This year (2009) celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of a classic television series: The Twilight Zone. Beginning in 1959 and running for five seasons, The Twilight Zone has definitely made its mark on our culture. Out of 156 fantastic episodes, I picked the top ten that, in my opinion, are must-see episodes.
Some may disagree with this episode being on the list. After all, it’s not well known and is rarely seen on television re-runs. However, “I Am The Night – Color Me Black” is a very powerful episode about a town that’s plunged into total blackness. The sun stops shining on this one town on the day of a hanging. The truth about why slowly comes out as a priest theorizes what the blackness means. The ending is subtle, creepy, and very bleak. While “I Am The Night – Color Me Black” is probably the least famous episode on this list, it comes highly recommended.
This episode is quite famous and features a young boy as an absolute monster. The town of Peaksville is in the fate of little Anthony Fremont. “It’s A Good Life” is based on a famous science-fiction short story by Jerome Bixby. The Twilight Zone does an admirable job of recreating the sense of helplessness that overcomes the residents of Peaksville as they embrace the dire circumstances that surrounds them. Like “I Am The Night – Color Me Black,” a sense of dread overpowers the story and leads to a bleak, unnerving conclusion. You just can’t help feeling a little on edge after watching this one.
Charles Beaumont’s vision of a future society (oddly enough, coined as the year “2000”) is thought provoking and absolutely chilling. Perhaps most frightening is how accurate Beaumont’s predictions are. The story is about a world in which plastic surgery and looking like everybody else is the true measure of “happiness.” You can’t help but wonder if Beaumont was psychic because so much rings true of today’s society – from the first name basis to the glass of instant smile (reminds me of some of the drugs out today). It’s a brilliant story and Marilyn’s last line is heart wrenching after witnessing all that she does to try and stay “ugly.”
The monster on the wing of the plane is a famous image from The Twilight Zone. If you haven’t seen this episode, you really owe it to yourself. Richard Matheson’s script is wonderful in the way it makes you question what’s real and what isn’t. A young William Shatner fills the role of a man on the verge of a mental break perfectly. While it may not have a big “twist” ending, the tension builds and builds to an explosive conclusion. It’ll make you look twice the next time you’re in the window seat of an airplane.
Here is a story about a man pushed to the breaking point – the stress of work and an unhappy marriage leads protagonist Gart Williams closer and closer to madness. Gart is clearly on the brink of a nervous breakdown and James Daly’s performance really sells the story and makes you feel for his character. It’s one of the more realistic scripts presented on The Twilight Zone and that’s what makes it so powerful. Every part of the “A Stop at Willoughby” feels genuine and the sense of desperation shines though. The ending is presented beautifully and you probably won’t see the twist coming.
This is probably the most famous episode on The Twilight Zone and it is for good reason. “Time Enough At Last” presents a story about the end of the world – and the one man who inhabits it. From the set pieces, to the performances, to the plot – everything about “Time Enough At Last” works. We can’t help but root for Henry Bemis (played wonderfully by Burgess Meredith) the whole way through. There’s a certain innocence and overall goodness about him that makes Bemis so likable. It’s this sympathy that makes the ending so tragic, so upsetting, and so “unfair.” Definitely see this one if you haven’t already.
What would happen if monsters landed in your town disguised as a normal family? This question echoes throughout the entire episode as suspicion mounts and the need for a scapegoat becomes more and more necessary. The residents of Maple Street become obsessed with finding out who the monster is among them after a mysterious comet flies over, shutting down all electrical power. As the viewer, you can’t help but try and out-guess the writer. At times you will go crazy trying to figure out who is (and who isn’t) the monster. “The Monsters are Due on Maple Street” is a wonderful social commentary about life in the 1950’s that still holds true today. The ending is perfect and shows the potential of human suspicion and hatred.
Here is an episode with almost no dialogue whatsoever. It’s about a woman living on an old farmhouse who is terrorized by tiny invaders from another planet. This episode, also written by Richard Matheson, is filled with tension and has one of the best twists. It’s amazing how you can turn off the volume and get just as much out of the episode as if you had the volume cranked up. “The Invaders” has a classic Twilight Zone feel to it – it’s creepy, suspenseful, and gripping. While some parts feel a little slow (after all, no one speaks until the last minute), there’s no denying that “The Invaders” is a must-see Twilight Zone episode.
