
Watch S2, EP21: The Prime Mover with Fubo for $0 Today
Two men try to make their fortune at Las Vegas from the power one of them has to move inanimate objects.
Two men try to make their fortune at Las Vegas from the power one of them has to move inanimate objects.
More episodes
The Twilight Zone
S5, EP2 "Steel"Two small-time promoters find that their fighter can't meet his opponent in the ring. With Lee Marvin.
The Twilight Zone
S1, EP31 "The Chaser"A lovesick man finds unexpected results when he buys a potion from a stranger to help woo the woman he desires.
The Twilight Zone
S1, EP4 "The Sixteen-Millimeter Shrine"A forgotten star of the '30s uses her old movies to re-create the spirit of her heyday.
The Twilight Zone
S5, EP10 "The 7th Is Made up of Phantoms"Modern National Guardsmen maneuvering at Little Big Horn find ominous signs of an impending Indian attack.
The Twilight Zone
S5, EP21 "Spur of the Moment"While horseback riding, a wealthy girl is nearly run down by another woman, who chases her.
The Twilight Zone
S5, EP12 "Ninety Years Without Slumbering"A retired watchmaker (Ed Wynn) fears that when his grandfather's clock stops ticking, his own life will end.
The Twilight Zone
S5, EP7 "The Old Man in the Cave"An old man in a cave offers guidance to survivors of a nuclear-war apocalypse, but their orderly world is shattered by the arrival of four soldiers.
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The 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.
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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.