Video Crossroads: DVD: The Twilight Zone - Vol. 31

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The Twilight Zone - Vol. 31 - DVD

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The Twilight Zone - Vol. 31

Our Price: $9.99

DVD - 15 August, 2000
Image Entertainment
NR (Not Rated)
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours


Number of Media: 1
Features:

  • Black & White
  • DVD-Video
  • NTSC

Related Areas: Horror / Sci-Fi / Fantasy, Japanimation, Movie, TV Shows / TV Movie, Television

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Customer Reviews

Travel into the latterday Zone

The three episodes featured in this volume of The Twilight Zone are either from the fourth or fifth seasons of the Zone, arguably the 2 worst seasons of the series.
"Miniature" hails from the hour-long episode season (the fourth). It tells the tale of a young man (Robert Duvall) obsessed with what he believes to be a living doll (Claire Griswold) residing in a doll house. While good, it, like most of the hour episodes, could probably been written to be shorter. I should state however, that it succeeds more than most of the hour episodes.
The last 2 episodes on the disc are from the fifth season.
"Stopover In a Quiet Town" stars Barry Nelson (James Bond in the TV adaptation of Ian Fleming's Casino Royale) and Nancy Malone as a squabbling couple who wake up after a late night party (where the booze apparently flowed freely) and find themselves in a small town that seems to be devoid of life. A somewhat spooky atmosphere is destroyed by the creative ending (creative until you think about it for a minute, that is). Despite this, it's still fun. It feels similar to Rod Serling's superior "Where Is Everybody?" (the series' pilot episode).It was written by the guy who wrote The Waltons.
The last (though not least) episode is entitled: "The Jeopardy Room" (but Alex Trebek is nowhere to be seen!) and stars Martin Landau (North By Northwest, X-Files: Fight The Future, Ed Wood) as Major Ivan Kuchenko, a man desperately trying to escape into the West. He is put through a fiendish test by Commissar Vassiloff, an agent assigned to kill him. This is a good thriller (if but a little too simple) remenisant of Hitchcock's style. It was directed by Richard Donner, later to become famnous for directing Superman: The Movie and the Lethal Weapon series.
All three episodes are enjoyable, though none are really extraordinary. 3 stars is a fair rating in my book.


miniature

This episode is my favorite of all the Twlight Zone series. However, I was disappointed the dialogue is missing. I got a replacement from Amazon and the same condition exists. Maybe there was a bad production run, but it is surely frustrating.


Good Episodes from the 4th and 5th Seasons

The 4th and 5th seasons of the "Twilight Zone" always seem to get poor marks for originality and production values. This DVD can testify to the contrary. `MINIATURE' written by Charles Beaumont is a tour-de-force of underplaying a role by Robert Duvall. This is a beautiful story of an introverted man that escapes the real world into a fantasy one when he becomes intrigued by a museum's miniature replica of life in the 1890's. `THE JEOPARDY ROOM' written by Rod Serling and directed by Dick Donner seems more akin to "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" but is a good play on words and strategies between Martin Landau and John VanDreelen with it `cold war' views and interpolations. It is still a story of the individual who must emerge from a society that would suppress personal freedoms. `STOPOVER IN A QUIET TOWN' is one of the most memorable episodes from the series. The Earl Hamner, Jr. story starring Barry Nelson and Nancy Malone as the stranded couple who wake up in a deserted middle class neighborhood returns back to the very origins of the series with a quite innovative ending. These are all well produced episodes and are very representative to the theme of the series.

 

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