What did everyone think of In His Image and the changes to Season 4? Watch the new NC here - th-cam.com/video/pRhsHg4ewBU/w-d-xo.html Watch more Twilight-Tober Zone here - bit.ly/TwilightToberZone Follow us on Twitch - www.twitch.tv/channelawesome
Well when I first started watching the Twilight Zone in the summer of 2009 from a SyFy channel marathon; for the first three days they showed 30 minutes episodes and then on the fourth day they showed the one hour episodes and I remember being weirded out by the Twilight Zone all of a sudden having one hour episodes and then year’s later discovering all the one hour episodes were all season four episodes and all these years I been scratching my head, wondering why all the season four episodes were one hour long while all the other episodes from seasons 1,2,3 & 5 are all 30 minutes long. And what makes it equally weird is back when the Twilight Zone was available to watch on Netflix, it had every season available, except season four? Why? Did it have to do with the fact season four had one hour episodes, did it play a part in why season four was never available to watch on Netflix?
Yes, well that scene scared the hell out of me when I was seven years old and seeing it for the first time. That and the one where man and robot are obviously fighting to the death, where one is trying to escape up the basement stairs and the other is pulling him back down.
Sounds similar to an episode of SpongeBob where SpongeBob had watched a scary movie about murderous robots and then gets convinced that Mr. Krabs is a robot!
@@michaeldebellis4202Me three. The scene where he sees that he's a robot (by looking inside his wrist) and the one where man and robot are in the basement, fighting apparently to the death, and one is trying to escape up the stairs and the other is pulling him back down. Those two scenes scared the hell out of me, seven years old.
This was an interesting start to the fourth season. In any other circumstance, Alan being replaced by Walter would be a negative thing, but it turns out to be positive, since Walter won't experience homicidal urges, or try to hurt Jessica.
Speaking of interesting, you should see the original pilot for Twilight Zone called The Time Element. It’s actually pretty cool, and Desi Arnaz introduces it
I want to be very clear here, NEVER STOP USING THE "She not a robit" CLIP. I laugh every single time, also when I see it's a robot episode I look forward to you using
12:23 My sole gripe with the season 4 Zone, and all of the Outer Limits, was the effect of the one hour frame on the story pace. Things being unnecessarily drawn out in order to fill the hour. The half hour fit Zone so much better and I believe could have made a lot of Limits stories even better.
This was the first episode of The Twilight Zone I saw; I forget how old I was at the time, but I was still a kid at that point. I loved the big twist in this episode, and it was what ultimately got me to start watching the show on a regular basis, when I got older.
I have a book about the TZ which states that it was broadcast in late-night reruns in the summer of 1965, and I realized that's when I first saw these episodes, including some of the hour-long ones. This one, "The Thirty Fathom Grave", and "The New Exhibit" *scared the hell out of me* that summer. I would have been seven that summer.
The scene of him peeling back his skin revealing the circuitry underneath reminded me of a similar scene from Terminator where Arnold does the same thing. Also I've seen similar stories like this of a robot that looks human not knowing they're a robot. I don't think I've ever seen this story done with the robot having a romantic love interest with a real person though which adds a bit more to the twist at the end I wasn't expecting.
I rewatched this episode last night since it’s the one season that’s not very memorable to me, but not in a bad way. Of all 5 original seasons, season 4 was one I only watched once, same with Season 5. 1-3 I binged on multiple occasions, and I can recall which episodes are from those. But rewatching this episode, reminded me that there are some hidden gems in this rather vast departure from its traditional form from previous seasons. And I gotta say, this episode, as well as The 30 Fathom Grave, He’s Alive, and Printer’s Devil, were the few I enjoyed the most. I can’t wait for those ones to be reviewed, and I hope the same positive things can be said about them as well.
Just now realizing next year, if this goes through all of season 4 and starts on 5, will likely be the last year of the classic Twilight Zone coverage. Curious if there are any plans to tackle the 80's version sometime in the future then.
