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Film Glance Forum

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  3. Whatu00b4s your favourite episode?

Whatu00b4s your favourite episode?

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    rebelpilot — 18 years ago(February 21, 2008 01:08 AM)

    That episode was called "Time Enough at Last" .. one of the great ones

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      balkaster — 21 years ago(July 04, 2004 10:32 AM)

      (can't remember the name) the one about parents concerned over their son taking a test
      The one about the test was one of my favorites, too. It was called "Examination Day", and I think it was based on a short story that I read later. I don't remember the author, unfortunately.

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        harry_vest — 21 years ago(July 07, 2004 03:01 PM)

        Why has no one mentioned "Palladin of the Lost Hour" with Danny Kaye. This was by far the best Twilight Zone episode of that 80's series. It's a beautiful story with exceptional acting. Another favorite is the one where a woman who is a worker in a future society escapes through a dream machine to her version of paradise (I think it may of been one of the first episodes ever broadcast). "A Message from Charity" was also great as was "Examination Day" and another one that was a take on the moral majority - a right wing preacher type is in charge of Hell and does not consult God before sending people there. Here in Canada it was considered the "lost episode" because of some interuption but I managed to tape it off someone's satelite.

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          bflynn65 — 21 years ago(August 20, 2004 03:02 AM)

          I never even knew "Paladin of the Lost" Hour was made into an episode. I remember reading the short story in Eng 101. It was a fantastic story and i wish i could see the episode.
          I do remeber seeing "Gramma" and i must agree it was scary as hell.

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              thatguy_78757 — 16 years ago(November 07, 2009 10:40 PM)

              was that the one where hes testing a new "keeper of the global stopwatch?"

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                hallier23 — 21 years ago(July 14, 2004 02:05 PM)

                Man, I remember watching this show all the time, but I don't remember any of the episode titles. Maybe you fellas here can help me with the titles, or if these were actually another show.
                Spoilers!
                My favorite: I think it was called "A Children's Zoo." In this episode, a family with two arguing parents took their little girl to the zoo. The catch was, the parents couldn't enter. The quiet, little girl enters, and in the zoo are, lo and behold, parents!! The little girl pushes a button to talk to the parents. Some threatened her, some begged of her, and finally, she selected an older, nicer couple to be her "new" parents. The episode ended with the little girl leaving with her new parents, and they walked right by her old parents, who were arguing. But then they panicked when they saw their daughter leaving with someone else.
                Second fav: An episode where a man's life is lived based on what he reads on fortune cookies. Predictable, of course, but I liked it. He's rich and living well, but then his life starts falling apart. He finally reads a cookie that says, "You will die very soon." He gets mad, attacks the waiters, and eats a ton of cookies at once. He thn pulls out a slip of paper that reads "You are dead." End of show.
                Also liked an episode where a mom discovers she can get quiet whenever she wants by saying "Shut up!" Everything freezes in life but her. If I'm not mistaken, the ending has the Soviet Union launching a nuclear missle that's about to land on America. She screams "Shut up!" over and over. Everything freezes, she walks outside, and there, among the many people that had gathered in the streets, sees the missle frozen in mid-air.
                And I think this show was called "Kentucky Rye." Don't remember much, except some guy who killed a woman accidentally in a hit-and-run, ends up buying a bar. Problem is, it's $1,100, and all he has is $1,000. Then a mysterious man appears and forks over $100. It was the husband. That's about all I remember.
                "When I left you I was but the learner. Now I am the master." - Darth Vader

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                  dubyah1 — 21 years ago(July 22, 2004 10:39 PM)

                  Twenty years, and it still resonates. Faves:
                  'A Message From Charity' {from quaint to chilling as a young man [Duncan McNeill from 'ST:Voyager'] telepathically experiences with her the attempted assault of a young woman accused of witchcraft}
                  'Rendezvous in a Dark Place' with the owner of one of the most beautiful male mouths on TV, Stephen McHattie [Seinfeld psychiatrist], as Death showing the ravaged Janet Leigh life is sometimes wasted on the living. "And I alone will never leave you."
                  Short and bittersweet, but liked the thought-provocation of 'The Star' [written by Arthur C. Clarke of '2001' fame]: a Jesuit's realisation that his star of Bethlehem heralded the loss of a great civilisation.
                  Honourable mention to:
                  'Palladin of the Lost Hour' with Danny Kaye [a big hit in France]
                  'Dead Run' [Brent Spiner ST:TNG alert] about raising the good from Hell, still topical in today's media climate where it is deemed acceptable prime time TV for children to see corpses [any CSI], airhead bulimics with plastic bags burrowed under their flesh [any 'reality' program] and beer commercials [any professional sporting event], but not a nipple, and
                  the score of 'Nightsong'; a DJ's lost love, with the late beefcake Antony Hamilton.
                  Worst?
                  I'm sure I'm repressing the worst episode ever. Worst I can recall? the campy 'I of Newton' with Ron Glass? The sappy 'Little Boy Lost'? hmm, guess I'll just have to await the DVD's.

