Here we go.
A massive list, every episode from the original run of The Twilight Zone ranked from #156 to #1.
I started this journey at the end of May and it took just about two months to complete viewing the 156 episodes, watching at least one a day, usually more.
As I watched, I kept a running tally of the episodes so I did not have to rank them all at one time. I flipped some around as I went, but the list is now complete. This is, of course, my opinion and my list. Yours may be completely different and that is okay.
And we are off…
#156. “The Bard” (S4 E18). The worst episode of the series was the use of black magic to bring William Shakespeare back to life. The Twilight Zone could never handle comedy and this was a prefect example of that.
#155. “Cavander is Coming” (S3 E36). Another attempt at comedy that failed, even with EYG Hall of Famer Carol Burnett in it. This was a It’s A Wonderful Life rip off.
#154. “The Brain Center at Whipple’s” (S5 E33). One of the last episodes of the series and one of the worst. The replacement of workers with computers was an issue and Wallace Whipple was a horrible person.
#153. “Showdown with Rance McGrew” (S3 E20). An actor playing a Western hero is a jerk. He winds up face-to-face with the real Jesse James. Seriously, this was so bad.
#152. “The Gift” (S3 E32). One of the worst acted episodes of the series and a thinly veiled religious parable.
#151. I Dream of Genie” (S4 E12). The second use of the genie legend was used in another poor comedic attempt. George P. Hanley had multiple dream sequences showing what his one wish would be like. Hanley was a terrible character that I hated watching.
#150. “The Mind and the Matter” (S2 E27). Archibald Beechcroft is able to use a book to focus his attention and get rid of all the other humans on the earth. Then he got bored. I was already bored.
#149. “The Mighty Casey” (S1 E35). A robot playing baseball? Isn’t that cheating?
#148. “Mr. Dingle, the Strong” (S2 E19). The absolutely worst appearance by Burgess Meredith in any Twilight Zone episode. Also included Don Rickles. Another bad comedy episode.
#147. “From Agnes-With Love” (S5 E20). The super computer named Agnes becomes jealous of the geeky programmer she had fallen for. Agnes sabotaged his date.
#146. “The Chaser” (S1 E31). A love potion makes a woman fall in love with a man… or controls her mind so she does not mind being a love slave. The idea borders on sexual assault. It also has the theme of being careful what you wish for.
#145. “Mr. Bevis” (S1 E33). More Guardian Angel stuff. Mr. Bevis is given everything that he wanted, but the changes did not make him happy. Orson Bean did what he could here, but he could only do so much.
#144. “Jess-Belle” (S4 E7). Jess-Belle, in order to gain the love of a man, became a witch and would change into a leopard at midnight. The ending was worse than that.
#143. “Sounds and Silences” (S5 E27). Roswell G. Flemington liked to listen to his military battles loudly. He was disruptive, until he couldn’t any more. Then he couldn’t hear. It was a mess.
#142. “A Thing About Machines.” (S2 E4). Bartlet Finchley hated machines and he treated them badly, going as far as to destroy them. They would turn on him. We don’t know why it happened. It just did.
#141. “The Jungle” (S3 E12). African curses come to the big city. So does a giant lion in an apartment building…somehow.
#140. “The Prime Mover” (S2 E21). Ace’s friend Jimbo had telekinesis powers and Ace made him go to Vegas so they could cheat and win by gambling. It got worse from there.
#139. “The Whole Truth” (S2 E14). This episode was the Jim Carrey movie Liar Liar episode based in a used car lot. A used car salesman who could not lie? What is the world coming to?
#138. “Mr. Garrity and the Graves” (S5 E32). A con man convinces an old western town that he could bring people back from the dead. He gets them to pay him to leave them dead. The twist at the end was as stupid of a twist as the show had come up with.
#137. “Black Leather Jackets” (S5 E18). Aliens are invading the earth and are doing so in black leather jackets. This one was dumb.
#136. “One More Pallbearer” (S3 E17). Paul Radin tried to get vengeance on a bunch of people from his past by pretending that the world was coming to an end. Didn’t work out for him.
