

The classic long-running television series is formed by 156 episodes and its narrator, of course, Rod Serling. Rating : Acceptable and passable, the picture will appeal to fantastic genre buffs. Colorful and imaginative cinematography especially in the third segment titled 'It's a good life'. The master Jerry Goldsmith composes a magic musical score particularly reflected on the second episode titled 'Kick the can'. The picture contains good special effects in traditional style without excessive computer generator as usual nowadays. And fourth episode titled 'Nightmare at 20.000 Feet' deals with a terrified passenger(John Lightow) who watch a creepy monster making rare issues on the wing of the plane. Four horror and science fiction segments, directed by four famous directors, each of them being a new version of a classic.

The third directed by Joe Dante concerns about a young woman (Kathleen Quinlan) encounters a kid with rare powers and some people (Kevin McCarthy, William Schallert,among them) closed at a strange house. The second segment directed by Steven Spielberg is a silly story about old people living in a retirement house who turn into little boys, thanks a strange visitor (Scatman Crothers).
#THE TWILIGHT ZONE MOVIE MOVIE#
The best directed by John Landis is the first, where a bigot (played by Vic Morrow who died during filming by a helicopter crash accident) who becomes pursued of evil Nazis, Ku Klux Klan and American soldiers in Vietnam. Also free of any connection to The Twilight Zone was the 1997 TV movie based on the Tower of Terror, a movie which starred Steve Guttenberg and Kirsten Dunst.

It's is divided into 4 parts, three of them real remakes from classic television series, though starts in a prologue stars Albert Brooks and Dan Aykroyd. Five episodes realized as tribute to Rod Serling's Twilight zone, made by four known directors. The Twilight Zone Movie is a classic horror anthology, featuring two original segments and two which remake iconic episodes of the original series.
