. A "soft" open with main characters talking about things cracking jokes interrupted by THE EMERGENCY! or THE CRIME! The heroes come near death as they battle the fire. The doctor shows use the old private eye trick where the police detective tolld the private eye not go near this crime. Of course he does and solves it despite pressure from on high. In the doctor shows, the doctor is told to stay off this patient for whatever reason. Of course he doesn't and saves the patient. To fill out an hour, personal lives are developed which also serves to make people identify with main characters so they will watch every episode. You could take the script of almost any of these shows and switch it to another cop/doctor/layer show with only minimal edits. Familiarity replaces creativity.
So true, for most TV shows and movies these days.
Bet that was me! I said that!!
@@larryarsenault You mean REPETITION replaces creativity?
@@stuartlee6622 You said....WHAT? never mind.
"Changing of the Guard" was and is my favorite Twilight Zone episode. Donald Pleasence played a boarding schoolteacher who thought that no one he taught through so many decades learned anything from him. When the ghosts of past students who were influenced in life by him came back to let him know that he made a difference in their lives. The only episode to make me cry!
It made me cry too. It inspired me to be a schoolteacher. I have 22 years service, and I am 5 years from retirement.
You do make a difference. Hopefully, the younger generation LISTENS!!!!!!!!!!!!
the movie Mr Holland's Opus was a kind of expanded version of that Twilight Zone episode
@@mosesCordovero-uw5vw Agreed.
Awww That's so sweet. Heartfelt , I like it.I was a teacher for 6 years.
I LOVED the Twilight Zone-- and I still think it was one of the very best, most imaginative, most thought-provoking TV shows ever created. Hats off to Rod Serling!
Couldn't agree moreNReeves...a body of creative work right up there. A benchmark series of creative writing and the cinematography was very strong too. Yes, an all time favorite of mine. Rod Serling - what he went through in war and possibly other significant events left us all with what emerged inhis writings from those experiences.
The Outer Limits and Night Gallery should be on that list as well.
@@MichaelClark-uw7ex As an adult I love all three. When I was a child for some reason "Twilight Zone" was my favorite. It was more disturbing.
What was neat about the TZ is that it brought issues to the screen that were current problems in society.🤔
It's weird that the show suffered low ratings at points, and also could not attract sponsors. What the heck? It's such a creative show. Maybe viewers were scared, literally.
Rod Serling was The Twilight Zone. His voice was so soothing and when I heard it, I’d run to the tv set.
Right on!!
@Jjchg, Just like Pavlov's dog?
A ton of tv stars took up smoking just to look cool.
30 fathom grave is the one that scared me the most
& then turn green and die when they became 70 or thereabouts.
My father was a member of the 221 Airborne Medical Company in the 11th Airborne Division. He knew Rod personally during the war. So, when the beginning of any Twilight Zone episode started it was dead silence in the room so dad could hear what Rod had to say. Like Rod my dad had a cigarette in his hand constantly and died in his 50s of a different form of cancer then lung cancer. Many of the 11th Airborne Division were declared Nuclear Vets due to their occupation of Japan after the war and going to Hiroshima.
That’s awesome. Thank you for your dad for serving
Horrible 😢hey I have a girljapanoccupied it says on the bottom of it was my nana's now I know what that means 😮😮Thank you sir for your service
My father loaded ordinance for circle R on Tinanin,Ennola Gay !!!
@@ultimateactivitiesdude2685 Do you actually hear yourself. You are thanking him for his dad in the military before he was born. You morons do not realize you say thank you to us Vets but its really a fuck you. It is quite insulting.
"Military men are DUMB, STUPID animals to be USED in foreign policy". Henry Kissinger.
Changing of the Guard, one of the Christmas episodes. In which a forcibly-retired school teacher is visited by the ghosts of past students, informing him that he taught them loyalty, honour, courage, sacrifice, bravery, compassion, empathy. That their victories are also his, and sheesh, simply remembering the episode brings tears to my eyes.
That is my favorite episode. He wasn't sure if he had an impact on his students. He was meet with a resounding yes
Sounds like it's a good episode. I'll have to check it out.
yes. not suspenseful, no monsters, but ghosts, and donald pleasance,
who would soon play ‘dr. no’ which was later spoofed as ‘dr. evil’
@@iracordem Donald Pleasance often played a villain. He was one of the Ernst Stavro Blofelds in the James Bond franchise, and he was also the bad guy in Fantastic Voyage. But he played against type as the saintly Reverend Septimus Harding in Barchester Towers.
@@AlexanderJWei 😎
The one episode that immediately sticks out in my mind, and not necessarily the scariest, but was a combination of scary, humorous, and clever, is the one where the aliens were recruiting Earth people to go back home with them. After a book they provided to the humans was decoded or translated as, "To Serve Man". As the humans were boarding the spaceship, someone came out and said, "Wait, it's a cookbook!"
To Serve Man.....is the title of that episode.
This was the most memorable episode for me as well. The way it started with the scientist in a room on the spaceship, trying to imagine what awaits him when the ship arrives at who knows where and being the only person to know that he is actually on the menu. I saw it in my teens on a late night re-run. It's hard for me to imagine that I am now 8 years older than Rod Serling was when he died, I tell myself to be happy that I am getting old, when so many other people are gone before they can be old.
It was completely ridiculous. They would come all the way to earth to eat us. Really
@@shepardsmith3235 you acting like this was real! 🤣🤣
@@rodprops If I thought that way I would have gone into how we taste. etc. LOL
Twilight Zone, Night Gallery and Outer Limits have all been on the cutting edge of thrilling storytelling. As a kid, I loved to be terrified by Twilight Zone! My older brother and I were enthralled! Each episode was unique. Characters were believable and the story stretched your mind into unlikely places. The people who acted in the stories went on to become stars. It’s fun to see the younger version of these well known personalities. I remember the stories, but I can’t recall the names of the episodes. I think Rod Serling was a terrific writer and it was a sad day indeed when these awesome shows were cancelled. There has never been another series of short stories that could equal these gems. Thank you for sharing this glimpse into the past. I loved it! ❤
Amen to that accolade.
The was also One Step Beyond.
100% Ditto my friend.
All 3 that you listed were and still are some of the best, most creative short story platforms ever brought to television. Wonderful in my youth and still a treasure today.
"One Step Beyond" is the poor man's version of the Twilight Zone.
"Time Enough At Last" with Burgess Meredith is just so heartbreaking to watch. "It's not fair!" is a fitting quote from it.
That one was the most emotionally traumatizing to me. I tear up just thinking about it, it made me so sad for him! Even as a kid, I felt the weight of that cruel irony, and the tragedy of his fate. Heart wrenching, indeed...
Although the one with the kid making someone's mouth disappear was kind of horrific, as an image, none of the others affected me as deeply as that one did, maybe because I was an only child who could not get enough of books! It was a pain I could relate to, both in the solitary existence and his dismay at not being able to read after so briefly feeling the joy of having so many just waiting for him alone to enjoy at last! Yes, that one might have hinted at the idea that God, if real, might just be a huge asshole...
@@UpRoaryus I always thought, he could just search through the rubble of countless drug stores until he found a pair of reading glasses
@@amain325 Oooh, if I had thought of that, it might have minimized the legitimate trauma that ep put me through. My heart hurt for him -,such a cruel misfortune!
My favorite episode!🎉
Burgess Meredith said he received more fan mail over that one episode than any other performance. Perhaps his character could have eventually found another pair of glasses, but the point is inescapable: in all-out nuclear war, there are no winners.