#135. “The Last Rites of Jeff Mytlebank” (S3 E23). Jeff Mytlebank was dead. Then he sat up alive at his funeral. How did that happen? He was a demon, I guess.
#134. “The Incredible World of Horace Ford” (S4 E15). Horace Ford was a toy maker who went back to his childhood to a certain moment. This episode was just too long and Pat Dingle choices as the lead actor was questionable.
#133. “The Mirror” (S3 E6). Peter Falk played a Fidel Castro-type character who saw traitors in his mirror. Peter Falk was certainly miscast in this role.
#132. “The Bewitchin’ Pool” (S5 E36). Last episode of the series ending on a thud. The unfortunate situation with the outdoor sound doomed this episode.
#131. “Steel” (S5 E2). Robot boxing? Well, except for one human who boxed a robot. It ended as you would think.
#130. “A Nice Place to Visit” (S1 E28). A low level crook winds up getting killed by the police, only to wind up in a place where all his needs are met. Except this life of unfettered success became dull.
#129. “A Short Drink from a Certain Fountain” (S5 E11). An older man who had been married to a young woman looked to use a potion made by a friend to make him young again. Boy did it work!
#128. “Dead Man’s Shoes” (S3 E18). The ghost of a mobster possesses people in an attempt to get revenge on the mobster that killed him. He possessed the people who would wear his shoes.
#127. “A World of his Own.” (S1 E36). A writer is able to write characters that come to life and he uses it to cheat on his wife. Rod Serling makes an appearance in the actual story as well.
#126. “Still Valley” (S3 E11). A Confederate soldier finds a whole troop of Union soldiers who were frozen in place and finds out that it was because of a book of witchcraft.
#125. “Uncle Simon” (S5 E8). Uncle Simon was a rotten man and I was cheering for his murder by his niece. However, Uncle Simon had something in his will that would continue his cruelty.
#124. “Judgment Night” (S1 E10). Carl Lanser found himself on board of the S.S. Queen of Glasgow during WWII with a terrible feeling of what was going to happen.
#123. “The Four of Us are Dying” (S1 E13). A shapeshifter makes some mistakes and winds up getting killed because of it.
#122. “A Kind of Stopwatch” (S5 E13). Patrick McNalty gets a stopwatch that can stop time. The annoying McNalty does not use it well.
#121. “Two” (S3 E1). A love story? Charles Bronson and Elizabeth Montgomery are the only two people in the world. Well acted but the story was lacking.
#120. “Execution” (S1 E26). A man who is going to be hanged in the old west winds up in present day. It’s a weird ending too.
#119. “Come Wander with Me” (S5 E34). A Rock-a-Billy singer goes into a time loop and finds a woman with a song. The musical episode was strange.
#118. “The Last Night of a Jockey” (S5 E5). Mickey Rooney was a down on his luck jockey who is able to grow. The new height actually ruins his life.
#117. “People are Alike All Over” (S1 E25) Roddy McDowell is an astronaut who crashes on Mars and finds out that the friendly Martians have something more sinister in mind. He winds up as an exhibit in a zoo.
#116. “The Fugitive” (S3 E25). A king form another planet has been hiding out on earth, making friends with a little girl. The story was cute, but there was a lot of creepiness factor to it if you actually think about it.
#115. “You Drive” (S5 E14). My least favorite character Oliver pope is here and his car is looking for revenge after a hit and run killed a kid.
#114. “Probe 7, Over and Out” (S5 E9). This is the Adam and Eve episode where we find out that they actually crashed on earth and found the Garden of Eden.
#113. “The Self-Improvement of Salvadore Ross”(S5 E16). Sal was a guy who could make deals with people and have it magically happen. He was a rotten person that was just after everything he wanted.
#112. “Mute” (S4 E5). A girl, whose family decided that they would only speak via telepathy, winds up with a speaking family when her parents die in a fire.
#111. “Ninety Years Without Slumbering” (S5 E12). Sam Forstmann thinks that he has to be able to keep a grandfather clock running or else he would die.
#110. “A Piano in the House” (S3 E22). Fitzgerald Fortune bought a player piano for his young wife’s birthday and he discovered that the piano had the ability to make people act in unexpected ways.
