Thursday, June 3, 2010

The Twilight Zone: Eye of the Beholder/ Living Doll [VHS]

The Twilight Zone: Eye of the Beholder/ Living Doll [VHS] Review



Your heart kind of goes Telly Savalas in Living Doll. As for the no-good creep of a stepfather who is should feel bad for this guy as he is overcome by a doll, Talky Tina. The doll is almost like he is, and this is very last scene, at the end of the stairs in the living room. Most of the ambivalent feelings of the viewer feels is the result of innovative Bermard Herrmann score. It 'a quality that childhood abuse and both teases and Telly Savalasthe viewer. This very episode from the fifth season and the entire series for that matter. The Eye of the Beholder insults even the protagonist and the viewer. The tension is unbearable what is under the bandages. This story is not only a likeness of beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but it makes a strong statement about fascism. Bernard Herrmann score is once again running for the score rather menacing exciting draws the viewer in an irony of fate. The eyeThe viewer is another excellent episode.




The Twilight Zone: Eye of the Beholder/ Living Doll [VHS] Overview


Living Doll, one of The Twilight Zone's scariest episodes, written by Charles Beaumont, stars Telly Savalas as a mean-spirited man who makes a pint-sized enemy in his stepdaughter's new and very protective doll, Talky Tina (June Foray, the venerable Queen of Cartoons, who is best known as the voice of Rocket J. Squirrel). He thinks after tossing her in the garbage can that he's seen the last of Tina. But then the telephone rings: "My name is Talky Tina ... and I'm going to kill you." This video also includes one of Rod Serling's best episodes, the thoughtful The Eye of the Beholder, in which unseen plastic surgeons labor intensively to make their desperate female patient look "normal." This is one of three must-own volumes of vintage Twilight Zone episodes released to commemorate this timeless series' 40th anniversary. Tape 1 features the video premiere of The After Hours (the one with the mannequins) and Time Enough at Last starring Burgess Meredith as the post-apocalyptic bookworm. Tape 3 features the alien-in-a-diner puzzler Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up, as well as the signature episode To Serve Man, which TV Guide rightfully ranked as one of TV's top 100 episodes of all time. --Donald Liebenson


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