Like many of you, I have probably seen every episode of the Twilight Zone as a child or later as an adult. As a result, I can recognize every episode in less than :30. The 4 stories I've chosen may not be the scariest or as well known, but they have twisted surprise endings that are both thought provoking and disturbing.
"The Howling Man" season 2, ep.5 - has one the most visually stunning transformations of the Devil incarnate on screen.
"The Invaders" season 2, ep. 15 - This is the only story, to my knowledge, where the main and lone character (Agnes Morehead) has no dialog. It is a cinematic hypnotic experience.
"Back There" season 2, ep.13 (my fav) - An answer to the question of cause and effect. When the main character, just by chance, travels back in time to the day Lincoln got shot.
"Perchance to dream" season 1, ep.9 - Where the main character, in reality (Richard Conte), dies in the opening scene of the story.
Submitted for your approval.
I was born in 1952. Our parents wouldn't have a TV in the house until we had graduated from public school in first place. My older sister didn't, but I did. The Agnes Moorhead episode cemented my interest in science fiction. I continued to sneak over to a girlfriend's house to watch Twilight Zone and Outer Limits on her .TV
:-) The Howling Man.. whew...you're right, as a kid, that transformation..hard to sleep at night after watching. As an adult I can appreciate the themes so much more..and still love that episode
My favorite is 'Young Man's Fancy' and 'Ring a Ding Girl'.
You picked good eps.
I have every episode on disc and every winter I tell myself I'm going to marathon through and watch all of the twilight zone episodes but I haven't done it yet. I'll go pick out these though, the ones people have suggested and watch them...
@@suzyskye733 "Howling Man" and "The Invaders", "Night Call", "Living Doll" and "Stop at Willoughby" round out my Top 5
I loved the episode with Agnes Moorehead... a woman terrorized by small invaders who were actually our astronauts. She never spoke a word... pure acting.
I also loved the episode where astronauts landed on a planet and there were tiny people on there. Then giants at the end.
One of my favorites.
The best episode they made. It was supposed to be about Russian cold war hysteria.
That's really wild that you mentioned those episodes together because, "The Invaders" starring Agnes Moorehead was the very first episode of the Twilight Zone I ever saw, when I was a kid, and my second episode was the other one you mentioned titled "The Little People" that starred Claude Atkins and Joe Maross.
Yeah, that WAS a good one! I like the twist at the end.
@@elizabethblackwell6242 They could make that same hysteria about Russia today! Russia is NOT our worst enemy! Neither is China! The worst enemy of the people (wherever they live), is their own, lying government! None more so than the scheming, power-mad, money-hungry U. S. government! Liberal historian Howard Zinn, correctly noted and is quoted on YT saying, "governments lie, or they wouldn't last as a government for very long!
The Howling Man scared the heck out of me. The Lonely and The Rip VanWinkle Caper have to be my runner-up favorites. Time Enough at Last is my all-time favorite.
The Howling Man scare me too!
So sad we lost Rod fairly early. He was such a creative genuis!!!!
Smoked himself to death !
The dude smoked on every episode
My exact thoughts of him as well.
@@anthonymanson1487 If you get the Blu-rays you'll see he does a cigarette commercial after almost every episode.
I'm in the camp of burned-bright. Nobody lives forever, and I think Rod Serling made his own choices.
The dude did more great writing than 10 of his peers combined.
I loved every single episode that Burgess Meredith was in.
1. The Obsolete Man; where he's a prisoner who's crime is reading books.
2. Time Enough at Last, again the bookworm only this time he's a meek little guy whose love of books gets him abused by family and job until a nuclear war wipes them all out.
3. Printer's Devil, where he literally plays Satan and was really scary. These were all fabulous performances.
4. Twilight Zone: The Movie, where he was just the narrator.
MY personal favorite, however, is the hilarious Mister Dingle, the Strong. A walk in the park for an actor of Meredith's skill, but so funny as the mild mannered, not-too-very-bright protagonist who becomes the center of a series of Alien experiments.
That was the genius of Rod Serling. You felt deep pity for a man because he broke his glasses. I really miss this kind of intelligent entertainment.
@@vogelstevAbsolutely the best episode of the entire series, by far. It’s Greek tragedy. I first saw the episode when I was maybe 4 or 5 years old. It haunted me so for many, many years. Even when I could only remember vague aspects of it, it disturbed me, even in my dreams. To this day I rewatch it whenever I can during the TZ marathons on Sci Fi network. Also, strangely, I have always had a somewhat compulsive need to handle my eyeglasses very gently and protect them at all costs… my wife says I’m maniacal about it. I always blame it on this episode, and she eases up on me. 🤓
@@ForAFreshStart You made me laugh - since I've manged to break THREE pair of eyeglasses in the past TWO months.
Agreed, the Burgess Meredith episodes are my favorites too.
Time enough ar last was my favorite with the one with the kid Anthony a close second.
The best TV series in history. The writing, acting and direction was incredible.
The 2019 revival/rehash is much too woke!!!🤔
@@robdykejr You can't remake a masterpiece. There can be only one Mona Lisa. And there is only one Twilight Zone.
@@robdykejr Yeah they really need to stop trying that. There's nothing wrong with the old school 50's voice but writing over that kind of destroys American culture - his voice set the tone for the whole series. I never want to see anybody else try it in general now. The writing and directing in hollywood is too awful. Will take an avante garde writer to take it over. The irony is Serling was actually too progressive for producers. They censored a lot of his African American characters (such as based on Emmitt Till) for other fill ins (Jewish instead, etc). So it's not as if he wasn't for equality. But forcing a whole style change with a completely different host was indeed woke.
@@maskcollector6949 :💯👌
@@robdykejr I didn't watch all the eps but I disagree. The one with the cop with an itchy trigger was great,,, it is good that Jordan Peele used the platform to write intelligent shows with social commentary, That's exactly what Rod Serling did too as alluded in this video, he would have approved
“Living Doll” with Telly Savalas gave me the creeps for decades!! 😂
Both "Talky Tina" and Mattel's "Chatty Cathy" doll on which the episode was based, were voiced by the incomparable June Foray ❤
I'm talking Tina and I hate you! To Telly Savalas 😅
She was the original creepy doll and still scary. Chucky and Annabelle don’t have anything on Talky Tina
Did it?
Me Too I still can't 👀@Night🤨👀
I can't see my life without this show. It's an iconic part of American history.
You can just hum "doo doo DOO doo, doo doo DOO doo" and everyone knows what you mean.
You can't see life without a TV show? Oh boy...
@@Cantthinkofahandle117
yup
The episode "Litle Girl Lost" in Season 3 scared me for years as a kid. A time warp or portal had opened up on the wall of a little girl's bedroom. Her parents hear her cries "mommy where are you?" but they can't see her. Eventually they get her back in the bedroom before the time warp slams shut forever. I could not sleep next to my bedroom wall for years after that show.
Haha! Me too!
That's probably where Spielberg got the idea for "Poltergeist"
@@blisterbrainThat's exactly where he got the idea.
yep me too, moved my bed
when I was a young boy after seeing that episode I told my father we better check the walls this was one of the greats
The episode with the department store manikins coming to life after closing…as a kid, that was terrifying to me & I’ve often thought of it.
Indeed‼️I was never the same after watching that episode😳🤨
That was one of the most haunting.
marsha marsha marsha come back marsha :)
Now you are giving me the Creeps .Who was the actress ? She played in many TV shows.