I've done the calculations. The original series consisted of 156 episodes. Twilight-Tober Zone has been going since 2020, making this the fourth year of it. Five Octobers, one episode a day, gets you to 155. I can't imagine that Channel Awesome would do a sixth year consisting of a single episode, so... I think you're correct. I would expect that next year will be the final year, and we'll get a bonus installment at some point next October to account for that last episode. Maybe the last two episodes next Halloween?
When they finish, they can still do the movie, and one tale, yeesh, that can be a whole episode in itself. Then there's Outer Limits, Night Gallery, Tales from the Crypt. The end never need be the end.
@@KyleTheDalek Outer Limits has more teeth so to say than Twilight Zone, Night Gallery was a sequel to Twilight Zone, but instead of original stories they're based off older horror stories, and Tales from the Crypt is a more modern series based off an old comic book.
I really liked this episode, however, I really can't wait for you to review one of my top five favorite episodes this season 'On Thursday, we leave for home '
I quite like "In His Image". One thing about it that ought to be considered more is that violent opening subway scene, which is one of the most shocking, not only for _Twilight Zone,_ but for all television at the time. It still packs a wallop. And that led me to speculation about openings in general. All the focus tends to be on the twist or otherwise memorable endings, but along with in "In His Image", here are a few _TZ_ openings that grabbed me from the start: * "The Howling Man" -- It's so Gothic, so surreal, as David Ellington breaks the fourth wall to invite us into his nightmare, one that starts on a stormy night at a spooky, isolated castle. The Dutch angles of the camera lend to his confusion & disorientation...and then he hears the howling! * "Living Doll" -- Erich Streator is perturbed when his wife buys an expensive "talking" doll for his stepdaughter that says "My name is Talky Tina and I love you very much". But Erich hurls the doll across the room and it slams against a wall. When, he picks it up, the doll changes its message: "My name is Talky Tina, and I don't think I like you." From there, antagonism by the doll escalates to a murderous conclusion, but it's that first totally unexpected phrase in the first scene that sets the action. * "A World of Difference'' -- Successful businessman Arthur Curtis is in his office at the beginning of a seemingly normal workday--normal, that is, until he hears someone yell "Cut!", and turns to discover one wall has disappeared, showing a director and crew on a soundstage. This is one of the great "didn't see that one coming" moments in television history. It doesn't end there. Curtis is then told that he isn't Arthur Curtis, but rather an actor named Gerald Raigan, and that "Arthur Curtis" is just a character he's been playing. He protests that he _is_ Curtis, yet he can find no evidence that the businessman really exists. * "Twenty-Two" -- A creepy vibe runs throughout this episode, but nothing surpasses the terrifying dream that opens it, as Liz Powell, a hospital patient, follows a mysterious nurse to an elevator, then down to the basement, where the patient goes down the hallway to a room she saw the nurse enter. Just as reaches the door of what turns out to be the hospital's morgue, and without warning, the nurse suddenly reappears, eerily inviting her in with the words, "Room for one more, honey." Liz screams, and runs away, in what turns out to be the central part of a recurring dream. * "The Dummy" -- This one might require multiple viewings, as it involves a foreshadowing of “the old switcheroo” ending. At the start we see ventriloquist Jerry Etherson and his dummy, "Willie" performing in a nightclub. During the act, the two switch roles, with Willie becoming the ventriloquist and Jerry serving as the dummy. Jerry's face seems devoid of expressions, much the same as one would expect from a dummy. (Oh, and while leaving the stage, Willie bites Jerry's hand, leaving marks!)
To think the entirety of Season 4 will be covered all throughout October! Hang onto your hats though folks! Cause towards the end of October we will be on Season 5 and finally get to see the review of one of the series’ most famous and oft-remembered episodes: “Terror at 20,000 Feet!”
I liked the longer episodes. I 100% agree that they were not as good as the half hour episodes, for the most part, but it was so fun to get an entire hour in the Twilight zone.
The part that gets me, and something Serling fixes when he does “Night Gallery” and when Twilight Zone” is revived in the 80: if CBS wants an hour of Twilight Zone, put two half-hour stories in a single hour episode. This is such a good idea, even Alfred Hitchcock did it.
One thing I liked about this episode is that they made it as realistic as they could possibly get given the limited technology at the time. He couldn't do it all by himself, he needed the world's greatest scientific minds, and even with all that he needed luck.
