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  • The Twilight Zone/Heartwarming
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  • The show wasn't about being warm and fuzzy, but it still had a few.. * In the first season episode "One for the Angels", an elderly pitchman named Lou Bookman is confronted by the Angel of Death who tells Bookman to put his affairs in order as he is scheduled to pass away in his sleep at midnight. Bookman tries to trick Death by convincing him to wait until he makes his greatest ever sales pitch, "one for the angels", but when Death agrees to the deal, Bookman immediately makes plans to quit his job and never make another pitch, and thus live forever. Then Bookman learns that someone has to die at midnight, and since Death is honoring their deal, he's going take a little girl who lives in Bookman's building instead. Bookman distracts Death with the greatest sales pitch he has ever done,
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  • The show wasn't about being warm and fuzzy, but it still had a few.. * In the first season episode "One for the Angels", an elderly pitchman named Lou Bookman is confronted by the Angel of Death who tells Bookman to put his affairs in order as he is scheduled to pass away in his sleep at midnight. Bookman tries to trick Death by convincing him to wait until he makes his greatest ever sales pitch, "one for the angels", but when Death agrees to the deal, Bookman immediately makes plans to quit his job and never make another pitch, and thus live forever. Then Bookman learns that someone has to die at midnight, and since Death is honoring their deal, he's going take a little girl who lives in Bookman's building instead. Bookman distracts Death with the greatest sales pitch he has ever done, making Death miss his midnight appointment and fulfilling their original agreement. * Also "The Hunt", a must see episode for any dog lover. A backwoods hunter and his hound dog drown in a river, and the hunter finds a man who says a nearby gate is the entrance to heaven, but dogs aren't allowed. The hunter elects to stay in limbo forever rather than be without his dog. Then a second man (who turns out to be an angel) shows up and says the first one was trying to trick him into entering hell, not allowing the dog in because he would smell the brimstone and warn his master. The two of them really will be able to spend eternity together in heaven. * * It gets better-- The angel assures him that there will be a coon hunt right after the square dance, and that the hunter's wife will have no trouble on the way. * "Night of the Meek". * To elaborate on this one, the episode features an alcoholic Mall Santa (whose rant explaining why he's an alcoholic is featured on the YMMV page). He gets a hold of the real Santa's sack, and proceeds to hand out gifts to all of the poor children (and adults!) in the neighborhood. The end of the episode shows him sitting on a stoop, magic bag empty, and reminiscing over the amount of smiles he'd been able to give that night. And his reward? One of Santa's elves approaches him and tells him that they'd been waiting for him, and they need to get a start on next year. * I'm not sure it got filmed like this, but I dearly love a Twilight Zone story called "Changing of the Guard". An old professor at a New England boy's school, well past retirement but too beloved to be let go, is informed that yes, despite being a favorite teacher, he is in fact being let go, if with a generous pension. He takes this rather badly, and contemplates suicide. On his way to kill himself, he passes a statue and reads the quotation on the base, "Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity.". The professor then reflects that he has not won any victory for humanity, and is quite ashamed to die. He cocks his pistol, puts it to his head, and...hears the sound of bells, chiming at an odd hour, followed by seeing lights in classrooms that should be dark. He goes to investigate, and is greeted by the ghosts of some of his old students. They explain to him in turns that yes, they died, and died to save others, at Chateau-Thierry, and at Pearl Harbor, and on Papua New Guinea, and they all died remembering some lesson he had taught them. One learnt patriotism, another learned humility, and a third courage. At the end of it, he thanks them all, and walks back to his room. As he passes the statue, he reads the quotation again, and comments that he has won no great victory, but he has helped others, and that may be enough. * This description is almost identical to the aired episode, which is thoroughly heartwarming. * And props to actor Donald Pleasance, who was actually only forty-odd years old at the time of filming. * And thanks to YouTube, here it is. * "Nothing in the Dark". An old woman is terrified to let anyone in her house, because she fears Death may come for her. Then a young police officer is wounded outside her door, and she relents and takes him in to care for him. At the end of the episode, it's revealed that the officer is Death, and that he wanted her to get to trust him and accept him. Now knowing that Death is not the monster she'd imagined, she finally touches his hand, and then is standing by her own dead body next to Death, who says: "You see. No shock. No engulfment. No tearing asunder. What you feared would come like an explosion is like a whisper. What you thought was the end is the beginning." Then, hand in hand, she walks with Death out into the sunlight. * The fifth season opener "In Praise of Pip" featured Jack Klugman as a small-time bookie named Max Phillips who receives word that his son Pip, whom he loves dearly but with whom he was never able to spend as much time as he would have liked, has been gravely wounded while serving in the military in South Vietnam. Following a confrontation with his boss in which he is himself wounded, Max stumbles to a darkened carnival at which he and Pip spent many happy days together... and finds a ten-year-old Pip, waiting for another day of fun with his "best buddy". The carnival lights up and father and son have a whale of a time on the rides and attractions, until Pip tells him he has to go... because he is dying in South Vietnam. After unsuccessfully trying to pursue Pip through a house of mirrors, Max stumbles into the midway and begs God to take his life instead of Pip's, at which point he falls down dead from his earlier wound. Flash forward, and Pip, now walking with a cane, has returned from South Vietnam and is spending the day at the carnival, and as he pays for a turn at the shooting gallery and remembers his father's advice to remove his chewing gum first, he tells his father that he always was his "best buddy". * God darn it... after reading that I... (wipes eyes) * The Twilight Zone's 2002's revival had "Homecoming", a wonderful story about a missing soldier who comes back from the dead to indulge his son, a rebel teenager with no future, into being a better man. * Though the ending is a