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- For over 60 years and across several generations, Rod Serling's "The Twilight Zone" has captured the imagination of audiences worldwide. To properly honor this groundbreaking sci-fi series, Channel Awesome's Walter Banasiak reviews every single episode every day in October.
- For the month of May, Walter Banasiak reviews episodes of Batman: The Animated Series (1992).
- Walter Banasiak counts down the 5 best and worst performances of our most beloved actors.
- FansScription theorizes how things would have played out if big events in film history took a different turn.
- Ghostbusters 2 disappointed many fans of the original and took the franchise in a different direction. But what if it kept the tone of the first film? What if the story was more inventive and expanded the Ghostbusters' technology? In short, what if Ghostbusters 2 was better? Rob Walker brings you his version of this high profile sequel featuring the art of Lucas Durham and the voices of Doug Walker, Malcolm Ray, Heather Reusz, Aiyanna Wade, Jim Jarosz, Walter Banasiak and Tamara Chambers. When there's a story that need fixing, who ya gonna call? Fanscription.
- 2018– 10mPodcast Episode
- 2018– 19mPodcast EpisodeWhile Mary Poppins Returns was a hit with critics, some of it missed the mark on what made the 1964 original so special. So what if this modern sequel had stayed closer to the Disney classic? Doug Walker deconstructs, then rebuilds the Emily Blunt led continuation of the Julie Andrews masterpiece.
- 2018–Podcast Episode
- 2018–Podcast Episode
- Rob pitches a film adaptation not of the Haunted Mansion in California, but rather of Disneyland Paris' equivalent ride, Phantom Manor. He pitches Jim Evers as a con-man played by Will Smith, his boss played by Michael Keaton, and the caretaker played by Tim Blake Nelson.
- A World War I flying ace flies through a mysterious cloud - and lands at a modern U. S. air base in the year 1959!
- Lt. Fitzgerald has found his own special wartime hell. Looking into the faces of his men prior to battle, he has the disquieting ability to see who is about to die.
- Millicent Barnes sees her double at a bus terminal.
- Businessman Arthur Curtis discovers that life as he knows it doesn't really exist.
- In class, Walter Jameson, Kittridge's colleague for twelve years and future son-in-law, reads from a Civil War journal of Major Hugh Skelton. Kittridge is riveted by Jameson's reading - an account of the burning of Atlanta. He discusses the diary after class with Jameson and invites him to dinner that night. That evening, as Jameson crosses the lawn to his home across the street from Kittridge's, he is observed by an old woman. Kittridge is very proud of his daughter, Susanna, who is immersed in her studies and cautions Jameson that he is giving her hand to him, not her mind. Nevertheless, he will not allow much socializing. After supper, he sends her up to her room and her books. As they resume a game of chess, Kittridge examines his colleague's hands and how different they look compared to his own. He asks Jameson how old he is. Jameson tells him he's 41, but Kittridge confronts him with the fact that he had given his age as 39 when he joined the university staff in 1947. He wonders why his friend does not seem to have aged at all. He pulls out a book of Matthew Brady photographs and shows Jameson a picture of General Sherman's staff, including Major Hugh Skelton. Down to the ring on his finger and a mole on his face, he is Jameson's perfect double. Jameson is forced to admit he is the same man. Jameson explains that two thousand years ago, he was obsessed with living longer. He searched out the experts, but no one could help him until an alchemist took a great deal of his money and subjected Jameson to his experiments. Jameson isn't certain exactly how it happened but that he nearly died of the experiments. Believing they had failed, he went on living his life only to watch his friends and relatives age and die while he remained the same. Kittridge, an old man afraid of dying, doesn't understand Jameson's weariness about this remarkable feat. His friend explains that death is what makes life worth living. He