"Oh, come off it Marsha"
It's really tough to pick a favorite. The ones I talked about as a kid were the one with the beauty standards and ugly doctors, the one with Burgess Merideth and the books. and of course we all talked about "To Serve Man" regularly. My school had us read "Monsters on Maple St." aloud and do a report on it. Classic. But it was my dad, who was on set for a Twilight Zone episode but they didn't use him at the last minute... who made me think about the show and talked about his favorites, one being "The Invaders" (season 2, episode 15) --the one with Agnes Moorhead as a wordless victim of tiny robots or something but the twist ending was perfect. We loved that one. Dad also loved "Shadow Play" where the trial kept resetting. And the 5 characters trying to get out of the trap... he wanted me to watch that one when I was pretty little. -- I realized as I grew to adulthood that the ones that got me the most were the misdirection ones like where things get reversed at the end like "The Invaders" but more than that I loved the Time Travel ones. The WW1 Pilot showing up in 1959 and having to get back to his time... gives me goose bumps... the one where the 1861 guy heads over the ridge for medicine and arrives in 1961 - But I think my favorite one for time travel was "Walking Distance" from season 1... the one with Gig Young arriving in his childhood town and seeing himself at 10 years old.. and remembering things long buried. Fascinating. I also still love "the Lonely" Jack Warden stranded on a planet for being a nuisance back on earth... and getting a companion. That kills me.
I forgot to add.....The thing that made Twilight Zone so creepy was every episode was a assault on your mind. Almost no monsters. Mr. Serling got our attention and just as he has us watching a plot line, he reverses everything at the end to make you think.........."WOW"!!
"WOW!" or "WHOA!"?
There were plenty of monsters, but human ones, not BEMs.
@@deborahfreedman333 You are right, Deborah. I stand corrected- human monsters it is !
@@deborahfreedman333 Oh, there WERE BEMS, don't you worry!
Agreed. Another thing that made the Twilight Zone so creepy was US. Those shows had the ability to shine a light on us humans at our most violent, bigoted, greedy, petty, egomaniacal, illogical, on and on. A story with those kinds of creatures will always be scarier than any made-up monster will ever be.
They were all scary when I was a kid! As an adult, I was unsettled by the episode that starred Billy Mumy as a child who could 'do' things. Including get away with murder and worse! It did prove that he was an incredible child actor though!
Yes. I agree. Especially when Billy Mumy turned that guy into a Jack n The Box
In Lost in Space he was described as " Beyond Excellence".
Absolutely one of my all time favorite child actors. He was/still is incredible.
That was my favorite and it was chilling .
Yeah, "It's A Good Day" is/was another of my favorites!
An episode that made an impression on me as a kid was the one where this traveler stumbles on some monks who claim to have captured the devil and have him imprisoned. Of course, the guy doesn't believe them and lets him out. There's a memorable scene in which the prisoner transforms from an ordinary looking man into the devil in stages, as he walks past some pillars in the monastery after being released.
That episode was truly frightening!
That's the scariest one for me
Which episode was that ,,
@@samsingh3753 It's called "The Howling Man," from Season 2
Serious life lesson about the consequences of trust. I have referenced this episode throughout my life.
The Grave - The acting talent in this episode is incredible; the cast includes Lee Marvin, Strother Martin, Lee Van Cleef, and James Best.
Wow good information
I remember the ACCIDENT VicMorrow was my crush
Now we've awakened in THE MATRIX knowing we are
SIMULATIONS 😮
Yep!
Yes, that one gave me chills!
Yeah, the wind wasn't blowing in that direction
Creepy
The one with Billy Mumy in it was classic. I was about 5 or 6 when that came out and Billy was my hero. Especially when he turned one of his antagonist into a jack in the box. The fear in the adults that had to deal with him was palpable.
The name of this episode is "It's a Good Life" and is IMO the most frightening, unsettling and hardest to watch TZ episode of all because of the utterly omnipotent power it ascribed to the selfish, unthinking, uncaring and completely capricious whims of a 6 year old! While many TZ episodes had an ending that left the characters & the viewers with some degree of hope for the future/survival if the story were true, this episode left both with no hope at all!
Don Keefer was the man turned into the Jack-In-The-Box, my boyhood best friend was his son, John.
Billy was not doing it in a good way, either; He was drunk with power, and the entire town feared, and hated him. In the opening scene, He makes a playmate disappear.
It was interesting that this episode, and many others, were set in Ohio; Ohio at that time, was considered as American Middle Class, as you can get. Serling also attended Kenyon College, in Gambier; about 50 miles northeast of Columbus, and about 30 miles, north of Newark.
The Movie, "Children of the Corn", was filmed in New England-influenced Northeastern Ohio, east of Cleveland and Akron; and some scenes from "Brubaker" were filmed at the now-closed Junction City State Prison, east of Lancaster, and south of Newark.
Incidentally, Billy Mumy reprised his Role, as a grown man, who had a daughter, with his "power" on one of the newer "Twilight Zones". As I remember it, They ended up destroying the town, and its residents, and Billy tells his daughter, somewhat ominously; "Let's go, to the City" (Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati? Maybe a city, in a nearby State, or in Canada?).
yes... i just mentioned that one...
That was really was terrifying!!
Death's Head Revisited was pure horror genius. The acting was incredible. The subject matter was horrific. Joseph Schildkraut rarely blinked in the episode. As Alfred Becker, the ghost of a concentration camp inmate, he acted extremely ghostly. It was pure genius.
The ep is one of my faves too. Oscar Beregi as the evil and unrepentant Capt. Lutze was also brilliant casting.
Schildkraut did actually survive the concentration camps.
I visited Dachau just a couple years after this was filmed. It is definitely a creepy place, but not much like the appearance in this episode.
@@TheBuck1283 They used an old western set outside of Hollywood for the episode.
@@TheBuck1283 The set where Deathshead Revisited was filmed was a set constructed for a western movie that was never finished. The set fell into disrepair and became weathered. It was perfect to shoot his episode because it was supposed to be abandoned since the end of World War II.
I do not remember the title but I can quickly describe the episode that I remember the most.
It takes place in a cabin/lake house. All shots are from within the home.
An old woman (70s?) is home alone at night, the lighting in the home is pre-electric.
Anyway, she is being attacked by 4" tall space-suited creatures and is in the fight of her life. You, the viewer are with her. Cheering her on.
When she finally kills the last creacher you are rewarded with your first look through the window.
On the ground is a 'flying saucer' with "USA" inscribed on it's side.
The woman never speaks, but she is terrorized by the small space ship. The woman was played by Agnes Moorehead and it was called "The Invaders".
My favorite, too. Scared the cp@p outta me.
Agnes Moorhead went on to play Endora the awful mother in law in Bewitched
I'm sorry, but there were a few shots where she was on the roof, trying to fight off/scare away the invaders. It starred the great Agnes Moorhead in her pre_Endora/Bewitched days. She also never had a single line of dialog except for a few grunts, groans and screams.
That sounds cool. I'm gonna binge old TZ today I think. I'm off because of the Coronation.🖖👌👍
Best quote ever is Gangster says "what kind of heaven is this!?!?" Dark Angel says laughing historically "What makes you think this is heaven."
Ii remember that one, yes, He wins every game of pool.
THIS IS THE OTHER PLACE, he maniacally laughs! Just call Pip!
I think of this episode every time I think something isn’t going “my way.”
@@dr.christopherdiaz4473 me too!!!
"Look, I don't belong in Heaven, see? I want to go to 'The Other Place'!"
"HEAVEN? Whatever gave you the idea you were in 'Heaven', Mr. Valentine? THIS *IS* 'THE OTHER PLACE'!!!!!!!!!!"
My favorite episodes are "A Stop at Willoughby" which was truly horrifying. "Walking Distance" (another favorite) was so profound and I literally bawled the first time I saw it. The speech Gig Young gave at the ferris wheel was tragic. That show was way ahead of it's time and I adore it. I have seen every episode. The scariest for me would have to be "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet" and "The Hitchhiker" is the most haunting. How horrifying would it be to be dead and on a loop. Night Gallery was brilliant as well.
A stop at Willoughby is great . Gig Young ?
Interesting that you found "A Stop at Willoughby" to be horrifying. It was one of my favorite episodes and hardly horrifying to me at all. To me, it was so gratifying to see an unhappy, miserable man, running the rat race of commuting from the suburbs to the city and back again, find happiness in the bucolic little village of Willoughby. Of course he had to die to get there permanently, but, having found the love and happiness he so desperately wanted, I like to think he would have made the same choice again. As a 13 to 15 year old unhappy child at the time, perhaps I saw the episode quite differently than some may have.
A Stop At Willoughby. This is the episode that stuck in my mind from childhood.
I too suggested, "Walking Distance" - it's such a beautiful, nostalgia-inspiring episode.
@@usafjoch Agree that it was more heartwarming than horrifying.
“Time Enough at Last” - absolutely the best episode of the entire series, by far. I’m heartened to learn that it was Rod Serling’s favorite as well. It’s pure Greek tragedy. I first saw the episode when I was maybe 4 or 5 years old. It haunted me so for many, many years. Even when I could only remember vague aspects of it, it disturbed me, even in my dreams. To this day I rewatch it whenever I can during the TZ marathons on Sci Fi network. Also, strangely, I have always had a somewhat compulsive need to handle my eyeglasses very gently and protect them at all costs… my wife says I’m maniacal about it. I always blame it on this episode, and she eases up on me. 🤓
I always thought, he could just search through the rubble of countless drug stores until he found a pair of reading glasses
This episode was my favorite since I loved to read and got into so much trouble for reading. Such a strange life I had.
Time enough at last was to me a very wise cautionary tale that you can't take for granted that you will have all the time in the world to achieve all your bucket list items. You need to do some of those now while you can because you may not be able to in the future...even if you finally have all the time in the world...time at last ;)
That episode is one of my favorites, too. It's a testimony to Murphy's Law! Finally, having all the free time to indulge and losing the opportunity in a split second due to a careless mistake. 🤦
As a goggle-glassed bookworm I identified so closely with Burgess Meredith. I cried when I saw the original episode. Even now, as I write this, tears come to my eyes.
Rod Sterling was Way ahead of his Time With the Subject matters on Twilight zone.
True but the t.z. was a product of the the show one step beyond which was years before.
How was his other show, Night Call?
@@matthewschwartz6607 Night Gallery.
@@tobezone - Yes, that was what I meant. Call was the episode of the Twillght Zone .
Yes all sci Fi writers are.
Pure genius, never will there be another, so many incredible memories, a classic until the end of time. Eternal thanks, Mr. Serling ❤
The scariest episode I remember was Little Girl Lost. The girl disappeared into another dimension. Although she was eerily crying throughout the house, her parents couldn't figure out where she was. They finally figured out how to enter this other dimension to rescue her, and they drew a door in chalk on her bedroom wall. It was frightening for me, thinking that such a portal existed - and in a bedroom! I was so afraid that I would disappear like she did!
I remember this episode like it was yesterday!
Yes, VERY scary and creepy!
I haven't seen that episode, but I have read the short story it was based on.
Several Twilight Zone episodes were based on previously published, print stories, by some of the better writers out there at the time.
Do you think that was the protagonist for the movie, Poltergeist? I do. I think a lot of movies were inspired by a Twilight Zone episode.
@@cynthiabarrow1867 Yes, most likely. (Poltergeist was frightening!)
The most frightening for me was the one where the characters were lost by falling into the wall. Remember going to bed that night and scared as hell of the nearby wall.
It was called "Little Girl Lost".
Yep, I remember that....VERY scary....
Yes, THAT was the scariest for me as well. One of the saddest is the mannequin one....
@@SafetySpooon the creepiest was the mannequin one
Terrified me as a child, and at times still does.
Time Enough at Last is, for a reader like me, absolutely the most terrifying episode of The Twilight Zone. To have all the undisturbed time in the world, and all the books at your finger, and not be able to read?
It gives me the shivers.
(But I'll read the ingredients list on the cereal box if there's nothing else. I will NEVER understand the people who say they haven't read even one book in the last year as if it's something to be proud of. I can tear through two a WEEK, depending on difficulty level.)
I always thought of this episode’s ending as rather mean-spirited. In many Zone episodes, people get what’s coming to them. This guy hadn’t hurt anybody, done anyone wrong as far as we can tell, and yet he gets screwed in the end. What was that all about?
Fantastic presentation 😂! Being a Rochester native I was surprised to learn of Rod Serling's death here 😮. Rod Serling was a creative genius & national treasure 🤩.
There was an episode where a man and his dog go to the afterlife. He comes to a gate where the man in front describes a great existence. The dead man seems like he will go in, but then he is told no dogs allowed. He decides to go on. At the next entrance he asks the man guarding the entrance if he can bring his dog. The guardian says yes. The dead man says, "I couldn't bring him in at the other place." The guardian replies, "That was the 'Other Place'."
The devil will trick you any which way he can. Could not fool a hunting dog. Rachel will be along soon.
Oh yeah! I forgot about that one!
An Excellent example of Deception
Amen. The devil deceives, distracts, and discourages us from getting God's blessings. @@xxvvkx9312
I knew I would find someone else who loved this episode in the comments. I Really enjoyed this episode. 👍🏼
When we get to Heaven or the other place it will be the place best suited for us..@@machwal4464 Spending eternity in the Ozarks was his Heaven.
I think my scariest TZ episode was none other than "Talkie Tina" the pre-Chucky scary doll. That gave me nightmares when I was a kid watching this at my grandmother's in the early 80s reruns. Rod Seeking was way ahead of his time.
It was the scariest by far
Great episode
Yeah, how can no one bring up Talky Tina when talking about scariest episodes?!
That was terrifying.
@@thing12games44 Telly Savalas played he dad in that episode
My brother and I used to tie strings to a doll my mom had and made it move at midnight. This was inspired by talking Tina
Oh yeah! I forgot about that one. My sister had a Chatty Kathy doll. After that episode I stopped pulling on Chatty Kathy's string! 😅
They showed "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" in my school, and it made a deep impression on me. Years later, I learned that it was based on a terrific Ambrose Bierce story. Both the original story and the short film are incredible.
I too saw Occurance at Owl Creek Bridge. I too was in the NYC school system. I think I saw it in 9th grade, decades ago.
I saw the original airing and the story stuck with me all these years later!
This one was impressive! It moved me more than most any other episode. I'd say it is in the top five. There was one with a giant inflatable alien, the "real" aliens being tiny compared to us. Was that "The Invaders"? Another good one. . .
A livin man, a livin man, I want to be, a livin man.
I saw this in school as well in central Illinois (nice to see they showed this in schools across the country) and it definitely struck something in me so that I’d remember it all these years later, every detail. It’s like I was that guy in the film and could think and feel everything he was.
I liked the episode with Art Carney picking up trash and becoming Santa Claus
My favorite too
Every heard his song, Song Of The Sewer? It is rap before rap.
I didn't.
At the conclusion of the opening scene in that one, I believe Rod stands taller than he does in any other ep with his comments and that coat in the falling snow. I think a church bell even rings. The concluding sentiments of that particular ep will always bring a smile to my face.
