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All 156 episodes of Rod Serling's classic television series in one special box set. This episodes-only collection includes all 5 seasons of the groundbreaking TV series. Guest stars include Art Carney, Burgess Meredith, Cliff Robertson, Dennis Hopper, Bill Bixby, Leonard Nimoy, Burt Reynolds, Don Rickles, Jack Klugman, Robert Redford, Lee Marvin, Martin Landau, Telly Savalas, William Shatner and many more. PLEASE NOTE: Season 1 not closed captioned and not subtitled. Review: The Series that Set the Standard - “The Twilight Zone” was the greatest television series of the 1950s and 60s, and may rank as the finest series of all time. Its superiority rested on several factors: quality of acting; superb direction by Douglas Heyes, Don Medford, Buzz Kulik and others; atmospheric music by Marius Constant and Bernard Herrmann; and, most of all, imaginative scripts by Richard Matheson, Charles Beaumont, George Clayton Johnson, and of course, Rod Serling. Serling had already established himself before the “Zone” as the best TV playwright in the business, contributing scripts to “Playhouse 90,” “Desilu Playhouse,” and others. But he had grown frustrated by the censorship of TV sponsors and other parties by 1958, who had objected to various aspects of his social and ethical themes. Particularly significant in this connection is a clip from the “Mark Wallace” show in 1959 (just one of many interviews in this box set) – on this occasion, the playwright detailed some of the reasons for embarking on “The Twilight Zone,” which included his desire to escape the petty bowdlerization of TV authorities. By now it’s a veritable cliché: this notion that serious themes can be treated more safely in commercial media through the “camouflage” of fantasy. In the Wallace interview, however, Serling did not actually cite this as a rationale for the “Zone.” What he did say, while neither affirming nor refuting that notion, was couched in ambiguity. On one hand, he vouched for the need to relinquish such themes for the “Zone,” partly for reasons of censorship, and partly owing to the abbreviated length of the new series (30 minutes as compared to the 90-minute length of most teleplays). Yet he also claimed genuine merit for the series, asserting that the shows were of high quality and had their own aesthetic legitimacy. Serling’s demeanor was serious, to be sure, but he was obviously hedging his bets. Because when viewing the general landscape, we find that a significant number of episodes tackled serious themes. Here is just a sampling of the subjects “Twilight Zone” addressed during its five-season run: Totalitarianism – “The Obsolete Man” Nuclear war – “Two,” “The Shelter”; “Time Enough at Last” Hypocrisy – “Four O’Clock”; “The Masks” Racism – “The Encounter”; “I Am the Night – Color Me Black” Greed – “The Fever” Juvenile delinquency - “Black Leather Jackets” Marital discord – “A World of Difference”; “Living Doll” Crime & recrimination – “You Drive” The societal obsession with beauty – “Eye of the Beholder” & “Number 12 Looks Just Like You” Loneliness of the elderly – “Nothing in the Dark”; “Night Call” Childhood isolation and fear of “the other” – “Mute” Labor issues – “The Brain Center at Whipple’s” The Holocaust (or Naziism generally) – “Death’s Head Revisited”; “Judgement Night” These and other examples prove that Serling did not abandon serious themes when embarking on “The Twilight Zone.” To the contrary, he explored them often, not only in his own writing, but in the stories he chose from others. Worthy as this was, the series went further. For one thing, it created a mood of existential isolation that had never been achieved before and has never been equaled since. Protagonists find themselves in strange environments they cannot fathom, and which leave them helpless and disoriented. We see this most clearly in episodes like “Where is Everybody” (the subject of a space project is forced to undergo sensory deprivation and suffers hallucinatory terrors as a result); “Mirror Image” (in which doppelgangers haunt the principal actors as ostensible manifestations of a parallel universe); “The After Hours” (where the protagonist finds herself trapped on an uninhabited level of a department store); and “A World of Difference” (which, anticipating the film, “The Truman Show,” shows an actor trapped in the spurious reality of a movie script). This series, in other words, created the most vivid portrait of what W.H. Auden called the “Age of Anxiety” – there was rarely an episode that did not touch upon this theme in one way or another. Even when loneliness and isolation were not the focus of an episode, they often seemed to lurk somewhere in the background, and were reflected in the form of prejudicial backlashes against real or imagined enemies --- see “The Monsters are Due on Maple Street” (a barely-concealed commentary on McCarthyism) or “Living Doll” (a little girl’s plastic companion serves as the catalyst for an estranged husband’s cruelty). In other words, “The Twilight Zone” wasn’t merely about imaginative ideas dressed in strange attire, or even about existential angst. It also had important things to say about human nature, about American culture in the twentieth century, and about the frequent inability of people to establish even the most basic forms of communication. By contrast, even the best of its TV rivals, “The Outer Limits” and “Thriller,’ had little to say in these regards. (The episode called “The Cheaters” in the “Thriller” series was an exception that proved the rule). Ray Bradbury, while contributing only one story for “Twilight Zone,” was ultimately the writer with the greatest influence on the series overall (at least on its serious and more literary episodes). This is evident in two ways: first, in particulars – e.g., “The Lonely” showed the strong influence of Bradbury’s “The Long Years,” while “Little Girl Lost” was an interesting variation on Bradbury’s “Tomorrow’s Child.” Moreover, at least two episodes allude to Bradbury by name – see “A Stop at Willoughby,” and “Walking Distance.” Second, and more importantly, Bradbury’s work suffused the series in that it transferred his concern for lonely and alienated people (especially in his early fiction) into what was, at the time, a comparatively new medium. We should remember that while TV had been available as early as the late 1940s, it was still at a rudimentary stage in 1959, and during most of its first decade, existed as live entertainment that had only recently been superseded by the filming of programs for long-term preservation. Bradbury’s influence can be seen, at any rate, in a significant number of Serling’s scripts. Readers sampling stories like those in The Martian Chronicles, The Golden Apples of the Sun, and Dandelion Wine – as well as dystopias like “The Pedestrian” and Fahrenheit 451 – will see some of the tales that inspired Serling and other contributors to the series. The latter included Richard Matheson and Charles Beaumont who, while very original fantasists in their own right, were both mentored by Bradbury in their apprentice years. While it’s true that Bradbury had little direct input to the “Zone,” the mood of his early work had strong and definite echoes that made a permanent impact. Some people, including “Zone” critic Marc Scott Zicree, feel that the series suffered when it changed to an hour format in 1962. Zicree does point out some notable exceptions, however, and I would agree that “Death Ship” and “Jess-Belle” were among the best shows in the series. “Jess-Belle,” scripted by “Waltons” creator Earl Hamner, Jr. is in my opinion a masterpiece of horror-oriented folklore, and strikes me as occupying the same plane as Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Jar” and Thriller’s “Pigeons from Hell.” “Death Ship,” for its part, is almost like an extraterrestrial variant on Ambrose Bierce’s “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” (which itself was appropriated – from a French adaptation – for the “Zone”). This set is well worth having, not just for the episodes themselves, but for the many interviews and commentaries that illuminate the work of Serling and his entourage of fantasists. Especially notable (though excluded from the Blu-ray edition) is the 90-minute documentary, “Submitted for Your Approval,” which effectively chronicles Serling’s career, including his powerful pre-Zone dramatic works like “Patterns“ and “Requiem for a Heavyweight.” In addition, it points out how strong an influence Serling’s military service had on his writing – episodes like “The Encounter,” “The Purple Testament,” “King Nine Will Not Return,” and even Civil War forays like “Still Valley, show the influence of his wartime experience. I find it mysterious, however, that Serling’s Jewish ancestry is not cited as a salient influence on the “Zone.” Given that fantasists like Franz Kafka and Bruno Schulz had to endure the oppression that stems from ethnic discrimination, it’s hard to believe Serling was immune from that oppression, even if this was less virulent in latterday America than in old-world Europe. We can speculate on the specific ways prejudice may have manifested itself in Serling’s personal life without reaching sound conclusions. It seems plausible, nevertheless, to infer that a sense of alienation due to lingering anti-Semitism may have dogged the writer throughout his life, and that this partially accounts for what Jack Klugman called Serling’s “great sense of morality.” “The Twilight Zone” covered a wide canvas, and not everything to which Serling applied his brush was successful. His comedy writing, in particular, seemed forced and artificial (though occasionally entertaining, as in “Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up”). Even his serious work could implode – in episodes like “He's Alive,” the moral message drowns in didacticism and sinks from its own pretensions. The frequent twist endings, moreover, could sometimes be puerile and a bit too “cute.” Whatever these failings, the best works – and there were a remarkably high percentage of them – rank as the screen equivalent of fine literature, and – probably because Serling was originally a playwright – were the most genuinely dramatic in TV history. There was, as Lois Nettleton observed in her commentary to “The Midnight Sun,” an intimacy about them that penetrated to the core of the human experience, and made us aware of our place in the universe. So, yes – there were pratfalls on occasion, as there are in every series. But overall, “The Twilight Zone” set a standard that rose above mere entertainment, and that will forever be a touchstone for everything that follows. Review: The Twilight Zone- The Complete Definitive Collection - I didnt get into this show until the past year or so. Ive heard of it in the past but I wasnt born until the early 80's so I didnt get to see it as much as id like to of. Now I can see all the great episodes on DVD and really get to appreciate the genius of this show. This box set contains all 156 complete episodes of Rod Serling's groundbreaking series along with exciting extras. List of Episodes for all 5 seasons- Season 1 Episode 1: 'Where is Everybody?'- Earl Holliman stars as a man on the edge of hysteria in a deserted town. Despite the emptiness, he has the strangest feeling hes being watched. Episode 2: 'One for the Angels'- A Salesman cleverly eludes death. But if he lives a little girl must die in his place. Only the salesman greatest pitch can save her. Episode 3: 'Mr. Denton on Doomsday'- A drunk of a gunslinger finds his fast draw abilities can be restored by drinking a magic potion. Episode 4: 'The Sixteen Millimeter Shrine'- an aging former movie star lives and dreams in the past. She refuses to leave her screening room until she disapears. Episode 5: 'Walking Distance'- Martin Sloan is plays a frazzled executive who learns that you can go home again after he steps back in time and meets his mom his dad and himself. Episode 6: 'Escape Clause'- A hypocondriac exchanges his soul for immortality and indestructibility. Episode 7: 'The Lonely'- A covicted murderer incarcerated on a distant asteroid and is dying of lonliness. Episode 8: 'Time Enough at Last'- A Bookworm yearns for more time to read, then a nuclear holocaust leaves him alone in the world with lots of time, plenty to read and an ironic twist. Episode 9: 'Penchance to Dream'- A man whos terrified of falling asleep in fear he might die. His pursuer? A mysterious vixen he meets in his dreams. Episode 10: 'Judgement Night'- 1942, a german wonders why he is on the deck of a British Steamship with no memory of how he got there and impending doom. Episode 11: 'And When the Sky was Opened'- Col. Clegg Forbes 'Rip Taylor' and 2 astronauts return from their space flight. They soon discover that no one remembers them as if they never even existed. Episode 12: 'What You Need'- Two bit thug thinks hes found the key to a better life. Episode 13: 'The Four of us are Dying'- Gifted with the ability to change his face Arch Hammer devises a plan to elevate himself. Episode 14: 'Third from the Sun'- William Surka and a friend steal an experimental spaceship and go off to an unknown planet. Episode 15: I shot an Arrow into the Air'- The worlds first manned space mission goes awry stranding the crew on an asteroid. Episode 16: 'The Hitchhiker'- Alone on a cross country trip Nan Adams has a blowout. Surviving the incident, she gets back on the road, only to see the same hitch-hiker everywhere she looks. Episode 17: 'The Fever'- Tight fisted Franklin Gibbs is not happy when his wife wins a trip for 2 to Vegas. But things change when he falls under the spell of a slot machine that calls his name! Episode 18: 'The Last Flight'- World War One flying ace flies through a mysterious and lands at a modern U.S. Airbase in the year 1960. Episode 19: 'The Purple Testament'- Lt. Fitzgerald has found his own special wartime hell. Looking into the faces of his men prior to battle he has the ability to see whos about to die. Episode 20: 'Elegy'- 3 astronauts land on a remote asteroid where everyone is frozen in place. Episode 21: 'Mirror Image'- A woman spies her exact double at a bus station and becomes convinced the double is trying to take her place in this world. A fellow passenger thinks shes crazy..at first. Episode 22: 'The monsters are due on Maple St'- Inexplicable events cause the residents of Maple Street to errupt into rioting. Residents suspect alien invasion. Episode 23: 'A World Of Diffrence'- Arthur Curtis thinks hes an average businessman living a normal life. Or is he an actor playing a businessman in an office thats really a set? Episode 24:' Long live Walter Jameson'- A history teacher who talks about the past as if he lives it. Episode 25: 'People are Alike all over'- Space expidition crashes on Mars. Episode 26: 'Execution'- man in 1880 about to be hanged for shooting a man in the back. Episode 27: 'The Big Tall Wish'- Over the hill prizefighter gets a boost from a lil boy whos a big fan in a disillusioned world. Episode 28: 'A Nice Place to Visit'- After being shot to death a theif encounters white haired pip who gives him everything he wishes. Episode 29: 'Nightmare as a Child'- A schoolteacher who has blocked out the details of her Mother's murder and encounters a strange little girl. Episode 30: 'A stop at Willoughby'- Advertising exec cracks under pressure of his job dreaming about a peaceful town called Willoughby. Episode 31: 'The Chaser'- Roger Shackleforth, desperate to win the affection of the beautiful Leila, slips her a love potion. Episode 32: 'A Passage for Trumpet'- After commiting suicide an unsuccessful trumpet player is given a second chance at life. Episode 33: 'Mr. Bevis'- A good