#109. “No Time Like the Past” (S4 E10). A time travel episode where Paul Driscoll tried to go into the past to stop horrible historical events but failed each time. He then decided to go back to a simpler time, only that did not go well either.
#108. “The Big Tall Wish” (S1 E27). A little boy’s wish gave a failing boxer a chance to win it all. Nice performance from Ivan Dixon of Hogan’s Heroes fame.
#107. “Static” (S2 E20). An old man finds a radio and starts hearing stations from the past. He winds up back in the past with his wife.
#106. “Elegy” (S1 E20). A threesome of astronauts land on a planet where everybody is frozen still. This is one of those episodes that started off strong but does not wrap up effectively.
#105. “What’s in the Box?” (S5 E24). A TV shows the future to a man who spends all the time arguing and fighting with his wife. He then finds out that he is going to kill her.
#104. “I Sing the Body Electric” (S3 E35). A family gets a robotic nanny that they dub “Grandma Robot” and there is a lot of sentimentality.
#103. “A Quality of Mercy” (S3 E15). Dean Stockwell is an army Lieutenant who orders his men to attack a group of Japanese soldiers who are cornered in a cave. However, before he could give the order, he winds up in the Japanese army changing his POV.
#102. “The Lonely” (S1 E7). This episode is usually considered higher by others but I found the man in love with a robot on a prison planet a bit hokey. I did not like the ending of the episode either.
#101. “The Sixteen Millimeter Shrine” (S1 E4). An old time actress isolates herself by watching her old time films and dreams of the old days.
#100. “Young Man’s Fancy” (S13 E34). Alex Walker is preparing to sell the home of his deceased overbearing mother after he was married. However, his mother had something to say about that.
#99. “A Most Unusual Camera” (S2 E10). A group of small time crooks find a camera that takes pictures of things that are going to happen in the future. Sadly everything goes tragic for them.
#98. “Hocus Pocus and Frisby” (S3 E30). Frisby tells tale tales and none of his friends believe him, even though they enjoy listening to his BS. So when Frisby is being abducted by aliens, who’s going to believe it?
#97. “The Night of the Meek” (S2 E11). An alcoholic department store Santa is fired, but he stumbles upon a bag that allows him to pull out whatever present he needs to. It’s Christmas cheer in the Twilight Zone.
#96. “Passage on the Lady Anne” (S4 E17). It is the final voyage of the Lady Anne and the passengers are upset that a couple trying to make their marriage work booked a trip on the ship.
#95. “Kick the Can” (S3 E21). A well known episode, where members of an old folks home find their youth again by playing a children’s game of kick the can.
#94. “The Lateness of the Hour” (S2 E8). A daughter decides that she wants her parents to deactivate all the robots that her father had created because she was a selfish and jealous girl (who turned out to be a robot herself).
#93. “Mirror Image” (S 1 E21). This is another episode that some consider better than I do. It is the story of a woman at a bus station whose alternate universe doppelganger switches places with her.
#92. “The 7th is Made Up of Phantoms” (S5 E10). A ghost story featuring the Battle of Little Big Horn and General Custer’s Last Stand. A couple of present day army officers wind up fighting with Custer in a weird time travel twist.
#91. “The Fever” (S1 E17). The fever of this episode is the gambling bug that can grip a person until their life is completely changed.
#90. “Number 12 Looks Just Like You” (S5 E17). A sci-fi episode where a young girl was turning the right age for her to be transformed into one of the acceptable beautiful bodies, just like everybody else is…even though she does not want to do it.
#89. “The Parallel” (S4 E11). An astronaut winds up shifting into a parallel universe where everything is just about the same, but a few details are different.
#88. “Person or Persons Unknown” (S3 E27). David Gurney wakes up one day and his wife, co-workers and friends do not recognize him. He remembers everything, but no one knows who he is.
#87. “The Hunt” (S3 E19). A man dies trying to save his dog from drowning, and he heads off to heaven… or does he?
#86. “The Arrival ” (S3 E2). A mysterious plane arrives without any crew or passengers. How did it happen? This is another episode where the set up was a banger only for the conclusion to be underwhelming.
