Posted by Gordon on April 19, 2010 at 7:00am
This is the theme song for the TWILIGHT ZONE series 1962.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-b5aW08ivHU&feature=player_embedded
26 Full Episodfes
http://www.cbs.com/classics/the_twilight_zone/video/
The Original Twilight Zone Episode Guide
http://tzone.the-croc.com/original-twilight-zone-episode-guide.html#first
Fan Cast
http://www.fancast.com/tv/The-Twilight-Zone/97525/621803727/The-Twilight-Zone-(1-2-hr)---Where-is-Everybody-/videos
The Twilight ZoneFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Twilight Zone
Created by Rod Serling
Narrated by Rod Serling
Forest Whitaker
Desi Arnaz Pilot Intro
Country of origin United States
No. of episodes Original series (1959-1964) 156
First revival (1985-1989) 65
Second revival (2002-2003) 44 (List of episodes)
Production
Running time 30 or 60 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel CBS (1959–2002)
UPN (2002–2003)
Original run October 2, 1959 – May 21, 2003
Status Latest revival cancelled on May 21, 2003.
Reruns of the 1959, 1985, and 2002 series still air, no news if there will be a third revival.
The Twilight Zone is an American television anthology series created by Rod Serling. Each episode (156 in the original series) is a mixture of self-contained fantasy, science fiction, suspense, or horror, often concluding with a macabre or unexpected twist. A popular and critical success, it introduced many Americans to serious science fiction and abstract ideas through television and also through a wide variety of Twilight Zone literature. The program followed in the tradition of earlier radio programs such as The Weird Circle and X Minus One and the radio work of Serling's hero, dramatist Norman Corwin.
The success of the original series led to the creation of two revival series: a cult hit series that ran for several seasons on CBS and in syndication in the 1980s, and a short-lived UPN series that ran from 2002 to 2003. It would also lead to a feature film, a radio series, a comic book, a magazine and various other spin-offs that would span five decades.
Aside from Serling himself, who crafted nearly two-thirds of the series' total episodes, writers for The Twilight Zone included leading genre authorities such as Charles Beaumont, Richard Matheson, Jerry Sohl, George Clayton Johnson, Earl Hamner, Jr., Reginald Rose, Harlan Ellison and Ray Bradbury. Many episodes also featured adaptations of classic stories by such writers as Ambrose Bierce, Lewis Padgett, Jerome Bixby and Damon Knight.
The term "twilight zone" predates the television program, and originally meant simply a "gray area." (Intelligence analysts in the early Cold War labeled a country a twilight zone if there was no definite U.S. policy on whether to intervene militarily.) Rod Serling himself chose the title of the series, and said that only after the series aired did he discover that the "twilight zone" was also a term applied by the US Air Force to the terminator, the border between "night" and "day" on a planetary body.
You unlock this door with the key of imagination
beyond it is another demension
a demension of sound
a demension of sight
a demension of mind
you're moving into a land of both shadow and substance
of things and ideas
you just crossed over into
the twilight zone
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzlG28B-R8Y&feature=player_embedded
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.