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The Twilight Zone Radio Dramas CD Collection 1 [Abridged] [Audio CD]

Rod Serling (Performer), Dennis Etchison (Performer), Tim Kazurinsky (Performer), Jane Seymour (Author), Jim Caviezel (Author), Stacy Keach (Narrator), Lou Diamond Phillips (Performer), James Keach (Performer)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 26, 2002
Experience one of television’s greatest science-fiction series, The Twilight Zone – fully dramatized for AUDIO! The Twilight Zone Radio Dramas feature a full cast, music and sound effects and today’s biggest celebrities in modern radio dramatizations by Dennis Etchison of creator Rod Serling’s classic scripts. Hosted by Stacy Keach, The Twilight Zone Radio Dramas will keep you glued to the edge of your seat whether listening in your home or while driving in your car. This collection features 4 stereo recordings.

"A Hundred Yards Over the Rim" Starring Jim Caviezel. The year is 1847. A wagon train has made the cross-country trek from Ohio to the deserts of Arizona and beyond – all the way into another century.

"The Lateness of the Hour" Starring Jane Seymour and James Keach. A young woman lives a life of comfort and easy, thanks to her father’s robot servants. The problem is, she may also be a prisoner in her own perfect home.

"A Kind of Stopwatch" Starring Lou Diamond Phillips. The world’s most talkative bore gets a magical stopwatch that can stop everything except him. But when he misuses it, a wonderful conversation piece becomes a real party killer.

"Mr. Dingle, the Strong" Starring Tim Kazurinsky. A mild-mannered vacuum cleaner salesman is given the strength of three hundred men in a scientific experiment conducted by two Martians.


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Editorial Reviews

From AudioFile

This sparkling example of radio drama is a pleasant surprise. With top-grade production values and a generally excellent cast, this step into another dimension of time and space offers the light humor, whimsical sci-fi, and occasional drama that made the TV series a classic. The standout performance is "The Lateness of the Hour," starring Jane Seymour and James Keach. This prescient, tense, and gripping story has nary a slip, and even the kids can enjoy it. As a matter of fact, the entire well-designed set is family fare. So enter another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. Next stop, The Twilight Zone! D.J.B. © AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine

Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Falcon Picture Group; Abridged edition (August 26, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1591710588
  • ISBN-13: 978-1591710585
  • Product Dimensions: 5.7 x 4.9 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,091,293 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars You have to give these guys an "E" for effort!, January 22, 2003
By 
Ron Wise (Cleveland, MS USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Twilight Zone Radio Dramas CD Collection 1 (Audio CD)
Okay, So I was all geared to be disappointed with this whole package. And, unfortunately, the producers picked the weakest of the four stories to begin the set. The actor in "A Hundred Yards Over the Rim" sounds like he just walked out of some ivy league acting school and not like a hardened pioneer who has been wandering through the desert for months on end.

The next story, "The Lateness of the Hour," is ruined by a too-long explanation of the "daughter" being a robot at the end. Does it take that much explanation for today's "dumbed-down" society? I hope not.

But the next two shows blew me out of the water. Lou Diamond Phillips is superb in "A Kind of Stopwatch." His over-the-top performance is one of the greatest I've ever heard in any radio drama. Then "Mr. Dingle, the Strong" followed and it was wonderful, too.

Another plus is the original Twilight Zone soundtrack music which is used and other pains that are taken to maintain the flavor of the original classic TV series. I would suggest buying one collection and seeing if you like it before buying the second.

This is not everyone's cup of tea, but the people who put these dramas together did the best they could and it's well worth a listen.

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10 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A Complete Waste, March 14, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Twilight Zone Radio Dramas CD Collection 1 (Audio CD)
When word got out that "The Twilight Zone" would make its move to radio with Stacy Keach filling in for Rod Serling as
host, the response was generally on the order of, 'Uh,
how can you go from TV back to radio? And why
Twilight Zone to make the regression?' Well, the producers
of the series obviously saw no problem with it...they
pay CBS their fees, get the product on the shelves,
and collect the cash from the sales.

