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From identity reveals to simple twists of fate, The Twilight Zone knew how to deliver a gut punch. The best of the best follow.
1) “Time Enough at Last” (Season 1, Episode 8)

In “Time Enough at Last” Rocky‘s Burgess Meredith plays Henry Bemis, a sheepish man working a job (as a bank teller) he’s bored by who then goes home to a wife he can’t stand. His only solace is his lunch break, where he can do the one thing he ever wants to do: read in peace.
However, one day, a nuclear explosion rocks the vault, knocking him unconscious. He exits the vault to find that everyone he’s ever known is dead, but instead of being wrought with sadness, he’s overjoyed. He can now read as much as he wants without being disturbed. However, his life plan is shattered when his glasses fall to the ground.
2) “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street” (Season 1, Episode 22)

An influential episode that received an inferior remake at one point, “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street” is an incisive look at just how little manipulation it takes to turn society on itself. It’s also an episode that’s perhaps hampered by its twist.
Throughout the episode, strange occurrences are happening on Maple Street. Simple things, like street lights flickering. But between those occurrences and news of a possible alien invasion, the people of Maple Street are quick to turn on their neighbors, who they have spent years living next to. It would be better if there weren’t aliens causing the lights to flicker, but the final scene reveals they are. We spend the whole episode thinking this is just people being people, and it’s a little surprising Serling thought it necessary to have a pair of aliens looking down on the chaos.
3) “The After Hours” (Season 1, Episode 34)

“The After Hours” is a fairly sweet episode with a few poignant themes. Stuff like accepting yourself for who you are, enjoying your limited time in life while you can, and so on.
We follow Marsha, who has entered a department store with the purpose of purchasing a gold thimble for her mother. She is directed to the ninth floor, and, oddly enough, by employees who seem to know her name. After purchasing the thimble, she notices it is scratched so she then hopes to return it. She tells the store manager that she purchased it on the ninth floor only to be told that the store has no ninth floor. Worse yet, she sees the woman who sold her the thimble only to realize that the saleswoman is, in fact, a mannequin. It turns out that’s Marsha’s status, too. Each of the store’s mannequins is allowed exactly one month to live out in the world with flesh and blood human beings, and Martha’s month has now reached its end.
4) “Eye of the Beholder” (Season 2, Episode 6)

Like “The After Hours,” “Eye of the Beholder” has a twist that is actually quite heartfelt once the viewer gets past the creepiness. The protagonist is Ms. Janet Tyler, who lives in a futuristic, totalitarian society where physical beauty is far more important than emotional complexity.
Tyler is undergoing her eleventh surgery, which is the final one allowed by the “State.” Should it fail, she will be ostracized, shepherded away to live with those who are similarly hideous to the eye. Once the bandages are removed, however, we learn she’s stunningly beautiful, and it’s the doctors and nurses who are grotesque.
5) “The Invaders” (Season 2, Episode 15)

One of the best Twilight Zone episodes not written by Rod Serling, “The Invaders” tells the tale of a woman who lives alone in a cabin. She never speaks a word. And, throughout the whole episode, we come to believe she never speaks because of that isolation.
Not even when some tiny extraterrestrials invade her home does she utter more than the occasional grunt. But they’re not extraterrestrials … they’re astronauts from Earth. She never speaks any English words because she doesn’t know them. She’s the extraterrestrial, and a massive one at that. While the little space-suited “aliens” haven’t aged particularly well (they’re clearly toys), Bewitched‘s Agnes Moorehead really sells her silent character as a human being who is frightened by what appears to be a team of E.T. invaders.