I think I misinterpreted the ending and thought the guy at the end was the final android, I thought the inventor got killed by the current model and some sort of fail safe activated the last one
Not a bad start to season 4. What stood out for me in this was the very beginning with Roger pushing the elderly woman onto the train tracks and the cemetery scene
"Robutt" has, for as long as I can remember been my favorite way to say "robot". It's not the way I say robot, I don't think it's the right way to say robot, but when I wanna joke about some slob like Paulie from Rocky talking about a robot, it's always "robutt".
I think the main problem with making it into an hour was a mistake because a short story relies on tension and stretching that tension over an hour instead of a half-hour, an hour can have a profound difference
Exactly. Even some of the half hour episodes dragged a little due to their having a thin concept which was then overly explained with excessive dialogue.
I always wondered why some TZ episodes were an hour long while most weren't...now I know! I personally never noticed that much of a difference in quality for the hour-long ones versus any others - "He's Alive" and "No Time Like the Past" are among my favorite episodes. Looking forward to your review of those.
Oh boy. I'm still in season 4 myself, and I agree that the hour long episodes feel way too dragged out so far. I like this one, though. It surprised me that they didn't go with the whole "creation overcomes the creator" trope. They actually had the human take the robot's place instead. I found that to be impressively unexpected.
Once again, I disagree with a lot of Zoners. While yes, some of the episodes get stretched out too far, others are some of my favorites and fit the hour format (TBH, some of the previous and subsequent season episodes could have benefited from this format as well). This episode is one that works well with the format. It almost reminds me more of an Outer Limits than a Zone specifically the OL episode, "Glitch. Alan is a great protagonist and his confision is clearly felt. I think his ending is more bittersweet because the character that we saw whose struggle is felt is gone and has been replaced. 😮 7:24-t took me longer than necessary to realize what you did there. "Fine and dandy." 13:34-This is going to be this year's Forbidden Planet isn't it? Oh well, drink up!🥂🍺
Here’s the thing I’m actually going through these episodes right now. Did the Ep Mute last night. So far I haven’t come across any that are terrible but at the same time I have not come across any that are great either. They’re all just kind of in the middle if you will. Like Walter says here it feels like it goes on longer then it needed to be and could have been done and a half the time and that’s the biggest feeling of all of them the drag on longer than they should . Maybe it would’ve been better instead of having our long episodes with one long story they could’ve had our long episode with two stories back to back. I think they do that in the 80s version. I’m not sure I’m gonna watch that as soon as I finish the series up. One, but this one was OK I didn’t do the mystery but near the end I was just kind of looking at my watch and waiting for the end. Not terrible, but not impressive . Also, Walter never stop with the robot joke. I love that joke.
There's just one thing about this one that bothers me. Twilight Zone is usually about things catching up to people whether they're bad people or not. So you'd think that the robot actually killing someone would make things bad for Walter by the end. So I wish that part weren't in the story (even though I admit it's a very good spooky scene).
True. I don't know if surveillance cameras existed in the 1960s, but had there been Walter would've been identified and arrested for the woman's murder.
It could've been the move to Thursday night from what we watched Friday at 8pm on CBS, that makes the hour long shows not spark my memory like the first three season. ...
I don't mind season 4 being hour long. A lot of the episodes do feel better because of it. But yeah, when I binged the series it was all on Hulu, except season 4 which I found on Netflix. Or was it the other way around.
None of the hour long season four episodes are outright successes for me. Some come close, but they usually seem way too stretched out (The Parallel), or if not, the pacing and tone is so altered it doesn’t feel like a Twilight Zone episode anymore (this one). I still enjoy them, and it’s probably good they experimented a little before going back to tried and true patterns, but they just never hit quite right.
This was a well-acted episode, but it had some major plot holes. First, the duping of Jessica continues without any consequences since Water seamlessly poses as Alan in the end. Next, the woman whom Alan viciously murdered in the train station received no justice.