“Walking Distance” is an all around beautiful episode of The Twilight Zone. I really considered putting it as number one, but it doesn’t exactly have that Twilight Zone feel to it. “Walking Distance” is similar to “A Stop at Willoughby” in its realism. The episode is about a middle-aged man who stumbles upon his childhood town exactly as it was when he was a kid. “Walking Distance” is a very nostalgic episode that makes you recall and appreciate your childhood. The acting, the music, the directing – everything in this episode is absolutely beautiful. The ending narration by Rod Serling is, in my opinion, the best of any narration on The Twilight Zone.
There is no denying that “The Eye of the Beholder” is the number one must-see episode of The Twilight Zone. It has everything that made the series great – a gripping story with a shocking twist, great acting, fine camera work, and a commentary on being human. “The Eye of the Beholder” is about a woman who is physically disfigured – and she wants nothing more than to have her physical deformities corrected. Slowly, the audience begins to realize that this hospital and world she’s living in is a totalitarian state, where being like everybody else is not only encouraged, but necessary. The ending is jaw dropping and leaves you with an insight into human nature. If you haven’t seen an episode of The Twilight Zone, this is the place to start.




















This is one of my fav lists on the site now. I’ve only ever watched episodes of the 80s run of the Twilight Zone, so how about a list of the top 10 must see episodes from that era?
Callie- YESSSSS! The hitchhiker was freaky as hell! Right after I watched it, a saw the same hitchhiker several times in different locations in the same day. After the third time I pinched myself to make sure I was alive
Time Enough is the first one I ever saw and it broke my heart.
Should have had Hitchhiker and Night Call in the list, both brilliant episodes, but otherwise an excellent list
Very good top-10 list. A few others that I remember:
Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up? (Episode 64) – State troopers follow tracks from a UFO to a diner where they try to determine which of the seven bus passengers stranded inside is really a Martian. (And just when you think you know who….)
Deaths-Head Revisited (Episode 74) – A former Nazi SS Captain returns to the ruins of a concentration camp to relive the good old days – until his long dead victims appear to deliver overdue justice! (Incredibly grim subject matter with perhaps Serling’s best ever conclusion).
Nothing in the Dark (Episode 81) – A old woman has fought with death a thousand time and has always won. But now she finds herself afraid to let a wounded policeman (Robert Redford)……need I say more?
The Fugitive (Episode 90) – Old Ben is a fugitive from outer space with a heart of gold. He risks it all to help a crippled little girl……
Even tho it’s not technically a twilight zone made episode, one of my faves is the episode the one that has to do with a man trying to escape that hangman noose during the civil war.
Best List Ever!!
I absolutely love the zone, these are all great episodes.
My personal favorite that is sorely underrated, is The Midnight Sun.
Also, not the best episode, but an incredibly creepy one is twenty-two, “room for one more, honey”
Classic.
This was the greatest show on TV and I’m so happy to see three of my favs on the list.
There were a few others episodes I remember, of course, and just like everyone else I want to mention this or that one you ‘missed’, but… it was just an amazing show altogether. Great list.
Was the one where the little girl gets trapped in another dimension on the other side of her wall the influence for the movie Poltergeist? She even talks to her mom from the other side in a similar voice to the one in Poltergeist.
Some more episodes that are among my favorites (besides the excellent ones already mentioned):
“A Most Unusual Camera”: While robbing an antique shop, two thieves find out that they have stolen a future predicting camera.
“The Odyssey of Flight 33″: An airliner traveling from London to New York travels back in time. (I know, the graphics are cheesy in the prehistoric scene, but hey, it’s 1961.)
“A Hundred Yards Over the Rim”: While searching alone for water, the leader of a 1847 wagon train ends up in the future.
