The Briefing Room
General Category => Sports/Entertainment/MSM/Social Media => Topic started by: Right_in_Virginia on March 29, 2019, 10:49:58 pm
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The 10 best classic ‘Twilight Zone’ episodes of all time
NY Post, Mar 29, 2019, Michael Starr
In honor of Jordan Peele’s revival of “The Twilight Zone,†premiering Monday on CBS All Access, here are my Top 10 all-time favorite episodes from the original CBS anthology series, which aired from 1959 to 1964. (Note: All of these classic episodes are available for streaming on CBS All Access and the official “Twilight Zone†YouTube channel.)
‘A Game of Pool’ (Oct. 13, 1961)
This parable of life and death, decided in a seedy pool room (city unknown), features two actors with terrific chops and even better chemistry: Jack Klugman as Jesse Cardiff, the self-proclaimed best pool player on Randolph Street, and Jonathan Winters as the dead pool legend James Howard “Fats†Brown (“The best who ever wasâ€). Fats materializes from pool-player heaven and challenges Jesse to a game. The stakes? If Jesse wins, he lives. If he loses, he dies. The banter between Klugman and Winters (stepping outside his comic comfort zone) is priceless. (And the timing was perfect: The episode aired shortly after the big-screen premiere of “The Hustler,†co-starring Jackie Gleason as pool legend Minnesota Fats.)
‘The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street’ (March 4, 1960)
Suburban mob-mentality panic turns deadly when strange things begin to happen on Maple Street one summer night after something crashes nearby, cutting the power. Lights flicker on and off, cars start by themselves and, before too long, neighbor turns on neighbor when teenage Tommy suggests it’s the work of aliens from outer space.
More: https://nypost.com/2019/03/29/the-10-best-classic-twilight-zone-episodes-of-all-time/
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Oh my! I used to work at a TeeVee station that ran these back in the 80's, and I've seen them all...many times. I liked "to Serve Man."
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The episode "One For the Angels" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_for_the_Angels) should have been on the list, IMHO.
By the way, the entire run of the original Twilight Zone is currently available on Netflix. Also, CBS All Access.
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Willoughby
5 characters in search of an exit
2 of my favorites
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They left out the arguably most touching Twilight Zone episode of all . . . "I Sing the Body Electric."
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While not technically a Twilight Zone episode, they did show "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge".
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I like them all, lots of twists and turns in each one. How can one select 10 as the "Top Ten"? IMHO, impossible to do so.
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I like them all, lots of twists and turns in each one. How can one select 10 as the "Top Ten"? IMHO, impossible to do so.
@SZonian
Well, for one thing, they couldn't (and didn't) do it without naming, too, "The Masks."
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Oh my! I used to work at a TeeVee station that ran these back in the 80's, and I've seen them all...many times. I liked "to Serve Man."
@Cyber Liberty
Because I am a "Prepper", I liked the one where the man with wife/think there was a kid, had his basement prepared with what they needed if there was an emergency. His neighbor friends kidded him about it; then there was an announcement that a nuclear bomb was on the way and the neighbors got to the point they would kill him to get his basement with food and water. Then there was another announcement there was no nuclear bomb. It showed what people would do if the bomb had been true.
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Eye of the Beholder (1959) and Time Enough At Last (1959) I was 11 and have never forgotten either of them.
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Interestingly, they chose "Twenty-Two," which was a cheapie by Twilight Zone standards.
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(http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-sUrwcGDta2Q/ThJor1LvOkI/AAAAAAAADZc/s9X5WEAsFAM/s1600/To+Serve+Man+Cannamite+3.jpg)
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Interestingly, they chose "Twenty-Two," which was a cheapie by Twilight Zone standards.
That episode is one of my favorites. The line "Room for one more, honey" gave me the creeps.
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What is fun about watching Twilight Zone now is seeing famous actors in these episodes, often long before they became household names. For example, a young Robert Redford in Nothing in the Dark or William Shatner in Terror at 20,000 Feet. I was just a kid when the Twilight Zone series originally aired, so no one in those episodes was familiar to me.
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Grabbed 'It's a Good Life' off my DVR, just this morning. I always thought James Mason was in that one, as the Jack in the Box.
(https://thenypost.files.wordpress.com/2019/03/good_life.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=1280)
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Grabbed 'It's a Good Life' off my DVR, just this morning. I always thought James Mason was in that one, as the Jack in the Box.
(https://thenypost.files.wordpress.com/2019/03/good_life.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=1280)
That was actually my favorite episode. But I like the one about the kids with the divorcing parents that dive into a swimming pool and come up in the old lady's house.
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That was actually my favorite episode. But I like the one about the kids with the divorcing parents that dive into a swimming pool and come up in the old lady's house.
The one with the kids escaping their unhappy home through the swimming pool was "The Bewitchin' Pool" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bewitchin'_Pool), written by Earl Hamner Jr. (creator of The Waltons). It was the last new episode of the original series to air, according to Wiki.
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Oddly enough, I don't remember ever seeing the "A Piano in the House" episode. And I thought I had seen them all dozens of times. :shrug: :shrug: :shrug:
One of my favorites was the one where the old man thought he couldn't take his dog into Heaven, so he refused to enter....
Error 404 (Not Found)!!1 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=56&v=iMpnJ2mmqvg#)
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Oddly enough, I don't remember ever seeing the "A Piano in the House" episode. And I thought I had seen them all dozens of times. :shrug: :shrug: :shrug:
One of my favorites was the one where the old man thought he couldn't take his dog into Heaven, so he refused to enter....
Error 404 (Not Found)!!1 (http://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=56&v=iMpnJ2mmqvg#)
"The Hunt" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hunt_%28The_Twilight_Zone%29), another classic episode written by Earl Hamner Jr.
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I may have posted this before, but I don't remember.
The true first episode of The Twilight Zone - The Time Element
On October 2, 1959, Rod Serling's landmark television series, The Twilight Zone debuted with the pilot episode, Where Is Everybody? However, this was actually the second pilot. The first pilot was an episode of the Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse. The episode, written by Serling, was The Time Element. The original air date was November 24, 1958.
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x6e9b0k (https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x6e9b0k)
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0745802/ (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0745802/)
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BKMK