What was your favorite Twilight Zone episode?

Don’t watch Quincy ME then. Because that’s every episode. :slight_smile:

There weren’t too many good hour-long episodes, but I like Miniature (another Beaumont episode), especially as the first time i saw it, they had colorized the miniature scenes only. it made an interesting effec.

Not the first season, but yep- after that it got so bad I stopped watching it.

My sister had a book of old TZ trivia, and it said this episode was filmed in Death Valley. They ran out of things to drink by the end of one day except for chocolate milk. Everybody got sick. I haven’t been able to verify this (and she no longer has the book), but it was extremely hot. Sweat would evaporate immediately so they had to use glycerin to simuate the sweat.

I didn’t recognize this one at all. It’s from the New Twilight Zone. Sounds like an update of the classic short story The Yellow Wallpaper.

I remember that one well, because his daughter? niece? had the same first name as me. I felt insulted!

I remember that one well, because his daughter? niece? had the same first name as me. I felt insulted!

Just remembered Long Live Walter Jameson about a college professor (played by Kevin McCarthy – no, not that one) who is suspiciously youthful, and who is undone by an old flame.

A book I have might be that one.

“We had a nurse with us and she kept pushing lukewarm water,” Buck Houghton recalls. “And once in a while a guy would say ‘Well, don’t worry about me,’ and put down a quart of nice, cold chocolate milk. In about a half hour, he’d turn green and have to lie down in the truck.”

…“Everybody was filling in for somebody else because people were just dropping off like flies.” Buck Houghton: “One time, Jean Marsh lay down in the shot that’s the tag of the picture. We put a thermometer down beside her. It was 140 degrees where she was lying.”

…After two days of shooting, Houghton and Smight decided – to the relief of cast and crew alike – to return to MGM, reconstruct the interior of the metal shack in which the convict in the story lives, and shoot the final day’s scenes under comparatively cool klieg lights.

“Two”. Charles Bronson and Elizabeth Montgomery are soldiers of opposing armies in a deserted trashed town - after a war?. There is little dialogue as they stalk each other. The ending is …well, sweet. It’s not so much scary, but I love watching this little 2-character play.