

- Twilight zone i sing the body electric movie#
- Twilight zone i sing the body electric plus#
- Twilight zone i sing the body electric series#
In the mid-1980s US television turned back, for a while, to the anthology format, especially for series of fantastic stories – Amazing Stories was another. There were 80 stories in the 36 episodes. Season 2: twelve episodes, some 50-minute and some 25-minute. Season 1: 24 50-minute episodes, each containing two to four stories. Directors included Wes Craven, Tommy Lee Wallace, Theodore Flicker, Joe Dante, Gerd Oswald, Martha Coolidge, Allan Arkush, Peter Medak, Jim McBride, Paul Lynch, Noel Black. Writers included Ray Bradbury, Alan Brennert, Crocker, DeGuere, Ellison, David Gerrold, George R R Martin, Richard Matheson, O'Bannon, Michael Reaves, Carter Scholz, J Michael Straczynski. The title was used also for a horror/fantasy magazine, Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone Magazine (1981-1989), whose editors included T E D Klein and Tappan King, and which published some weird fiction of high quality.Ģ.

Then came a new The Twilight Zone television series ( 2).
Twilight zone i sing the body electric movie#
This resulted in an anthology feature film produced and partly directed by Steven Spielberg, Twilight Zone: The Movie ( 1983), mostly updatings of some of the old scripts.

The Twilight Zone was fondly remembered – indeed, it could hardly have been forgotten, the episodes being repeated endlessly in syndication for the next 20 years. The Twilight Zone received three Hugos (1960-1962) as Best Dramatic Presentation. A book about the series is Twilight Zone Companion ( 1982 rev as The Twilight Zone Companion: Second Edition 1989) by Marc Scott Zicree. Two collections ghosted by Walter B Gibson are Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone (coll 1963) and Rod Serling's Twilight Zone Revisited (coll 1964), both assembled in Rod Serling's Twilight Zone (omni 1984). Short-story versions of some of Serling's The Twilight Zone scripts appeared in three books by (or ostensibly by) Serling: Stories from The Twilight Zone (coll 1960), More Stories from The Twilight Zone (coll 1961) and New Stories from The Twilight Zone (coll 1962) – the latter two possibly being by Walter B Gibson – with selections appearing in From The Twilight Zone (coll 1962) and all three being reprinted in a single volume as Stories from The Twilight Zone (omni 1986). Another sf episode was Ray Bradbury's "I Sing the Body Electric!" ( 1962), about a Robot grandmother the author's later story adaptation is "I Sing the Body Electric!" (August 1969 McCall's). Two of these were based on Matheson's short stories "Steel" (May 1956 F&SF) and "Little Girl Lost" (October/November 1953 Amazing) the story version of "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet" (in Alone By Night, anth 1962, ed Michael & Don Congdon, 1962) may or may not postdate the script. Episodes varied in quality, many of the better sf ones being written by Richard Matheson: three of these were "Steel" ( 1963), in which Lee Marvin is the manager of a robot boxer who is forced to take his machine's place in the ring after it breaks down, "Little Girl Lost" ( 1962), about a child who falls into a dimensional warp under her bed, so that her parents can hear her crying but cannot reach her, and "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet" ( 1963), with William Shatner as a man on an airliner who keeps seeing a mysterious creature – invisible to others – playing on the wing as in most of Matheson's work, Paranoia is eventually vindicated and the creature is proved to exist. Overall the series was thoughtful and fairly original, though it certainly had its fair share of Clichés.

Sting-in-the-tail plotting was standard on The Twilight Zone. The denouement reveals that the situation has been implanted in his mind as part of a study conducted by space scientists into human reactions to loneliness. The very first episode, "Where is Everybody?" by Serling, has a young man waking in a small town to find it deserted, with signs that the inhabitants had left only moments before. Most of the playlets were pure fantasy, but a number were sf. The Twilight Zone, hosted by Serling with a rasping voice and a thin black tie, was an anthology series – perhaps the most famous ever on television.
Twilight zone i sing the body electric plus#
5 seasons, 156 episodes (138 each 25 minutes, plus 18 in season 4 each 50 minutes). Directors included Jack Smight, Stuart Rosenberg, John Brahm, Ralph Nelson, Buzz Kulik, Boris Sagal, Lamont Johnson, Elliot Silverstein, Don Siegel, William Friedkin, Richard Donner, Joseph Newman, Ted Post. Writers included Serling (91 episodes), Charles Beaumont, Ray Bradbury, Earl Hamner Jr, George Clayton Johnson, Richard Matheson. Producers were Buck Houghton, Herbert Hirschman, Bert Granet, William Froug. Created Rod Serling, also executive producer.