“Two”: A male and female, survivors from opposite armies of an apocalyptic world war, meet in a deserted, war-ravaged town. (A Cold War epic played wonderfully by Charles Bronson and Elizabeth Montgomery)
“Dead Man’s Shoes”: A homeless man takes a dead man’s shoes and is taken over by the personality of the shoes’ previous owner.
“The Long Morrow”: A space explorer on a solitary 40-year mission makes a life-altering decision.
“The After Hours”: Marsha White is a woman browsing for a gift for her mother in a department store. She ends up finding out that she’s not the person she thinks she is.
“Shadow Play: A man convicted of murder tries to convince those about to execute him that it’s all just a recurring nightmare of his.
So many I could list…
(Description source from Wiki)
What about TO SERVE MAN! IT’S A COOKBOOK! IT’S A COOKBOOK!
I agree with 123, especially about Night Call —
It’ one of the eeriest, spookiest, “hairs standing up on the back of your neck” episodes ever filmed. (I dare you to watch it in a dark room!) Plus, it features one of the greatest character actresses of all time, Gladys Cooper.
Check it out: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFePjwuWUDo&feature=related
Love the Twilight Zone. Still good after all this time. The Monsters are Due on Maple Street was a reference to the Red Scare of the 50′s. (The communists). Rod Serling was interested in making social satyrs of the society in which we live but the Hollywood producers did not want that.
So Rod made science fiction stories that represented those issues and got away with it and none was the wiser. (at that time)The Monsters are due at Maple Street (Red Scare) and Time Enough at Last (Cold War/ nuclear threats) were some examples.
I’m thinking the series might make a fine Christmas present
Great Twilight Zones…
The one with the Civil War soldiers returning “home”. I think it had Fess Parker in it.
An astronaut lands on a planet and the tiny inhabitants make him their “God”.
Waking in an empty, round room a ballerina, soldier and two others try to figure out what is going on, only to learn at the end of the episode, they were only toys for a giant child.
An asshat starts bullying an old man who can see the future into being his seer…..the old man sees his own salvation by mentioning “leather shoes”.
Just about every episode mentioned in the comments here is one of my favorites…aw crap…the whole series was excellent.
Thank you for the great list Margg… a light-hearted trip through yesteryear. I sense a another series is going to be added to my netflix queue.
I grew up watching the 80´s series and still remember it as something that nurtured my avid imagination and changed my life forever, Twilight Zone may be one of the reasons of my interest in the mysteries of the mind which evolved into my psychology career.
I would be delighted to see a list from that Second Generation Twilight Zone (the third generation kind of sucked).
I cant believe “The Howling Man” didnt make the list. It is my all-time favorite episode, but I do agree that “The eye of the Beholder” is excellemt as well.
superb list!!
@Blogball (101): Thanks for the info. Alfed Hitch*****Presents was another great show along the same lines. Hitch*****would alway make snide comments directed towards his sponsers when breaking for commercials. He must have had a set of brass ones. When I was a kid I bought an Alfred Hitch*****anthology of short stories from a used book sale. I still have it.
Just as an aside there’s one story where an enormously fat man makes a type of “deal with a devil” in order to loose weight. He ends up looking the same but he floats because he becomes weightless. Too funny.
i like the Shatner episode with the devil bobble head that tells fortunes. And the one with the martian and venusian at the rest stop. and Talkie Tina with Telly Savalas!
What about To Serve Man?! I own the Twilight Zone series, and I’d have to say To Serve Man is my number 1, followed by It’s A Good Life.
I totally agree. The Eye Of The Beholder is my favorite it is a twist that left me flabbergasted a bit. I’m glad it was mentioned…
I was a huge fan of TZ during its first run on TV. I was about five, six years old.
It was quite clear the stories were meant as “lessons,” stories with a moral, or at least an ironic comment at the end, usually delivered by Mr. Serling himself. I learned a lot of my best, longest-lasting values from The Twilight Zone.
Hurray once more for Rod Serling, Charles Beaumont, & Richard Matheson. (Check out Matheson’s resume on IMDB sometime.)
The one where Art Carney becomes Santa Claus is a sentimental favorite of mine. Great list overall.
I love Twilight Zone. I agree with all those who say it’s one of the best shows ever created for television. I can and do watch these episodes again and again.