Plot holes are not story elements where you personally would have done something differently. Jessica - What exactly is the consequence? She doesn't continue on with a homicidal robot she met several days ago? We aren't talking about Walter stepping into a relationship going back years. Worst case - they break up Deceased Woman Alan is deactivated. There's your justice. Should Walter have to go to jail?
Like that cartoon where a scientist is working on a blackboard full of calculations, with a big empty space in the middle saying “”And then a miracle happens”,-In even the most inoffensively average S4 episodes (like this one), you can see the point where what would normally be a nice, average inconsequential half-hour S5 non-Serling story starts to break at the ten or fifteen minute mark, and spins its wheels for another 20 wandering around in other directions, just to fill time before coming back to the last ten to build the Big Climax. And that’s just the GOOD episodes…. 😰
I seen this one on tv before but i didn’t know it was season four Season Four is a mixed bag with its new format but the new format creates more half baked episodes than just bad episodes
What did everyone think of In His Image and the changes to Season 4?
Watch the new NC here - th-cam.com/video/pRhsHg4ewBU/w-d-xo.html
Watch more Twilight-Tober Zone here - bit.ly/TwilightToberZone
Follow us on Twitch - www.twitch.tv/channelawesome
A lot
I liked it, as it was an interesting direction to take the show in.
I liked it🎉🎉🎉🎉
It’s a interesting season if you look back
Well when I first started watching the Twilight Zone in the summer of 2009 from a SyFy channel marathon; for the first three days they showed 30 minutes episodes and then on the fourth day they showed the one hour episodes and I remember being weirded out by the Twilight Zone all of a sudden having one hour episodes and then year’s later discovering all the one hour episodes were all season four episodes and all these years I been scratching my head, wondering why all the season four episodes were one hour long while all the other episodes from seasons 1,2,3 & 5 are all 30 minutes long. And what makes it equally weird is back when the Twilight Zone was available to watch on Netflix, it had every season available, except season four? Why? Did it have to do with the fact season four had one hour episodes, did it play a part in why season four was never available to watch on Netflix?
I’m so happy Rod Serling still did the narrations
I've always loved that shot of Alan peeling back his skin and the circuitry revealed underneath, with springs and tubes popping out. So STRIKING.
Yes, well that scene scared the hell out of me when I was seven years old and seeing it for the first time. That and the one where man and robot are obviously fighting to the death, where one is trying to escape up the basement stairs and the other is pulling him back down.
This one terrified me as a kid. Just the thought of someone's life not being real and finding out they're a murderous robot was creepy.
Me too. I still remember that scene where he pulls his skin away and reveals circuits and wires underneath and how that made my skin crawl.
Sounds similar to an episode of SpongeBob where SpongeBob had watched a scary movie about murderous robots and then gets convinced that Mr. Krabs is a robot!
Robit*
@@michaeldebellis4202Me three. The scene where he sees that he's a robot (by looking inside his wrist) and the one where man and robot are in the basement, fighting apparently to the death, and one is trying to escape up the stairs and the other is pulling him back down. Those two scenes scared the hell out of me, seven years old.
Imagine....NO CGI in those days and how they pulled off the doubles is incredible.
ROD SERLING Baby !!!😁👍🏻
This was an interesting start to the fourth season. In any other circumstance, Alan being replaced by Walter would be a negative thing, but it turns out to be positive, since Walter won't experience homicidal urges, or try to hurt Jessica.
Speaking of interesting, you should see the original pilot for Twilight Zone called The Time Element. It’s actually pretty cool, and Desi Arnaz introduces it
It would have better if ended with the police showing up to arrest him for the murder of the woman
@@22espec I agree actually there is no way they didnt think of it.. maybe ran out of time..
I want to be very clear here, NEVER STOP USING THE "She not a robit" CLIP. I laugh every single time, also when I see it's a robot episode I look forward to you using
RIP Charles Beaumont. And credit to everyone who made this great episode work.
"If only I'd programmed the robot to be more careful what I wished for...
Robot, experience this tragic irony for me!"
Robot: "NOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!"
* cracks a beer *
Thank you for referencing Futurama referencing this episode ❤
12:23 My sole gripe with the season 4 Zone, and all of the Outer Limits, was the effect of the one hour frame on the story pace. Things being unnecessarily drawn out in order to fill the hour. The half hour fit Zone so much better and I believe could have made a lot of Limits stories even better.
