Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • American anthology horror television series

      • Tales from the Darkside is an American anthology horror television series created by George A. Romero. [ 1] A pilot episode was first broadcast on October 29, 1983. The series was picked up for syndication, and the first season premiered on September 30, 1984. The show would run for a total of four seasons. Each episode is a self-contained story.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tales_from_the_Darkside
  1. Episode Guide

    • 1. Trick or Treat
      1. Trick or Treat Oct 29, 1983
      • A mean store owner (Barnard Hughes) hosts a scary Halloween night for the town's youngsters.
    • 2. The New Man
      2. The New Man Sep 30, 1984
      • A recovering alcoholic is driven away from his family by a boy claiming to be his son.
      • A millionaire (Keenan Wynn) offers to buy his friend's (George Petrie) soul for $1 million.
  2. Tales from the Darkside is an American anthology horror television series created by George A. Romero. [1] A pilot episode was first broadcast on October 29, 1983. The series was picked up for syndication , and the first season premiered on September 30, 1984.

  3. People also ask

  4. Tales from the Darkside: With Paul Sparer, Catherine Battistone, John Marzilli, Karen Shallo. "Tales from the Darkside" was a horror anthology series where the viewer is taken through ghost stories, science fiction adventures, and creepy, unexplained events.

    • (7K)
    • 1983-10-29
    • Comedy, Drama, Fantasy
    • 30
  5. Millionaire Duncan Williams ( Keenan Wynn) offers his longtime acquaintance Jack Blaine ( George Petrie) $1,000,000 to buy his soul. When Jack ends up dying shortly after, Duncan races to claim his soul, but faces a troubling complication when another party becomes interested in it as well.

    No.
    Title
    Original Air Date
    1
    "The New Man"
    September 30, 1984 ( 1984-09-30)
    2
    "I'll Give You a Million"
    October 7, 1984 ( 1984-10-07)
    3
    "Pain Killer"
    October 14, 1984 ( 1984-10-14)
    4
    "The Odds"
    October 21, 1984 ( 1984-10-21)
    • Sean Hutchinson
    • “Sorry, Right Number” Stephen King came up with this story specifically for Tales from the Darkside, and later made it the only screenplay he wrote to be included in any of his short story collections (you can read it in Nightmares & Dreamscapes).
    • “A Case of the Stubborns” This episode answers the question: What if a body of a loved one doesn’t want to die? It’s worth a watch only for the progressively disgusting makeup applied to actor Eddie Bracken as the seemingly dead grandfather who doesn’t stay dead.
    • “Distant Signals” Futurama fans might recognize this episode as eerily similar to the cartoon’s episode “When Aliens Attack”, which features invaders who come to Earth to demand a cancelled TV show called Single Female Lawyer to tie up its various storylines.
    • “The Enormous Radio” Who knew an episode of a lovably schlocky TV show could get inspiration from a Pulitzer Prize winning author? Adapted from a John Cheever short story, “The Enormous Radio” is the perfect balance between high- and low-brow and is probably the closest Tales from the Darkside ever got to Twilight Zone.
  6. Computer whiz Mookie is terminally ill. But not even death can sever the bond that exists between the two siblings when his knowledge of technology follows him into the afterlife. 5.5/10 (488) Rate.

  7. Sep 27, 2015 · Tales from the Darkside is an anthology horror TV series created by George A. Romero, each episode was an individual short story that ended with a plot twist. The series' episodes spanned the genres of horror, science fiction, and fantasy, and some episodes featured elements of black comedy or more lighthearted themes. George A. Romero.

  8. Tales From the Darkside. A "Twilight Zone" type of show, this horror anthology series, produced by noted horror filmmaker George A. Romero, explores the macabre, but like its predecessor,...

  1. People also search for