natured, accident prone eccentric whos guardian angel gives him a chance at success. Episode 34: 'The After Hours'- A woman discovers that the floor of a department store on which she bought a gold thimble dosent exist. Episode 35: 'The Mighty Casey'- Baseball team with a robot player. Episode 36: 'A world of his own'- Noted playwright who discovers he can make anything appear or disappear by just describing it. Season Two Episode 37: 'King Nine Will not Return'- WWII captain/a vast desert. Where is his crew and why are futuristic jets flying overhead? Episode 38: 'The Man in the Bottle'- A curio shop owner thinks hes found happiness when a genie he discovers in an old bottle grants him 4 wishes. Episode 39:' Nervous Man in a Four Dollar Room'- Small time hood is ordered to commit a murder he dosent want to perform. Episode 40: 'A Thing about Machines'- A man despises any sort of machine, and he'll experience a new kind of terror when he learns the feeling is mutual. Episode 41: 'The Howling Man'- During a walking trip in Europe Ellington loses his way and meets an insane monk claimed hes captured by the Devil. Episode 42:' Eye of the beholder aka Private World of Darkness'- Janets hideous face has made her an outcast all her life. As she waits for her last chance surgery, she ponders the consequence of failure. Episode 43: 'Nick of Time'- A superstitious newlywed becomes obsessed with a penny fortune telling machine. Episode 44:' The Lateness of the Hour'- Dr. Loren and the faultless Robot services he invented. Episode 45: 'The trouble with Temptation'- An aging actor who longs for the old days when his wife was alive. Hes given a glimpse of the past. Episode 46: 'A most unusual camera'- Two thieves find out a camera they have stolen take pictures of the future. Episode 47: 'Night of the Meek'- Christmas in the Twilight Zone. Art Carney as a forelorn department Santa who takes to drinking. Episode 48:'Dust'- A man about to be hanged for running over a little girl. The girls father uses magic dust and a change comes over village. Episode 49: 'Back There'- A man who travels back in time to Lincolns assassination. Episode 50: 'The Whole Truth'- Automobile compels used car dealer to tell the truth. He cant sell a single vehicle on his lot until he comes up with an unusual idea. Episode 51: 'The Invaders'- A flying saucer lands in the attic of an isolated house. Spaceship begins to stalk old woman. Episode 52: 'A penny for your thoughts'- Flip of a coin gives banker the power to read minds. Episode 53: 'Twenty Two'- Woman is terrified of returning nightmare involving number Twenty Two. Episode 54: 'The Odyssey of Flight 33'- Flight 33 picks up a tail wind and is blown off course. After corrected the flight arrives at its destination- a billion years of course. Episode 55: 'Mr. Dingle, The Strong'- A timid salesman is given super strength by a martian experimentor. Episode 56: 'Static'- an antique radio starts to broadcast programs from an old mans youth that only he can hear. Episode 57: 'The Prime Mover'- Ace Larson discovers his business partner can move things with his mind. They set out for Vegas and win. Episode 58: 'Long Distance Call'- Before Grandma died she gave Billy a toy telephone. When he uses it to talk to her, his parents dismiss it as imagination. Episode 59: 'A hundred yards over the Rim'- 1847, a western settler sets out to find medicine for his son, he returns with much more than medicine. Episode 60: 'The Rip Van Winkle Caper'- Thieves put themselves into suspended animation for 100 years after hiding a million dollars worth of gold bars. Episode 61: 'The Silence'- Archie Taylor offers man half a million dollars if he can keep quiet for a year. Episode 62: 'Shadow Play'- a man trapped in a reaccuring nightmare. Episode 63: 'The Mind and the Matter'- a book on the power of thought enables a worker to recreate the world exactly how he wants it. Episode 64: 'Will the real Martian please stand up'- State troopers follow tracks from an unidentified flying object. Episode 65: 'The Obsolete Man'- In a future state where religion and books have been banned, a librarian is judged obsolete by The Chancelor and sentenced to death. Season Three Episode 66: 'Two'- Two lone survivors of a nuclear Holocaust must start the world anew. Episode 67: 'The Arrival'- A plane lands safely but all passengers and crew are missing. Episode 68: 'The Shelter'- When a UFO invasion appears eminent, friends and neighbors are reduced to selfish conniving animals in a fight over one familys bomb shelter. Episode 69: 'The Passersby'- Civil War Confederate Soldier stops at a house, he soons realizes everyone who pass are dead. Episode 70: 'A Game of Pool'- a brilliant pool player in a show down. Episode 71: 'The Mirror' - a poor and ambitious central american farm worker overthrows his countrys tyranical leader. Episode 72: 'The Grave'- Notorious badman puts a curse on hired gun. Episode 73: 'It's a Good Life'- He knows your every thought, every emotion. He can eliminate all you hold dear. Who is he? A six yera old boy. Episode 74: 'Deaths'- Head Revisited- A former Nazi captain returns to a concentration camp to relive the good old days- until his long dead victims appear to deliver overdue justice! Episode 75: 'The Midnight Sun'- Earths orbit has changed drawing closer to the sun and promising imminent destruction. Or has it? Episode 76: 'Still Valley'- A confederate soldier gets a chance to win a Civil War for the South. Episode 77: 'The Jungle'- A businessman and a trip to Africa. A voodoo curse is placed upon him. Episode 78: 'Once upon a Time'- A janitor living in the year 1890 and a time traveling helmet. Episode 79: 'Five Characters in Search of an Exit'- clown, hobo army ranger are trapped in a enormous cyclinder. Episode 80: 'A Quality of Mercy'- A soldier gets a new perspective on war when he is forced to experience it from the enemy's point of view. Episode 81: 'Nothing in the Dark'- an old woman has fought with death a 1000 times and always won but she thinks a wounded policeman at her door is Mr. Death. Is He? Episode 82: 'One More Pallbearer'- Eccentric millionare offers use of his bomb shelter to 3 people who wronged him. Episode 83: 'Dean Mans Shoes'- a vagrant steps into a murdered gangsters expensive shoes and is taken over by the dead mans ghost. Episode 84: 'The Hunt'- An old hillbilly and his hound dog find themselves meet a gatekeeper who tells them theyre at the entrance to Heaven. One problem.. Dogs are not allowed. Episode 85: 'Showdown with Rance Mcgrew'- TV cowboy finds himself in a real old west Saloon where Jesse James challenges him to a showdown. Episode 86: 'Kick the Can'- an old man at sunnydale rest home discovered a secret to regaining youth. Episode 87: 'A piano in the House'- A critic uses a magical piano player to disclose his party guests hidden selves. Episode 88: 'The last rights of Jeff Mrytlebank'- came back to life at his own funeral, Jeff hasnt been the same. Townspeople want him out. Episode 89: 'To Serve Man'- The Kanamits, 9 foot tall aliens arrive on Earth. To Serve Man. Episode 90: 'The Fugitive'- Old Ben, A fugitive from Outer Space with a heart of gold. Episode 91: 'Little Girl Lost'- a 6 yr old who can be heard but not seen and has vanished into a 4rth dimension. Episode 92: 'Person or Persons Unknown'- David wakes up to find himself in a nightmare, no one, not even his wife or mother know him, all evidence of his identity has disapeared. Episode 93: 'The Little People'- Spaceship commander declares himself a god when he lands on a planet populated by people smaller than ants. Episode 94: 'Four O'Clock'- Political fanatic has determined that at 4 p.m. he will eliminate all his enemies by shrinking them. Episode 95: 'Hocus Pocus and Frisby'- Frisby is a loud mouth braggart whos boasts attract the attention of aliens. Episode 96: 'The Trade-Ins'- An elderly couple visits the New Life Corporation hoping to transplant their personalities into youthful bodies. Episode 97: 'The Gift'- An alien crash lands in a village and befriends and gives a present to a little boy. Episode 98: 'The Dummy'- A Ventriloquist is convinced that his dummy, Willie, is alive and evil. Episode 99: 'Young Mans Fancy'- Newlywed couple return to grooms childhood home, the ties of the past prove to strong to resist. Episode 100: 'I Sing the Body Electric'- Anne must learn to understand and accept that her new grandmother can be tender loving and thoughful even thought she is a Robot. Episode 101: 'Cavender is Coming'- Carol Burnett stars as Agnes in this tale of a klutzy usherette rescued from poverty by a guardian angel. Episode 102: 'The Changing of the Guard'- Donald Pleasance is Professor Ellis Fowler, forced to retire after 51 yrs of teaching. Fowler is startled by a ghostly appearance of former students.. Season Four Episode 103: 'In His Image'- Alan Talbot dosent understand why his hometown seems unfamiliar, why he is driven to kill and what are the noises in his head? Hes about to get answers when he comes face to face with his double. Episode 104: 'The Thirty Fathom Grave'- submerged submarine, 20 yrs after it was sunk by Japanese during World War II. Episode 105: 'Valley of the Shadow'- Phillip Redfield finds himself trapped in a small town where people can reverse time. Episode 106: 'Hes Alive'- Peter, 'Dennis Hopper', a smalltime Nazi Leader, yearns for more power. Episode 107: 'Mute'- 12 yr old girl who loses her parents in a fire and dosent speak. Episode 108: 'Death Ship'- 3 astronauts discover a wrecked duplicate of their spaceship and their own dead bodies! Episode 109: 'Jess Belle'- Billy Ben finds himself enchanted by the beautiful Jess Belle who soons learns the danger of buying a love spell from a witch. Episode 110: 'Miniature'- Charley Parkes is a shy bachelor who discovers a miniature doll alive inside a 19th century dollhouse. Episode 111: 'Printers Devil'- Newspaper editor on the brink of suicide, someone presents an unusual deal. Episode 112: 'No Time like the Past'- Paul travels back in time to try to prevent some of historys catastrophes. Episode 113: 'The Parallel'- Astronaut finds himself back on Earth in a world similar to but not quite his own. Episode 114: 'I dream of Genie'- George rubs a magic arabian lamp and a genie emerges to grant him one wish. Episode 115: 'The New Exhibit'- About a Wax Museum Episode 116: 'Of late I think of Cliffordville'- A bored wealthy businessman, gets a chance to go back in time and start over. Episode 117: 'The Incredible World of Horace Ford': Toy Designer spends most of his time reminiscing about his idyllic childhood. But when he gets a chance to go back to those years, he gets a bitter taste of reality. Episode 118: 'On Thursday we leave for Home'- Leader of a strander outpost in space for 30 yrs. Episode 119: 'Passage on the Lady Anne'- young couple books passage on old ship. Episode 120: 'The Bard'- Jack Weston is an untalented would be writer wohse career takes off when the ghost of William Shakespere writes his script. Season Five Episode 121: 'In Praise of Pip'- An alcoholic bookie regrets that he wasnt a better father to his son, 'Pip', critically wounded in South Vietnam. A visit to an amusement park gives them both a second chance. Episode 122: 'Steel'- The future, robots and asteroids. Episode 123: 'Nightmare at 20,000 Feet'- A salesman recovering from a nervous breakdown spots a gremlin on the wing of his plane. Episode 124: 'A kind of stopwatch'- magical stopwatch that can stop everything except him. Episode 125: 'The last night of a Jockey'- Mickey Rooney is Grady, a former jockey banned from horseracing. Episode 126: 'Living Doll'- Erich is displeased when his wife buys an expensive doll for his stepdaughter. He becomes even more displeased when the doll tells him it dosent like him. Episode 127: 'The old man in the cave'- a mysterious guardian helps a tiny community. Episode 128: 'Uncle Simon'- Barbara Polk has taken care of her detested Uncle for 25 yrs waiting impatiently to inherit his wealth. But his will states she must take care of his robot. Episode 129: 'Probe 7, over and out'- Lone survivors of 2 annihilated planets. Episode 130: 'The 7th is made up of Phantoms'- a trio of national guardsmen conducting war exercises. Episode 131: 'A short drink from a certain fountain'- an aging man desperate to keep up with his younger wife tries a youth serum. Episode 132: 'Ninety years without slumbering'- man believes he will die if his grandfather clock stops. Episode 133: 'Ring a Ding Girl'- Hollywood Star Bunny Blake gets an unusual gift from her town fan club. Episode 134: 'You Drive'- Oliver Pope hits a boy on a bike killing him. Episode 135: 'The Long Morrow'- 40 years in suspended animation. Episode 136: 'The Self improvement of Salvador Ross'- Salvador will stop at nothing to win Leahs love. He even trades his youth for money. Episode 137: 'Number 12 looks just like you'- at age 19, everyone must undergo an operation which makes them beautiful and identical to everyone else. But Marilyn refuses. Episode 138: 'Black Leather Jackets'- 3 tough looking guys on motorcycles move into a suburb. Dont drink the water. Episode 139: 'Night Call'- Lonely and confined to a wheelchair Elva Keene starts to get numerous mysterious phone calls. Terrified, she screams the words that will doom her. Episode 140: 'From Agnes, With Love'- A computer technician must dela with the queen of all femme fatales, a computer names Agnes who wreaks havoc on his love life. Episode 141: 'Spur of the Moment'- Woman chased by mysterious figure in black. Episode 142: 'An Occurence at Owl Creek Bridge'- Confederate spy spared death when the rope meant to hang him breaks. Or does it? Episode 143: 'Queen of the Nile'- a columnist,a movie star and a secret. Episode 144: 'Whats in the box'- Joe sees a secret revealed and its horrible consequences on his tv set. Episode 145: 'The Masks'- Knowing he is about to die, Foster summons his heirs to his mansion for a bizarre Mardi Gras ritual and gives them the inheritance they so richly deserve! Episode 146: 'I am the Night, Color me Black'- an execution day and pitch black skies. Episode 147: 'Sounds and Silences'- Roswell, a boisterous man who loves noise. But when his wife leaves the volume in his life goes haywire. Episode 148: 'Ceasar and me'- Ventriloquist Jonathan West is no match for his evil dummy- Little Ceasar, woh grabs the chance to set him up for a fall. Episode 149: 'The Jeopardy Room'- man has 3 hours to escape from a room with a ticking bomb and a gun pointing at his head. Episode 150: 'Stopover in a quiet town'- 2 people wake up in a strange town where everything appears to be fake. Episode 151: 'The Encounter' - ' A rare non syndicated episode'- Fenton, a WWII Vet, proudly shows his captured sumurai sword to Arthur Takamuri, a young Japanese American gardener- who picks it up and instantly knows he must kill his host! Episode 152: 'Mr. Garrity and the Graves'- Jared Garrity makes a living reserecting the dead in the old west. Episode 153: 'The Brain center at Whipple's'- Callous factory owner Wallace Whipple automates his plant, putting thousands of men out of work, Smugly self satisfied, he has no regrets.. At first. Episode 154: 'Come Wander with Me'- a singer journeys to the backwoods to find authentic folk songs. Episode 155: 'The Fear'- An unknown creature hidden in the shadows terrorizes a hysterical young woman a state trooper whos there to help her. Episode 156: 'The Bewitchin' Pool'- For children distraught by feuding parents, a special swimming pool offers admittance to a happier, simpler place. There are tons of extras on these DVDS. Some of the extras include Conversations with Rod Serling, Photo Galleries, Billboards, Alfred Hitchcock Promo, Everything you could imagine. Enjoy it.

