IMDb RATING
6.2/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
Two stories written by Rod Serling and intended for his seminal television anthology series are presented.Two stories written by Rod Serling and intended for his seminal television anthology series are presented.Two stories written by Rod Serling and intended for his seminal television anthology series are presented.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAt 59 minutes, "Where the Dead Are" is the longest story in the history of "The Twilight Zone".
- Quotes
[closing narration for "Where the Dead Are"]
Host: Quotation from the Bible, the Book of Ecclesiastes: "To everything, there is a season and a time for every purpose under Heaven. A time to be born and a time to die." To which Dr. Ramsey might add, "And death will come, despite the misguided efforts of man to delay or prevent it, even in the Twilight Zone."
- ConnectionsEdited from Miền Ảo Ảnh (1959)
Featured review
OK, it has James Earl Jones hosting it so it gets 10 stars and a note that I'm still disappointed that he was replaced as the goto narrator. I mean, don't get me wrong, I love Morgan Freeman too, but I do miss the days where you were guaranteed Jones or Nimoy as hosts and narrators.
So Jones brings it to the 10 star mark, even though it was only two episodes and the first episode was so forgettable that, honestly, I literally forgot about it... which is a pretty poor showing for a VHS that consists of only two episodes.
But the second is good, it has the irony, it has an H.G. Wells/Mary Shelly feel to it set in the Civil War and a path to hell that is all good intentions. It is good old fashioned Twilight Zone irony right there.
But it still doesn't have that classic Twilight Zone feel to it, so you don't really get what you expected. It's a little too modern for the early 60s, but the story is there... at least in the second, which was a strong finish for a two episode video tape that was only half good.
So Jones brings it to the 10 star mark, even though it was only two episodes and the first episode was so forgettable that, honestly, I literally forgot about it... which is a pretty poor showing for a VHS that consists of only two episodes.
But the second is good, it has the irony, it has an H.G. Wells/Mary Shelly feel to it set in the Civil War and a path to hell that is all good intentions. It is good old fashioned Twilight Zone irony right there.
But it still doesn't have that classic Twilight Zone feel to it, so you don't really get what you expected. It's a little too modern for the early 60s, but the story is there... at least in the second, which was a strong finish for a two episode video tape that was only half good.
- generationofswine
- Oct 11, 2020
- Permalink
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Top Gap
By what name was Twilight Zone: Rod Serling's Lost Classics (1994) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer