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The Twilight Zone is an American media franchise based on the anthology television series created by Rod Serling in which characters find themselves dealing with often disturbing or unusual events, an experience described as entering "the Twilight Zone".
The Twilight Zone is an American anthology television series developed by Simon Kinberg, Jordan Peele, and Marco Ramirez, based on the original 1959 television series created by Rod Serling. Peele serves as narrator, in addition to executive producing through Monkeypaw Productions .
Title card. The original incarnation of The Twilight Zone anthology series began on October 2, 1959, and ended on June 19, 1964, with five seasons and 156 episodes. It was created by Rod Serling and broadcast on CBS.
The Twilight Zone was a television series created (and often written) by its narrator and host Rod Serling. Each episode was an individual fantasy or science fiction story albeit with social commentary, often concluding with an eerie or unexpected twist.
The Twilight Zone episode: Episode no. Season 3 Episode 32: Directed by: Allen H. Miner: Written by: Rod Serling (Based on his original script "I Shot an Arrow Into the Air".) Featured music: Laurindo Almeida: Production code: 4830: Original air date: April 27, 1962 () Guest appearances; Geoffrey Horne: Williams Nico Minardos: Doctor Edmund ...
"Nightcrawlers" is the third and final segment of the fourth episode of the first season of the television series The Twilight Zone. It is adapted from a short story of the same name by Robert R. McCammon, first published in the 1984 collection Masques.
The Twilight Zone episode: Episode no. Season 5 Episode 35: Directed by: Ted Post: Written by: Rod Serling: Featured music: Stock (including cues from Fred Steiner's "A Hundred Yards Over the Rim") Production code: 2633: Original air date: May 29, 1964 () Guest appearances; Peter Mark Richman (as "Mark Richman"): Trooper Robert Franklin
"Twenty Two" is episode 53 of the American television series The Twilight Zone. The story was adapted by Rod Serling from a short anecdote in the 1944 Bennett Cerf Random House anthology Famous Ghost Stories, [1] which itself was an adaptation of "The Bus-Conductor", a short story by E. F. Benson published in The Pall Mall Magazine in 1906.