| Contributor | Abner Biberman, Abraham Sofaer, Adam Williams, Agnes Moorehead, Alan Dexter, Alan Napier, Alan Sues, Albert Carrier, Albert Salmi, Albert Szabo, Alex Nicol, Alexander Scourby, Alice Frost, Alice Pearce, Allan Lurie, Allen Miner, Allen Reisner, Alma Platt, Alvin Ganzer, Andrea Margolis, Andy Devine, Angus Duncan, Ann Blyth, Ann Jillian, Anne Barton, Anne Francis, Anne O'Neal, Anthony Ray, Antoinette Bower, Anton Leader, Arch Johnson, Arline Sax, Art Carney, Art Lewis, Arte Johnson, Arthur Batanides, Arthur Hunnicutt, Arthur Peterson, Asa Maynor, Austin Green, Barbara Barrie, Barbara Baxley, Barbara Nichols, Barbara Perry, Barbara Stuart, Barnaby Hale, Barney Phillips, Barry Atwater, Barry Brooks, Barry Nelson, Bart Burns, Bartlett Robinson, Barton Heyman, Ben Cooper, Ben Erway, Ben Wright, Bernard Fein, Bernard Girard, Bernie Hamilton, Bert Granet, Betty Garde, Betty Harford, Betty Lou Gerson, Beverly Brown, Beverly Garland, Bill Bixby, Bill Diamond, Bill Erwin, Bill Hickman, Bill Mumy, Bill Self, Bill Walker, Billy Beck, Billy Booth, Billy Vincent, Bing Russell, Bob Biheller, Bob Hastings, Bob Hopkins, Bob Kelljan, Bob Kline, Bob McCord, Bob Mitchell, Bonnie Beecher, Boris Sagal, Brian Aherne, Brooke Hayward, Buck Houghton, Buddy Ebsen, Buddy Hart, Burgess Meredith, Burt Metcalfe, Burt Mustin, Burt Reynolds, Buster Keaton, Butch Hengen, Buzz Kulik, Byron Foulger, Byron Morrow, Carl McIntire, Carleton Young, Carmen D'Antonio, Carmen Mathews, Carol Burnett, Carole Kent, Carolyn Kearney, Carter Mulavey, Casey Adams, Cecil Kellaway, Cedric Hardwicke, Celia Lovsky, Charles Aidman, Charles Bronson, Charles Herbert, Charles Horvath, Charles Kuenstle, Charles Lane, Charles P. Thompson, Charles S. Carlson, Charles Seel, Chet Stratton, Christian Nyby, Christian Nyby II, Christine Burke, Christine White, Chuck Fox, Chuck Hicks, Clancy Cooper, Claude Akins, Clegg Hoyt, Clem Bevans, Cliff Osmond, Cliff Robertson, Cloris Leachman, Colleen O'Sullivan, Conlan Carter, Connie Gilchrist, Constance Ford, Curt Conway, Cyril Delevanti, Dabbs Greer, Dan Duryea, Dan Tobin, Dan White, Dana Andrews, Dana Dillaway, Dane Clark, Dave Willock, David Armstrong, David Bond, David Butler, David Garcia, David Lowell Rich, David Macklin, David Opatoshu, David Orrick McDearmon, David Sheiner, David Thursby, David Wayne, David White, Dean Jagger, Dean Stockwell, Dee Carroll, Dee Hartford, Denise Alexander, Dennis Hopper, Dennis Weaver, Denver Pyle, Dewey Martin, Diana Hyland, Diane Honodel, Dick Wessel, Dick Wilson, Dick York, Diedre Owen, Don Dubbins, Don Gazzaniga, Don Gordon, Don Keefer, Don Medford, Don O'Kelly, Don Rickles, Don Siegel, Don Weis, Don Wilbanks, Donald Foster, Donald Journeaux, Donald Losby, Donald Pleasence, Donna Douglas, Doris Karnes, Doris Kemper, Doris Packer, Doris Singleton, Doro Merande, Dorothy Adams, Dorothy Neumann, Doug McClure, Douglas Dumbrille, Douglas Heyes, Douglas Lambert, Douglas Spencer, Duane Grey, Dub Taylor, Dwight Townsend, Earl Hamner, Earl Hodgins, Earl Holliman, Ed Kemmer, Ed Nelson, Ed Wynn, Eddie Marr, Edgar Buchanan, Edson Stroll, Edward Andrews, Edward Binns, Edward Platt, Edward Ryder, Edwin Rand, Edy Williams, Eileen Ryan, Eleanor Audley, Elizabeth Allen, Elizabeth Harrower, Elizabeth Montgomery, Elliot Silverstein, Ernest Truex, Eugene Borden, Evans Evans, Eve McVeagh, Everett Glass, Everett Sloane, Ezelle Poule, Farrah Fawcett, Fay Roope, Felix Locher, Ferris Taylor, Florence MacMichael, Florence Marly, Forrest Compton, Franchot Tone, Francis de Sales, Frank Aletter, Frank Allocca, Frank Behrens, Frank Ferguson, Frank London, Frank Maxwell, Frank Overton, Frank Silvera, Frank Sutton, Frank Tallman, Frank Watkins, Frank Wolff, Frankie Van, Fred Clark, Fred Kruger, Fredd Wayne, Frederick Ledebur, Fritz Weaver, Gail Kobe, Garry Walberg, Gary Crosby, Gary Merrill, Gene Lyons, Gene Roth, Geoffrey Horne, George Baxter, George Chandler, George E. Stone, George Grizzard, George Keymas, George Lindsey, George Macready, George Mitchell, George Murdock, George Petrie, George Takei, Georgia Simmons, Gerald Gordon, Gig Young, Gil Lamb, Gladys Cooper, Gloria Pall, Greg Morris, Guy Raymond, Guy Wilkerson, H.M. Wynant, Hal K. Dawson, Hank Patterson, Hardie Albright, Harold D. Schuster, Harold Gould, Harold Innocent, Harold J. Stone, Harp McGuire, Harry Bartell, Harry Fleer, Harry Jackson, Harry Raybould, Harry Swoger, Harry Townes, Harvey Keitel, Hayden Rorke, Hazel Court, Helen Brown, Helen Kleeb, Helen Wallace, Helen Westcott, Henry Beckman, Henry Corden, Henry Hunter, Henry Jones, Henry Scott, Herbert Hirschman, Herbert Lytton, Herbie Faye, Horace McMahon, House Peters, Jr., Howard Caine, Howard Duff, Howard I. Smith, Howard McNear, Howard Morris, Howard Wright, Hugh Sanders, Ian Wolfe, Ida Lupino, Inger Stevens, Irene Dailey, Irene Hervey, Irene Tedrow, Ivan Dixon, J. Pat O'Malley, Jack Albertson, Jack Carson, Jack Elam, Jack Ging, Jack Grinnage, Jack Klugman, Jack Mann, Jack Perkins, Jack Raine, Jack Smight, Jack Warden, Jack Weston, Jackie Cooper, Jacqueline De Wit, Jacqueline Scott, Jacques Aubuchon, Jacques Tourneur, James Best, James Broderick, James Callahan, James Coburn, James Daly, James Doohan, James Flavin, James Franciscus, James Gavin, James Gregory, James Hector, James Maloney, James McCallion, James Millhollin, James Seay, James Sheldon, James Turley, James Westerfield, James Whitmore, James Yagi, Jan Handzlik, Jane Burgess, Jane Romeyn, Janice Rule, Jason Johnson, Jason Wingreen, Jay Adler, Jay Overholts, Jean Marsh, Jean Willes, Jeane Wood, Jeanette Nolan, Jeanne Bates, Jeanne Cooper, Jeanne Evans, Jeannie Carson, Jeff Morrow, Jeffrey Morris, Jeffrey Sayre, Jenna McMahon, Jennifer Howard, Jenny Maxwell, Jerome Cowan, Jerry Catron, Jerry Davis, Jerry Fujikawa, Jerry Fuller, Jesse White, Jim Boles, Jim Hutton, Jim Johnson, Jimmie Baird, Jimmy Lydon, Jo Helton, Joan Blondell, Joan Marshall, Joanna Heyes, Joanne Linville, Joe Bassett, Joe Bernard, Joe Flynn, Joe Hamilton, Joe Haworth, Joe Higgins, Joe Mantell, Joe Maross, Joe Perry, Joe Scott, John Alonso, John Anderson, John Archer, John Astin, John Brahm, John Carradine, John Clarke, John Cliff, John Considine, John Conwell, John Craven, John Crawford, John Dehner, John Eldredge, John Fiedler, John Harmon, John Holland, John Hoyt, John Kroger, John Larch, John Lasell, John M. Pickard, John Marley, John McGiver, John McIntire, John McLiam, John Mitchum, John Newton, John Rich, John Sullivan, John Williams, John Zaremba, John van Dreelen, Jon Lormer, Jonathan Harris, Jonathan Hole, Jonathan Winters, Joseph Corey, Joseph Newman, Joseph Ruskin, Joseph Schildkraut, Joseph Wiseman, Josephine Hutchinson, Josip Elic, Joyce Jameson, Joyce Van Patten, Judy Ellis, Julie Newmar, June C. Ellis, June Dayton, June Foray, Jus Addiss, Kaaren Verne, Karen Norris, Kate Murtagh, Katherine Squire, Kathleen O'Malley, Kay Cousins, Keenan Wynn, Kelton Garwood, Ken Drake, Ken Lynch, Kendrick Huxham, Kenneth Haigh, Kevin Hagen, Kevin Jones, Kevin O'Neal, Kim Hamilton, King Calder, Kirk Douglas, Lamont Johnson, Lance Fuller, Larrian Gillespie, Larry Barton, Larry Blake, Larry Blyden, Larry Gates, Larry Johns, Laura Devon, Lea Marmer, Lea Waggner, Lee Kinsolving, Lee Marvin, Lee Millar, Lee Philips, Lee Sabinson, Lee Sands, Lee Van Cleef, Lela Bliss, Lenny Geer, Leon Belasco, Leonard Nimoy, Leonard Strong, Leslie Barrett, Leslie E. Bradley, Leslie Goodwins, Lester Fletcher, Lew Brown, Lew Gallo, Liam Sullivan, Lili Darvas, Lillian O'Malley, Linden Chiles, Lindsay Workman, Lisa Golm, Lloyd Bochner, Logan Field, Lois Nettleton, Lori March, Loring Smith, Ludwig Donath, Luther Adler, Lyn Guild, Mack Williams, Madge Kennedy, Maggie Mahoney, Maggie McNamara, Malcolm Atterbury, Marc Cavell, Marc Towers, Marcel Hillaire, Margarita Cordova, Marge Redmond, Mariette Hartley, Marjorie Bennett, Mark Miller, Mark Richman, Mark Tapscott, Marsha Hunt, Martin Balsam, Martin Landau, Martin Milner, Martine Bartlett, Marvin Miller, Mary Adams, Mary Badham, Mary Carver, Mary Gregory, Mary Laroche, Mary Munday, Mary Webster, Mavis Neal, Max Slaten, Maxine Cooper, Maxine Stuart, Meg Wylie, Mercedes Shirley, Merritt Bohn, Michael Burns, Michael Conrad, Michael Constantine, Michael D. Ford, Michael Forest, Michael Fox, Michael Keep, Michael Montgomery, Michael Pataki, Michael Vandeveer, Mickey Maga, Mickey Rooney, Mike Kellin, Milton Frome, Milton Parsons, Milton Selzer, Miranda Jones, Mitchell Leisen, Mitzi McCall, Montgomery Pittman, Morgan Jones, Moyna MacGill, Murray Hamilton, Murray Matheson, Nan Martin, Nan Peterson, Nancy Kulp, Nancy Malone, Nancy Rennick, Naomi Stevens, Natalie Masters, Natalie Trundy, Ned Glass, Nehemiah Persoff, Nesdon Booth, Neville Brand, Nick Cravat, Nico Minardos, Nina Roman, Noah Keen, Nora Marlowe, Norma Connolly, Norman Leavitt, Norman Sturgis, Norman Z. McLeod, Olan Soule, Oliver McGowan, Orson Bean, Orville Sherman, Oscar Beregi, Pat Crowley, Pat Hingle, Pat O'Malley, Pat O'Moore, Patricia Barry, Patricia Breslin, Patricia Donahue, Patricia Smith, Patrick Macnee, Patrick O'Neal, Patrick Waltz, Patrick Westwood, Patrick Whyte, Paul Baxley, Paul Bryar, Paul Comi, Paul Fix, Paul Genge, Paul Hartman, Paul Lambert, Paul Langton, Paul Mazursky, Paul Stewart, Paul Tripp, Peggy Stewart, Penny Singleton, Percy Helton, Perry Lafferty, Pert Kelton, Peter Brocco, Peter Coe, Peter Falk, Peter Walker, Phil Chambers, Philip Abbott, Philip Ober, Philippa Bevans, Phillip Pine, Phyllis Kirk, Phyllis Love, Phyllis Thaxter, Pippa Scott, R.G. Armstrong, Ralph Manza, Ralph Moody, Ralph Nelson, Ralph Senensky, Ralph Votrian, Randy Boone, Ray Galvin, Ray Kellogg, Ray Teal, Rayford Barnes, Raymond Bailey, Raymond Greenleaf, Read Morgan, Reid Hammond, Rex Holman, Rhoda Williams, Richard Angarola, Richard Basehart, Richard Conte, Richard Devon, Richard Donner, Richard Erdman, Richard Geary, Richard Haydn, Richard Karlan, Richard Kiel, Richard L. Bare, Richard Long, Richard Lupino, Richard Peel, Richard Sarafian, Ricky Kelman, Robert Ball, Robert Boon, Robert Boone, Robert Bray, Robert Brubaker, Robert Burton, Robert Butler, Robert Cornthwaite, Robert Cummings, Robert Duvall, Robert Ellis Miller, Robert Emhardt, Robert Florey, Robert Foulk, Robert Gist, Robert Hogan, Robert Karnes, Robert Keith, Robert L. McCord III, Robert Lansing, Robert Lieb, Robert Parrish, Robert Redford, Robert Riordan, Robert Sampson, Robert Simon, Robert Snyder, Robert Sorrells, Robert Sterling, Robert Stevens, Robert Tafur, Robert Warwick, Robin Hughes, Rod Serling, Rod Taylor, Roddy McDowall, Rodolfo Hoyos, Roger Davis, Roger Kay, Ron Masak, Ron Stokes, Ron Winston, Ronny Howard, Rose Flynn, Ross Elliott, Ross Martin, Roy Roberts, Russ Bender, Russell Collins, Russell Horton, Russell Johnson, Russell Trent, Rusty Lane, Rusty Wescoatt, Ruta Lee, Ruth Phillips, Ruth White, Ryan Hayes, S. John Launer, Sam Balter, Sandra Gould, Sandra Warner, Sandy Kenyon, Sara Taft, Sarah Marshall, Sarah Selby, Seymour Cassel, Seymour Green, Shelley Berman, Shelley Fabares, Shepperd Strudwick, Sheridan Comerate, Sherry Jackson, Shirley Ballard, Shirley O'Hara Krims, Simon Oakland, Simon Scott, Stafford Repp, Stanley Adams, Stanley Donen, Stephen Talbot, Sterling Holloway, Steve Cochran, Steve Forrest, Steven Perry, Strother Martin, Stuart Nisbet, Stuart Rosenberg, Sue Randall, Susan Cummings, Susan Dorn, Susan Gordon, Susan Harrison, Susan Oliver, Suzanne Cupito, Suzanne Lloyd, Suzy Parker, Sydney Pollack, Tammy Marihugh, Ted Jacques, Ted Knight, Ted Otis, Ted Post, Ted Stanhope, Ted de Corsia, Telly Savalas, Terence de Marney, Terry Becker, Terry Burnham, Than Wyenn, Theo Marcuse, Theodore Bikel, Therese Lyon, Thomas Gomez, Tim O'Connor, Tim Stafford, Titus Moede, Tod Andrews, Tom Lowell, Tom Palmer, Tom Reese, Tommy Nello, Totty Ames, Tracy Stratford, Trevor Bardette, Troy Melton, Tudor Owen, Val Avery, Valley Keane, Vaughn Taylor, Vera Miles, Vernon Gray, Veronica Cartwright, Vic Perrin, Virginia Christine, Virginia Gregg, Vito Scotti, Vivi Janiss, Vladimir Sokoloff, Wallace Rooney, Walter Brooke, Walter Burke, Walter E. Grauman, Walter Reed, Ward Wood, Warren Kemmerling, Warren Oates, Warren Parker, Warren Stevens, Wayne Heffley, Wayne