"The Night of the Meek". I have loved this episode since I first saw it. Art Carney was superb. John Fiedler was the perfect antagonist, redeemed by the miracle. See the rest of the cast on Wikipedia or IMDB, see who else you remember.
"The Monsters are Due on Maple Street", shows how quickly "mob mentality" can quickly overcome once friendly people. I loved "Nightmare at 20,000 ft", the original and the remake with, John Lithgow. Both were well done. Richard Matheson, my all time favorite scifi screen writer co-wrote it with Serling both (RIP).
I like how you get to see actors in their early years making guest appearances: Burgess Meredith, John Lithgow, Edgar Buckhannan etc,...
I always seem to bring that up when we fly... and I always get the window seat! 😄
Did you see the 3rd rock from the sun episode where Shatner played "The Big Giant Head", an alien overlord, and he rode on an airplane and apparently made a fuss because "there was something on the wing of the plane!", to which Lithgow's character proclaimed "The same thing happened to me!"
The remake with John Lithgow scared the living crap out of me! The special effects on the "gargoyle" was just magnificent! Really made me scared shitless of flying.
@@jimmyb.5356Lithgow played the part brilliantly and that made the gremlin even more terrifying!
I watched Twighlight Zone regularly as a kid. The episode I remember best is when a young woman wants an operation due to being ugly in the culture she's in. "No change" from the operation as the doctors look at her in horror & reveal THEIR faces, truly horrific to us. BEAUTY IS IN EYE OF BEHOLDER. A great lesson for a 10-year-old.
Liked that one. A pre Beverly Hillbillies Donna Douglas.
"Eye of the Beholder" (aired on Nov. 11, 1960), with a gorgeous Donna Douglas, then 28, two years before her "Elly May" role on The Beverly Hillbillies (1962-71).
The Night of the Meek, starring Art Carney, 1960 is one of those 6 episodes originally recorded in videotape and then transferred to 16mm. Not a scary episode, unless perhaps you might see a bit of yourself in the main character, but definitely my very favorite episode and one that showcased Art's talent as a serious actor. "And a Merry Christmas, to each and all" - Rod Serling (1924-1975).
To Serve Man is one of my favorite Twilight Zone episodes
@@loucroft9415 That was creepy!!!
How to serve man? Wasn't that the title? Akitchen guide? Best ways to cook to serve us humans. But i dont rember seeing any actual recipes! Guess would depend on which culture as other countries have vastly different diets. Why usda allows so much unhealthy ingredients i can not guess,think a cash payout made all types of non sugarcane raw natural sweeteners too use items otherwise disposable ,but if they treat it well, now we can bottle and sell it to McDonald's for milkshakes as example. Greedy people. Until its their child in a bind,private jet to any other country privately of course..because heathcare is much cheaper along with same meds.but so very much less expensive. Yet we keep installing wealthy people or those with a long list of people who ready to help for a favor. Working class family that struggling to pay rent or mortgage working 2 parents 2jobs..lets give them 100k a year! Folks that help neighbors and dont tolerate b.s! Just a thought.
My favorites include the first one I ever saw, "Kick the Can" where old folks discover they can become young again if they will only play Kick the Can. I was a little freaked out a few years later when we moved to a neighborhood where they actually played Kick the Can. We played as if our lives depended on it.
Billy Mumy in "It's a GOOD Life." I first read this as a short story, maybe in a book of Twilight Zone stories, about a kid who just has way too much influence on the things and people in his town. You sure don't ever want to get this kid angry at you.
There was the one about the old lady who lives alone in a small cabin way out in the wilderness who hears really strange noises outside. She's scared to death, especially when she hears more spooky sounds and some banging up on her roof. She takes an ax up into her attic and finds a smallish flying saucer on her roof and has at it with the ax. Then we see the American Air Force insignia on the broken saucer and hear frantic radio calls back to Earth about the terrible monsters they have encountered. That one gave me nightmares.
Oh, but it was "The Green Hills of Earth" that really gave me nightmares.
A small group of people are stranded on a barren planet, where a kid sits on a rock and asks the old guy to tell him what Earth was like. The old guy talks about crowds of people, pushing and shoving, fighting and hurting one another. Great machines belching smoke that darken the skies and make it hard to breathe. The kid says he would still like to see it if he ever got a chance. The old guy argues that they've made a pretty good place for themselves here, but some of the others argue that it still doesn't compare to Earth.
Then a rescue ship arrives to take them all home to Earth. The old guy says he doesn't want to go because they've built too much here to just give up on it. They end up leaving him behind, but he goes over to the rock the kid used to sit on and talks about the green meadows, clear rushing streams, the bright blue skies with beautiful clouds, it's all just so wonderful! So he turns back to the swiftly receding spaceship and yells, "Wait! Come back! I want to go too! Please take me back!" But it's too late.
That one haunted me for a LONG time.
The second one featured Agnes Moorhead; no dialogue.
On Thursday We Leave For Home was horrifying in that it portrayed a man (James Whitmore as William Benteen) so stubborn that he couldn't let go of his power and authority. He chose to stay behind rather than be rescued from a desolate planet. When the rescue ship took off, and he realized he'd made a huge mistake, it took a long time for me to forget the image of him running after the ship, crying for it to come back, come back.
Scariest episode had to be the one where people had gathered for the reading of a will but they all had to wear hideous masks. At the end when they took off the masks they had taken on the appearance of the mask they were wearing.
Loved this episode. What an ending. Has to make the top ten for that ending. Gave me chills seeing the 4 of them
Yes, this was indeed a frightening episode of Twilight Zone. It was episode 145 titled The Masks.
What a good story that was.
Yes! That's the only one that freaked me out, l was just out of high school first time l saw it.
Love the New Year's Eve Twilight Zone Marathon! Great way to ring in the New Year!!
I remember the Twilight Zone film accident quite well having worked at the studio. It was a very intense time for everyone working in production. Likewise I was involved in the reboot of the series at CBS and all of the background issues, both costwise, production issues, etc. There were very few stories which came remotely close to the original series. It was one of the first series to use the EditDroid, a precursor to computerized editing, which the Exec Prod continually changed story lengths and episodic placement in each episode practically missing delivery every week to the Network for the weekly broadcast, as well as other issues.
Thanks for the little peek inside
I sat on the couch in the living room wrapped in a quilt, peeking out through a slit. (that protected me from ghosts, aliens, and scary people and monsters.) I watched them all. Rod Serling's voice would make me shiver. I LOVED IT! Dear Gods, has it been FIFTY odd years? I'm only now seeing familiar tv/movie stars in them! I'm enjoying them all over again. Thank you!!!! The Encounter!!!! George Takai!!!! I saw that one before discovering star trek fan. I STILL read everything he posts! (yes, 05/06/2023.) I thought Vic Morrow was a very sexy man when I was a kid, couldn't believe he was doing a Twilight Zone episode! I couldn't WAIT to see it......Ugh. Oh. That sucked. The accident, not the film. I still watched it in his memory, to see what he wanted to create. Loved the night gallery but it was a little less...Rod. Loved all the monster movies. I have since learned from Scooby Doo. People are the real monsters. Throw me all the vampires, mummies, and werewolves, I can take it and scarf down popcorn at the same time. It's the news that scares the crap out of me.
The Encounter. George at his absolute best.
You're one of THOSE MEDDLING KIDS!
I can’t believe that this show wasn’t as popular when it first started. I remembered falling in love the first time I came across this show during NYE re-runs.