Some episodes needed to be shortened and others could have used the extra half hour to make the episode better.
I've always loved "Tomato in the Mirror" stories, wherein the protagonist isn't who they appear to be. I never would have spotted the twist coming.
A perfect way to start season 4. A man trying to create something in his own image without his flaws seems like what people use AI for today.
Donchu mean photoshop 😂
Agreed, though artifical intelligence comes at a high cost.
Sounds like Walter was playing God to me.
@@rajabuta
It could be both…although most people like that nowadays try to use AI more because it feeds more into their laziness!
Synthetic "Garbage" Intelligence 🙄😶👎
This series is by far my favorite from Channel Awesome.
Wow that robot effect is super neat-o!
This was the first episode of The Twilight Zone I saw; I forget how old I was at the time, but I was still a kid at that point. I loved the big twist in this episode, and it was what ultimately got me to start watching the show on a regular basis, when I got older.
I have a book about the TZ which states that it was broadcast in late-night reruns in the summer of 1965, and I realized that's when I first saw these episodes, including some of the hour-long ones. This one, "The Thirty Fathom Grave", and "The New Exhibit" *scared the hell out of me* that summer. I would have been seven that summer.
The scene of him peeling back his skin revealing the circuitry underneath reminded me of a similar scene from Terminator where Arnold does the same thing.
Also I've seen similar stories like this of a robot that looks human not knowing they're a robot. I don't think I've ever seen this story done with the robot having a romantic love interest with a real person though which adds a bit more to the twist at the end I wasn't expecting.
5:29 Ouch! That look like it hurt... That car actually hit his leg.
I rewatched this episode last night since it’s the one season that’s not very memorable to me, but not in a bad way.
Of all 5 original seasons, season 4 was one I only watched once, same with Season 5. 1-3 I binged on multiple occasions, and I can recall which episodes are from those.
But rewatching this episode, reminded me that there are some hidden gems in this rather vast departure from its traditional form from previous seasons.
And I gotta say, this episode, as well as The 30 Fathom Grave, He’s Alive, and Printer’s Devil, were the few I enjoyed the most.
I can’t wait for those ones to be reviewed, and I hope the same positive things can be said about them as well.
Just now realizing next year, if this goes through all of season 4 and starts on 5, will likely be the last year of the classic Twilight Zone coverage. Curious if there are any plans to tackle the 80's version sometime in the future then.
I've done the calculations. The original series consisted of 156 episodes. Twilight-Tober Zone has been going since 2020, making this the fourth year of it. Five Octobers, one episode a day, gets you to 155. I can't imagine that Channel Awesome would do a sixth year consisting of a single episode, so... I think you're correct. I would expect that next year will be the final year, and we'll get a bonus installment at some point next October to account for that last episode. Maybe the last two episodes next Halloween?
When they finish, they can still do the movie, and one tale, yeesh, that can be a whole episode in itself. Then there's Outer Limits, Night Gallery, Tales from the Crypt. The end never need be the end.
There was a 2000 version.
@@angrytheclown801Have alike are those shows?
Haven’t seen them.
@@KyleTheDalek Outer Limits has more teeth so to say than Twilight Zone, Night Gallery was a sequel to Twilight Zone, but instead of original stories they're based off older horror stories, and Tales from the Crypt is a more modern series based off an old comic book.
The town seemed to have moved on by 20 years, but the cars sure didn't. Those tailfins at 5:04 are straight out of 1958.
Batman: Could it be it had a soul, Alfred ? A soul of silicon, but a soul nonetheless.
I really liked this episode, however, I really can't wait for you to review one of my top five favorite episodes this season 'On Thursday, we leave for home '
I quite like "In His Image". One thing about it that ought to be considered more is that violent opening subway scene, which is one of the most shocking, not only for _Twilight Zone,_ but for all television at the time. It still packs a wallop. And that led me to speculation about openings in general. All the focus tends to be on the twist or otherwise memorable endings, but along with in "In His Image", here are a few _TZ_ openings that grabbed me from the start:
* "The Howling Man" -- It's so Gothic, so surreal, as David Ellington breaks the fourth wall to invite us into his nightmare, one that starts on a stormy night at a spooky, isolated castle. The Dutch angles of the camera lend to his confusion & disorientation...and then he hears the howling!
