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A married couple discover a dangerous way to put the spark back into their relationship.
A married couple discover a dangerous way to put the spark back into their relationship.
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The Twilight Zone
S2 "Shelter Skelter"A survivalist (Joe Mantegna) escapes to his bomb shelter when nuclear war starts.
The Twilight Zone
S2, EP5 "Toys of Caliban"A father (Richard Mulligan) tries to protect his mentally impaired son when the boy's visions come to life.
The Twilight Zone
S1 "Joy Ride; Examination Day"A 1956 Buick baffles joyriders; a boy wants a good mark on a civil exam.
The Twilight Zone
S2 "The Junction"A trapped coal miner (William Allen Young) meets a miner from another era.
The Twilight Zone
S2, EP7 "The Road Less Traveled"An alternate past confronts a Vietnam draft evader (Cliff De Young).
The Twilight Zone
S2 "The Girl I Married"A married couple discover a dangerous way to put the spark back into their relationship.
The Twilight Zone
S2 "The Card"A credit-card junkie (Susan Blakely) gets a lesson in timely payments.
The Twilight Zone
S2 "Song of the Younger World"An imprisoned teen fall in love with the warden's daughter.
More anthology shows
See allThe Twilight Zone
"The Twilight Zone" was the brainchild of Emmy Award-winner Rod Serling, who served as host and wrote over 80 episodes of the original show's 150-plus episode run. It's a strange mix of horror, science-fiction, drama, comedy and superstition. Serling introduced each episode, and many of the black and white hours concluded with a surprise ending. Actors such as Burt Reynolds, Roddy McDowell and Robert Redford made appearances in some of the more well-known stories.
Death Valley Days
Stories based on the legends and lore of Death Valley, California.
Zane Grey Theatre
An anthology series based on the novels of Zane Grey.
Alfred Hitchcock Presents
The familiar "plink, plink" of the theme song, accompanied by the line drawing of a man in profile immediately identifies the show as "Alfred Hitchcock Presents." The famed director opens almost every episode with the words "Good evening ..." After a joke -- usually about the evening's sponsor -- Hitchcock lays the groundwork for that episode's freestanding story of suspense and terror.