bit of a Tear Jerker, "Kick The Can" is one of the most timeless and haunting of the Twilight Zone episodes. The part that is heartwarming is that the old man's belief that magic is real turned out to be true. * "The Paladin of the Lost Hour", an episode of the 1980s revival written by Harlan Ellison. A man burdened by a debt he feels he can never repay (Glynn Turman) meets and befriends an older man (Danny Kaye) who is getting ready to pass on - and not just from life, but the custodianship of a watch that holds the last hour of the world's existence, an hour that can never be allowed to strike. One minute of that hour is granted to the first man, who gets to finally meet and thank the unknown Marine who saved him from an ambush in The Vietnam War, at the cost of his own life... and be thanked in turn, as the Marine never knew he was there and thought he'd died in vain. He relates all of this to his friend, who dies peacefully and leaves him as the new guardian of the watch. * The end of "To see the invisible man". I can see you! You are not invisible! * Not a major one, but The Trade-Ins was a simple yet touching episode. An old couple wants to trade their old bodies for newer ones to continue living a happy life together. However, they only have enough money for only one of them to take the operation. The husband then tries to win the rest of the money by gambling with poker, but is horribly unskilled. Taking pity on the old man, the lead poker shark purposely folds his winning hand so that the old man can break even. On his wife's insistence with the intent of winning the wife's share of the operation later, the husband undergoes the operation, but afterwards realises that he won't be able to earn the money for his wife's operation in time. In the end, the old man decides to cancel the operation and live the remainder of his old life with his wife together. * The male and female soldiers (who used to be on opposite sides of a war) getting together in "Two". * In the 1985 revival episode "The Star", a priest grieves over an alien civilization that was destroyed by a supernova (which the light would have reached Earth, and be seen as the "Star of Bethlehem"). He cries out to God, question why the aliens had to die when there were other stars with lifeless planets to chose from. However, an anthropologist found a poem in the aliens' archive, which says they have lived a very long, peaceful life and saw the beauty of the universe. They knew they were going to die, but they're okay with it and accept their fate. "Whatever destiny was theirs, they fulfilled it. Their time had come, and in their passing, they passed their light on to another world. A balance was struck, and perhaps one day, humanity will light the way for another world." This comforts the priest and renewed his faith. * In the 2003 revival, one episode has a doctor meeting with Death (who is a rather kindly person). While the doctor does not believe that the man is Death and thus ignores Death's proclamation that he will give up killing people, it soon becomes apparent that the patients in the hospital the doctor works at are not dying when they ought to be. The doctor ends up finding Death and asking him to go back to his job, because there are patients suffering from severe burns and can't find relief through death. After Death agrees to go back on the job (even though it saddens him greatly), the doctor suffers a very painful headache. Death helps him sit down, comforts him, and then reveals that the doctor just died of an aneurysm. While the doctor is obviously not happy he just died and Death admits to being tempted to just letting him go back to being alive, both agree that it's best to not mess with the way things ought to be and Death peacefully leads him to the afterlife. * While it eventually is spoiled, in the 2002 series episode Sanctuary, it is very sweet when the man and the woman find the modern-day Eden and begin to take joy in the natural pleasures of life. * In the 2002 revival, in the episode Memphis, a man named Ray finds that he has a lethal brain tumor and probably can not afford the only specialist who can operate to remove it. After being hit by a car, he finds himself back in 1968. While there, Ray tries to save Martin Luther King Jr. from the assassin but fails. Instead, he chooses to save the life of a boy who was the son of a woman who took Ray in after he woke up in the past. When Ray returns to the present, he finds out that the boy he saved grew up to be the specialist, and that he runs a program for patients who can't afford treatment, so he can save Ray's life. * "A Passage for Trumpet". * In "The Trouble With Templeton," actor Booth Templeton is going through a Heroic BSOD - behaving meekly while longing for the good old days of thirty years earlier, such as his dead first wife, Laura. After a rough first meeting for his newest play, Booth is suddenly transported to those good old days and encounters his loved ones. However, his reunions aren't quite what he expected - to the point of no one taking him seriously and Laura finally demanding "go back where [you] came from." Booth returns to the present and is quite distraught... until he realizes he has a script he earlier took from Laura: What To Do When Booth Comes Back. Learning that it was all an act to get him to live life to the fullest, a smiling Booth shakes his Heroic BSOD and regains his confidence. * In "Long Distance Call", a little boy whose grandmother had recently died could talk to her from beyond the grave using a toy telephone she gave him for his birthday. During the episode it seems that the boy keeps on getting into deathly situations so he can "join his grandma"; and eventually, when his parents take away the phone from him, he almost drowns. As it turns out, the reason the grandmother was trying to have the grandson join her in the after life, was because he reminded her of his father at his age and was sad that he had stopped being so warm to her when he got married. Near the end of the episode, when it seems that hope has run out for the boy and he might die, the father picks up the phone (though prior to this moment he did not believe in the abilities of the phone) and begs his mother to let the boy live and experience the world and not take out her anger at him on his son. It works. * Dead Run was praised for it's message of LGBT equality. A trucker driver realises that he's delivering innocent souls to Hell and starts asking the people he's delivering what they did to deserve be condemned. One of the passengers can't think of anything, and then, has a realisation, saying that surely him being gay couldn't be the reason. The driver takes the man with the rest of the innocent souls to Heaven. There's no heavy-handed moralising, no debate, and no real angst. It's just presented as a given that yes, gay people can be good people, that no, being gay is not a sin, and that people who believe otherwise are wrong. * The After Hours ending is strangely heartwarming.