Thank you for the look back in time on our behalf, as viewers. I was a preteen when I started watching "The Twilight Zone," and I believe it was on Friday nights at 9:00 p.m. Occasionally, in the summertime, I would have a campout in our backyard with friends, but first we would go in and watch "The Twilight Zone," get scared, and then go out and sleep in the tent. This was in Columbus, Ohio. It was a time when our imaginations ran wild.
Ha! I literally did the same thing as a pre teen in Columbus, in my cousins backyard, they were my best friends at the time '71-'77.
Good times!
I also thought it so cool that RS incorporated Ohio towns in more than a few episodes!
My favorite episode has always been "Time Enough At Last" with Burgess Meredith. I can relate because, I need glasses for reading/needlework/computer use (I can walk around seeing things just fine, just need glasses for close work) and to see blind as a bat, Meredith not able to see anything when his glasses fell off his face just broke my heart. There is a great episode highlighting mob mentality/hysteria: "The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street". There is a cul-du-sac I drive past every day where the homes remind me of that episode and I can visualize the homeowners banding together to blame the weird goings on on someone on the street.
"The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" is the one I find scariest, especially in light of today's political climate!
The Monsters are due on Maple Street is one of my favorites too! People can suspect people that they know intimately of doing something suspicious.
Henry Bemis was his name in the episode.
His wife was evil in that episode. She hated him so much that she took the time to cross out every page in his book of poetry.
I''ve never thought that much of this episode. If the books have survived. Why wouldn't have other opticals and glasses. He's just the laziest of whiny bastards.
Twilight Zone is one of my top 5 favorites. The one with Agnes Moorehead scared the pants off me. The Time Enough episode hit me because I was a kid when it aired and I loved reading and was nearsighted and there was still the threat of Russia nuking us, so I identified with the main character. I started off enchanted by fairy tales and moved on to sci-fi. The old black and white sci-fi movies used to be on tv Fridays and Saturdays. The ones with the 50 foot tall woman, giant spiders, giant ants. The Japanese sci-fis. Wonderful stuff. Sci-fi addresses our fears. There’s so much change going on in the world. And some of those fears actually come true in real life. I saw a movie a few years ago about a society where just about everyone was connected through brain implants and libraries were a thing of the past but some people’s brains were incompatible with that so when the glitch occurred in the “net” the unconnected guy figured it out by consulting old library books and saved the day. So now we have people like Musk pushing something like implants and I’m laughing and thinking, Yeah what could POSSIBLY go wrong and it’ll be a cold day in hell before I go THAT far. So sentimentally. I’m putting twilight zone first.
My all time favourite show… ever.
Started watching about 14 or 15 years ago, when my son bought a Twilight Zone DVD boxed set.
I have been a huge fan ever since.
His genius, and originality and influence over future writers,
and future tv shows, is and was endless.
Rod Serling gave us an endless catalogue of original and great stories that have gone unmatched , to this day.
Thank you Mr. Serling!!
*Even as a ChiLd, I Considered TwiLight too StuPud to Watch!!!*
*& THAT was 64-years ago!!!!*
@@Robert.Martyr sometimes them bullfrogs be taking off, whenever I have time they shuck them up a bit, but consequently the hummingbird was the one the got away
@@Robert.Martyr : Get woke,go broke-back...🤔
So many great ones. One of my favorites of all time was when they had the devil locked up in a castle and a stranger doesn't listen to the brothers of the castle and release him. Scary and intriguing episode. Loved Twilight Zone and couldn't get enough of them even though they aired years before i was born.
The Obsolete Man episode is to this day quite brilliant. "To serve man" I think may be the most psychologically terrifying one. Rod was a brilliant storyteller. I loved the the show as a kid watching it in re-runs late at night. Good video. 👍
I like talking Tina
The State has declared you OBSOLETE, Mr. Wordsworth!
“To serve man” i was a 70’s baby. I remember watching a few of these. But let’s just say. If aliens show up and invite us to their world. I will stay right here.
2 SERVE MAN.,YES
@@cecilreed7543 "Mr. Chambers, don't get on that ship! To Serve Man,; it's a COOK BOOK!."
My favorite was the the one starring Burgess Meredith , when he survived an atomic bomb blast ,discovering a treasure trove of books at the library but accidentally crushed his glasses. I was 8 years old in 1959 watching the Twilight Zone BCTV . My second favorite episode was when the devil tricked a man into freeing him from his cage..
yes that is another one of my favorites
Omg I saw that episode as a kid and it haunted me for years. And that beautiful and tragic title for the episode “time enough at last”
That episode was Serling's favorite and it is mine too. Sad, ironic ending, but couldn't have had any other ending.
After having cataract surgery and needing to wear reading glasses for any close viewing, that episode with Burgess Merideth became very personal for me.
Burgess Meredith was in four or five episodes, all which are memorable. One episode with Jack Warden, who played a prisoner on an asteroid was financed by Sterling himself after the original actor who was to play the prisoner died. Many actors who were not known at the time took parts, Robert Duval in 'Everything in Miniature,' Robert Redford, Cliff Robertson, Cloris Leachman, Jonthan Winters, Charles Bronson, Elizabeth Montgomery, Agnes Moorehead, Bill Mumy, Donna Douglas & my favorite episode - A Kind of a Stopwatch with Richard Erdman who also was in Stalag 17 as the Allied POW commander.
Would you like to see time stand still? Then you must increase your present thought speed. Please describe your present thought speed. I'm all ears!
was "A Kind of a Stopwatch" one where watch broke with time frozen? yeah i liked it too
"Time Enough at Last", "The Obsolete Man", "Mr. Dingle the Strong", and "Printer's Devil".
Burgess was a powerful actor!
"The Obsolete Man" was really something I thought......Rod's commentary before and after was also extremely thought provoking.
@@glendanielson9006 LMAO, you have never had thought one, and you don't even know it. You have yet to answer the most obvious question there is: "is the ground there?" If you had, then the Time: 4,600,000,000 years it has "recorded" as being there would be "now playing" in your conscious moment, only you have never had a conscious moment or a thought of your own. You sit at your dish of time 2023 put in front of your mind. Your dog sits at its dish too, except your dog knows there is bag ( 10,000,000,002,023) that fills its 2023 dish, and you don't. YOU DON"T! I just proved your dog is more conscious than you! nana nana. If you were more conscious than your dog, it would be picking up your poop.
When I was a boy, stayed up and watched it with my Dad, I miss him. And I do agree with Serling, "Time Enough". was my favorite and Bergous Meredith was a great and powerful actor. - thanks for the frightening memories
I grew up watching The Twilight Zone... and have so many favorite episodes. My absolute favorite is "Nightmare at 20,000 feet" and I also loved "Next Stop, Willoughby", "Time Enough At Last", that one where the mannequin came back to the dept store to find out she wasn't a real person on vacation, the one where the kids went swimming and escaped to a different place/time with nice people instead of their selfish arguing parents. So many more! I would love to see "The Encounter" some day, it looks like it is really great and I love George Takei.
I grew up watching The Twilight zone and gorgeous George the wrestler the best Twilight zone I watched was the guy on the wing
Yeah... Willoughby! So Good!! My younger sister (born '54) loved that one too!
The episode with the kids and squabbling parents was called "The Bewitching Pool".
If you want to watch the one they have not shown in 50 years down load the Pluto app it was on the other day
"Next Stop, Willoughby" is ridiculously underrated!!!