Mallory, Wendell Holmes, Wesley Lau, Wilfrid Hyde-White, Will J. White, Will Kuluva, William Asher, William Benedict, William Challee, William D. Gordon, William Demarest, William Edmonson, William F. Claxton, William Fawcett, William Froug, William Idelson, William Joseph Keene, William Kendis, William McLean, William Mims, William Phipps, William Reynolds, William Sargent, William Schallert, William Shatner, William Swan, William Windom, Willis B. Bouchey, Wright King Contributor Abner Biberman, Abraham Sofaer, Adam Williams, Agnes Moorehead, Alan Dexter, Alan Napier, Alan Sues, Albert Carrier, Albert Salmi, Albert Szabo, Alex Nicol, Alexander Scourby, Alice Frost, Alice Pearce, Allan Lurie, Allen Miner, Allen Reisner, Alma Platt, Alvin Ganzer, Andrea Margolis, Andy Devine, Angus Duncan, Ann Blyth, Ann Jillian, Anne Barton, Anne Francis, Anne O'Neal, Anthony Ray, Antoinette Bower, Anton Leader, Arch Johnson, Arline Sax, Art Carney, Art Lewis, Arte Johnson, Arthur Batanides, Arthur Hunnicutt, Arthur Peterson, Asa Maynor, Austin Green, Barbara Barrie, Barbara Baxley, Barbara Nichols, Barbara Perry, Barbara Stuart, Barnaby Hale, Barney Phillips, Barry Atwater, Barry Brooks, Barry Nelson, Bart Burns, Bartlett Robinson, Barton Heyman, Ben Cooper, Ben Erway, Ben Wright, Bernard Fein, Bernard Girard, Bernie Hamilton, Bert Granet, Betty Garde, Betty Harford, Betty Lou Gerson, Beverly Brown, Beverly Garland, Bill Bixby, Bill Diamond, Bill Erwin, Bill Hickman, Bill Mumy, Bill Self, Bill Walker, Billy Beck, Billy Booth, Billy Vincent, Bing Russell, Bob Biheller, Bob Hastings, Bob Hopkins, Bob Kelljan, Bob Kline, Bob McCord, Bob Mitchell, Bonnie Beecher, Boris Sagal, Brian Aherne, Brooke Hayward, Buck Houghton, Buddy Ebsen, Buddy Hart, Burgess Meredith, Burt Metcalfe, Burt Mustin, Burt Reynolds, Buster Keaton, Butch Hengen, Buzz Kulik, Byron Foulger, Byron Morrow, Carl McIntire, Carleton Young, Carmen D'Antonio, Carmen Mathews, Carol Burnett, Carole Kent, Carolyn Kearney, Carter Mulavey, Casey Adams, Cecil Kellaway, Cedric Hardwicke, Celia Lovsky, Charles Aidman, Charles Bronson, Charles Herbert, Charles Horvath, Charles Kuenstle, Charles Lane, Charles P. Thompson, Charles S. Carlson, Charles Seel, Chet Stratton, Christian Nyby, Christian Nyby II, Christine Burke, Christine White, Chuck Fox, Chuck Hicks, Clancy Cooper, Claude Akins, Clegg Hoyt, Clem Bevans, Cliff Osmond, Cliff Robertson, Cloris Leachman, Colleen O'Sullivan, Conlan Carter, Connie Gilchrist, Constance Ford, Curt Conway, Cyril Delevanti, Dabbs Greer, Dan Duryea, Dan Tobin, Dan White, Dana Andrews, Dana Dillaway, Dane Clark, Dave Willock, David Armstrong, David Bond, David Butler, David Garcia, David Lowell Rich, David Macklin, David Opatoshu, David Orrick McDearmon, David Sheiner, David Thursby, David Wayne, David White, Dean Jagger, Dean Stockwell, Dee Carroll, Dee Hartford, Denise Alexander, Dennis Hopper, Dennis Weaver, Denver Pyle, Dewey Martin, Diana Hyland, Diane Honodel, Dick Wessel, Dick Wilson, Dick York, Diedre Owen, Don Dubbins, Don Gazzaniga, Don Gordon, Don Keefer, Don Medford, Don O'Kelly, Don Rickles, Don Siegel, Don Weis, Don Wilbanks, Donald Foster, Donald Journeaux, Donald Losby, Donald Pleasence, Donna Douglas, Doris Karnes, Doris Kemper, Doris Packer, Doris Singleton, Doro Merande, Dorothy Adams, Dorothy Neumann, Doug McClure, Douglas Dumbrille, Douglas Heyes, Douglas Lambert, Douglas Spencer, Duane Grey, Dub Taylor, Dwight Townsend, Earl Hamner, Earl Hodgins, Earl Holliman, Ed Kemmer, Ed Nelson, Ed Wynn, Eddie Marr, Edgar Buchanan, Edson Stroll, Edward Andrews, Edward Binns, Edward Platt, Edward Ryder, Edwin Rand, Edy Williams, Eileen Ryan, Eleanor Audley, Elizabeth Allen, Elizabeth Harrower, Elizabeth Montgomery, Elliot Silverstein, Ernest Truex, Eugene Borden, Evans Evans, Eve McVeagh, Everett Glass, Everett Sloane, Ezelle Poule, Farrah Fawcett, Fay Roope, Felix Locher, Ferris Taylor, Florence MacMichael, Florence Marly, Forrest Compton, Franchot Tone, Francis de Sales, Frank Aletter, Frank Allocca, Frank Behrens, Frank Ferguson, Frank London, Frank Maxwell, Frank Overton, Frank Silvera, Frank Sutton, Frank Tallman, Frank Watkins, Frank Wolff, Frankie Van, Fred Clark, Fred Kruger, Fredd Wayne, Frederick Ledebur, Fritz Weaver, Gail Kobe, Garry Walberg, Gary Crosby, Gary Merrill, Gene Lyons, Gene Roth, Geoffrey Horne, George Baxter, George Chandler, George E. Stone, George Grizzard, George Keymas, George Lindsey, George Macready, George Mitchell, George Murdock, George Petrie, George Takei, Georgia Simmons, Gerald Gordon, Gig Young, Gil Lamb, Gladys Cooper, Gloria Pall, Greg Morris, Guy Raymond, Guy Wilkerson, H.M. Wynant, Hal K. Dawson, Hank Patterson, Hardie Albright, Harold D. Schuster, Harold Gould, Harold Innocent, Harold J. Stone, Harp McGuire, Harry Bartell, Harry Fleer, Harry Jackson, Harry Raybould, Harry Swoger, Harry Townes, Harvey Keitel, Hayden Rorke, Hazel Court, Helen Brown, Helen Kleeb, Helen Wallace, Helen Westcott, Henry Beckman, Henry Corden, Henry Hunter, Henry Jones, Henry Scott, Herbert Hirschman, Herbert Lytton, Herbie Faye, Horace McMahon, House Peters, Jr., Howard Caine, Howard Duff, Howard I. Smith, Howard McNear, Howard Morris, Howard Wright, Hugh Sanders, Ian Wolfe, Ida Lupino, Inger Stevens, Irene Dailey, Irene Hervey, Irene Tedrow, Ivan Dixon, J. Pat O'Malley, Jack Albertson, Jack Carson, Jack Elam, Jack Ging, Jack Grinnage, Jack Klugman, Jack Mann, Jack Perkins, Jack Raine, Jack Smight, Jack Warden, Jack Weston, Jackie Cooper, Jacqueline De Wit, Jacqueline Scott, Jacques Aubuchon, Jacques Tourneur, James Best, James Broderick, James Callahan, James Coburn, James Daly, James Doohan, James Flavin, James Franciscus, James Gavin, James Gregory, James Hector, James Maloney, James McCallion, James Millhollin, James Seay, James Sheldon, James Turley, James Westerfield, James Whitmore, James Yagi, Jan Handzlik, Jane Burgess, Jane Romeyn, Janice Rule, Jason Johnson, Jason Wingreen, Jay Adler, Jay Overholts, Jean Marsh, Jean Willes, Jeane Wood, Jeanette Nolan, Jeanne Bates, Jeanne Cooper, Jeanne Evans, Jeannie Carson, Jeff Morrow, Jeffrey Morris, Jeffrey Sayre, Jenna McMahon, Jennifer Howard, Jenny Maxwell, Jerome Cowan, Jerry Catron, Jerry Davis, Jerry Fujikawa, Jerry Fuller, Jesse White, Jim Boles, Jim Hutton, Jim Johnson, Jimmie Baird, Jimmy Lydon, Jo Helton, Joan Blondell, Joan Marshall, Joanna Heyes, Joanne Linville, Joe Bassett, Joe Bernard, Joe Flynn, Joe Hamilton, Joe Haworth, Joe Higgins, Joe Mantell, Joe Maross, Joe Perry, Joe Scott, John Alonso, John Anderson, John Archer, John Astin, John Brahm, John Carradine, John Clarke, John Cliff, John Considine, John Conwell, John Craven, John Crawford, John Dehner, John Eldredge, John Fiedler, John Harmon, John Holland, John Hoyt, John Kroger, John Larch, John Lasell, John M. Pickard, John Marley, John McGiver, John McIntire, John McLiam, John Mitchum, John Newton, John Rich, John Sullivan, John Williams, John Zaremba, John van Dreelen, Jon Lormer, Jonathan Harris, Jonathan Hole, Jonathan Winters, Joseph Corey, Joseph Newman, Joseph Ruskin, Joseph Schildkraut, Joseph Wiseman, Josephine Hutchinson, Josip Elic, Joyce Jameson, Joyce Van Patten, Judy Ellis, Julie Newmar, June C. Ellis, June Dayton, June Foray, Jus Addiss, Kaaren Verne, Karen Norris, Kate Murtagh, Katherine Squire, Kathleen O'Malley, Kay Cousins, Keenan Wynn, Kelton Garwood, Ken Drake, Ken Lynch, Kendrick Huxham, Kenneth Haigh, Kevin Hagen, Kevin Jones, Kevin O'Neal, Kim Hamilton, King Calder, Kirk Douglas, Lamont Johnson, Lance Fuller, Larrian Gillespie, Larry Barton, Larry Blake, Larry Blyden, Larry Gates, Larry Johns, Laura Devon, Lea Marmer, Lea Waggner, Lee Kinsolving, Lee Marvin, Lee Millar, Lee Philips, Lee Sabinson, Lee Sands, Lee Van Cleef, Lela Bliss, Lenny Geer, Leon Belasco, Leonard Nimoy, Leonard Strong, Leslie Barrett, Leslie E. Bradley, Leslie Goodwins, Lester Fletcher, Lew Brown, Lew Gallo, Liam Sullivan, Lili Darvas, Lillian O'Malley, Linden Chiles, Lindsay Workman, Lisa Golm, Lloyd Bochner, Logan Field, Lois Nettleton, Lori March, Loring Smith, Ludwig Donath, Luther Adler, Lyn Guild, Mack Williams, Madge Kennedy, Maggie Mahoney, Maggie McNamara, Malcolm Atterbury, Marc Cavell, Marc Towers, Marcel Hillaire, Margarita Cordova, Marge Redmond, Mariette Hartley, Marjorie Bennett, Mark Miller, Mark Richman, Mark Tapscott, Marsha Hunt, Martin Balsam, Martin Landau, Martin Milner, Martine Bartlett, Marvin Miller, Mary Adams, Mary Badham, Mary Carver, Mary Gregory, Mary Laroche, Mary Munday, Mary Webster, Mavis Neal, Max Slaten, Maxine Cooper, Maxine Stuart, Meg Wylie, Mercedes Shirley, Merritt Bohn, Michael Burns, Michael Conrad, Michael Constantine, Michael D. Ford, Michael Forest, Michael Fox, Michael Keep, Michael Montgomery, Michael Pataki, Michael Vandeveer, Mickey Maga, Mickey Rooney, Mike Kellin, Milton Frome, Milton Parsons, Milton Selzer, Miranda Jones, Mitchell Leisen, Mitzi McCall, Montgomery Pittman, Morgan Jones, Moyna MacGill, Murray Hamilton, Murray Matheson, Nan Martin, Nan Peterson, Nancy Kulp, Nancy Malone, Nancy Rennick, Naomi Stevens, Natalie Masters, Natalie Trundy, Ned Glass, Nehemiah Persoff, Nesdon Booth, Neville Brand, Nick Cravat, Nico Minardos, Nina Roman, Noah Keen, Nora Marlowe, Norma Connolly, Norman Leavitt, Norman Sturgis, Norman Z. McLeod, Olan Soule, Oliver McGowan, Orson Bean, Orville Sherman, Oscar Beregi, Pat Crowley, Pat Hingle, Pat O'Malley, Pat O'Moore, Patricia Barry, Patricia Breslin, Patricia Donahue, Patricia Smith, Patrick Macnee, Patrick O'Neal, Patrick Waltz, Patrick Westwood, Patrick Whyte, Paul Baxley, Paul Bryar, Paul Comi, Paul Fix, Paul Genge, Paul Hartman, Paul Lambert, Paul Langton, Paul Mazursky, Paul Stewart, Paul Tripp, Peggy Stewart, Penny Singleton, Percy Helton, Perry Lafferty, Pert Kelton, Peter Brocco, Peter Coe, Peter Falk, Peter Walker, Phil Chambers, Philip Abbott, Philip Ober, Philippa Bevans, Phillip Pine, Phyllis Kirk, Phyllis Love, Phyllis Thaxter, Pippa Scott, R.G. Armstrong, Ralph Manza, Ralph Moody, Ralph Nelson, Ralph Senensky, Ralph Votrian, Randy Boone, Ray Galvin, Ray Kellogg, Ray Teal, Rayford Barnes, Raymond Bailey, Raymond Greenleaf, Read Morgan, Reid Hammond, Rex Holman, Rhoda Williams, Richard Angarola, Richard Basehart, Richard Conte, Richard Devon, Richard Donner, Richard Erdman, Richard Geary, Richard Haydn, Richard Karlan, Richard Kiel, Richard L. Bare, Richard Long, Richard Lupino, Richard Peel, Richard Sarafian, Ricky Kelman, Robert Ball, Robert Boon, Robert Boone, Robert Bray, Robert Brubaker, Robert Burton, Robert Butler, Robert Cornthwaite, Robert Cummings, Robert Duvall, Robert Ellis Miller, Robert Emhardt, Robert Florey, Robert Foulk, Robert Gist, Robert Hogan, Robert Karnes, Robert Keith, Robert L. McCord III, Robert Lansing, Robert Lieb, Robert Parrish, Robert Redford, Robert Riordan, Robert Sampson, Robert Simon, Robert Snyder, Robert Sorrells, Robert Sterling, Robert Stevens, Robert Tafur, Robert Warwick, Robin Hughes, Rod Serling, Rod Taylor, Roddy McDowall, Rodolfo Hoyos, Roger Davis, Roger Kay, Ron Masak, Ron Stokes, Ron Winston, Ronny Howard, Rose Flynn, Ross Elliott, Ross Martin, Roy Roberts, Russ Bender, Russell Collins, Russell Horton, Russell Johnson, Russell Trent, Rusty Lane, Rusty Wescoatt, Ruta Lee, Ruth Phillips, Ruth White, Ryan Hayes, S. John Launer, Sam Balter, Sandra Gould, Sandra Warner, Sandy Kenyon, Sara Taft, Sarah Marshall, Sarah Selby, Seymour Cassel, Seymour Green, Shelley Berman, Shelley Fabares, Shepperd Strudwick, Sheridan Comerate, Sherry Jackson, Shirley Ballard, Shirley O'Hara Krims, Simon Oakland, Simon Scott, Stafford Repp, Stanley Adams, Stanley Donen, Stephen Talbot, Sterling Holloway, Steve Cochran, Steve Forrest, Steven Perry, Strother Martin, Stuart Nisbet, Stuart Rosenberg, Sue Randall, Susan Cummings, Susan Dorn, Susan Gordon, Susan Harrison, Susan Oliver, Suzanne Cupito, Suzanne Lloyd, Suzy Parker, Sydney Pollack, Tammy Marihugh, Ted Jacques, Ted Knight, Ted Otis, Ted Post, Ted Stanhope, Ted de Corsia, Telly Savalas, Terence de Marney, Terry Becker, Terry Burnham, Than Wyenn, Theo Marcuse, Theodore Bikel, Therese Lyon, Thomas Gomez, Tim O'Connor, Tim Stafford, Titus Moede, Tod Andrews, Tom Lowell, Tom Palmer, Tom Reese, Tommy Nello, Totty Ames, Tracy Stratford, Trevor Bardette, Troy Melton, Tudor Owen, Val Avery, Valley Keane, Vaughn Taylor, Vera Miles, Vernon Gray, Veronica Cartwright, Vic Perrin, Virginia Christine, Virginia Gregg, Vito Scotti, Vivi Janiss, Vladimir Sokoloff, Wallace Rooney, Walter Brooke, Walter Burke, Walter E. Grauman, Walter Reed, Ward Wood, Warren Kemmerling, Warren Oates, Warren Parker, Warren Stevens, Wayne Heffley, Wayne Mallory, Wendell Holmes, Wesley Lau, Wilfrid Hyde-White, Will J. White, Will Kuluva, William Asher, William Benedict, William Challee, William D. Gordon, William Demarest, William Edmonson, William F. Claxton, William Fawcett, William Froug, William Idelson, William Joseph Keene, William Kendis, William McLean, William Mims, William Phipps, William Reynolds, William Sargent, William Schallert, William Shatner, William Swan, William Windom, Willis B. Bouchey, Wright King See more |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 2,696 Reviews |
