Top products from r/TwilightZone

We found 30 product mentions on r/TwilightZone. We ranked the 21 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/TwilightZone:

u/doug65oh · 9 pointsr/TwilightZone

You actually missed one, at https://www.amazon.com/Patterns-Rod-Serling/dp/1505707463 It's not Twilight Zone material, but all of it is pretty good stuff - and all but one of these can be seen (at least at the moment) on youtube for free.

u/Argott_ · 5 pointsr/TwilightZone

These are my must-see episodes of the 1980s Twilight Zone series, in no particular order. Some are classic.

Season 1.
Children's Zoo.
Nightcrawlers -- based on the classic short story by Robert M. McCammon, available in Blue World, the Complete Collection.
Examination Day.
Paladin of the Last Hour -- based on a story by Harlan Ellison.
One Life, Furnished in Early Poverty -- based on Harlan Ellison's short story.
Her Pilgrim Soul.
I of Newton -- based on Joe Haldeman's short story, available in Cosmic Laughter, Science Fiction for the Fun of It.
But She Can Type?.
The Star -- based on Arthur C. Clarke's excellent story, available in The Collected Stories of Arthur C. Clarke.
The Misfortune Cookie.
A Small Talent for War.
A Matter of Minutes.
To See the Invisible Man.
Gramma -- based on the classic short story by Stephen King, available in Skeleton Crew.
Dead Run -- based on Greg Bear's short story, available in The Collected Stories of Greg Bear.
The Last Defender of Camelot, based on a short story by Roger Zelazny and teleplay by George R. R. Martin, available in Last Defender of Camelot short story collection.

Season 2.
A Saucer of Loneliness -- based on Theodore Sturgeon's excellent short story, available in The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon, Volume VII.
The Storyteller.
Toys of Caliban -- Teleplay by George R. R. Martin.
The Road Less Traveled -- by George R. R. Martin; memories of Martin's experience working on the Twilight Zone writing staff, and two teleplays, this one and an unproduced one, are available in Dreamsongs: Volume II.

Season 3 -- This season is worth a look, but none of them are my favorites.

--edited for formatting--

u/FattyBrent · 8 pointsr/TwilightZone

Honestly, 65 bucks for the entire series and numerous cool bonuses is totally worthwhile and you don't have to worry about superfluous editing choices!

The Twilight Zone: The Complete Series Blu-ray https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01M28F76S/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_vhOBzbHRDARZP

u/tqgibtngo · 1 pointr/TwilightZone

Serling's first three Twilight Zone story collections were published in 1960-62
as "Stories from the Twilight Zone," "More Stories from the Twilight Zone",
and "New Stories from the Twilight Zone".

The book pictured above is a 1986 omnibus edition collecting the 19 stories
from the original 3 books (and adding the introduction by Klein, who had
been an editor of Rod Serling’s The Twilight Zone Magazine in the '80s).

Recent releases include Anne Serling's 2013 editions of the first
three collections, Stories From the Twilight Zone, More Stories
from the Twilight Zone
, and New Stories From the Twilight Zone.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1490423915/
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1490423834/
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1490423893/

According to the article linked below, those 2013 editions include "...informative introductions written by members of the Editorial Board of Rod Serling Books, an impressive group of contributors which includes Anne Serling, Jim Benson, Scott Skelton, Mark Dawidziak, and Mark Olshaker. Anne Serling provides the introductions to all three volumes..., an engaging mix of personal memoir and look at the creation of the stories."

...
For more information about numerous Twilight Zone books, read this entire article:

https://twilightzonevortex.blogspot.com/2018/01/

u/randysmith77 · 7 pointsr/TwilightZone

I’m 99% sure that is not an original TW episode. I have seen every episode and would watch them with The Twilight Zone Companion book. Check that book out for excellent analysis on each original episode. twilight zone companion

u/momordica · 2 pointsr/TwilightZone

The Twilight Zone Companion is a good one to own. It has a lot of fun facts about the episodes.

u/kimota68 · 1 pointr/TwilightZone

If you're not averse to comic books, you might appreciate the Zombie Tales Omnibus. I haven't read them all, but I recall one story, I think by Mark Waid, specifically being a bit like a Twilight Zone episode.

u/OldestChampagne · 2 pointsr/TwilightZone

There are A LOT of full episodes on YouTube, Daily Motion, etc, if you don’t mind having a search about. Full seasons, no, but free to watch.

Saying that, the entire series can be found on DVD for about £40, or Blu-ray for about £60. I bought my Region A Blu set about eight years ago when it was about $40, but the new Blu set is on there for $62 at the moment, which is about £48.

u/Bronsonkills · 2 pointsr/TwilightZone

Im not sure if it’s on any online services, but you can get the full 3 season run for $20 on Amazon

https://www.amazon.com/Night-Gallery-Complete-Rod-Serling/dp/B073CY8HYG

u/Kleetus_Van_Dam · 6 pointsr/TwilightZone

I just got the complete DVD set for my birthday.

Night Gallery: The Complete Series https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073CY8HYG/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_IwGRAbBH0ZSBD

u/-eDgAR- · 2 pointsr/TwilightZone

For mental insanity definitely check out "Mirror Image" and "Four O'Clock" and if you want to go into more broad mental issues like repression of a traumatic memory then use "Nightmare as a Child."

I wrote a research paper in college about TZ and issues pertaining to tje Cold war. The episodes I used were The Jeopardy Room, The Mirror, The Monsters are Due on Maple Street, Third From the Sun, and The Shelter. A big help for me was The Twilight Zone Companion. Definitely get that because it is a great thing to own for any Twilight Zone fan.

Some of the works I cited other than that included "Monster, Mushroom Clouds and the Cold War: American Science Fiction and the Roots of Postmodernism, 1946-1964", "Cold War Culture: Media and the Arts, 1945-1990, and "Cinematic Cold War: The American and Soviet Struggle for Hearts and Minds."

Hope that is helpful.