“The Howling Man” (season 2, episode 5) stands out in my mind as the personification of the idea that the Devil’s greatest trick is his ability to appear and disappear at will. The transformation sequence (camera follows him walking past several pillars and slowly transforming into the classic devil) was an impressive use of special effects on a very low budget that produced the desired result.
According to Baudelaire, “the greatest trick of the devil is convincing people that he doesn’t exist.”
You know, that was scary!!! That transformation!!!
Watching that great episode on cable it seems to me the transformation has been trimmed - edited shorter than it’s full length. I recall the different shots of the transition were each a little longer and therefore scarier. It would be interesting to find out.
@@dpcon One of my favorite episodes. The TZ marathons on cable frequently trim the episodes for time or to get more ads in.
This one still gives me chills
Serling was a compelling storyteller. Don't think he did movies or at least did very few. Amazing talent and with a conscience. The cliché: "never will be another" is appropriate here. How we need him today.
Long before The Twilight Zone (1959), he was known for writing such high-quality scripts as "Patterns" and "Requiem for a Heavyweight," both later turned into films (Patterns (1956) and Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962)). "Patterns", was broadcast live and it won Serling an Emmy Award. He won a second statuette the following year, 1957, for "Requiem for a Heavyweight", which starred Jack Palance as a washed-up prizefighter.
He co-wrote the screenplay for Planet of the Apes.
@@jmgreenshields I've heard he was personally responsible for the film's iconic ending scene.
Serling was the sole screenwriter behind SEVEN DAYS IN MAY, a great political thriller.
He also wrote THE MAN, a great foreshadowing of Obama's election. Yup, the film dared to ask.... COULD A BLACK MAN ACTUALLY BECOME PRESIDENT?! Being an early 70's film, this subject matter was still taboo.❤
@@JoseMorales-lw5nt thank you. I'm going to look up those films.
Great Actors of the time. Thanks Rod for all your work and Defence Service.
Night Call is my favorite episode. The eerie voice on the phone and the revelation at the end still gets me every time.
I actually watched The Encounter for the first time about 2 years ago. I've always been a fan of the show and assumed it was just one I had missed as a kid. I had no idea it was banned.
Rodman Edward Serling (December 25, 1924 - June 28, 1975) was an American screenwriter, playwright, television producer, and narrator/on-screen host. I think he was a genius. So it's hard for me to pick a fave episode. But "Little Girl Lost" would have all the ingredients of future episodes. Also, each show was well acted and filmed. Kudos to the whole creative team.
Born in Binghamton NY. Hometown indeed!
Sterling had an amazing voice for narrating !
My favorite episode was is “ Walking Distance” with Gig Young. I am a native of Binghamton NY and grew up here and spent many days riding the Carousel at Recreation Park in Binghamton which is right near the old Serling Family Home. So it has a very special meaning for me. So when I moved back to Binghamton after being away many many years I went to Recreation Park to ride that carousel and I truly felt like I was part of that episode. It’s great to be home again! By the way they plan on putting up a bronze statue of Rod Serling in Recreation Park I believe sometime this year if I remember correctly from the local newspaper. Just an FYI the Triple Cities area is the Carousel Capital of the USA. There is also the Twilight Zone Museum here in Binghamton as well. Better Known as the Bundy Museum
What does it have, props from the show?
My mother and I used to watch this while my dad worked at night. I miss those times
The episode was "The Fever". I was about 10 at the time. I will never forget the slot machine calling "Franklin" over and over again. I may be misremembering it all, but the word franklin still sends chills up my spine. Great writing, acting directing. Plus: Rod Serling.
ruclips.net/video/a_9IvaNgT7s/видео.html
Now that you have summoned me I will be watching you...every breath you take...every move you make...I'll be watching you...
OMG YES! I had forgotten about that one. They way they blended the voice saying "Franklin" with the sound of pouring coins was brilliant.
"The Grave" gave me chills at the end , The wind was blowing the opposite way so he came out the grave . Also, "Room for one more honey" had me shook to the bone
I think about (or say to the crew) "Room For One More, Honey" every time I get on a plane.😧
One that scared me when I was a kid was the one about Martha White shopping for a gold thimble for her aunt or grandmother. She had to go to the 13th floor in a department building which actually wasn't there. When she got there, these mannequins became alive and started swarming her...... scared the heck out of me, LOL
"The After-Hours." I love that episode, too. Very spooky but the end is very touching.
It was the "9th floor"- which the store didn't have. Actual buildings don't have "13th floors", because they're considered "unlucky". They skip between "12" and "14".
*Marcia 🙂
Used to watch it every week with my late father in the early 60's. It was one of his favourite programmes. Nightmare at 20000ft scared the crap outta me as a 7year old,72 now and can still remember William Shatner being dragged off the Plane in a straight jacket and the cowelling of the engine being torn back.
To me the scariest episode featured Billy Mumy as the kid who wished his neighbors out to the cornfield because he randomly chose those he believed had failed to please him or somehow offended him.
That might have been "It's a Good Life" based on a book by Jerome Bixby.
That episode was chillingly ahead of its time.
Fifty years later, there are things we cannot say, even though they may be true, or we will get "banished to the cornfield." And what's right and wrong changes and is decided capriciously.
@@paulmianulli1044 amen,paul
Yes, Billy Mumy became an evil dictator. Amazing skills for that time in my life.
If you think that was scary, read the story on which that episode was based.
The Encounter was a very deep introspective view of veterans of war from opposing sides. I fail to understand the controversy, as we must all understand what vets go through. Sometimes Rod skips the sci-fi & offers a dark reality of men. Good episode my friend !👍👍👍
From what I remember reading back in the 70s, the reason for the episode being pulled was the scene where Takei's character reveals that his father had carved arrows into his field to guide the Japanese planes. This was a commonly repeated accusation after the attack, but was quickly debunked by investigators that couldn't find any evidence to support the claim. But like every other conspiracy theory that's been proven to have no basis in fact, it lived on for years. Japanese-American groups quite rightly protested the episode for perpetuating the lie, and the episode was pulled.
@@dsnitris2007 😁👍 I didn’t know about those factors, you mention, but I know that they suppressed it due to the hard-core racism from the white guy… Of course, they were actors, but also that George committed suicide after murdering the other man was quite a lot for people to deal with As this was telecast, May 1, 1964, so it was less than 20 years since the end of WW II, and most people remembered much of the hatred and horrible treatment to millions of people.
@@dsnitris2007 Are you aware of the Niihau incident? That was the basis for the concern regarding Japanese allegiance in Hawaii. I believe the "planting crops in the shape of arrows" story originated in California, not Hawaii.
Funny how the general public has come to accept the terrible treatment of Japanese/Americans in WW2 yet still have trouble with the gay population....both of which George Takei is a member.
@@259Den3 The basis was the attack itself, which resulted in Marital Law on the Islands, they were, after all, 5,000 miles from the mainland. Subs were off the California coast and oil fields were attacked, weakly, but still a fact, as were incendiary balloons floated to start fires in the Western States. Fu-Go balloon bombs.
Twilight zone was so great. People just don’t know that they canceled a wonderful show
Thrillseeker!!!! You have more than one channel! Good stuff!
I saw "The Encounter" only 10 years ago on Netflix. I was blown away by that episode. George Takei and the other co-star were magnificent. The intense moments were well done and the writing was excellent. It portrayed the amount of hate of a time period that we hope to never revisit.
I also saw "The Encounter." Unfortunately the "WOKE" crowd is promoting the kind of hate you are talking about. I thought as a country we were past that, but those who want to control everyone else can do a better job of it if we are fighting with each other. I pray we all wake up and stop fighting with each other before it is too late.