#85. “A Penny for your Thoughts” (S2 E16). By flipping a penny into a wishing box and having it land on its side, a man gains the ability to hear people’s thoughts.
#84. “Back There” (S2 E13). Another time travel episode where the Professor from Gilligan’s Island goes back in time and tries to stop the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.
#83. “A Passage for Trumpet” (S1 E32). Jack Klugman portrayed a man who played the trumpet. He was down and attempts to kill himself by stepping in front of a truck. He winds up in a land where no one could see or interact with him.
#82. “Nervous Man in a Four Dollar Room” (S2 E3). A man is supposed to kill a bar owner for a local criminal, but his conscience was getting to him and his reflection begins to talk to him.
#81. “Of Late I Think of Cliffordville” (S4 E14). A businessman makes a deal with the devil to go back in time and recreate his fortune with the knowledge of the future that he had. Did not work well for him. Julie Newmar guest starred as the Devil.
#80. “What You Need” (S1 E12). There is a peddler going around providing exactly what people need, even if they do not understand why they need it.
#79. “The Encounter” (S5 E31). Neville Brand and George Takei face off in an attic of a house dealing with ghosts of their past and facing prejudice and stereotypes. One episode that was never shown in reruns or syndication for years.
#78. “Queen of the Nile” (S5 E23). An actress seems to never age and a reporter is looking into the story. Little did he know that the story had a very Egyptian answer to it.
#77. “The Jeopardy Room” (S5 E29). A defector is trapped in a room and spies have set up a bomb. He is given a length of time to discover where the bomb is or he will be killed.
#76. “The Trade-Ins” (S3 E31). Looking to stay together after so many years, a pair of elderly people look to trade in their bodies for younger ones.
#75. “The Trouble with Templeton” (S2 E9). An aging Broadway actor winds up traveling back in time to see that he old days were not as awesome as he remembered.
#74. “The After Hours” (S1 E34). A woman is confused by the mysterious floor at the department store. Turns out she was a mannequin that had received a time in the real world and she was having a hard time coming back.
#73. “Ring-a-Ding Girl” (S5 E13). This was an episode that was not working that well for me, but the ending really was an awesome twist that I did not see coming and it shot this one up the ratings.
#72. “The Rip Van Winkle Caper” (S2 E24). Three criminals plan to escape with their gold by going into suspended animation for 100 years. Not a good idea.
#71. “Dust”. A man is the cause for an accidental death of a little girl and is scheduled to be hanged. His father buys some ‘magic’ dust to help save his son.
#70. “A World of Difference” (S1 E23). A businessman finds himself as an actor in a show. He still remembered being the character that he was playing, not the actor that everyone seems to think he is.
#69. “Miniature” (S4 E8). A lonely man finds companionship with a doll house inside a museum that he believes is coming to life.
#68. “Nightmare as a Child” (S1 E29). A teacher is visited by an odd little girl who has strange information to share that leads the teacher to remember something that happened when she was a child.
#67. “The Silence” (S2 E25). A man who is tired of hearing another man always talking bets him that he cannot go a year’s time without saying a word.
#66. “The Thirty Fathom Grave” (S4 E2). A ship comes across a sunken submarine that seems to be making sounds as if there are survivors aboard. Meanwhile one of the crew of the ship is going crazy.
#65. “One for the Angels” (S1 E2). Lou Bookman, a friendly street vendor, is visited by Mr. Death and told that his life will end at midnight. Bookman tries to deal with the problem only to find a more tragic circumstance.
#64. “The Long Morrow” (S5 E15). An astronaut on a trip to a distant planet falls in love with a beautiful woman just before departing. The problem? She would be 40 years older when he returned as he would be in a suspended animation. It is one of those couples destined to be apart stories.
#63. “Shadow Play” (S2 E26). Adam Grant is convicted of murder and sentenced to the electric chair. However, he is telling anyone that will listen that this had all happened before and that they were all just in his head and if he is killed, everything will just start again. Cool concept.
