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    • The Purple Testament. Only in the Twilight Zone could glowing skin ever be so damning. Imagine having the ability to tell exactly which of those around you were unknowingly on their deathbed.
    • The Dummy. Know what's even scarier than flashing lights? Ventriloquist dummies. We challenge you to think of a time when one of the pint-sized human replicas popped up in a story and things took a turn for the better.
    • The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street.
    • The Silence.
    • The After Hours
    • Where Is Everybody?
    • The Dummy
    • The Obsolete Man
    • The Midnight Sun
    • The Howling Man
    • Perchance to Dream
    • Eye of The Beholder
    • It's A Good Life
    • The Hitch-Hiker

    Many episodes of the famous anthology showinvolve the epiphany that the protagonist’s reality and purpose are not as they initially seemed. This suspenseful episode corrupts an ordinary department store setting. Rather than claustrophobia, the emptiness from its sheer size is an oppressive force. Red herrings regarding the staff fuel the bizarre my...

    The very first episode ofThe Twilight Zoneever to air, "Where Is Everybody?" set a strange tone for the series. In the episode, an amnesiac finds himself in a town that was seemingly abandoned, though all appears to be normal save for the lack of inhabitants. The isolation has a profound effect on him, and, in the end, it is revealed that the town ...

    This is a familiar story and killer dolls, like the modern-day horror staples Anabelle and Chucky, can be found in many movies and TV shows. Much like the mannequins, they are unnerving because of their likeness to a human face. Furthermore, ventriloquist dummies are larger than most dolls and designed to emulate sentience in any act. In this story...

    The Twilight Zone follows in the footsteps of classic dystopian novels like George Orwell's 1984 and Aldus Huxley's Brave New Worldby presenting a society run entirely by and for the benefit of the state. Those the state deems "obsolete" are put to death, and this fate befalls a librarian named Wordsworth, who tricks the man condemning him to death...

    Many episodes of The Twilight Zonedealt with apocalyptic scenarios and societal collapse, but few were as bleak and unbearable as "The Midnight Sun." In this episode, two women are made to survive in an apartment after a strange phenomenon sets the Earth on a collision course with the sun. The two apparently succumb to heatstroke as the walls begin...

    Surprisingly enough, this is a story about the Devil. Given how many countless stories there are of the figure, this should have suppressed the episode's originality. But, although the story somewhat feels like an urban legend, it’s unique nonetheless. The howling itself is absolutely chilling. More than just a religious tale, it is a compelling ho...

    It isn’t unreasonable to connect this classic episode to the popular horror series A Nightmare on Elm Street. They’re conceptually identical stories wherein a horrifying being gradually attempts to kill the protagonists by attacking them in their nightmares. Given the effort of many episodes to pursue startling realism, this focus on the surreal is...

    In what is without a doubt one of the most creative episodes of the classic horror anthology series, a woman undergoes a kind of facial reconstructive surgery, and, though she's eventually revealed to be conventionally beautiful, her doctors deem the procedure to be a failure. RELATED: 10 Best Holiday-Themed Horror Anthology TV Episodes As it turns...

    This episode concerns a six-year-old boy named Anthony who wields godlike powers. Able to create and destroy on a whim, he taps into the minds of adults living in his rural town and banishes the ones who think poorly of him. The town's remaining citizens are forced into a kind of waking horror as their every thought is analyzed and one mistake coul...

    Lonely roads can be very intimidating. Drivers are cut off from assistance, and the unfamiliar is always daunting. More so, the concept of the terrifying hitchhiker has been used in countless movies and TV shows. But, in this case, it’s a ghostly figure rather than some unstable killer. His gradual approach feels totally oppressive and eerily super...

    • The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street (Season 1, Episode 22) Real invaders are unnecessary when people will enthusiastically murder each other over hypothetical ones.
    • It's a Good Life (Season 3, Episode 8) "It's a Good Life" doesn't tell a story so much as describes a situation: revealing a town enslaved by a little boy named Anthony who can manipulate reality just by thinking about it.
    • The Shelter (Season 3, Episode 3) Like "Nick of Time," "The Shelter" doesn't require anything supernatural to make its point. A friendly party turns ugly upon the announcement of a nuclear attack, which the host has prepared for by building a fallout shelter in his basement.
    • The Dummy (Season 3, Episode 33) Before the likes of M3GAN and Child's Play, there was The Dummy: the best of several Twilight Zone episodes focused on evil dolls.
  1. Mar 24, 2024 · The Twilight Zone told a lot of great stories while it was on the air, ranging across genres and storytelling devices, with everything from straightforward ghost stories to dystopian science fiction.

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    • Was 'Twilight Zone' a spooky story?1
    • Was 'Twilight Zone' a spooky story?2
    • Was 'Twilight Zone' a spooky story?3
    • Was 'Twilight Zone' a spooky story?4
    • Was 'Twilight Zone' a spooky story?5
  2. Oct 22, 2014 · Look no further. An airline passenger (William Shatner) comes face to face with a horrific monster (Nick Cravat) in one of The Twilight Zone’s most famous — and scariest — episodes. Emily St ...

  3. May 23, 2024 · When The Journey Occurs: Season 5, episode 15. What Happens In This Dimension: Oliver Pope is a mild-mannered but anxious executive whose life takes a turn for the worse when he runs over a paperboy. “But Mr. Pope hasn't time for the victim,” as Serling says in his opening narration, “his only concern is for himself.

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  5. Twenty Two (. The Twilight Zone. ) " Twenty Two " is episode 53 of the American television series The Twilight Zone. The story was adapted by Rod Serling from a short anecdote in the 1944 Bennett Cerf Random House anthology Famous Ghost Stories, [1] which itself was an adaptation of "The Bus-Conductor", a short story by E. F. Benson published ...

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