* "Living Doll" -- Erich Streator is perturbed when his wife buys an expensive "talking" doll for his stepdaughter that says "My name is Talky Tina and I love you very much". But Erich hurls the doll across the room and it slams against a wall. When, he picks it up, the doll changes its message: "My name is Talky Tina, and I don't think I like you." From there, antagonism by the doll escalates to a murderous conclusion, but it's that first totally unexpected phrase in the first scene that sets the action.
* "A World of Difference'' -- Successful businessman Arthur Curtis is in his office at the beginning of a seemingly normal workday--normal, that is, until he hears someone yell "Cut!", and turns to discover one wall has disappeared, showing a director and crew on a soundstage. This is one of the great "didn't see that one coming" moments in television history. It doesn't end there. Curtis is then told that he isn't Arthur Curtis, but rather an actor named Gerald Raigan, and that "Arthur Curtis" is just a character he's been playing. He protests that he _is_ Curtis, yet he can find no evidence that the businessman really exists.
* "Twenty-Two" -- A creepy vibe runs throughout this episode, but nothing surpasses the terrifying dream that opens it, as Liz Powell, a hospital patient, follows a mysterious nurse to an elevator, then down to the basement, where the patient goes down the hallway to a room she saw the nurse enter. Just as reaches the door of what turns out to be the hospital's morgue, and without warning, the nurse suddenly reappears, eerily inviting her in with the words, "Room for one more, honey." Liz screams, and runs away, in what turns out to be the central part of a recurring dream.
* "The Dummy" -- This one might require multiple viewings, as it involves a foreshadowing of “the old switcheroo” ending. At the start we see ventriloquist Jerry Etherson and his dummy, "Willie" performing in a nightclub. During the act, the two switch roles, with Willie becoming the ventriloquist and Jerry serving as the dummy. Jerry's face seems devoid of expressions, much the same as one would expect from a dummy. (Oh, and while leaving the stage, Willie bites Jerry's hand, leaving marks!)
George Grizzard does marvelously in this and his performance(s) make this one of my favorite episodes.
To think the entirety of Season 4 will be covered all throughout October!
Hang onto your hats though folks! Cause towards the end of October we will be on Season 5 and finally get to see the review of one of the series’ most famous and oft-remembered episodes: “Terror at 20,000 Feet!”
Even if I didn't love that episode before, John Lithgow and William Shatner coming together to joke about it would have won me over anyway.
Walter ironically this has a lot of similarities with the Batman Animated Series episode 'His Silicone Soul'
I liked the longer episodes. I 100% agree that they were not as good as the half hour episodes, for the most part, but it was so fun to get an entire hour in the Twilight zone.
Man what a change up for the new season . 4:40 wasn't expecting that
2:48 So the most famous intro of the show, comes from Season 4 ?
You guys always make this time of day better! 🖤🖤🖤🧡🧡🧡
*Once, I got stuck in the Twilight-Tember Zone - which isn't quite as scary and weird as the Twilight-Tober Zone. Even so, I'll never forget it.*
I always wondered if the circuitry under his arm was an inspiration for Data in Star Trek TNG.
So, a synth story. Sweet.
I watched this for the first time yesterday. I liked it
This was actually the version of the opening that was seen in Tower of Terror the ride.
The part that gets me, and something Serling fixes when he does “Night Gallery” and when Twilight Zone” is revived in the 80: if CBS wants an hour of Twilight Zone, put two half-hour stories in a single hour episode.
This is such a good idea, even Alfred Hitchcock did it.
Poor Alan guess in the end you can say he had a "Heart of Steel" and "Silicon Soul" XD
I can’t think of an hour long so that I really like. That all definitely drag.
I love this The Twilight Zone episode!
One thing I liked about this episode is that they made it as realistic as they could possibly get given the limited technology at the time. He couldn't do it all by himself, he needed the world's greatest scientific minds, and even with all that he needed luck.
