The original five-season run of The
Twilight Zone is comprised of 156 episodes.
After the series ended in 1964, 151 of these episodes were assembled
into a syndication package and began airing in local markets around the
country.
But wait, that’s five episodes short.
What gives?
First, let’s list the missing episodes.
Cayuga Productions accepted outside teleplay submissions for
consideration; however, they rejected a great many of them. Unfortunately, there were subsequent lawsuits
filed by some of the aspiring writers they’d turned down. Theoretical example: Dick Johnson submits a script about a
rampaging army of telepathic squirrels, which gets summarily rejected. Serling then later writes a script that
happens to incorporate a telepathic squirrel, which gets produced. Dick Johnson believes Serling stole his intellectual
property, so he screams plagiarism and files a lawsuit. Of course I’m simplifying this some, but
that’s the basic gist of things. At the time the series’ syndication package
was put together, three episodes were stuck in mid-litigation (“Miniature,” “A
Short Drink from a Certain Fountain,” and “Sounds and Silences”) and were
therefore held back.
“The Encounter,” meanwhile, contained some fairly heavy racial
content, so it too was omitted (which is kinda odd, since it was allowed to air
in the first place). “An Occurrence at
Owl Creek Bridge” was left out because it wasn’t really a Twilight Zone episode at all… but we’ll delve into that particular
story when we get to it (a little over a year from now).
Aside from “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” getting a repeat
broadcast during the summer of 1964, these five episodes essentially
disappeared.
Fast forward 20 years. To celebrate the show’s 25th
anniversary in October 1984, a feature-length syndicated special was aired
which resurrected three of “The Lost Five”:
“Miniature,” “A Short Drink from a Certain Fountain,” and “Sounds and
Silences” (coincidentally the same three that had been previously suppressed
for legal reasons; presumably their respective lawsuits had either been
dismissed or otherwise dealt with by 1984). The special was hosted by Patrick O’Neal (who
had starred in “A Short Drink from a Certain Fountain”). Here’s a link to the New York Times’write-up.
I think the episodes may have suffered some minor editing (we’re
talking about syndication, after all), but they seemed relatively unscathed…
except for “Miniature,” the fate of which we’ll address later this week.
“An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” and “The Encounter,” meanwhile,
first reappeared on VHS in 1992 in the two-tape Treasures of The Twilight Zone set.
The set also included “The Howling Man,” “Eye of the Beholder,” “The
Masks,” and “Where Is Everybody?” This release was later broken up into two
separate DVD volumes in 1999 (Treasures
from The Twilight Zone and More
Treasures from The Twilight Zone; incidentally the first two TZ DVDs ever released; both "Lost Five" episodes appear on the first volume).
“The Lost Five” formally rejoined the series for the first time when the entire 156-episode run was presented on VHS by Columbia House. You had to join the club, and wait impatiently as the volumes trickled out once a month but, at the time, this was the only way for a collector like me to acquire the entire series… at a pretty enormous cost (with shipping, I ultimately paid close to $1,000.00 to complete my set; it still amazes me that the entire series can be bought now, in pristine high definition with copious bonus features, for a mere fraction of that… in 2013 dollars, no less!).
Offer no longer valid... but hey, it might be fun to try.
At some point, probably in the early 2000’s or so (I’m totally
guessing here), “Miniature," "A Short Drink from a Certain Fountain" and "Sounds and Silences" were added to the syndication package, reducing "The Lost Five" to "The Lost Two." Despite the fact that "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" and "The Encounter" remain MIA from the syndication package to this date, all 156 episodes are easily
available on both DVD and blu-ray (and via streaming: all 156 are available for
free on Hulu, while paying members of Netflix can view
all the half-hour episodes); in other words,“The Lost Five” aren't really lost at all these
days. Their unique history is little
more than a footnote now, but for those of us who pre-date the digital age,
“The Lost Five” were once frustratingly out of reach, and therefore hold a
special unique place in the legacy that is… The
Twilight Zone.
*Speaking of plagiarism claims levied against The Twilight Zone… well, stay tuned. I’m working on a pretty big expose that I
hope to publish in the next month or two.
You might find it quite eye-opening.
Actually they still haven't added Encounter and Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge back to any syndication package (including the ones on ME-TV) so basically its still the "lost two".
ReplyDeleteME-TV hasn't shown any of them, and I've watched the cycle come around 3 times so far. Can we write to them? Maybe they didn't get them from CBS. I noticed that this time around, they're showing the new CBS distribution logo at the very end, so maybe it's a new set of copies.
ReplyDeleteThe hours have been frustratingly rare for years before the video era. KTLA used to show a few during marathons, and it took me 3 or 4 years to see them all at least once. ME-TV ran them a few times last year in an hour time slot (although they strangely skipped Miniature and No Time Like the Past each time).
And a fun trivia fact: "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" made its VHS debut in 1985 on a budget tape from Kids Klassics home video. It was taken from a 16mm copy with some film scratches, but at the time, it looked like it did on KTLA. It even had the "Queen of the Nile" promo! I watched that tape over and over, and even made an audio tape of the soundtrack!
In accordance with owl Creek bridge as shown in the Twilight Zone is a slightly condensed version of a film made by a Frencfilmmakerfilmmaker .as part of a three-part film adapted from three stories written by Ambrose Bierce . At one time I believe in the 1970s there was a videotape oven according to owl Creek bridge from the French film just the one element of the three available to me at the Toledo public library to check out. I do not know if this was a slightly shorter version that was shown on the Twilight Zone or the slightly longer version that appeared in the original film. If I remember correctly it did not have any comments by Sterling or Twilight Zone branding a prologue on it but I'm not sure about that part. It is my understanding saw the film and a film festival and purchased the rights to use it on the Twilight Zone for restaurant have cost him to produce a new episode of The Twilight Zone. As a footnote sometime in the decade before this was shown on the Twilight Zone in a timely different version was produced and adapted of the same story for the Alfred Hitchcock Presents half hour show. The Alfred Hitchcock version was a good telling of a clever story but not begin to match what I consider the city of manic genius of the French version which was shown as an episode of The Twilight Zone
DeleteKen - Yeah, I have (had? I haven't seen it for several years) the Kids Klassics tape, which I've always suspected was an unauthorized bootleg.
ReplyDeleteJoel - I would swear one of the marathons (SyFy or KTLA) showed "Occurrence," but so far I haven't been able to verify it. In either case, "The Encounter" seems totally MIA. I'll edit my post accordingly.
Craig-A Short Drink should be 12/13/63. 12/20/63 was Ninety Years Without Slumbering.
ReplyDeleteD'oh! Fixed.
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