Gr8flDdFn (125)
The non-technical episode is call “An Occurance at Owl Creek Bridge”(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jLxlyTrAC4). This episode was shown to our entire school when I was in 6th grade. Everyone of us was brought into the multi-media theatre for it. I am suprised it isn’t shown during those marathons as it won the 1964 Oscar for best short film.
So much to watch, so little time…
My favorite episodes are, will the real martian please stand up, A game of pool, and five characters in search of an exit.
i thought that real martians would def be on this list
wooot Eye of the Beholder was my favorite too
Love the show, good list, but there’s room for a sequel to this list. “Another 10 Must-see Episodes of the Twilight Zone” I’d nominate these for the selection.
“One for the Angels” October 9, 1959
“A Passage for Trumpet” May 20, 1960
“The Night of the Meek” December 23, 1960
“The Odyssey of Flight 33″ February 24, 1961
“Two” September 15, 1961
“The Passersby” October 6, 1961
“Five Characters in Search of an Exit” December 22, 1961
“A Quality of Mercy” December 29, 1961
“Nothing in the Dark” January 5, 1962
“To Serve Man” March 2, 1962
“The 7th Is Made Up of Phantoms” December 6, 1963
Number 12 Looks Just Like You! is one of my faves, next to The Eye Of The Beholder, Two and Time Enough At Last…
I noticed that The Masks isn’t on this list…
I thought it should be in a Top 15 Must See List…
Forget about this Top 10…
@peacehog (144): AH! for the life of me i couldn’t remember the name of that episode, thanks for that!
its funny many of the twilight zone episodes scare the heck out of me. i saw #1 when i was like 8 or 9 and it freaked me out so badly today i still fear that episode lol
what about “Get out of here finchly”
Watching that clip of Time Enough At Last, I realize how stupid that episode actually is. A guy not being allowed to read at work and at home? What the ****? Does the episode take place in Nazi Germany, or Communist China? A guy has the right to read during his lunch break or while sitting on his chair at home if he God damn wants to.
Maxx @152,
being banned from having access to books (ie new ideas) it is actually a common dystopian theme in all fiction.
Banning doesnt just happen in totalitarian states. Surely you know that banning books and movies is a common theme throughout societies in history and still goes on TODAY. Remember during the election, it was revealed that Palin trying to ban certain books from the Wasilla library? The thing is that what she did is unfortuantely not uncommon.
It rases ideas about living in a free, democratic society – what does that involve? If you disagree with ideas, do you think they should be banned? If the majority disagrees with an idea, should it be banned? Would you ban your kids from access to things you disagreed with? Should moral outrage dictate what is acceptable expression in society and what is not? Etc Etc.
There are whole sites dedicated to banned books, movies, art, etc in the Western world – you should check them out.
sorry for the typos above…
Maxx, some links for you (there are lots more)…
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/banned-books.html
http://www.banned-books.com/
http://www.ala.org/ala/issuesadvocacy/banned/bannedbooksweek/index.cfm
This is a recent case that has grabbed my attention. Its an Native American author whose book is being banned from an Illinois high school because of ‘lewd content’. Other schools have ripped pages of love scenes out of shakespeare (romeo and juliet) because parents want to prevent their kids reading about *****.
It is an interesting topic – far from being a stupid theme for a twilight Zone episode.
http://www.ala.org/ala/issuesadvocacy/banned/bannedbooksweek/index.cfm
Whoops, posted wrong link at the bottom…
http://archives.chicagotribune.com/2009/jun/22/local/chi-antioch-book-22-jun22
This is the link about the Illinois high school banning.
Sorry for the copious posts. I just thought these might be useful for Maxx to look into the issue a bit more.
what about talkinf tina!!!! telly s was great and that doll still scares the hell out of me
put up the banned list! to heck with momo’s who cant stand to have their world view messed with forget them
Did you forget “The howling man’?
#1 is my all time fav!
makes me look forward to the sci-fi channel’s annual twilight zone marathon for new year’s.
some of my favorites (but i don’t know the titles):
-a WWI plane lands in the 1950′s
-burgess meredith as the librarian judged to be obsolete
-the one with buster keaton going back to the 1890′s, the episode is partially silent
oh yeah, and the one where the little girl went through a portal in her bedroom wall and the parents could hear her but couldn’t find her.
