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I'd like to customize my own Twilight Zone collection box. I could probably get it down to about 5-6 discs of just the episodes that merit repeat viewing.
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Yes, Martin, I think I'd have to concur with this statement.
Well, I might as well add in my
Two TZ Cents here.

.....
Here would be my votes for
Top Twilight Zone Volumes On DVD:
#1 pick (without a moment's hesitation) goes to
Volume 2, with such winners as "The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street", "Nightmare At 20,000 Feet", "The Odyssey Of Flight 33", and "Time Enough At Last". All "Classic TZs" in my manual.
#2 pick: "More Treasures Of The Twilight Zone" volume. ... Which has three top-flight eps., plus a revealing Rod Serling/Mike Wallace interview (circa 1959), with Rod, as per his norm, just smoking up a storm during his session with Wallace.

.... Episodes include: "The Masks", "The Howling Man", and "Eye Of The Beholder". All fabulous Serling tales, IMO.
#3 pick: Volume 8 -- With "The Shelter", "Third From The Sun", and "To Serve Man" (plus one more 30-minute episode).
#4 pick: Volume 7 -- Which includes "The Hitch-Hiker" (with the ever-fetching Inger Stevens

) and "Shadow Play" (with a fine Dennis Weaver performance, as a tormented prisoner).
#5 pick: Volume 9 -- Has the outstanding "Nick Of Time" ("Mystic Seer"

) episode, plus "It's A Good Life".
#6 pick: Volume 26 -- Includes Barry Morse's fine outing in "A Piano In The House", plus "Night Call" (a nice & creepy ep.).
#7 pick: Volume 11 -- With Telly Savalas' "Living Doll" and "The After Hours". (Keep an eye open for Inger Stevens lookalike Mary LaRoche in "Living Doll". She's worth keeping an eye peeled for, believe me.

)
#8 pick: Volume 34 -- Worthy of purchase for "A Stop At Willoughby" alone.
#9 pick: Volume 23 -- Includes Edward Andrews in "You Drive". Great ep.
#10 pick: Volume 32 -- For the best 1-hour (1963) episode of the series, IMO: "Printer's Devil", with Burgess Meredith hamming it up very nicely as that guy from...down there.
#11 pick: Volume 1 -- With the fine Christmas episode featuring the recently-departed Art Carney ("Night Of The Meek"); plus "Nothing In The Dark", with Robert Redford.
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I'd really like to see more of the series
"Alfred Hitchcock Presents" released on DVD (in separate issues).
Some of those Hitch episodes are every bit Serling's TZ equal -- such as all of the examples included on
this VHS tape from GoodTimes.
It appears, as of now, the only way to get a smattering of A. Hitchcock eps. on DVD is to buy some of the full Movie Collections out there.