#62. “King Nine Will Not Return” (S2 E1). World War II B-25 Mitchell bomber pilot awakens and has no idea what has happened to his crew and he desperately tries to find them.
#61. “The Grave” (S3 E7). Lee Marvin starred in this Western where he is an old lawman who found out that a rival had been killed and buried with a threat to Marvin that if he went to the grave he would get revenge on him.
#60. “The Fear” (S5 E35). A woman in a cabin sees strange lights and a trooper comes to check on her. They wind up with a confusing mystery involving giant aliens? Good performances elevate this episode.
#59. “The Old Man in the Cave” (S5 E7). In an apocalyptic future, a group of people follow the instructions of a mysterious man in a cave. When a military troop come along, thye throw the groups belief system out of whack.
#58. “Four O’ Clock” (S3 E29). Oliver Crangle is a 1960s version of a ‘Karen,’ and he is trying to stop all that he believes is evil. He is going to turn all evil people 2 ft. tall. Crangle is one of the best villains of the series because he really believes that what he is doing is right.
#57. “Valley of the Shadow” (S4 E3). Reporter Phillip Redfield winds up in a small town called Peaceful Valley. Before he knew it, he was being held captive because the people of the town could not allow him to leave.
#56. “Spur of the Moment” (S5 E21). This is a weird story where a woman sees a vision of herself that chases her. The vision is trying to warn her not to make the choice that is going to ruin her life.
#55. “Little Lost Girl” (S3 E26). The episode that tell you that it is always a good thing to have a physicist on speed dial. A little girl gets lost in another dimension through a portal in her bedroom.
#54. “Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?” (S2 E28). Which of the eccentric group of people are actually a Martian? And why are they here?
#53. “Twenty-Two” (S2 E17). A dancer is in the hospital recovering from exhaustion when she has a reoccurring dream about visiting the Hospital’s morgue. The dream has a significance for the woman.
#52. “The Man in the Bottle” (S2 E2). The first example of a genie story in The Twilight Zone. You’ve got to be careful what you wish for because you may end up as Adolf Hitler.
#51. “In his Image” (S4 E1). A modern version of Frankenstein, a man is confused when his hometown seems to not know who he is.
#50. “The Midnight Sun” (S3 E10). A well constructed story that started off with the world moving too close to the sun and so the heat was getting terrible. The twist at the end was a really cool one. (Pun intended).
#49. “The Last Flight” (S1 E18). A pilot in WWI winds up landing at a base in 1960. He discovered that the pilot he had left had reached the rank of an air-vice marshal in the Royal Air Force.
#48. “Where is Everybody?” (S1 E1). The pilot episode where Earl Holliman arrives in a town where there are no people and he begins to feel paranoia and anxiety about what wa going on. A strong start to the series.
#47. “The Little People” (S3 E28). What would you do if you landed on a planet with a race of ant-sized people? Would you become their god? Would you pay for that eventually with your life? In The Twilight Zone you would.
#46. “Third from the Sun” (S1 E14). A family try to escape from their planet to avoid an upcoming nuclear war and they wind up heading for a planet they learn is called earth. One of the early twist like this that does happen a few times in the series.
#45. “Long Live Walter Jameson” (S1 E24). Professor Walter Jameson is ready to get married, but his future father-in-law has a doubt because it seems as if Walter Jameson does not age.
#44. “The Masks” (S5 E25). A father on his deathbed brings his family together and insists that they wear masks until midnight or they would receive nothing in the will. He has a surprise waiting for his rotten family.
#43. “Stopover in a Quiet Town” (S5 E30). A husband and wife wind up in a small town with no people and things that do not seem real. And they have no idea how they got here.
#42. “The Changing of the Guard” (S3 E37). A teacher being forced to retire, considers suicide until the spirits of some of his former students come back and tell him what a difference he had made in their lives. As a teacher myself, this one hit home.
#41. “Mr. Denton on Doomsday” (S1 E3). The first Western of the show, Mr. Denton finds a peddle who is selling a potion that will make him the fastest draw in the west.
#40. “Escape Clause” (S1 E6). A man makes a deal with the devil making himself immortal, but he winds up in prison.
