Episodes
# | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Production code |
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1 | "Don't Forget Me" | David Jackson | Story by: R. L. Stine Teleplay by: Paul Bernbaum |
August 31, 2001 | 001 |
Danielle Warner (Amanda Bynes) along with her brother, Peter Warner, and the rest of her family, have just moved into a new house where the basement is haunted by the ghosts of children who have been forgotten by their friends and families—and lure living children in by making their friends and families forget about them. Once the child gets touched by strange goo by the forgotten children....they will start to be forgotten by their friends and family. | |||||
2 | "Scareful What You Wish For" | Anson Williams | Naomi Janzen | August 31, 2001 | 002 |
While packing away all of the toys from his childhood days before his 14th birthday, Dylan Pierce (Shia LaBeouf) is haunted by a strange little boy (played alternately by Dylan and Cole Sprouse) who turns out to be Dylan's favorite childhood doll come to life—and not willing to let his human friend go. Also starring Tania Raymonde, Marcus T. Paulk and Betsy Randle. Note: This is the first of three episodes where the story isn't adapted from a Nightmare Room book. |
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3 | "The Howler" | Steve Dubin | Story by: R. L. Stine Teleplay by: Scott Murphy |
September 29, 2001 | 003 |
Three kids (Cara DeLizia, Jeremy Ray Valdez, Jermaine Williams) find a strange machine called "The Howler" that lets them communicate with spirits, but the spirits that come out need three human bodies to possess. | |||||
4 | "Tangled Web" | Ron Oliver | Paul Bernbaum | October 6, 2001 | 004 |
A boy named Josh (Justin Berfield), who has a reputation for lying, suddenly finds his outrageous tales coming true after a substitute teacher tells Josh that he believes everything he says. Also starring Steve "Sting" Borden and Naturi Naughton. | |||||
5 | "Fear Games" | Ron Oliver | Story by: R. L. Stine Teleplay by: Paul Bernbaum |
October 13, 2001 | 005 |
Five teenagers on a Survivor-esque reality game show must compete in island challenges—and fight a psychotic witch who haunts the island. Starring Lindsay Felton, Eric "Ty" Hodges II and Roger Lodge. Note: Based on the first book of The Nightmare Room Thrillogy called "Fear Games". |
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6 | "School Spirit" | Rich Correll | Scott Murphy | October 20, 2001 | 006 |
A group of students serving detention must help the ghost of a teacher seeking retribution. Starring Madeline Zima, George O. Gore II, Keiko Agena, Jeffrey Licon, Jenny Gago and James Karen. | |||||
7 | "Full Moon Halloween" | Rich Correll | Story by: R. L. Stine Teleplay by: Naomi Janzen |
October 27, 2001 | 007 |
A group of teenagers grow suspicious of one another when a werewolf is heard to be on the loose in their town. Also starring Michael Galeota. Note: This episode features the same actors that starred in "School Spirit". |
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8 | "Four Eyes" | Michael B. Negrin & Brian Robbins | Scott Murphy | December 1, 2001 | 008 |
A boy's new glasses gives him the power to see aliens and monsters secretly living among humans and ready to take over the world. Starring Josh Zuckerman, Lynsey Bartilson and John C. McGinley. Note: This is the last of the four episodes where the story isn't based on any of the books in the Nightmare Room series. Note: The premise of aliens covertly invading Earth was used in the last book of The Nightmare Room series, "Visitors". |
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9 | "Locker 13" | Ron Oliver | Story by: R. L. Stine Teleplay by: Richard H. Rossner |
December 8, 2001 | 009 |
A boy is terrified of the consequences when his school assigns him Locker #13, a locker rumored to give the owner eternal bad luck. Starring Brandon Gilberstadt, Boris Cabrera, Mary Stein, Ken Foree and Angus Scrimm. | |||||
10 | "Dear Diary, I'm Dead" | Steve Dubin | Story by: R. L. Stine Paul Bernbaum |
February 2, 2002 | 010 |
Alex (Drake Bell) is a normal boy that discovers a diary that predicts the future—including his death. Also starring A.J. Trauth and Brenda Song. | |||||
11 | "My Name is Evil" | Anson Williams | Story by: R. L. Stine Lee Goldberg & William Rabkin |
February 23, 2002 | 011 |
A boy's encounter with a carnival fortune teller leads to horrific consequences when the boy turns evil. Starring Shan Elliot, Kaley Cuoco, Melody Johnson and Beth Broderick. | |||||
12 | "Camp Nowhere (Part 1)" | James Marshall | Story by: R. L. Stine Teleplay by: Paul Bernbaum |
March 9, 2002 | 012 |
A group of kids must spend one night in the haunted cabin, then they discover that a summer camp has been trapped in time thanks to the violent Indian spirits that haunt the campgrounds. Starring Allison Mack, Sam Jones III, Dan Byrd and Danielle Fishel. | |||||
13 | "Camp Nowhere (Part 2)" | James Marshall | Story by: R. L. Stine Teleplay by: Paul Bernbaum |
March 16, 2002 | 013 |
The group of kids must contend with Indian spirits that have captured the kids of Camp Hawkwood. Also starring Frankie Muniz and Kevin Meaney. |
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Famous quotes containing the word episodes:
“What is a novel if not a conviction of our fellow-mens existence strong enough to take upon itself a form of imagined life clearer than reality and whose accumulated verisimilitude of selected episodes puts to shame the pride of documentary history?”
—Joseph Conrad (18571924)
“Twenty or thirty years ago, in the army, we had a lot of obscure adventures, and years later we tell them at parties, and suddenly we realize that those two very difficult years of our lives have become lumped together into a few episodes that have lodged in our memory in a standardized form, and are always told in a standardized way, in the same words. But in fact that lump of memories has nothing whatsoever to do with our experience of those two years in the army and what it has made of us.”
—Václav Havel (b. 1936)