The Twilight Zone excelled in telling tales of terror, exploring the darkest aspects of human existence in myriad
ways. To celebrate the Halloween season, we’re counting down the 31 most
frightening and unsettling moments from The
Twilight Zone, one for each day of October. We’ll be revisiting some of the
episodes we’ve already covered and looking ahead to episodes from the final
three seasons of the series. -JP
Happy Halloween! Here's our top moment of terror from the series!
#1 - There’s Something on the Wing, from “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet,” season five, episode 123
Written
by Richard Matheson, directed by Richard Donner, starring William Shatner,
Christine White, Nick Cravat
The most frightening and unsettling
moment of The Twilight Zone occurs in
Richard Matheson’s fifth season masterpiece, “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet,” which
finds William Shatner playing Bob Wilson, an air passenger recovering from a
mental breakdown who has the misfortune of witnessing a gremlin tampering with
an engine on the airplane. Of course, no one believes there really is a
gremlin on the wing of the airplane and Wilson is forced to take desperate
measures to ensure the safety of the passengers. Over and again, the series
presented stories in which individuals are isolated due to their experience of
a preternatural event and “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” is perhaps the finest
example of this type of episode. The dynamic which propels the story forward is
similar that found in “Living Doll.” It is the psychological element which
contrasts the manner in which other characters perceive Wilson’s mental state
against what is actually happening. Also like “Living Doll,” Matheson includes
the character of a wife (missing from Matheson’s original short story) who
seems to exist in the episode only to look incredulous at each passing moment.
To the credit of actress Christine White, she uses very expressive body
language to convey the dilemma in which she finds herself. William Shatner’s performance may well be the finest ever
showcased on the series. Because of the extreme nature of the character, it is
a performance easily parodied, and the episode itself has served as comedic
fodder for countless films and television series. William Tuttle’s makeup design has lost some of its effectiveness yet remains an iconic image
from the series. The camera work of director Richard Donner and director of photography Robert W. Pittack is exceptional here, especially the framing shot
capturing the horrified expressions on the faces of Wilson’s wife and others
crowded in the aisle after Wilson opens the emergency exit. The
episode is crowned with a clever ending that finds Wilson, in a rare
moment for the series, breaking the fourth wall and speaking directly to the
audience.
Trivia:
-Matheson’s original story appeared in
the paperback anthology Alone by Night:
Tales of Unlimited Horror (Ballantine, Jan, 1962). Matheson placed a second
story in the anthology, “The Likeness of Julie,” under the pseudonym Logan
Swanson. “The Likeness of Julie” was later adapted by Matheson’s friend William
F. Nolan as the first of three segments in Dan Curtis’s 1975 horror anthology
television film Trilogy of Terror. Alone
by Night was edited by Michael and Don Congdon, the latter of whom was
Matheson’s literary agent.
-“Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” was
reimagined for the 1983 feature film Twilight
Zone: The Movie, written by Richard Matheson (with additional material by
George Miller), directed by George Miller, starring John Lithgow.
-“Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” is perhaps
the most parodied of any episode of the series. A long list of instances of
parody can be found on the episode’s Wikipedia page.
-If that’s not enough spooky Twilight Zone for you, here are a few
more unsettling episodes we really enjoy which just missed out on the
countdown.
“Where is Everybody?”
“The Sixteen Millimeter Shrine”
“The Monsters are Due on Maple Street”
“A World of Difference”
“Shadow Play”
“Deaths-head Revisited”
“Spur of the Moment”