| Format | NTSC |
| Genre | Science Fiction & Fantasy/Television, Television |
| Language | English |
| Number Of Discs | 25 |
P**R
The Series that Set the Standard
“The Twilight Zone” was the greatest television series of the 1950s and 60s, and may rank as the finest series of all time. Its superiority rested on several factors: quality of acting; superb direction by Douglas Heyes, Don Medford, Buzz Kulik and others; atmospheric music by Marius Constant and Bernard Herrmann; and, most of all, imaginative scripts by Richard Matheson, Charles Beaumont, George Clayton Johnson, and of course, Rod Serling. Serling had already established himself before the “Zone” as the best TV playwright in the business, contributing scripts to “Playhouse 90,” “Desilu Playhouse,” and others. But he had grown frustrated by the censorship of TV sponsors and other parties by 1958, who had objected to various aspects of his social and ethical themes. Particularly significant in this connection is a clip from the “Mark Wallace” show in 1959 (just one of many interviews in this box set) – on this occasion, the playwright detailed some of the reasons for embarking on “The Twilight Zone,” which included his desire to escape the petty bowdlerization of TV authorities. By now it’s a veritable cliché: this notion that serious themes can be treated more safely in commercial media through the “camouflage” of fantasy. In the Wallace interview, however, Serling did not actually cite this as a rationale for the “Zone.” What he did say, while neither affirming nor refuting that notion, was couched in ambiguity. On one hand, he vouched for the need to relinquish such themes for the “Zone,” partly for reasons of censorship, and partly owing to the abbreviated length of the new series (30 minutes as compared to the 90-minute length of most teleplays). Yet he also claimed genuine merit for the series, asserting that the shows were of high quality and had their own aesthetic legitimacy. Serling’s demeanor was serious, to be sure, but he was obviously hedging his bets. Because when viewing the general landscape, we find that a significant number of episodes tackled serious themes. Here is just a sampling of the subjects “Twilight Zone” addressed during its five-season run: Totalitarianism – “The Obsolete Man” Nuclear war – “Two,” “The Shelter”; “Time Enough at Last” Hypocrisy – “Four O’Clock”; “The Masks” Racism – “The Encounter”; “I Am the Night – Color Me Black” Greed – “The Fever” Juvenile delinquency - “Black Leather Jackets” Marital discord – “A World of Difference”; “Living Doll” Crime & recrimination – “You Drive” The societal obsession with beauty – “Eye of the Beholder” & “Number 12 Looks Just Like You” Loneliness of the elderly – “Nothing in the Dark”; “Night Call” Childhood isolation and fear of “the other” – “Mute” Labor issues – “The Brain Center at Whipple’s” The Holocaust (or Naziism generally) – “Death’s Head Revisited”; “Judgement Night” These and other examples prove that Serling did not abandon serious themes when embarking on “The Twilight Zone.” To the contrary, he explored them often, not only in his own writing, but in the stories he chose from others. Worthy as this was, the series went further. For one thing, it created a mood of existential isolation that had never been achieved before and has never been equaled since. Protagonists find themselves in strange environments they cannot fathom, and which leave them helpless and disoriented. We see this most clearly in episodes like “Where is Everybody” (the subject of a space project is forced to undergo sensory deprivation and suffers hallucinatory terrors as a result); “Mirror Image” (in which doppelgangers haunt the principal actors as ostensible manifestations of a parallel universe); “The After Hours” (where the protagonist finds herself trapped on an uninhabited level of a department store); and “A World of Difference” (which, anticipating the film, “The Truman Show,” shows an actor trapped in the spurious reality of a movie script). This series, in other words, created the most vivid portrait of what W.H. Auden called the “Age of Anxiety” – there was rarely an episode that did not touch upon this theme in one way or another. Even when loneliness and isolation were not the focus of an episode, they often seemed to lurk somewhere in the background, and were reflected in the form of prejudicial backlashes against real or imagined enemies --- see “The Monsters are Due on Maple Street” (a barely-concealed commentary on McCarthyism) or “Living Doll” (a little girl’s plastic companion serves as the catalyst for an estranged husband’s cruelty). In other words, “The Twilight Zone” wasn’t merely about imaginative ideas dressed in strange attire, or even about existential angst. It also had important things to say about human nature, about American culture in the twentieth century, and about the frequent inability of people to establish even the most basic forms of communication. By contrast, even the best of its TV rivals, “The Outer Limits” and “Thriller,’ had little to say in these regards. (The episode called “The Cheaters” in the “Thriller” series was an exception that proved the rule). Ray Bradbury, while contributing only one story for “Twilight Zone,” was ultimately the writer with the greatest influence on the series overall (at least on its serious and more literary episodes). This is evident in two ways: first, in particulars – e.g., “The Lonely” showed the strong influence of Bradbury’s “The Long Years,” while “Little Girl Lost” was an interesting variation on Bradbury’s “Tomorrow’s Child.” Moreover, at least two episodes allude to Bradbury by name – see “A Stop at Willoughby,” and “Walking Distance.” Second, and more importantly, Bradbury’s work suffused the series in that it transferred his concern for lonely and alienated people (especially in his early fiction) into what was, at the time, a comparatively new medium. We should remember that while TV had been available as early as the late 1940s, it was still at a rudimentary stage in 1959, and during most of its first decade, existed as live entertainment that had only recently been superseded by the filming of programs for long-term preservation. Bradbury’s influence can be seen, at any rate, in a significant number of Serling’s scripts. Readers sampling stories like those in The Martian Chronicles, The Golden Apples of the Sun, and Dandelion Wine – as well as dystopias like “The Pedestrian” and Fahrenheit 451 – will see some of the tales that inspired Serling and other contributors to the series. The latter included Richard Matheson and Charles Beaumont who, while very original fantasists in their own right, were both mentored by Bradbury in their apprentice years. While it’s true that Bradbury had little direct input to the “Zone,” the mood of his early work had strong and definite echoes that made a permanent impact. Some people, including “Zone” critic Marc Scott Zicree, feel that the series suffered when it changed to an hour format in 1962. Zicree does point out some notable exceptions, however, and I would agree that “Death Ship” and “Jess-Belle” were among the best shows in the series. “Jess-Belle,” scripted by “Waltons” creator Earl Hamner, Jr. is in my opinion a masterpiece of horror-oriented folklore, and strikes me as occupying the same plane as Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Jar” and Thriller’s “Pigeons from Hell.” “Death Ship,” for its part, is almost like an extraterrestrial variant on Ambrose Bierce’s “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” (which itself was appropriated – from a French adaptation – for the “Zone”). This set is well worth having, not just for the episodes themselves, but for the many interviews and commentaries that illuminate the work of Serling and his entourage of fantasists. Especially notable (though excluded from the Blu-ray edition) is the 90-minute documentary, “Submitted for Your Approval,” which effectively chronicles Serling’s career, including his powerful pre-Zone dramatic works like “Patterns“ and “Requiem for a Heavyweight.” In addition, it points out how strong an influence Serling’s military service had on his writing – episodes like “The Encounter,” “The Purple Testament,” “King Nine Will Not Return,” and even Civil War forays like “Still Valley, show the influence of his wartime experience. I find it mysterious, however, that Serling’s Jewish ancestry is not cited as a salient influence on the “Zone.” Given that fantasists like Franz Kafka and Bruno Schulz had to endure the oppression that stems from ethnic discrimination, it’s hard to believe Serling was immune from that oppression, even if this was less virulent in latterday America than in old-world Europe. We can speculate on the specific ways prejudice may have manifested itself in Serling’s personal life without reaching sound conclusions. It seems plausible, nevertheless, to infer that a sense of alienation due to lingering anti-Semitism may have dogged the writer throughout his life, and that this partially accounts for what Jack Klugman called Serling’s “great sense of morality.” “The Twilight Zone” covered a wide canvas, and not everything to which Serling applied his brush was successful. His comedy writing, in particular, seemed forced and artificial (though occasionally entertaining, as in “Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up”). Even his serious work could implode – in episodes like “He's Alive,” the moral message drowns in didacticism and sinks from its own pretensions. The frequent twist endings, moreover, could sometimes be puerile and a bit too “cute.” Whatever these failings, the best works – and there were a remarkably high percentage of them – rank as the screen equivalent of fine literature, and – probably because Serling was originally a playwright – were the most genuinely dramatic in TV history. There was, as Lois Nettleton observed in her commentary to “The Midnight Sun,” an intimacy about them that penetrated to the core of the human experience, and made us aware of our place in the universe. So, yes – there were pratfalls on occasion, as there are in every series. But overall, “The Twilight Zone” set a standard that rose above mere entertainment, and that will forever be a touchstone for everything that follows.
A**N
The Twilight Zone- The Complete Definitive Collection