I remember this one, it was pretty good
I think I misinterpreted the ending and thought the guy at the end was the final android, I thought the inventor got killed by the current model and some sort of fail safe activated the last one
I wonder if they chose the name "Talbot" as a Wolfman homage, implying that Alan is is not what he seems.
thank you for all the cool facts and behind the scenes
I wonder if that scene with the robot stripping it's skin was the the Inspiration of the T2 scene
The ending twist reminds me of the Nightmare Time story 'Forever And Always'
So, in a way, this episode is to you what It's A Good Life is to me.
Not a bad start to season 4. What stood out for me in this was the very beginning with Roger pushing the elderly woman onto the train tracks and the cemetery scene
I like to think that Alan's last words were to ask Walter to take care of Jessica.
"Robutt" has, for as long as I can remember been my favorite way to say "robot". It's not the way I say robot, I don't think it's the right way to say robot, but when I wanna joke about some slob like Paulie from Rocky talking about a robot, it's always "robutt".
This was a solid episode in an up and down season.
That's the episode I remember most, but it's also the hardest to find!
Would be chilling if the robot was the one who survived.
Fascinating!
I know nothing of this season it is a pleasure to learn
This almost feels like a play on Frankenstein.
That "fine and dandy" caught me very off guard.
Enjoying Spooktober🦇🧛🏻♀👻🙀
I hope to see future use of the “stop it, Walter” clip lol
I really liked this episode.
I love season 4. I'd put it above seasons 3 and 5 personally.
Season 4 is my favorite. I actually like the hour long episodes 😂
I heard “DP” in the intro and my mind went places… 😢😅
great videos as always - but what's with the random punching in on the footage? is this something you have to do now to avoid copyright claims?
Today, the android would have won or another would have awakened, what a fantastic twist.
I think the main problem with making it into an hour was a mistake because a short story relies on tension and stretching that tension over an hour instead of a half-hour, an hour can have a profound difference
Exactly. Even some of the half hour episodes dragged a little due to their having a thin concept which was then overly explained with excessive dialogue.
Do Happy ending? But what about the old woman? Thought that was gonna be something else but it was just a victim of the murderous rage scene!
I got the feeling that episode was going to end with the police showing up to arrest him for that but for some reason they didn't do that ending
She deserved it. That proselytizing bitch shouldn't have harassed him in the first place.
I don't know if surveillance cameras existed in the 1960s, but if they did, then the police would've identified Walter as the woman's killer.
Imagine taking his class and his lectures are how he narrates
I always wondered why some TZ episodes were an hour long while most weren't...now I know! I personally never noticed that much of a difference in quality for the hour-long ones versus any others - "He's Alive" and "No Time Like the Past" are among my favorite episodes. Looking forward to your review of those.
I look forward to your review on the episodes "The New Exibit" and "On Thursday We Leave For Home."
Oh boy. I'm still in season 4 myself, and I agree that the hour long episodes feel way too dragged out so far. I like this one, though. It surprised me that they didn't go with the whole "creation overcomes the creator" trope. They actually had the human take the robot's place instead. I found that to be impressively unexpected.
Once again, I disagree with a lot of Zoners. While yes, some of the episodes get stretched out too far, others are some of my favorites and fit the hour format (TBH, some of the previous and subsequent season episodes could have benefited from this format as well).
This episode is one that works well with the format. It almost reminds me more of an Outer Limits than a Zone specifically the OL episode, "Glitch.
Alan is a great protagonist and his confision is clearly felt. I think his ending is more bittersweet because the character that we saw whose struggle is felt is gone and has been replaced.
😮
7:24-t took me longer than necessary to realize what you did there. "Fine and dandy."
13:34-This is going to be this year's Forbidden Planet isn't it? Oh well, drink up!🥂🍺
Here’s the thing I’m actually going through these episodes right now.
Did the Ep Mute last night.
So far I haven’t come across any that are terrible but at the same time I have not come across any that are great either. They’re all just kind of in the middle if you will.
Like Walter says here it feels like it goes on longer then it needed to be and could have been done and a half the time and that’s the biggest feeling of all of them the drag on longer than they should .