#39. “He’s Alive” (S4 E4). A small time Neo-Nazi suddenly becomes the next major leader thanksto a shadowy figure that turns out to be Hitler!
#38. “Printer’s Devil” (S4 E9). Burgess Meredith played the devil in this episode focused on the newspaper business. Meredith is one of the best actors from the series.
#37. “The Passersby” (S4 E9). A Confederate soldier winds up at a Southern home where a widow watches the soldiers walk by, angry about the loss of her husband.
#36. “A Game of Pool” (S3 E5). Jack Klugman and Jonathan Winters engage in a game of pool to decide whom is the greatest of all time. Thing is, Winters was dead.
#35. “A Hundred Yards Over the Rim” (S2 E23). While traveling from St. Louis to the New Mexico Territory, Cliff Robertson must go off to try and find help for his sick son. He finds the help in the future.
#34. “The New Exhibit” (S4 E13). The curator Martin Lombard Senescu brings home the wax figures of the serial killer exhibit when the museum they were in closed. That led to some murders taking place in his home. It seemed as if the wax figure had committed the crimes but it was implied that Martin was the culprit.
#33. “I am the Night- Color Me Black” (S5 E26). There is a hanging scheduled. The criminal had killed a man. The town had been covered in a darkness, literally.
#32. “Once Upon a Time” (S3 E13). A cool tribute to Buster Keaton and silent movies as part of this episode was in silent movie format. Buster Keaton starred as a man lost in time.
#31. “It’s A Good Life” (S3 E8). Anthony has a fearful power that he uses to lord over the town and his family or he will send them to the ‘cornfield.’ Anthony is just a little kid. Creepy kid horror works really well in The Twilight Zone.
#30. Death Ship” (S4 E6). Jack Klugman captains a vessel that has crashed on a planet where there is another crashed ship with a crew identical to them. The episode does a cool job of keeping the audience guessing about what has happened.
#29. “Five Characters in Search of an Exit” (S3 E14). This is one of the most original twists at the end of an episode in the whole series. These people we are following are actually just dolls in a charity collection container. Mind blown.
#28. “The Odyssey of Flight 33” (S2 E18). Their airplane accelerates to an incredible speed and something unexpected happens- they travel time. Wild twist here too.
#27. “Perchance to Dream” (S1 E9). Edward Hall is afraid to go to sleep because there is a woman in his dream that is going to kill him. His psychiatrist does not seem to be much help in the matter.
#26. “I Shot an Arrow into the Air” (S1 E15). The Planet of the Apes twist. Three astronauts crash on a planet not knowing that it was earth all along.
#25. “Nothing in the Dark” (S3 E16). An amazing performance by Gladys Cooper as a fearful woman hiding form Death. Unfortunately death is played by Robert Redford and he finds her.
#24. “And When the Sky was Opened” (S1 E11). Three astronauts return to earth only to have one of them, Forbes, claim that there was supposed to be a fourth astronaut that nobody else remembers and is seemingly erased from existence.
#23. “Nick of Time” (S2 E7). William Shatner’s first appearance on The Twilight Zone. He played a newlywed who gets stuck in a little town and becomes obsessed with a fortune telling machine in a diner. Shatner does a wonderful job in this episode.
#22. “Walking Distance” (S1 E5). Martin Sloan went to his hometown and is suddenly back in his childhood, watching things happen that happened when he was a kid.
#21. “The Hitch-Hiker” (S1 E16). Nan Adams is on a road trip across the country when she sees a hitch-hiker along the road. No matter how fast she goes, he is always there, showing up at the worst times. Another big twist as it turned out that Nan had died in a car wreck.
#20. “The Purple Testament” (S1 E19). A soldier in war suddenly began to see in the faces of his troop mates who was going to die.
#19. “In Praise of Pip” (S5 E1). Jack Klugman gives a great performance teaming up with Billy Mumy in an emotional episode dealing with grief and loss.
#18. “On Thursday We Leave for Home” (S4 E16). A group of people were stranded on a different planet, but Captain Benteen took control. When a rescue team arrived years later, Benteen was not ready to give up his power and control.