Don't vote for Trump that goes for everybody!!!@@HaunaLee
Are you sure you know what woke even means? It seems doubtful if you're blaming them for hatred. Or consider Trump and the Maga as being woke.
It appears to be rearing it’s ugly head again. Racist wyte nationalism should never be allowed to return!
Always had a moral to the story. I grew up with this and Alfred Hitchcock Presents and Alfred Hitchcock Hour, then Night Gallery.
I loved that show. For my scariest, my choice is "Nightmare as a Child" where a woman is visited by a man who killed her mother years earlier. A young girl seems to know all about the murder and forces the woman to confront her suppressed memories. The woman narrowly escapes from being killed by the same man. Great example of horror without gore.
Twinkle twinkle little star.
@@paulleckner8235 You're right.
@@paulleckner8235Stop it or ima tell mom
I have several favourite episodes, but don't find all that many of them actually scary, as much as just wonderfully twisted. For pure fright value, I think that the episode entitled "22" is the one that creeps me out the most. It's the one where the professional dancer, who has been hospitalised for exhaustion and stress, has a recurring nightmare about being invited into the morgue by a mysterious nurse who always says, "Room for one more, honey." The dream turns out to be more than just a simple dream, but that episode definitely stands out in my mind as one that makes my skin crawl every time I see it.
For scariness, I'll also give a runner-up nod to "Death Ship", where a crew of space explorers, captained by Jack Klugman, land on a planet and find a copy of their own crashed ship, complete with their own dead bodies, and have to try to solve the mystery of whether the situation is real or illusion.
I was watching the reruns in the late 70's. Serling knew how to hold the audience and weave a tale. So many faves but I loved - "Will the real martian please stand up" from 1961.
Rod sterling was ahead of his time I’m a twilight zone junkie always watch New Year’s Eve marathon
Twilight Zone was a much anticipated family watch in our home. Rod Serling as the host created fear and suspense so casually. I was probably 10 years at the time and we go to bed after watching it sometimes scared but mostly astonished by these thought provoking and highly imaginative story ideas. The stories never disappointed. The ones that left the biggest impact on me were the Hitchhiker, with a woman driving alone seeing this Hitchhiker on the road over and over…following her and always there no matter how far she drove, yikes!
Another was “ The monsters on Maple street” the lights go out except one house, people begin to blame and suspect and accuse each other and start fighting etc And then you see Aliens watching from above causing the problems waiting for them to kill each other so they can move in, and “Little girl lost” , when the parents can only hear the voice of their daughter in the wall somewhere and have to try to get her back through a shrinking portal. Most stories had a good messages displayed in unforgettable unimaginable conclusions that left you wanting more…and wondering about the consequences to the characters in these
highly unusual stories. 😮 Rod Serling was such a talent. S
yes to both of those
Probably the best introduction to any tv show. The series of images immediately pulled you into “The Twilight Zone”
One of the great things about TTZ was that unlike its contemporary "The Outer Limits" it very rarely relied on a kind of "monster of the week" type of plot device. Perhaps Serling recognized the limitations of having a character reduced to a guy in a rubber suit or a puppet with eyes and how that would affect the story. Also, it differed from TOL in that it had no real problem with humorous stories which are not infrequent (Cavender is Coming, Once Upon a Time, From Agnes with Love). Admittedly often the humor is quite dark, and some episodes are fundamentally a joke with a twist punchline (The Man in the Bottle, A Most Unusual Camera, The Chaser). Even episodes like "Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up", and "To Serve Man" sort of fall into this last category even if as portrayed, the other characters find nothing funny in this episode at all. The fairly good satire on the Simpson's with regard to "To Serve Men" pretty much attests to this.
Moreover, even as strange and fantastic as the situations were often portrayed, the characters themselves were readily identifiable as people with some depth. In fact some criticism might be applied to a certain over sentimentality to some of the stories, but it made the characters real people who dealt with envy, regret, guilt, and joy pretty much like anyone else. It's here that credit should given to Rod Serling's to not just for the teleplays for many of the episodes, but also for the production of good stories by other writers, perhaps most notably Richard Matheson and Charles Beaumont (whose own tragically short life could have been adapted for a TTZ episode itself).
when things are re made for the 21st century..it's never quite as good and in some cases not even worth the effort
Yeah, didn't really watch it. I did watch, The Outer Limits though.
Serling knew that the scariest monsters were humans, and he also knew how to manipulate humanity's fears through allegorical stories. Despite all that, he truly loved people, and hoped the human race would stop destroying itself and the planet.
"Mirror Image" is one of the episodes that spooked me the most. Woman at a bus station sees evidence of someone who looked just like her, yet she is alone most of the time. "When The Sky Opened" is my second favorite for its creepiness. Third is "The Howling Man".
This show aged so well , I became a fan of this show decades after its release. My favs are : A Stop at Willoughby and The Bewitching Pool.
Mine too!!!!!
My favorite original TZ episodes are, ironically, 'The Grave' and 'Mr. Garrety and the Graves'. Both are western themed episodes, but the first was a chilling ghost story while the second was a rare comedic episode.
I really liked the 1985 TV revival of TZ. There were some really stories in the first season. I think its biggest problem was it carried the Twilight Zone name, and some couldn't look past that to give it a chance. I'd recommend it to any looking for a good horror/fantasy/sci-fi anthology.
One of my favorite episodes was "The Grave," with Lee Marvin as the bounty hunter, and with Elen Willard as the witchy Ione Sykes. My favorite scene is at the end, with Ione standing at her brother's grave, laughing as the wind blows her cloak.
Yes this one was awesome my #1 pick #2 the obsolete man
That is a very good choice.
Spot on ...great Actor
Great episode also starring Lee Van Cleef, Strother Martin, and James Best. "I don't get my nerve from a bottle, Mothershed".
Damn good choice!
I can’t imagine anyone else voicing The Twilight Zone other than Rod Serling. It’s hard to believe he wasn’t the first several considerations. I loved The Twilight Zone as a child growing up in the 60s. Eye Of The Beholder scared the crap out of me. They won’t ever make smart TV like this again. I also remember Serling doing a show called Night Gallery, but The Twilight Zone is the show that voice makes me quickly recall.
Nightmare at 20,000 Feet is for me the best episode because it perfectly captures what TZ was - the gray area between reality and unreality, between known and unknown. We are never told if Shatner's character was a lunatic who almost got all the passengers killed, or did he really see that creature and save everyone? It scared the audience and left us wondering.
I agree this was a great episode. When Shatner pulled aside the curtain from the window and the gremlin's face was pressed up against the glass, my whole family jumped and gasped and my mom shrieked. However, your memory is a bit faulty regarding the conclusion. Next time it airs watch the ending more closely. As Shatner is being wheeled away he tells wife he's the only one who knows that everything's all right now. The camera then pans up to show the wing of the plane, and it clearly shows that a part of the wing over the engine has been pried up, thereby affirming that the gremlin was real. Further, Serling's narration mentions something to the effect that soon everyone will know.
@@tradewins Yes and I think there was also a chunk of fur from the gremlin stuck on the wing
It'a the most unforgettable one to me; I do think of it when I fly!!!
That was my younger sister's fave too. She was born in '54 and always went for the "One Step Beyond" type genre... her fave TZ besides the monster at 20,000 feet, was the episode of the Department Store mannequins who once a year got to be real people and the tragedy and tears involved when they had to once again return to the Department Store to harden into the mannequins for which they existed. Crazy shit!
Lol, it scared us as kids, but looking at the monster later was a hoot. So funny! 😆