I didnt get into this show until the past year or so. Ive heard of it in the past but I wasnt born until the early 80's so I didnt get to see it as much as id like to of. Now I can see all the great episodes on DVD and really get to appreciate the genius of this show. This box set contains all 156 complete episodes of Rod Serling's groundbreaking series along with exciting extras. List of Episodes for all 5 seasons- Season 1 Episode 1: 'Where is Everybody?'- Earl Holliman stars as a man on the edge of hysteria in a deserted town. Despite the emptiness, he has the strangest feeling hes being watched. Episode 2: 'One for the Angels'- A Salesman cleverly eludes death. But if he lives a little girl must die in his place. Only the salesman greatest pitch can save her. Episode 3: 'Mr. Denton on Doomsday'- A drunk of a gunslinger finds his fast draw abilities can be restored by drinking a magic potion. Episode 4: 'The Sixteen Millimeter Shrine'- an aging former movie star lives and dreams in the past. She refuses to leave her screening room until she disapears. Episode 5: 'Walking Distance'- Martin Sloan is plays a frazzled executive who learns that you can go home again after he steps back in time and meets his mom his dad and himself. Episode 6: 'Escape Clause'- A hypocondriac exchanges his soul for immortality and indestructibility. Episode 7: 'The Lonely'- A covicted murderer incarcerated on a distant asteroid and is dying of lonliness. Episode 8: 'Time Enough at Last'- A Bookworm yearns for more time to read, then a nuclear holocaust leaves him alone in the world with lots of time, plenty to read and an ironic twist. Episode 9: 'Penchance to Dream'- A man whos terrified of falling asleep in fear he might die. His pursuer? A mysterious vixen he meets in his dreams. Episode 10: 'Judgement Night'- 1942, a german wonders why he is on the deck of a British Steamship with no memory of how he got there and impending doom. Episode 11: 'And When the Sky was Opened'- Col. Clegg Forbes 'Rip Taylor' and 2 astronauts return from their space flight. They soon discover that no one remembers them as if they never even existed. Episode 12: 'What You Need'- Two bit thug thinks hes found the key to a better life. Episode 13: 'The Four of us are Dying'- Gifted with the ability to change his face Arch Hammer devises a plan to elevate himself. Episode 14: 'Third from the Sun'- William Surka and a friend steal an experimental spaceship and go off to an unknown planet. Episode 15: I shot an Arrow into the Air'- The worlds first manned space mission goes awry stranding the crew on an asteroid. Episode 16: 'The Hitchhiker'- Alone on a cross country trip Nan Adams has a blowout. Surviving the incident, she gets back on the road, only to see the same hitch-hiker everywhere she looks. Episode 17: 'The Fever'- Tight fisted Franklin Gibbs is not happy when his wife wins a trip for 2 to Vegas. But things change when he falls under the spell of a slot machine that calls his name! Episode 18: 'The Last Flight'- World War One flying ace flies through a mysterious and lands at a modern U.S. Airbase in the year 1960. Episode 19: 'The Purple Testament'- Lt. Fitzgerald has found his own special wartime hell. Looking into the faces of his men prior to battle he has the ability to see whos about to die. Episode 20: 'Elegy'- 3 astronauts land on a remote asteroid where everyone is frozen in place. Episode 21: 'Mirror Image'- A woman spies her exact double at a bus station and becomes convinced the double is trying to take her place in this world. A fellow passenger thinks shes crazy..at first. Episode 22: 'The monsters are due on Maple St'- Inexplicable events cause the residents of Maple Street to errupt into rioting. Residents suspect alien invasion. Episode 23: 'A World Of Diffrence'- Arthur Curtis thinks hes an average businessman living a normal life. Or is he an actor playing a businessman in an office thats really a set? Episode 24:' Long live Walter Jameson'- A history teacher who talks about the past as if he lives it. Episode 25: 'People are Alike all over'- Space expidition crashes on Mars. Episode 26: 'Execution'- man in 1880 about to be hanged for shooting a man in the back. Episode 27: 'The Big Tall Wish'- Over the hill prizefighter gets a boost from a lil boy whos a big fan in a disillusioned world. Episode 28: 'A Nice Place to Visit'- After being shot to death a theif encounters white haired pip who gives him everything he wishes. Episode 29: 'Nightmare as a Child'- A schoolteacher who has blocked out the details of her Mother's murder and encounters a strange little girl. Episode 30: 'A stop at Willoughby'- Advertising exec cracks under pressure of his job dreaming about a peaceful town called Willoughby. Episode 31: 'The Chaser'- Roger Shackleforth, desperate to win the affection of the beautiful Leila, slips her a love potion. Episode 32: 'A Passage for Trumpet'- After commiting suicide an unsuccessful trumpet player is given a second chance at life. Episode 33: 'Mr. Bevis'- A good natured, accident prone eccentric whos guardian angel gives him a chance at success. Episode 34: 'The After Hours'- A woman discovers that the floor of a department store on which she bought a gold thimble dosent exist. Episode 35: 'The Mighty Casey'- Baseball team with a robot player. Episode 36: 'A world of his own'- Noted playwright who discovers he can make anything appear or disappear by just describing it. Season Two Episode 37: 'King Nine Will not Return'- WWII captain/a vast desert. Where is his crew and why are futuristic jets flying overhead? Episode 38: 'The Man in the Bottle'- A curio shop owner thinks hes found happiness when a genie he discovers in an old bottle grants him 4 wishes. Episode 39:' Nervous Man in a Four Dollar Room'- Small time hood is ordered to commit a murder he dosent want to perform. Episode 40: 'A Thing about Machines'- A man despises any sort of machine, and he'll experience a new kind of terror when he learns the feeling is mutual. Episode 41: 'The Howling Man'- During a walking trip in Europe Ellington loses his way and meets an insane monk claimed hes captured by the Devil. Episode 42:' Eye of the beholder aka Private World of Darkness'- Janets hideous face has made her an outcast all her life. As she waits for her last chance surgery, she ponders the consequence of failure. Episode 43: 'Nick of Time'- A superstitious newlywed becomes obsessed with a penny fortune telling machine. Episode 44:' The Lateness of the Hour'- Dr. Loren and the faultless Robot services he invented. Episode 45: 'The trouble with Temptation'- An aging actor who longs for the old days when his wife was alive. Hes given a glimpse of the past. Episode 46: 'A most unusual camera'- Two thieves find out a camera they have stolen take pictures of the future. Episode 47: 'Night of the Meek'- Christmas in the Twilight Zone. Art Carney as a forelorn department Santa who takes to drinking. Episode 48:'Dust'- A man about to be hanged for running over a little girl. The girls father uses magic dust and a change comes over village. Episode 49: 'Back There'- A man who travels back in time to Lincolns assassination. Episode 50: 'The Whole Truth'- Automobile compels used car dealer to tell the truth. He cant sell a single vehicle on his lot until he comes up with an unusual idea. Episode 51: 'The Invaders'- A flying saucer lands in the attic of an isolated house. Spaceship begins to stalk old woman. Episode 52: 'A penny for your thoughts'- Flip of a coin gives banker the power to read minds. Episode 53: 'Twenty Two'- Woman is terrified of returning nightmare involving number Twenty Two. Episode 54: 'The Odyssey of Flight 33'- Flight 33 picks up a tail wind and is blown off course. After corrected the flight arrives at its destination- a billion years of course. Episode 55: 'Mr. Dingle, The Strong'- A timid salesman is given super strength by a martian experimentor. Episode 56: 'Static'- an antique radio starts to broadcast programs from an old mans youth that only he can hear. Episode 57: 'The Prime Mover'- Ace Larson discovers his business partner can move things with his mind. They set out for Vegas and win. Episode 58: 'Long Distance Call'- Before Grandma died she gave Billy a toy telephone. When he uses it to talk to her, his parents dismiss it as imagination. Episode 59: 'A hundred yards over the Rim'- 1847, a western settler sets out to find medicine for his son, he returns with much more than medicine. Episode 60: 'The Rip Van Winkle Caper'- Thieves put themselves into suspended animation for 100 years after hiding a million dollars worth of gold bars. Episode 61: 'The Silence'- Archie Taylor offers man half a million dollars if he can keep quiet for a year. Episode 62: 'Shadow Play'- a man trapped in a reaccuring nightmare. Episode 63: 'The Mind and the Matter'- a book on the power of thought enables a worker to recreate the world exactly how he wants it. Episode 64: 'Will the real Martian please stand up'- State troopers follow tracks from an unidentified flying object. Episode 65: 'The Obsolete Man'- In a future state where religion and books have been banned, a librarian is judged obsolete by The Chancelor and sentenced to death. Season Three Episode 66: 'Two'- Two lone survivors of a nuclear Holocaust must start the world anew. Episode 67: 'The Arrival'- A plane lands safely but all passengers and crew are missing. Episode 68: 'The Shelter'- When a UFO invasion appears eminent, friends and neighbors are reduced to selfish conniving animals in a fight over one familys bomb shelter. Episode 69: 'The Passersby'- Civil War Confederate Soldier stops at a house, he soons realizes everyone who pass are dead. Episode 70: 'A Game of Pool'- a brilliant pool player in a show down. Episode 71: 'The Mirror' - a poor and ambitious central american farm worker overthrows his countrys tyranical leader. Episode 72: 'The Grave'- Notorious badman puts a curse on hired gun. Episode 73: 'It's a Good Life'- He knows your every thought, every emotion. He can eliminate all you hold dear. Who is he? A six yera old boy. Episode 74: 'Deaths'- Head Revisited- A former Nazi captain returns to a concentration camp to relive the good old days- until his long dead victims appear to deliver overdue justice! Episode 75: 'The Midnight Sun'- Earths orbit has changed drawing closer to the sun and promising imminent destruction. Or has it? Episode 76: 'Still Valley'- A confederate soldier gets a chance to win a Civil War for the South. Episode 77: 'The Jungle'- A businessman and a trip to Africa. A voodoo curse is placed upon him. Episode 78: 'Once upon a Time'- A janitor living in the year 1890 and a time traveling helmet. Episode 79: 'Five Characters in Search of an Exit'- clown, hobo army ranger are trapped in a enormous cyclinder. Episode 80: 'A Quality of Mercy'- A soldier gets a new perspective on war when he is forced to experience it from the enemy's point of view. Episode 81: 'Nothing in the Dark'- an old woman has fought with death a 1000 times and always won but she thinks a wounded policeman at her door is Mr. Death. Is He? Episode 82: 'One More Pallbearer'- Eccentric millionare offers use of his bomb shelter to 3 people who wronged him. Episode 83: 'Dean Mans Shoes'- a vagrant steps into a murdered gangsters expensive shoes and is taken over by the dead mans ghost. Episode 84: 'The Hunt'- An old hillbilly and his hound dog find themselves meet a gatekeeper who tells them theyre at the entrance to Heaven. One problem.. Dogs are not allowed. Episode 85: 'Showdown with Rance Mcgrew'- TV cowboy finds himself in a real old west Saloon where Jesse James challenges him to a showdown. Episode 86: 'Kick the Can'- an old man at sunnydale rest home discovered a secret to regaining youth. Episode 87: 'A piano in the House'- A critic uses a magical piano player to disclose his party guests hidden selves. Episode 88: 'The last rights of Jeff Mrytlebank'- came back to life at his own funeral, Jeff hasnt been the same. Townspeople want him out. Episode 89: 'To Serve Man'- The Kanamits, 9 foot tall aliens arrive on Earth. To Serve Man. Episode 90: 'The Fugitive'- Old Ben, A fugitive from Outer Space with a heart of gold. Episode 91: 'Little Girl Lost'- a 6 yr old who can be heard but not seen and has vanished into a 4rth dimension. Episode 92: 'Person or Persons Unknown'- David wakes up to find himself in a nightmare, no one, not even his wife or mother know him, all evidence of his identity has disapeared. Episode 93: 'The Little People'- Spaceship commander declares himself a god when he lands on a planet populated by people smaller than ants. Episode 94: 'Four O'Clock'- Political fanatic has determined that at 4 p.m. he will eliminate all his enemies by shrinking them. Episode 95: 'Hocus Pocus and Frisby'- Frisby is a loud mouth braggart whos boasts attract the attention of aliens. Episode 96: 'The Trade-Ins'- An elderly couple visits the New Life Corporation hoping to transplant their personalities into youthful bodies. Episode 