#17. “Caesar and Me” (S5 E28). The talking dummy is back to torment poor Cliff Robertson into becoming a criminal. Then there is the most annoying little girl named Susan who will be Caesar’s next victim.
#16. “Night Call” (S5 E19). Another great performance by Gladys Cooper as an old woman who was receiving mysterious calls in the middle of the night by someone who would not identify themselves. She had two top tier performances in this show.
#15. “The Obsolete Man” (S2 E29). An excellent acted episode featuring Burgess Meredith as a librarian being killed off being obsolete and Fritz Weaver as the Chancellor who winds up obsolete as well.
#14. “Deaths-Head Revisited” (S3 E9). A former SS captain returned to the concentration camp at which he worked only to find the ghosts may not be as happy to see him. This was a powerful episode that needed a little more realness in the Nazi to make it great.
#13. “The Shelter” (S3 E3). The most realistic episode of The Twilight Zone. The announcement is made that there is some unidentified objects heading toward America and that people should take shelter with the chance that it was nuclear bombs, The neighborhood went crazy and tried to force their way into Bill Stockton’s bomb shelter. This showed the human reaction to panic perfectly.
#12. “The Invaders” (S2 E15). A brilliant performance from Agnes Morehead a she plays a woman, with almost no dialogue, who is being invaded by a group of small aliens. Of course, everything is not as it seems.
#11. “Long Distance Call” (S2 E22). A grandmother givers her beloved grandson a toy pone that allows him to talk to her after her death. As she was lonely, she tried to convince him to come be with her, by drowning himself. Another powerful episode.
#10. “The Howling Man” (S2 E5). A man arrives at a castle during a storm and finds another man held captive in a room. He is told that this man is evil, that he is the devil, but he does not believe it…until it is too late. Oh and there were so many Dutch angles.
#9. “The Dummy” (S3 E33). The first of the talking ventriloquist dummy episodes, with this dummy named Willie. It is actually the same physical dummy that they used in “Caesar and Me”. This uses the dummy to deal with mental illness.
#8. “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” (S5 E22). A French short film that the producers bought the right to and made an episode of the show. This own an Oscar as Best Short prior to its debut in The Twilight Zone.
#7. “Time Enough at Last” (S1 E8). Burgess Meredith just wanted to be able to read undisturbed. Sadly, even the end of the world, as the only man left, he can’t read. His glasses are broke. One of the all time classics.
#6. “Eye of the Beholder” (S2 E6). One of the creepiest episodes of the series as a woman has gone in for a treatment, trying to cure her ugliness. Her face is all wrapped up, but the audience realizes that something weird is going on as the cameras are avoiding showing anyone else. Another great twist at the end.
#5. “A Stop at Willoughby” (S1 E30). Gart Williams has been having trouble at work and has been dreaming about a peaceful town called Willoughby. He can go to Willoughby on the train and he finally does decided to do so. Only to find out that there is no Willoughby… outside of a funeral parlor.
#4. “Living Doll” (S5 E6). Telly Savalas gives a great performance as one of the worst characters on the show. He is an abusive father and husband who is confronted and eventually killed by Talky Tina, his step-daughter’s new doll.
#3. “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” (S5 E3). Probably the most iconic Twilight Zone episode ever. William Shatner is amazing as the man who sees a gremlin on the wing of his airplane. The tension and anxiety that built as no one believed Shatner was palatable. One of the best episode of the series, deserving its status.
#2. “To Serve Man” (S3 E24). “IT’S A COOKBOOK!” With those words, the helpful and friendly aliens known as the Kanamits become earth people eating monsters. To Serve Man is an epic episode with a great twist ending. Honestly, this could easily be considered 1B instead of #2 on this list. I debated between To Serve Men and the episode that actually did end up at number one…
#1. “The Monsters are Due on Maple Street” (S1 E22). Who are the real monsters on Maple Street? Is it the aliens who are revealed to be messing with the residents or is it the paranoid and suss people who live on the street and turn on each other at a moments notice. This is a great episode that speaks to human nature.
That is it. A massive undertaking for this list. It took me hours to complete this.