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                    mcdoodad49 — 21 years ago(July 23, 2004 01:18 PM)

                    "Little Boy Lost'" with Season Hubley was my favorite episode even though dubyah1 thought it was sappy. It's a story about how coming to any decision can greatly alter the course of your life or someone elses.

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                      adam_douglas-1 — 21 years ago(July 31, 2004 05:45 PM)

                      Can anyone remember an episode from the 1980's version with Bruce Willis starring? He splits in to two versions of himself. One version never leaves his apartment, the other version goes out to work and takes over his life. The apartment version gradually becomes psychotic and reclusive while the exterior world version is more confident and together. I think it ended with the apartment version of Willis fading away and the exterior version stepping in to his life completely. It was transmitted in the UK by at least Central/Angla ITV stations in the late 1980's or early 1990's. This and the end scene of 'A Little Peace and Quiet' with the ICBM frozen in the night sky above a cinema showing 'Doctor Strangelove' are enduring TV images for me.

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                        dubyah1 — 21 years ago(August 05, 2004 09:28 PM)

                        Bruce Willis calls home and Bruce Willis answers in 'Shatterday' 😉 written by Harlan Ellison, who also wrote 'Palladin of the Lost Hour', as well as 'Ther Terminator', 'Logan's Run', and the Star Trek classic 'City on the Edge of Forever'.

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                            dubyah1 — 21 years ago(August 07, 2004 11:57 AM)

                            Harlan Ellison co-wrote 'Gramma' from King's short story

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                                thatguy_78757 — 16 years ago(November 07, 2009 10:43 PM)

                                Im confused.
                                I thought Bruce Willis in "ShatterDay" was about a guy sentenced to a year of invisibility??? What IS that one?

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                                  Bargle77 — 15 years ago(September 19, 2010 07:19 PM)

                                  Never mind, I see you started a separate thread and got an answer there.
                                  I thought Bruce Willis in "ShatterDay" was about a guy sentenced to a year of invisibility??? What IS that one?
                                  That's "To See The Invisible Man" with Cotter Smith.


                                  It's all like some bad movie.

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                                    Bargle77 — 15 years ago(September 19, 2010 07:36 PM)

                                    My favorites, in no particular order.
                                    Her Pilgrim Soul
                                    To See the Invisible Man
                                    A Message From Charity
                                    Wordplay
                                    I of Newton
                                    The Once and Future King
                                    Voices In the Earth
                                    Wong's Lost and Found Emporium
                                    A Small Talent for War
                                    A Little Peace and Quiet


                                    It's all like some bad movie.

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                                      masuka-fan — 13 years ago(August 15, 2012 03:45 PM)

                                      John deLancie was also in "Dead Run." There were quite a few modern Trek actors in this series of TZ. Jonathan Frakes turns up in "But Can She Type," and I'm pretty sure I saw Nana Visitor somewhere.

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                                        syphus — 21 years ago(August 16, 2004 04:51 PM)

                                        Yeah I think I remember that one. She says "Shut up" and it stops time and then she says "Start talking" and it starts up again. I remember she used it at the supermarket when this lady took the last box of cereal and then at the end the Russians were bombing so she stopped time and saw the missle up in the air. That was one of my favorites and so many times I wish I had that amulet 🙂

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                                          frog-34 — 21 years ago(August 19, 2004 01:07 PM)

                                          I can vaguely recall the beginning of one episode that was set in London in 1986. All I can remember is

                                          1. The first shot we see (at night) is a teenager with a spiked punk haircut standing on a street corner listening to some heavy metal music and
                                          2. King Arthur and Merlin become involved with this kid one way or another (I think).
                                            Does this ring any bells with anybody, or am I genuinely crazy? If this was in fact a 1980s "Twilight Zone" story, was it any goodor was this an episode of "Amazing Stories" or "Alfred Hitchcock Presents"? (As I recall, I was at my grandparents' house and the channel got changed on the TV.)
                                            "That, my friends, was the minority vote."Daniel Day-Lewis, "Gangs of New York"
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