- In New York City, over-the-hill boxer Bolie Jackson examines his scars in a mirror as he prepares for his comeback fight against Consiglio. The neighbor, ten-year-old Henry, is avidly watching him and says that he'll be watching Bolie's fight on TV. Bolie talks of all the scars he's earned over the years from his fights, and admits that he's an old man always running behind him. Henry tells him that he's going to make a "big tall wish" so that Bolie won't be hurt. As Bolie leaves for the game, henry's mother Frances greets him downstairs. She thanks him for looking after her son and tells Bolie to take care of himself. As Henry comes down after Bolie, he promises the fighter that he's going to make a wish. France sends him to bed and tells Bolie that Henry believes in wishes. One time she needed $15 for rent and Henry made a wish, and a customer sent Frances $15. Bolie admits that he doesn't believe in magic, and that someday Henry is going to get that lesson drilled into him. As Bolie walks down the street to his fight, all of his neighbors wish him well. The fighter looks up at Henry's window, and the boy waves to him. At the arena locker room, Bolie's manager Joe wraps the fighter's hands. Thomas, Bolie's hired agent, lights up a cigar and a disgusted Bolie tells him to put it out. He tells Bolie that he's just a washed-up fighter, and he has a stable of similar fighters that he uses for preliminary bouts. Thomas offers Bolie a job with them, but Bolie refuses. He then asks Thomas what he knows about Consiglio. When the agent claims that he hasn't seen Consiglio fight, Bolie realizes that Thomas bet against him in the fight. He slams Thomas into the wall and throws a punch, but the agent slips out of the way and runs out. Bolie realizes that he's busted four knuckles on his right hand, and Joe warns him that there's no way he can fight. The fighter refuses to give up
- After being shot to death, Rocky Valentine encounters the amiable white-haired Mr. Pip, who gives Rocky everything he wishes for.
- Riding home on the train one day, a man falls asleep and dreams it is 1880, and he is entering a small town called Willoughby.
- Mike Ferris finds himself alone in the small Oakwood town and without recollection about his name, where he is or who he is. Mike wanders through the town trying to find a living soul. The tension increases and Mike has a breakdown.
- A pitchman is visited by Mr. Death and is forced to get his priorities in order.
- Al Denton, once a feared gunslinger, now the town drunk, is humiliated daily by Dan Hotaling - a local bully - who forces him to sing "How Dry I Am" for a drink as a source of amusement. After one such incident, Denton finds a gun on the ground shortly after Henry J. Fate, a peddler, arrives in town. When Hotaling sees it, he forces Denton to draw against him over the other man's protests. To everyone's surprise, especially Denton's, he disarms Hotaling, not once, but twice. He is given a new lease on life and decides he's not going to drink anymore. He explains to the local saloon girl that he used to be the best gunfighter in town. The problem was that his fame brought plenty of opponents determined to prove they were better. He once left a 16-year old lying dead in the street and began drinking to deal with the stress of constantly having to prove his skill. Eventually, the drinking overcame him. He knows it will happen again and, this time, he will not be able to fight with the same skill. He decides to have a shave so he can look proper on the day of his death. As it happens, he is approached that very evening by representatives of Pete Grant. He tries to turn them down, but matters of honor were not handled so easily in those days. He finally agrees to meet Grant. Determining that the shots he got off on Hotaling were flukes, he decides to leave town. Seeing Fate's wagon on the street, he goes down to see him. Fate claims to sells tonics and general merchandise, including potions. He offers Denton a potion that will allow him 10 seconds of deadly accuracy. Testing the potion, Denton takes it with no charge from Fate who wants him to take it and remember "the day Fate rode into town". Meeting Grant at the saloon, he is surprised to see the very young man also taking the same potion. They both draw on each other at the same time, each sustaining an injury that will prevent them from gunfighting again. Denton un
- An aging, former movie star lives and dreams in the past, constantly watching her old movies alone in her room.
- Martin Sloan, driving through the country, leaves his car and starts to walk toward his hometown, Homewood. He finds things exactly as they were when he was a child. He soon realizes he's gone back in time.
- A hypochondriac exchanges his soul for immortality and indestructibility.