Videos by ComicBook.com
Based on the anthology series’ original run (1959-1964), here are the 10 Twilight Zone episodes that still stand up as well today as they did when they first came out.
10) “Living Doll”

The 12th episode from the fifth season, โLiving Doll,โ took something that terrifies many people, and that is little old dolls with big eyes. The plot follows a mother who buys her daughter a wind-up doll called โTalky Tina,โ who says โMy name is Talky Tina, and I love you very muchโ when it is wound up. However, when the girlโs abusing step father winds the doll up, it says, โI donโt like you.โ The episode has a recognizable star, with Telly Savalas playing the stepfather. The lesson that child abusers will get what is coming to them remains strong to this day.
9) “Mirror Image”

โMirror Imageโ is the 21st episode of The Twilight Zone, Season 1. This episode was a little more twisted than others and used more visual cues than straight-up horrific moments. Millicent is at a bus stop waiting for a bus to look for a new job. She soon realizes that the bus is late. Strange things happen around her, where the bus attendant says she has been there before, and the bathroom cleaning lady also backs this up. This is a doppelgรคngerย story, and one of the better โmonsterโ stories in The Twilight Zone’s first season. It is also one of the best Twilight Zone episodes that not enough people talk about.
8) “Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?”

“Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?” is a second-season episode of The Twilight Zone, and one that plays strongly into the idea of the Red Scare of that era. Much like horror films like Invasion of the Body Snatchers, this is a story about not trusting other people. This is a theme that remains strong to this day, and even with the idea that one of these men is a Martian on Earth prepping for an invasion, it is still mainly a tale of distrust and paranoia.
7) “The Invaders”

Another second-season episode, “The Invaders,” is a twisted tale that has an ending that changes everything a viewer thinks they know about the story. The episode begins with an older woman in a remote cabin who hears something above her, and she soon finds what appears to be two beings in pressurized suits who arrived in a flying saucer. The woman then defends her home against these invaders. This, in itself, is a straightforward sci-fi tale, but the twist at the end shows the woman is a giant and the “invaders” are U.S. Air Force astronauts sent to deal with these monsters. This twist was one of the most inventive in the entire anthology series.
6) “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street”

“The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street” was another first-season Twilight Zone episode that was yet another paranoia-focused story. This plays into the same Cold War paranoia of “Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?”, but transfers it into small-town America. The main characters were the residents on Maple Street, presented as a perfect small-town neighborhood where everyone watched out for each other. However, this all changes when strange occurrences make the neighbors believe one of them is an alien, and by the end, they are destroying their entire neighborhood in an all-out war. The twist ending here that reveals the truth is funny and shows that paranoia can lead any society to collapse.