97: 'The Gift'- An alien crash lands in a village and befriends and gives a present to a little boy. Episode 98: 'The Dummy'- A Ventriloquist is convinced that his dummy, Willie, is alive and evil. Episode 99: 'Young Mans Fancy'- Newlywed couple return to grooms childhood home, the ties of the past prove to strong to resist. Episode 100: 'I Sing the Body Electric'- Anne must learn to understand and accept that her new grandmother can be tender loving and thoughful even thought she is a Robot. Episode 101: 'Cavender is Coming'- Carol Burnett stars as Agnes in this tale of a klutzy usherette rescued from poverty by a guardian angel. Episode 102: 'The Changing of the Guard'- Donald Pleasance is Professor Ellis Fowler, forced to retire after 51 yrs of teaching. Fowler is startled by a ghostly appearance of former students.. Season Four Episode 103: 'In His Image'- Alan Talbot dosent understand why his hometown seems unfamiliar, why he is driven to kill and what are the noises in his head? Hes about to get answers when he comes face to face with his double. Episode 104: 'The Thirty Fathom Grave'- submerged submarine, 20 yrs after it was sunk by Japanese during World War II. Episode 105: 'Valley of the Shadow'- Phillip Redfield finds himself trapped in a small town where people can reverse time. Episode 106: 'Hes Alive'- Peter, 'Dennis Hopper', a smalltime Nazi Leader, yearns for more power. Episode 107: 'Mute'- 12 yr old girl who loses her parents in a fire and dosent speak. Episode 108: 'Death Ship'- 3 astronauts discover a wrecked duplicate of their spaceship and their own dead bodies! Episode 109: 'Jess Belle'- Billy Ben finds himself enchanted by the beautiful Jess Belle who soons learns the danger of buying a love spell from a witch. Episode 110: 'Miniature'- Charley Parkes is a shy bachelor who discovers a miniature doll alive inside a 19th century dollhouse. Episode 111: 'Printers Devil'- Newspaper editor on the brink of suicide, someone presents an unusual deal. Episode 112: 'No Time like the Past'- Paul travels back in time to try to prevent some of historys catastrophes. Episode 113: 'The Parallel'- Astronaut finds himself back on Earth in a world similar to but not quite his own. Episode 114: 'I dream of Genie'- George rubs a magic arabian lamp and a genie emerges to grant him one wish. Episode 115: 'The New Exhibit'- About a Wax Museum Episode 116: 'Of late I think of Cliffordville'- A bored wealthy businessman, gets a chance to go back in time and start over. Episode 117: 'The Incredible World of Horace Ford': Toy Designer spends most of his time reminiscing about his idyllic childhood. But when he gets a chance to go back to those years, he gets a bitter taste of reality. Episode 118: 'On Thursday we leave for Home'- Leader of a strander outpost in space for 30 yrs. Episode 119: 'Passage on the Lady Anne'- young couple books passage on old ship. Episode 120: 'The Bard'- Jack Weston is an untalented would be writer wohse career takes off when the ghost of William Shakespere writes his script. Season Five Episode 121: 'In Praise of Pip'- An alcoholic bookie regrets that he wasnt a better father to his son, 'Pip', critically wounded in South Vietnam. A visit to an amusement park gives them both a second chance. Episode 122: 'Steel'- The future, robots and asteroids. Episode 123: 'Nightmare at 20,000 Feet'- A salesman recovering from a nervous breakdown spots a gremlin on the wing of his plane. Episode 124: 'A kind of stopwatch'- magical stopwatch that can stop everything except him. Episode 125: 'The last night of a Jockey'- Mickey Rooney is Grady, a former jockey banned from horseracing. Episode 126: 'Living Doll'- Erich is displeased when his wife buys an expensive doll for his stepdaughter. He becomes even more displeased when the doll tells him it dosent like him. Episode 127: 'The old man in the cave'- a mysterious guardian helps a tiny community. Episode 128: 'Uncle Simon'- Barbara Polk has taken care of her detested Uncle for 25 yrs waiting impatiently to inherit his wealth. But his will states she must take care of his robot. Episode 129: 'Probe 7, over and out'- Lone survivors of 2 annihilated planets. Episode 130: 'The 7th is made up of Phantoms'- a trio of national guardsmen conducting war exercises. Episode 131: 'A short drink from a certain fountain'- an aging man desperate to keep up with his younger wife tries a youth serum. Episode 132: 'Ninety years without slumbering'- man believes he will die if his grandfather clock stops. Episode 133: 'Ring a Ding Girl'- Hollywood Star Bunny Blake gets an unusual gift from her town fan club. Episode 134: 'You Drive'- Oliver Pope hits a boy on a bike killing him. Episode 135: 'The Long Morrow'- 40 years in suspended animation. Episode 136: 'The Self improvement of Salvador Ross'- Salvador will stop at nothing to win Leahs love. He even trades his youth for money. Episode 137: 'Number 12 looks just like you'- at age 19, everyone must undergo an operation which makes them beautiful and identical to everyone else. But Marilyn refuses. Episode 138: 'Black Leather Jackets'- 3 tough looking guys on motorcycles move into a suburb. Dont drink the water. Episode 139: 'Night Call'- Lonely and confined to a wheelchair Elva Keene starts to get numerous mysterious phone calls. Terrified, she screams the words that will doom her. Episode 140: 'From Agnes, With Love'- A computer technician must dela with the queen of all femme fatales, a computer names Agnes who wreaks havoc on his love life. Episode 141: 'Spur of the Moment'- Woman chased by mysterious figure in black. Episode 142: 'An Occurence at Owl Creek Bridge'- Confederate spy spared death when the rope meant to hang him breaks. Or does it? Episode 143: 'Queen of the Nile'- a columnist,a movie star and a secret. Episode 144: 'Whats in the box'- Joe sees a secret revealed and its horrible consequences on his tv set. Episode 145: 'The Masks'- Knowing he is about to die, Foster summons his heirs to his mansion for a bizarre Mardi Gras ritual and gives them the inheritance they so richly deserve! Episode 146: 'I am the Night, Color me Black'- an execution day and pitch black skies. Episode 147: 'Sounds and Silences'- Roswell, a boisterous man who loves noise. But when his wife leaves the volume in his life goes haywire. Episode 148: 'Ceasar and me'- Ventriloquist Jonathan West is no match for his evil dummy- Little Ceasar, woh grabs the chance to set him up for a fall. Episode 149: 'The Jeopardy Room'- man has 3 hours to escape from a room with a ticking bomb and a gun pointing at his head. Episode 150: 'Stopover in a quiet town'- 2 people wake up in a strange town where everything appears to be fake. Episode 151: 'The Encounter' - ' A rare non syndicated episode'- Fenton, a WWII Vet, proudly shows his captured sumurai sword to Arthur Takamuri, a young Japanese American gardener- who picks it up and instantly knows he must kill his host! Episode 152: 'Mr. Garrity and the Graves'- Jared Garrity makes a living reserecting the dead in the old west. Episode 153: 'The Brain center at Whipple's'- Callous factory owner Wallace Whipple automates his plant, putting thousands of men out of work, Smugly self satisfied, he has no regrets.. At first. Episode 154: 'Come Wander with Me'- a singer journeys to the backwoods to find authentic folk songs. Episode 155: 'The Fear'- An unknown creature hidden in the shadows terrorizes a hysterical young woman a state trooper whos there to help her. Episode 156: 'The Bewitchin' Pool'- For children distraught by feuding parents, a special swimming pool offers admittance to a happier, simpler place. There are tons of extras on these DVDS. Some of the extras include Conversations with Rod Serling, Photo Galleries, Billboards, Alfred Hitchcock Promo, Everything you could imagine. Enjoy it.
M**D
A MUST HAVE for any true TZ fan!
I had grown up watching The Twilight Zone. I recall the commercials for its first season airing on TV with all the hoopla about the coming decade (the 60's)--most of all I recall the omnipresent Mr. Serling standing off center (camera pan left or right), with a cigarette dangling from his first two fingers as he narrates a brief intro, promo, or closing. I watched many of the reruns from time to time on the Sci-Fi (sorry, can't get into the lame syfy moniker) channel. Problem was, you always missed some of the ones you remembered the best. I know the one with Keenan Wynn that I thought was called "The Pitch" (actually it was "One for the Angels") was as clear in my memory as if I were a nine year old watching it air for the first time, back in my old homestead. Yet I never got to see it again and was delighted that it was among the first in season 1 of this set (actually it was the SECOND TZ episode to air). The Twilight Zone was one of those very special shows that left an indelible mark on your memory. I was an imaginative child to begin with, and sci-fi/fantasy were among my favorite genre. This made Twilight Zone an absolute "must" every Friday night! What I especially like is that you have them ALL! How can any TZ fan not be impressed with that? And wonder of wonders, the specials are incredible! 1.) Each disc has a sub menu for each episode (usually the scene menu) which includes Mr. Serling's promo for the next week's show AND a link to "specials" which run the gamut from isolated scores, where you can watch in a muted episode and hear the haunting score behind it. The imagination runs WILD. 2.) Among the specials, you also get interviews with many of the stars who were featured on the episodes, including Burgess Meredith discussing "Time Enough At Last", while the episode plays in the background. The list of stars, writers, producers, is very impressive and too lengthy to list here--suffice it to say, you'll love hearing their own views of the shows they were a part of. Even Mr. Serling graces us with lectures he gives to students with his unique self-deprecating humor while looking back at special episodes. 3.) The old CBS logo appears after each show, and you get promos from other shows like Danny Thomas and Wanted Dead or Alive-- even an occassional PSA about things like "take your family to church or synagogue this week" (imagine THAT in today's PC world!) there are others--but THAT one struck me as special-- takes you right back to those better times! For me, this is a welcome retreat back to a better time. Yes, I know we need to live in the present, and concern ourselves with the future--nobody better, and I do that; but once or twice a week, I cherish the opportunity to put in one of these discs and relive a time in my life when things were just less chaotic, and more filled with childlike fancy. Perhaps I'm a tad like the actress who, watching her old films wished to retreat back to her glory days as a star of celluloid (so many of the TZ episodes focused on the desire to recapture the past; remembere "Kick the Can"? --perhaps one day my own children will come into my house and see a rerun of "Walking Distance" and see me playing the role of Martin, walking back into the time of his childhood. Anyone who knows about the episode "Next Stop Willoughby" will understand why I'm not quite ready for THAT one! Bottom line, it's a GREAT collection, with GREAT specials you'll LOVE if you are a real TZ fan, and that I am! The only drawback, if one could call it that, was the packaging. The discs slide open inside a book-like package and sit on plastic spools in dual-stacks offset somewhat. This makes for an awkward effort to dislodge the discs, some of which are a bit loose--others of which are very tight, and on one particular instance I was frightfully worried I might break DVD which resisted my every effort to dislodge it. If I ever have another episode like that, I'll just transfer them into a set of easy access DVD packages--problem solved, and the money saved over buying them in the season-by-season packages is still astounding. You can NOT do better than this set if you love the Twilight Zone, and want to learn more about those wonderful episodes imprinted permanently in your memory! Quite frankly, one of the two or three BEST TV series--EVER! -- At a price you won't beat... ANYWHERE!
