View allAll Photos Tagged twilightzone
These abandoned industrial buildings are quite literally in their twilight. Since I took these shots both are now being dismantled for a new industrial development.
Where The Sky Meets The Earth...
The fog and the mist rose from the river and met the sky in a blur of blue leaving the line between earth and sky somewhere in between. I call this the twilight zone...
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© NICK MUNROE (MUNROE PHOTOGRAPHY)
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An homage to one of my all time favorite Twilight Zone episodes.... "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet"
Written by Richard Matheson
Directed by Richard Donner
First broadcast Oct. 11, 1963
Future Enterprise Captain William Shatner appeared twice on "The Twilight Zone" - once as a newlywed who becomes too trusting of a fortune-telling machine ("Nick of Time"), and then in this all-time classic by Richard Matheson.
Shatner played an airline passenger just recovered from a nervous breakdown who is convinced he has spotted a bizarre creature tearing apart the plane. It's a story full of energy anchored by a man desperate to prove to himself that he is not going crazy.
It's no surprise that the atmosphere of the episode was so rich - Richard Donner went on to direct "The Omen."
The story was one of three TZ episodes remade in the 1982 theatrical film, then played by John Lithgow.
CREDIT: CBS
Along the Christian Science Center Plaza reflecting pool looking toward 177 Huntington, the former CSC Administration Building, and the Colonnade Building, two of the three Brutalist buildings (designed by I. M. Pei & Associates, now I. M. Pei, Cobb, Freed & Partners ) ringing the old Mother Church, reflecting pool and fountain. | Back Bay, Boston
(* not to be confused with: Take the Long Way Home)
Made Explore, 12/17/21. Always an honor.
I have absolutely no logic nor explanation for what occurred while exploring some old road full of pot holes, looking for river shots old barns or farm animals to click on. The camera only clicked two times and my iPhone drained-all at this spot. It’s like my car stopped exactly here like it was meant to. I felt uneasy and I only got off this shot and one more before camera stopped. . It was weird so I turned around and got back to a safe feeling place with people eating outside the river restaurant. ♀️ strangest of all was when the GPS was working it gave an estimate of a full 40 minutes to get to town. I’m thinking that’s really weird. It must be some really long windy roads. When I stopped at the restaurant and asked the owner, how could it take so long to town. He looked really hard and said I don’t know what you mean you can’t go all the way. It’s a dead end and there’s another boat storage place just before it dead end. I didn’t really quite know what to respond. The only thing I could think about was, I felt like I was in the twilight zone . I am a really nosy person and always have to have an answer for something and I left empty with nothing
The Colonnade Building is one of a trio of Brutalist buildings (along with the Administration Building and Reflection Hall, 1971-1973) ringing the old Mother Church and reflecting pool in the Christian Science Center. The three buildings and reflecting pool were designed by Araldo Cossutta of I. M. Pei & Associates.
Back Bay, Boston
Picture, if you will, a quaint scene from Mother Nature’s grand design. On the surface, it’s the simple, heartwarming image of a song sparrow mother dutifully tending to her youngster. But look closer and you'll find that not all is as it seems.
This unassuming fledgling is not her offspring--but an imposter. He hails not from the sparrow lineage, but rather, is the young scion of a brown-headed cowbird clan. He is a creature born not from the bonds of familial love, but from a dark grift hatched in the sinister alleyways of the animal kingdom.
Deftly perpetrating his ruse, this fledgling cowbird has hoodwinked his foster mother into a misplaced display of parental care. His call is not a melody of innocent hunger, but a siren tweet--drawing the hapless sparrow into an intricate dance of survival and deceit.
Such is life upon this sylvan stage, where the line between victim and perpetrator blurs, where innocence is lost amidst the rustle of feathers, and where the laws of nature unfold not in black and white, but in the unforgiving grays of ... the Flylight Zone.
Lassen Volcanic National Park is home to steaming fumaroles, clear mountain lakes, and numerous volcanoes.
twilight zone - the ambiguous region between two categories or states or conditions (usually containing some features of both); "but there is still a twilight zone, the tantalizing occurrences that are probably noise but might possibly be a signal"; "in the twilight zone between humor and vulgarity"; "in that no man's land between negotiation and aggression"
from the free dictionary
REVELATION: This is not HDR just like most of my recent beach pictures.
____________
This ARTIST is for HIRE.
I was composing my shot of this pier with the door wide open, when a gust of wind from the approaching storm, swung the door to its partly closed position. I went with that suggestion for a photo as I was getting soaked and thought it did add an element of mystery.
Thanks for looking!
Twilight across Lavender Bay. Sydney.
Photographed from the outdoor cafe at the 'View Sydney Hotel'.
Blue Street, North Sydney.
In the foreground are the roof tops of the Victorian-era houses along Walker Street, Lavender Bay.
In the distance you can see the lights of the Walsh Bay Wharf Precinct and Barangaroo (right) and Luna Park, the harbour bridge and the city (left).
Zoom in - you can see right across to Circular Quay. And you can see the 'Just For Fun' sign at Luna Park, lol.
And here is 'The Twilight Zone' by the iconic 'Manhattan Transfer':
www.youtube.com/watch?v=EVm6ZEQt71c
My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon 24-105mm f/4L IS II USM lens.
Processed in Adobe Lightroom.
Summer flowers requesting to be transported into the twilight zone
Light paint was drying on this particular pixel canvas
Boogie Woogie - De Phazz
www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpsKaVJ5W5w
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Twilight at Pier One.
The Walsh Bay Wharf Precinct.
Dawes Point, Sydney.
Photographed from Hickson Road looking north to the harbour, on one of my epic after-work walks around the harbour.
Across the harbour are the tall buildings of North Sydney (right) and the silhouette of the ubiquitous Blues Point Tower (left).
To accompany my twilight capture here is something out of the vault from the 1970s. It is the very cool Michael Franks with his slinky song 'B’wana He No Home'. Perfect for a chilled twilight here in Sydney town, or anywhere, lol.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqIaOeT1L2E
And here is the more famous version of 'B’wana She No Home' by The Carpenters. I LOVE both versions.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2BN_CiOIPw
My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L lens.
Processed in Adobe Lightroom and PhotoPad Pro by NCH software.
This was taken in Botany Bay and the tanker was at the Kurnell oil terminal.With no wind the water had an oily look about it and the last light added to the atmosphere.
It's two a.m.
The fear has gone
I'm sitting here waiting
The gun is still warm
Maybe my connection is tired of taking chances
– Golden Earring, Twilight Zone
Kaze Shabu Shabu looking up Essex St. at late twilight.
Chinatown, Boston.
(Not to be confused with Hot Pot).