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Cargando... The Twilight Zone Radio Dramas, Volume 6 (Fully Dramatized Audio Theater hosted by Stacy Keach) (edición 2013)por Various Authors (Autor), Bruno Kirby (Reader), Jason Alexander (Reader), Adam West (Reader), Adam Baldwin (Reader) — 2 más, John Ratzenberger (Reader), Mike Starr (Reader)
Información de la obraThe Twilight Zone Radio Dramas, Volume 6 por Rod Serling
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Pertenece a las seriesThe Twilight Zone Radio Dramas (Volume 6)
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Not really having watched much of The Twilight Zone myself, I'm not sure if all of these were actually television episodes or not. I can say they all work well as radio show episodes. The full cast includes some pretty big names such as Adam West.
It's been too long between me having finished this title and me reviewing it now so my details are already super sketchy. It doesn't help that this particular volume felt a little weak in my opinion, especially compared to the strong start of earlier volumes.
This volume includes the following stories:
- "The Dummy," in which a man is taunted by his ventriloquist dummy, but only he can hear the insults and threats. The protagonist shows a lot of emotional turmoil in this one, which makes it more compelling than it might have otherwise been.
- "No Time Like the Past," in which a man tries to use time travel to fix problems in the future but gets tangled up in the past. Time travel stories are very prevalent in The Twilight Zone universe and this one was middle-of-the-road among them.
- "Still Valley," in which we re-visit the Confederate War (again), this time from the perspective of a zealous Confederate soldier. This is a completely skippable story in my opinion.
- "King Nine Will Not Return," in which a combatant has lost his plane and his crew in the desert during World War II. This one ultimately scores points for the psychological tension and the reveals, but it was an almost entirely one-person show and it didn't pull that off as well as it could have.
- "I Am the Night, Color Me Black," in which a small town is encompassed entirely by black skies in the middle of the day and wonder what it means. I suppose this story was trying to talk about good and evil, and even the shades of gray in morality, but it didn't pack quite the emotional punch it was meant to have.
- "The Incredible World of Horace Ford," in which an immature man goes to visit to his old neighborhood -- and goes back in time to the way it was when he was a child. This is another twist on the time travel story, this time showing character growth and the traps of nostalgia. However, it didn't really leave much of an impact on me once it was over.
While this wasn't my favorite volume of the lot so far, I am still plowing ahead with these Twilight Zone radio dramas. ( )