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Favorite Twilight Zone episode except these...

Vanyel

The Imperious Leader
Premium Member
So now that The Twilight Zone is 50 years old (TOS TZ), what are your favorite episodes. However to make you have to think about it, I'm going to say you cannot choose these favorites:

To Serve Man
Time Enough At Last
It's A Good Life
Nightmare at 20,000 Feet
Living Doll I think this is the scariest episode.
The Midnight Sun My all time favorite.
Eye of the Beholder
The Invaders
Will The Real Martian Please Stand Up?

I know some of these may not be your favorites, but they are mine and most are almost always listed as favorites.

Aside from those, my favorite are:
I Shot An Arrow Into the Air
The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street
A Stop At Willoughby
The Passerby
Still Valley

What are yours?
 
"On Thursday We Leave For Home" (which is one of the few hour long episodes that I thought was good)

After that, probably either "The Obsolete Man" or "People are the Same All Over".
 
"The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street"
"The Odyssey of Flight 33"
"The 30-Fathom Grave"
"I Shot An Arrow Into the Air"
 
Original series:

I Am The Night - Color Me Black
The Parallel
And When The Sky Was Opened

80's version:

Profile in Silver
Dead Run
Kentucky Rye
Nightcrawlers
A Matter Of Minutes
Need To Know
The Misfortune Cookie
 
Probe 7 - Over And Out - Because it was the first time I ever saw that particular twist

Night Of The Meek - Because everything that works with the main type of twist ending works just as well here, and the social commentary is just as sharp as the Dickens. Plus, I have honestly never decided if Corwyn just became, or had always been and forgot till the end.

The one where Shatner and his new bride get caught up by one of those 'prediction' machines. Scary look at obsession and assigning power over your life to another.

Nothing In The Dark - A time we all must face, in what way we decide.
 
Perchance to Dream.
Man will die if he falls asleep and dreams. Great early twist ending before TZ twist endings got predictable.

And When the Sky Was Opened
Astronauts sucked out of existence one by one.

Shadowplay
Another dream episode. Man trapped in the same dream, played over and over again, of his execution.

The After-Hours
Woman trapped in department store terrorized by dummies.

Rod Serling once said the greatest fear of all was the fear of the unknown acting upon you and you being unable to share that experience with anyone else. These are some of the episodes I think best illustrate that. They just happen to be some of my favorites, too.
"On Thursday We Leave For Home" (which is one of the few hour long episodes that I thought was good)

After that, probably either "The Obsolete Man" or "People are the Same All Over".
The thing I never liked about "The Obsolete Man" was that the state were a bunch of idiots. Going back all through recorded history, leaders who wanted a stranglehold on their subjects don't say, "We've proven God doesn't exist." They say, "God exists, and he's on our side. Whose side are you on?" A far more believeable -- and frightening -- scenario, IMO, than the one depicted in "Obsolete."
 
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Which is the one where the guys in the tank travel through time to be at Little Big Horn? I like that one.

I think On Thursday We Leave For Home is also one of the all-time not so well known greats.

Also, what is the one where the monks have the devil trapped in their monastery, and the hiker thinks the monks are crazy and lets the devil out? That's a good one too.
 
Also, what is the one where the monks have the devil trapped in their monastery, and the hiker thinks the monks are crazy and lets the devil out? That's a good one too.


That's THE HOWLING MAN by Charles Beaumont. That's one of my favorites, too.

I also like THE OBSOLETE MAN and STEEL.
 
Night Of The Meek - Because everything that works with the main type of twist ending works just as well here, and the social commentary is just as sharp as the Dickens. Plus, I have honestly never decided if Corwyn just became, or had always been and forgot till the end.

The one where Shatner and his new bride get caught up by one of those 'prediction' machines. Scary look at obsession and assigning power over your life to another.

These are 2 of my favorites as well. I try to make "Night of the Meek" an annual Christmas tradition. Of the 2 Shatner episodes, I prefer "Nick of Time" over the more famous "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet."

"The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" - I love the twist ending here as well as the message of how easy it is for humanity to destroy itself. The tension leading up to the twist is very good as well. It's a taut story that keeps you interested the whole time rather than just waiting around for the obligatory twist ending.

"A World of His Own" - This one is just fun, and great wish-fulfillment for any writer. A famous playwright is able to conjure anything he wants into existence by describing it in his tape recorder. I believe this was also the 1st episode where Rod Serling appears on screen. The twist with him at the end is priceless!

"He's Alive" - You can see the twist coming from a mile away but Rod Serling writes the episode with such earnest urgency, you can't help but take notice. Serling is right. He's alive and we can't allow the maddness to begin again. Also a standout performance by Dennis Hopper as the young neo-Nazi.

Lee Marvin delivers a great performance as a retired boxer in "Steel."

Jack Klugman & Jonathan Winters have great chemistry together as dueling pool players in "A Game of Pool."

And while the 2002 UPN revival was largely crap, they did a couple episodes that really stand out for me:

"It's Still a Good Life" - Bill Mumy & Cloris Leachman return in their original roles and show what life is like in Peakesville 40 years later. (Although I don't know how anyone managed to survive Anthony's teenage years.)

I don't remember the name but there was this episode about a white man driving his car who refuses to stop and help a black man who is being chased by some gang. As he tries to assuage his conscience and tell himself that it wasn't really about racism, the white driver starts turning into that black man. The ending has an unexpected twist and Vincent Ventresca (The Invisible Man) gives a great performance in the lead role. Also starring Michael Shanks during his Season 6 hiatus from Stargate SG-1.
 
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