|
Dan Aykroyd | Passenger | |
Albert Brooks | Car Driver (prologue) | |
Vic Morrow | Bill Connor (segment Time Out) | |
Doug McGrath | Larry (segment Time Out) | |
Charles Hallahan | Ray (segment Time Out) | |
Rainer Peets | German Officer (segment Time Out) | |
Kai Wulff | German Officer (segment Time Out) | |
Sue Dugan | Waitress No. 1 (segment Time Out) | |
Debby Porter | Waitress No. 2 (segment Time Out) | |
Steven Williams | Bar Patron (segment Time Out) | |
Annette Claudier | French Monther (segment Time Out) | |
Joseph Hieu | Vietnamese (segment Time Out) | |
Al Leong | Vietnamese (segment Time Out) | |
Stephen Bishop | Charming G.I. (segment Time Out) | |
Thomas Byrd | G.I. (segment Time Out) |
Director |
|
||||
Producer |
Jon Davison
Michael Finnell |
||||
Writer |
John Landis
George Clayton Johnson |
||||
Cinematography |
Allen Daviau
John Hora |
||||
Musician |
Jerry Goldsmith
|
|
1959. Friday nights. We time-travelled. Witnessed surprising twists. Entertained aliens. Experienced fear. And first journeyed to the "Twilight Zone" of Rod Serling's memorable TV series. And guided by four imaginative moviemakers, we travelled there again in 1983. Directors John Landis, Steven Spielberg, Joe Dante, and George Miller fashion stories based on or inspired by classic episodes. Landis weaves the tale of a bigot who gets a walloping dose of his own hatred. Spielberg takes over with a fable of senior citizens offered a magical rejuvenation. Dante serves up a terror trip with a child who uses his cartoon-inspired powers to enslave his family. Then fright goes aloft with Miller's finale about a neurotic passenger who sees a monster on the jetliner's wing. Or does he? |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Features
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||