Comments about ‘Alfred Hitchcock's TV series is true classic’
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Hitchcock and the Twilight Zone were two of my childhood favorites. Even though I was only five or six at the time, specific images, and even entire episodes, have stayed with me for decades-- much more so than anything from Bonanza or Gilligan's Island or My Mother the Car (except the theme song from the latter, which I can't seem to erase: "A 1928 Porter, that's my mother dear. She helps me through every thing I do, my mother, the car."). I had trouble looking at windows for years after Hitchcock's "Don't Interrupt" episode.
BTW, the Alfred Hitchcock Hour is running on the Starz Encore Suspense channel and The Twilight Zone is broadcast locally on KCSG.
Oops, left out a line: "A 1928 Porter, that's my mother dear. She helps me through every thing I do, and I'm so glad she's here. My mother, the car."
I'm so glad that Hitch and Serling were able to provide something more cerebral to entertain me.
Oops, I pressed the button too soon!
Oh, this is a TV watcher after my own heart!
I can't remember the last Adam Sandler role I saw, but I love Alfred Hitchcock's work. Whenever I go to Barnes & Noble or Fry's, I look to see if they have anything of his that I might want.
This week I spent a whole evening watching a set of "Twilight Zone" episodes that I just got.
And now you'll have to excuse me because I'm about to hit the road with Buz and Tod in the Corvette on old Route 66.
...Hitchcock did his part(Psycho and Rear Window) to move everyone closer to acceptance of violence, especially against women. He had a very lucrative career indeed. Now we are left with dramas that MUST show this violent violence if it is to have a chance of making any money at all.
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