@necro_penguin (162): Poltergeist?
Just kidding
@necro_penguin (162):
“Little Girl Lost.” I believe by Richard Matheson.
The only one I ever saw was “will the real martian please stand up?”. Definitely making a plan to watch all these others. Fantastic list.
@Maxx The Slash:
Maxx, seeing as you didn’t pay a whit of attention to the message in the episode, here it is:
Meredith was being forbidden to read at work over the lunch hour because the boss(@$$|-|013) was under the impression he was goldbricking…
On the home front, the shrewish cow he was married to felt he wasn’t paying HER any attention…
Two major obstacles to reading.
The Biggest ones were yet to come… The nuclear war, and the destruction of his glasses…
A Capice?
What!? No Chatty Cathy? That one freaked me out!
@ 53 General Tits Von Chodehoffen
(nice name, by the way) said: “I’m assuming most of the younger LV readers will not be familiar with all of these.”
Don’t be so sure. I’m only 17 and I’m definitely familiar
with all of them.
#7 was the first one I ever saw… that scared me so much that I don’t think I watched the Twilight Zone again for a few years. Then again, I was only about 8, so I wouldn’t have understood the allegorical aspects anyway.
Time Enough At Last is probably my favorite episode…
I watched about five episodes in 7th grade. We watched maple street, one where a plane goes back in time. And the one with shanter on the plane, and the one with the dude and the books. That one really upset me. I don’t even want to talk about it. I remember watching it and getting that strange feeling in my stomach. But after that episode, someone in my class did mention him just finding another pair of glasses on a body.
I wanna know what happens at the end of #1 and 10. Can someone help me?
At my age I remember 7 of these 10 episodes. I do think you should have included the episode, “To Serve Man”, since its theme is often copied in today’s science fiction, as in the remake of the series, “V”. Thanks for the memories and your work in getting these episodes together.
the last one gave me goose bumbs the first time i saw it!!! i was so shocked at how beautiful she was and how ugly every else is!
My favorite TZ episode is Deaths-Head Revisited(11/17/1961)by Rod Serling & it would be on my Top 10 List.A former Nazi commandant returns to the concentration camp he was in charge of after the war & meets up with one of his victims.Powerful performances & a sensational script by Rod!
Nice list. I have the box set of every TZ episode ever made. I could watch them over and over. ” Stop at Willoughby ” is definitely one of my favorites. Along with, “5 Characters in Search of an Exit”, “A Game of Pool”, “Living Doll”, “Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up”, “Invaders”, “Mr. Dingle, The Strong”, and I could go on for days.
“Eye of the Beholder” was the first Twilight Zone episode I had ever seen. I was really young too : )
Walking Distance is great. Really a must-see one. Good post.
what about “The Shelter”?
not as supernatural as most twilight episodes, but it is one hell of a powerful episode.
I absolutely love Twilight Zone! Like someone else mentioned, I too was born in the early 80s, so I didn’t get to see these at first run, but have certainly seen a number of them. I remember reading “Maple Street” back in Jr. High, I was one of maybe 2 students in the class who had seen any TZ, let alone this episode already. I always loved the Talking Tina episode, and the one with the Mannequins (I believe Randall mentioned that one), and of course “To Serve Man.” There are so many that I’ve never even seen, I just added the DVD collection to my Amazon wishlist.
When SciFi channel (SyFy they call it now? lame!) first came out, they would play Twilight Zone, Tales From the Dark Side, Amazing Stories, while other kids were watching Batman or Gargoyles cartoons, I was watching reruns of these shows. My favorite Amazing Stories was the one with the kid who spills some pink & blue goo on a magazine in his science class, and the photos come to life. So he takes the stuff home to try & make a girlfriend, with some crazy consequences.
“Night of the Meek” is must see.
there is an obnoxious mucinex ad that plays whenever i open this page and i can’t hear any of the videos over it and i can’t find the source of the noise… it’s really ticking me off.