This is, unfortunately, another example of an

over-commercialised, slapdash attempt to revive
and sequelize a classic masterwork....sort of like
taking Shakespeare and cutting out all the middle-English
so everyone on the planet can understand it in "plain"
English. Bad example...and call me a mindless dolt
for using it. But that's exactly what's happening
with these Twilight Zone radio dramas.

The producers hooked Dennis Etchison, an excellent
writer, to expand and water-down the great old stories
of Rod Serling (and yes, the stories of Richard Matheson,
Chuck Beaumont, and other writers are going to be
adapted for radio as well, sans a few segments
that don't work well on radio including Matheson's
near-silent "The Invaders" and Serling's highly visual
"Eye of the Beholder"). Sadly, it is all too apparent
that Etchison knows, deep down, that the work of
the old writers can't be topped. For a show like
"The Twilight Zone", whose domain was almost like
a world parallel to our own, with the entire universe
as its breeding ground,
to take its stories and bring them back to the mundane and the reality-grounded
as radio programs is pointless. These first two sets
really come off as no more than bland recitations of
old stories that fans know inside and out from the
original TV versions.

The actors for the first series of eight dramas
include Jim Caviezel, Lou Diamond Phillips, Tim
Kazurinsky, Jane Seymour, James Keach, Blair Underwood,
Kim Fields, Chris MacDonald, and Ed Begley Jr.
Of these, only Jane Seymour does a credible job
as star of Serling's episode "The Lateness of the Hour"
(which originally starred the late Inger Stevens).
Tim Kazurinsky and Lou Diamond Phillips do earn
their paychecks with fairly humorous performances
in episodes "Mr. Dingle the Strong" (originally
starring Burgess Meredith) and "A Kind of Stopwatch",
respectively. The rest of the actors quite obviously
have no clue as to what they were doing, reciting
all their lines as if read directly from a cue card
(which in fact is probably what they did!)

In the role of ersatz-Rod Serling, the narrator,
Stacy Keach pretty much mails in his performance.
His readings of the intro/closings are but
lacking the gripping sincerity and meaning that
Rod always imparted to each and every narration.

Further hampering the dramas is the inclusion
of sponsor commercials, which pop up several
times. The CD versions are all one continuous
42-minute track with no option of fast-forwarding
through the commercials unless done manually.

In short, this new radio series does not yet offer
anything that the original series didn't. The
days of good ol' radio are gone, never to return.
But there are many more of these dramas still yet to
be released. Collections 3 and 4 have already
been released and do offer some nice sound
effects and a fabulous performance by Morgan
Brittany in episode "The Passersby". So perhaps
there's hope. Brittany is the first actor who
appeared in the TV series, to star in these dramas,
and more celebrities are reportedly going to
appear in future installments. Stay tuned...but
keep the volume on low until the producers come
full circle and prove their worthiness to carry
Rod Serling's gauntlet.

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent collection, well acted. Serling was a genius., March 15, 2004
By 
M. Chlanda "Miguelito" (Saint Louis, MO United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Twilight Zone Radio Dramas CD Collection 1 (Audio CD)
This collection (the first of four) radio dramas, based on scripts by the late master of the strange, Rod Serling, presents four explorations of the dimension known as "The Twilight Zone". Narrated by Stacy Keach, who gives a certain eerie presentation as the narrator (though not in the same league as Mr. Serling, still eerie). The four stories presented are well acted, by James Keach, Jane Seymour, Lou Diamond Phillips, and Tim Kazurinsky. The "commercials" are kept to a minimum, which is good. Still, a fine collection (I look forward to listening to collections 2-4.) [Refers to cassette edition, bought also cd edition.] I contacted the producers of the series, and unfortunately, there is no print equivalent (as the scripts are owned by the Serling estate, which, one day, will [hopefully] publish them). Serling was a master and a genius.
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