Maybe it would’ve been better instead of having our long episodes with one long story they could’ve had our long episode with two stories back to back.
I think they do that in the 80s version. I’m not sure I’m gonna watch that as soon as I finish the series up. One, but this one was OK I didn’t do the mystery but near the end I was just kind of looking at my watch and waiting for the end.
Not terrible, but not impressive .
Also, Walter never stop with the robot joke. I love that joke.
This story could be turned into a feature length movie.
There's just one thing about this one that bothers me. Twilight Zone is usually about things catching up to people whether they're bad people or not. So you'd think that the robot actually killing someone would make things bad for Walter by the end. So I wish that part weren't in the story (even though I admit it's a very good spooky scene).
True. I don't know if surveillance cameras existed in the 1960s, but had there been Walter would've been identified and arrested for the woman's murder.
Probably, but not nearly as many.@@melissacooper8724
It could've been the move to Thursday night from what we watched Friday at 8pm on CBS, that makes the hour long shows not spark my memory like the first three season. ...
And a new Intro
I would have ended the episode with the police asking him some questions about the woman in the subway
That car hit came so close!
I am jealous of every person who got to learn under Rob Sterling. That would be like taking acting lessons from Robin Williams
I’ve seen this episode of the Twilight Zone in reruns on the syfy channel once, and it’s not bad though🙂💁🏻♂.
I don't mind season 4 being hour long. A lot of the episodes do feel better because of it. But yeah, when I binged the series it was all on Hulu, except season 4 which I found on Netflix. Or was it the other way around.
None of the hour long season four episodes are outright successes for me. Some come close, but they usually seem way too stretched out (The Parallel), or if not, the pacing and tone is so altered it doesn’t feel like a Twilight Zone episode anymore (this one). I still enjoy them, and it’s probably good they experimented a little before going back to tried and true patterns, but they just never hit quite right.
I sayed it before but I like season 4 and the longer episode idea is interesting
why does "Antioch college" sound like a great name for ANOTHER setting to explore the nature of Eldrich Horror?
it's even in OHIO!
I preferred the original short form content. Although the hour long ones are adequate I suppose🙀
I legit thought the robot will win
4:04
Very cool 😎
Wasn’t there a movie called that
Wait that opening wasn’t always the opening?
I was just going so say that
That was damn close 9:19
So much to tell if it’s a robot Talbot
This was a well-acted episode, but it had some major plot holes. First, the duping of Jessica continues without any consequences since Water seamlessly poses as Alan in the end. Next, the woman whom Alan viciously murdered in the train station received no justice.
Those aren't plot holes, they just don't have the consequences you apparently desire. Unfair things happen all the time in real life.
Plot holes are not story elements where you personally would have done something differently.
Jessica - What exactly is the consequence?
She doesn't continue on with a homicidal robot she met several days ago?
We aren't talking about Walter stepping into a relationship going back years.
Worst case - they break up
Deceased Woman
Alan is deactivated. There's your justice. Should Walter have to go to jail?
So it's a human being vs a mechanical double episode
Did this make anyone else think of the Futurama episode "Rebirth," where Leela dies in an accident and Fry recreates her as a robot? 🤔
Twilight Zone Presents: Westworld
Like that cartoon where a scientist is working on a blackboard full of calculations, with a big empty space in the middle saying “”And then a miracle happens”,-In even the most inoffensively average S4 episodes (like this one), you can see the point where what would normally be a nice, average inconsequential half-hour S5 non-Serling story starts to break at the ten or fifteen minute mark, and spins its wheels for another 20 wandering around in other directions, just to fill time before coming back to the last ten to build the Big Climax. And that’s just the GOOD episodes…. 😰
I seen this one on tv before but i didn’t know it was season four
Season Four is a mixed bag with its new format but the new format creates more half baked episodes than just bad episodes
That reminds me of the Mandela effect iceberg video or are you people thought his name was Sterling
Why no Nostalgia-ween intro added onto this?
You can't just gloss over the nonconsensual aspect of the switch for Margaret. She was tricked, and there's horror in that undiscovered deception.