A**S
The Twilight Zone: The Complete Definitive Collection - I Love It!
I do not give 5 stars to very many items that I purchase - in fact, I believe that this is the first time when a product has warranted such a rating. The Complete Definitive Collection is all that it claims, and more! The packaging is eye-catching, with its laser-etched hologram logo and artwork, and the 28 DVDs are securely packed in their book-style covers, with five separate inner volumes covering the five seasons which the series ran. There are innumerable extras included, which will provide commentary and insight into this classic Sci-Fi series, as well as a glimpse back in time to the fashions, adverts, and general 'feeling' of the late 1950s and the early 1960s. The video transfers are stunning. The 4:3 format monochrome images are clear and crisp, and the sound, while only monaural, is nicely recorded, and at no time does it seem to be overpowering or 'boomy'. The music of Bernard Herrmann and other contemporary composers is succinct and beautifully recorded. Some episodes have 'Isolated scores' which enable you to listen to the music track independently of the dialogue. The late, great Rod Serling presents and narrates each episode (or at least he has, as I have so far seen) and he also gives a quick outline of "next weeks episode" at the end. However, if you choose to wait until 'next week' to watch each episode, then it will take you years to view the whole series. I am currently restricting myself to watching two half-hour episodes per evening, and I do not recall looking forward to something on the 'idiot box' as much as this for many, many years. It's like seeing it all over for the first time! Some of the episodes are familiar, and are well remembered from their original airings, all those years ago. Others tend to unfold as you watch, and you may recall just one or two scenes, or situations, and you will find yourself saying "Aha! That's where I saw that!" The various tales are set in strange, almost two-dimensional settings, and the use of the basic props, combined with stark, low-key lighting, (which was warranted by the production costs at the time) are quite evident, but this fact only seems to add to the charm and ethereal quality of the tales. Even the exterior scenes have something of a 'magical' quality which is almost surreal. It is very hard to describe these sensations, but you will surely feel it, as you watch. Whether younger viewers will be similarly affected depends on how much they are prepared to suspend belief, but I am sure that most of them will draw something positive from the various episodes. The actors playing the parts in the series read like a Who's-Who of television and screen of the period. Some of them you will be able to identify on sight, while others may seem strangely familiar, and you will only be able to pick their names up from the end credits. Others still - very many - are 'unknowns' of the era, who never went on to act in anything else, but all the actors' appearances are nicely done, within the constraints of the late 1950s. Now, to my only two criticisms of this excellent series (and they are only tiny ones): The DVD menus, while of very good format, require that one navigates to each episode individually. What I mean is that you cannot just press 'Play All' and have the episodes play in unbroken order. At the end of each episode, you have to use the cursor on your remote control to navigate back to the main disc menu, and then select the next episode manually. This is not really a problem, and after the first few episodes, becomes quite acceptable. The second criticism I have is that one of the small booklets which shows the episode numbers and order on the disc, as well as giving a short precis on the stories, was missing from my set. I am currently trying to contact the producers of the boxed set (Image Entertainment) in order to ascertain whether I can obtain the missing booklet. So far, I have not had very much success. My verdict then: Top value, top production, top presentation, and top marks for the Definitive Series. It is a very welcome addition to my DVD collection, and will be re-watched and enjoyed over and over again, many times in the future. (Or is it the past? One can never tell - in the Twilight Zone....) ^-^
K**T
Welcome to the dimension of imagination.
I'm a big fan of The Twilight Zone and shows in a similar vein like The Outer Limits , Night Gallery , and The Ray Bradbury Theater . My wife loves it as well so I purchased this collection as a birthday gift for her. The digital remastering is excellent and the image and sound quality of (most of) the shows is better than I ever remember it looking/sounding when they aired on TV. Most of the shows are half-hour episodes, but in season four they are one hour long. It's wonderful to have all 156 episodes in one collection, as well as all of the plethora of extra goodies that accompany almost every episode. Having the commercials and next week previews that aired with the original shows adds extra depth to the viewing experience. Discovering episodes I've never seen is quite a thrill too. I might have thought twice about buying this for the list price, but I was able to get it as a Gold Box deal for under a hundred dollar mark so I'm quite pleased. That works out to about 60¢ and episode! I don't see how the quality of a program recorded so long ago could be any better on Blu-ray, so the DVD set is perfect. The only reason I'd want the Blue-ray edition is that it is supposed to include the rare teleplay pilot episode, the "Time Element" in the season one extras. My 6 year old daughter and 10 year old son have come to enjoy it too, so we watch it together as a family activity. The kids have even taking to calling our eclectically decorated home the "Mr. Bevis" house, hah! The plot twists and concepts presented in Mr. Serling's series are as gripping and innovative today as they were in 1959 and the 60s. The scripts are not dumbed down like so many of today's sitcoms, and actually make one think. The plethora of great actors that starred in the various stories is yet another plus. Are there any negatives? A few, but nothing that detracts from my family's enjoyment of this set. A smattering of episodes have an odd video quality that looks as though they were plays filmed live with a handheld camera. I've seen a similar effect on old BBC shows. They often have dark halos around high contrast portions of the recording. The DVDs are a little difficult to remove from the boxes and I fear that I might break one in the process--though I never have. The set also lacks any closed captioning (season one only) or subtitles, and you have to click through each single episode rather than having a "play all" feature, which would have been a nice option. When on sale, The Twilight Zone: The Complete Definitive Collection DVD is a spectacular deal and a must have for fans of the original series. As the great man once said, "Imagination... its limits are only those of the mind itself." Get this set and lose yourself for a while... in the Twilight Zone. ~ Kort
T**D
"Seeing "The Twilight Zone" Like You've Never Seen It Before"
"The Twilight Zone: The Complete Definitive Collection" is just that! This set is one of the best DVD box sets on a classic television series ever put together and all other "Twilight Zone" collections pale in comparison to this splendid and marvelous set. The price itself is also amazing when you consider fans shelved out hundreds of dollars to own "The Twilight Zone" on VHS, as well as around $80.00 for individual season sets. Here you get all five seasons worth of shows, all 156 episodes that are uncut with their original network openings along with Rod Serlings' "preview for next weeks episodes" tags that were cut from their syndicated airings. The shows themselves look impeccable being cleaned and restored from their network CBS master copies and the sound is wonderful. The bonuses are great as well with audio commentaries on certain episodes from different actors and writers who worked on "The Twilight Zone". There is also an array of interviews that offer insights into the making of this television classic. If your reading this review you must be an ardent "Twilight Zone" fan. Your DVD collection will not be complete without this extraordinary collection. If your curious on the series remember "The Twilight Zone" has been made in many different forms since the original went off network televison in 1964. Movies and new series remakes have been made, but all pale to this original series that ran from 1959-1964. Like "Star trek" that came after it, "The Twilight Zone" was never a hit in the Nielsen ratings, but the critics loved it for its original scripts and innovative storytelling. Today, many college campuses throughout the country offer courses in dramatic writing, televison directing, and producing using these "Twilight Zone" episodes as examples for study. Out of all the episodes made of this series, many are standouts including "Eye of the Beholder", "Uncle Simon" (my personal favorite due to Rod Serling's writing), "The Midnight Sun", "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet", "Time Enough At Last", "Living Doll", "It's A Good Life", and Time magazine's all-time favorite "The Monster's Are Due On Maple Street". There is also an excellent book available on the making of "The Twilight Zone" called "The Twilight Zone-Unlocking The Door To A Television Classic". This is an exceptional piece of work due to the care and time invested by its author. The best part is the chapter dealing with all the individual episodes that includes airdates, production schedules, shooting locales, budget costs, salaries, and more. This softcover gem is fastly going-out-of-print so garb a copy as soon as you see one available. The price is a bit high, but it's worth the cost especially if your a huge "Twilight Zone" fan like me. Important to note too is the fact that CBS is releasing season one on Blue-ray on September 14, 2010 making "The Twilight Zone" one of the few 1960's TV series being made available in this new format.
P**I
Inspired writing and superb performances were the hallmark of this amazing series.
In recent years I always looked forward to holiday weekends so I could sample some of the episodes during "The Twilight Zone" marathons on SyFy. But alas it seemed the network always showed the same 30 or 40 episodes. Although the series was available on DVD I found the price tag on Image Entertainment's 2006 release "The Twilight Zone: The Complete Series" to be quite a bit more than I was willing to pay. Then in 2013 the folks at Image decided to release a scaled-back version featuring each and every one of the 156 classic episodes minus all of the special features. This 5 disc box was much more reasonably priced and I jumped at the chance to purchase it. And let me tell you I was not disappointed. I have spent the last few months watching the entire series and save for a handful of clunkers found the overwhelming majority of the episodes to be thoughtfully written and highly entertaining. It was fun to see so many stars from the golden age of television as well as up-and-coming young actors like Jack Klugman, Robert Redford, Burt Reynolds and William Shatner to name but a few. Then there all of those terrific character actors you have seen a million times. You recognize the faces but are hard pressed to come up with the names. Great stuff! The writing is almost always superb and the camera work top notch. Meanwhile, depending on the episode creator Rod Serling's clever introductions add a welcome touch of intrigue or humor. I was quite surprised at the large number of these episodes that I had never even seen before. I was especially impressed by a chilling episode from the fifth and final season entitled "Number 12 Looks Just Like You". "The Twilight Zone" is one of a handful of TV shows from that period that hold up well even to this day. If you are a fan of science fiction or classic television then "The Twilight Zone: The Complete Series" would be the perfect choice for you. This set is very reasonably priced and would be a great gift for that Baby Boomer in your life. A truly outstanding series. Very highly recommended!
S**Y
Excellent (with functional caveats)
Excellent picture and sound. You don’t want the ending given away so have to sneak around the menu after you choose a program so you don’t see too much before you watch the show. This ties in with the lack of a “play all” choice so that you can just start the shows and it will keep going. It only returns back to the menu with the particular show that you were watching and you have to go back to the main menu which makes you go through another bit of animation to get to and then choose another show.
C**O
American region 1 dvd release of The Twilight Zone
This dvd box set contains the complete series of the original Twilight Zone created by Rod Serling. All five wonderful seasons are included. The picture and sound quality are excellent having been remastered. The dvd set comes in a plastic amery style case that houses all the disks. Please note this is the American release and is region 1 coded - so you will need a multi region dvd player to watch them. If you enjoy classic sci fi television then this box set is for you. Next stop The Twilight Zone.
K**ー
買ってよかった。
映像もきれい、値段も安く感激です。ロッド・サーリングの次回予告がこんなにあったとはびっくりしました。
R**N
Twilight Years
In my twilight years, I can rate this series before purchase, having watched many of them when I was about 9 years old. At that age, some were too scary so my mother sent me out of the lounge! Now, I can watch them all.
M**K
¡ Viaja en el tiempo con Twilight Zone 60's Series !
El producto llegó en tiempo y en excelentes condiciones. La colección de Twilight Zone serie original de los 60's es simplemente maravillosa, refleja el ambiente misterioso e intrigante que Rod Serling seguramente quería crear para los televidentes de aquella época, y que sigue creando para nosotros los fans de esta fantástica serie.
M**R
Worth Every Penny
When I was a kid, the Twilight Zone was one of the few shows our whole family would gather around the TV set (black & white, of course) to watch. But I was only nine when it first began broadcasting and, although, I remembered it fondly, I didn't remember it well. There is always a bit of a risk returning to the things of your youth and that includes TV shows. But, when I saw the complete series on Amazon.ca for a very affordable price, I thought 'what the heck' and took a chance. So glad I did. The show itself was at least as good as it was in my memories. Sure, the special effects are poor and kinda cheesy by today's standards but the stories themselves could easily compete with some of the best of the scifi shows on now. They're very well-thought out with a subtle social message (sort of George Romero before George Romero) but the message never overtakes the story and there's enough excitement to satisfy both my outer adult and my inner child. But the really fun part was spotting all of the people who were big names or would become big names in movies or on TV: people like Art Carney, Inger Stevens, Bob Cummins, and, a very young William Shatner. But it's not just the show itself that made this worth every penny. Anyone who has ever bought a complete series has probably encountered those little black envelopes that require forceps and a great deal of swearing if you actually want to watch one of the discs and invariably result in scratches and always at the most inopportune time, you know what I mean - oh no, a kid's about to be attacked and Buffy's off in the graveyard. Then wait, what, the Scooby gang is wisecracking and the credits are rolling? Not so here. Each of the five seasons comes in its own separate shell case. This set is pure viewing pleasure and gets a high recommendation from me. Nicely done.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
1 month ago