“The Twilight Zone” is one of the most influential creations in the history of entertainment. 2024 marks Rod Serling’s centennial.

There are 156 episodes, and most are hit or miss. I struggled to craft a list of the Top 60 and ranked them accordingly.

Cliff Robertson (right) in The Dummy

30 – The Dummy
Cliff Robertson stars as a ventriloquist haunted by his pint-sized partner.

29 – The Lateness of the Hour
Videotape helps the spookiness of this creep episode about a reclusive family and their robot servants.

28 – The Jungle
My boy John Dehner plays an executive crossing Manhattan late at night whilst plagued by a voodoo curse.

27 – Twenty-Two
Another videotape entry that excels because of its straight horror script. A woman has a recurring nightmare that takes her to the hospital morgue. Room for one more, honey.

26 – The Jeopardy Room
A guilty pleasure favorite of mine, this is one of the few non-paranormal episodes. The plot revolves around a man attempting to flee the Iron Curtain. What has made me love it since childhood is the performance of John van Dreelen as the assassin Commissar Vassiloff – who is in my top ten all time fiction characters.

John van Dreelen and Martin Landau in The Jeopardy Room

25 – Walking Distance
Classic tale about a middle-aged man pining for the freedom of childhood.

24 – Nick of Time
The first of two William Shatner episodes, the episode features a man obsessed with a fortune telling machine.

23 – Where is Everybody?
The pilot and one of the best. Earl Holliman is a one man show as he wanders a deserted town.

22 – Five Characters in Search of an Exit
Creepy tale about a strange eclectic mix of beings confined to a mysterious prison.

21 – The Big Tall Wish
Rod Serling was a pioneering voice in the Civil Rights Movement. This episode is one of the first ever to feature a black man in the lead role – a boxer who is down on his luck. It’s a terrific story with cold reality emphasized by its time.

Twilight Zone episode ‘Eye of the Beholder’, written by Rod Serling. Donna Douglas as patient Janet Tyler Originally broadcast November 11, 1960. (Photo by CBS via Getty Images)

20 – Long Live Walter Jameson
After he did battle with the Body Snatchers, Kevin McCarthy became a TZ fave as a guy with immortality.

19 – Eye of the Beholder
One of the best-known episodes holds up great and has more spookiness than one may remember.

18– The Invaders
Straight horror story about a woman in an isolated farmhouse terrorized by mysterious creatures.

17 – It’s a Good Life
Billy Mumy plays a kid with Shining-like powers terrorizing his town.

16 – The Monsters are Due on Maple Street
Another well-known episode, its prescient nature adds to its horror. A group of suburbanites turn on each other in the face of the unknown.

The Monsters are Due on Maple Street

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Matt's a writer and content creator for the site. His reviews offer insight on the art of filmmaking from the standpoint of a casual fan. Check out mattdecristo.com and follow him on Instagram and Twitter @MattDeCristo.

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