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Showing posts with label Kolchak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kolchak. Show all posts

Thursday, July 18, 2019

Kolchak: The Night Stalker gets down and dirty



It's been a few minutes since we last updated the website. Personal obligations have temporarily taken most of us away from Collinsport for a spell, but we'll be firing on all cylinders again soon. In the meantime, enjoy some creative vandalsim concerning Gold Key comics and the misadventures of an intrepid reporter whose name you probably know. No, they aren't real ... but they ought to be.



Thursday, July 26, 2018

October will be a big month for Dan Curtis fans


Back in January, Kino Lorber confirmed they were preparing Blu-ray releases of a trio of Dan Curtis television classics from the 1970s. The details and release dates for those titles have finally been released, and they're corkers. 4K restorations of THE NIGHT STALKER (1972) and THE NIGHT STRANGLER (1973) will be arriving on Blu-ray and DVD on Oct. 2, with 1975's TRILOGY OF TERROR getting similar treatment on Oct. 16. None of these titles are yet available for pre-order, but I imagine that will change soon. Here's what you can expect:

The Night Stalker (1972)

• Brand New 4K Restoration!
• NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historian Tim Lucas
• NEW Interview with Director John Llewellyn Moxey
• NEW Interview with Composer Bob Cobert
• "The Night Stalker: Dan Curtis Interview" featurette
• Limited Edition Booklet essay by Film critic and author Simon Abrams (Blu-ray only)
• Newly Commissioned Art by Sean Phillips
• Limited Edition O-Card Slipcase (Blu-ray only)

Color 74 Minutes 1.33:1 Not Rated

Release date: Oct. 2

The Night Strangler (1973)

• Brand New 4K Restoration!
• NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historian Tim Lucas
• NEW Interview with Composer Bob Cobert
• "Directing 'The Night Strangler'" Featurette
• Limited Edition Booklet essay by film critic and author Simon Abrams (Blu-ray only)
• Newly Commissioned Art by Sean Phillips
• Limited Edition O-Card Slipcase (Blu-ray only)

Color 90 Minutes 1.33:1 Not Rated

Release date: Oct. 2

Trilogy of Terror (1975)

• Brand New 4K Restoration
• NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historian Richard Harland Smith
• NEW Interview with Composer Bob Cobert
• Audio Commentary with Karen Black and writer William F. Nolan
• "Richard Matheson: Terror Scribe" Featurette
• "Three Colors Black" Featurette
• Limited Edition Booklet essay by Film critic and author Simon Abrams (Blu-ray only)
• Newly Commissioned Art by Jacob Phillips
• Limited Edition O-Card Slipcase (Blu-ray only)

Color 72 Minutes 1.33:1 Not Rated

Release date: Oct. 16

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Stan Against Evil goes full Collinsport in season 3


The teaser for season three of STAN AGAINST EVIL debuted Saturday at Comic-Con, with the cast and crew on-hand to give fans an idea of what to expect when the series returns to IFC on Oct. 31. I'm too busy to dive deep into this trailer at the moment, but needless to say: Familiar imagery abounds! If you get a DARK SHADOWS vibe from the vampire elements (such as that screencap of series MVP Janet Varney at the top of this post) that's by design. Series creator Dana Gould has spent a lot of time in Collinsport and knows his way around town. I'll have more to say about all of this later, but for now enjoy some images from DARK SHADOWS that are some obvious touchstones for STAN AGAINST EVIL. (Bonus points of you spot the reference to KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER in the teaser.) You can should watch the trailer for season three at the bottom of this post.



Thursday, June 16, 2016

8 things I learned from Jeff Thompson's "Nights of Dan Curtis"


By WALLACE McBRIDE

"Nights of Dan Curtis" is not an especially friendly book. Author Jeff Thompson (a frequent contributor to the CHS) is possibly the reigning scholar on the works of Dan Curtis, and it certainly shows in his latest publication, which is saddled with the subtitle "The Television Epics of the Dark Shadows Auteur: Horror, Western, and War." Having already tackled Curtis' horror movies and television shows in his books "The Television Horrors of Dan Curtis" and "House of Dan Curtis," Thompson focuses here on his outlying productions, which range from the trivial (1998's THE LOVE LETTER) to possibly his most important work (1983's WINDS OF WAR.)

Unsurprisingly, DARK SHADOWS lurks in the recesses of almost every chapter "Nights of Dan Curtis." Despite the filmmaker's efforts to marginalize his breakthrough achievement, the gothic soap provided Curtis with friends and professional relationships that endured his entire career. You'll see many of the same names appear throughout the book, such as Kathryn Leigh Scott, Robert Cobert, Barbara Steele, Lysette Anthony and John Karlen. No matter the subject matter (and Curtis produced everything from westerns to melodrama) you were bound to find some kind of connection to DARK SHADOWS.

When I cracked this book open for the first time (and I've returned to its pages many times during the last few weeks) it was under the delusion that I knew a little something about Dan Curtis. As it happens, I didn't know much of anything ... I've seen very few of the projects documented in this book, many of which were total revelations. It begins with a forward by one of my childhood heroes, Larry Wilcox (I was never much of a Ponch fan) who writes about working with Curtis on 1979's THE LAST RIDE OF THE DALTON GANG. There are details on the 1979 SUPERTRAIN debacle, 1974's MELVIN PURVIS G-MAN, 2005's SAVING MILLY and tons of other projects that were entirely new to me.

Still, it's not what I'd call a friendly read. Thompson has crafted a fine reference book here, which was almost certainly his intention. This isn't a book about Jeff Thompson; it's a book about Dan Curtis, and it's refreshing to see such an absence of ego in this kind of book. But it also makes it incredibly difficult to review in a typical fashion. In light of that, here are eight factoids I learned from reading "Nights of Dan Curtis," which ought to give you an idea of what to expect from the book.

1: Holy Candy Man, Batman!
Two years before DARK SHADOWS, Dan Curtis tried to develop a BATMAN television series for CBS. In 1964, Curtis got the go-ahead to develop a pilot, with CBS given right of first refusal. The vision of the series doesn't sound very far removed from the show created by William Dozier in 1966: actor Don Murray (CONQUEST OF THE PLANET OF THE APES) had agreed to star as the caped crusader, with Sammy Davis, Jr. as the Joker. Had a change in management not torpedoed the project, BATMAN would have stocked its rogues gallery with members of the Rat Pack.


2: CBS hacked Drac
In 1972, Curtis returned to the vampire well with DRACULA, which aired on television in the U.S., and was released theatrically (with a bloodier cut) in Europe. It was originally meant to be a much grander project, though. Curtis and screenwriter Richard Matheson wanted a three-hour time slot, but CBS granted them only two. While it was the first legitimate attempt to faithfully translate Bram Stoker's novel for film, both creators felt the shorter time slot hobbled (to a certain extent) the final product.



3: "That's the signpost up ahead ..."
As DARK SHADOWS was hitting its stride in 1967, Curtis was in the U.K. producing and directing THE STRANGE CASE OF DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE. The TV movie was written by Ian McLellan Hunter and starred Jack Palance in the title roles, but neither were Curtis' first choice. When the project began development, actor Jason Robards was attached, and Rod Serling (!) was tapped to write the screenplay.





4: Author, author!
Herman Wouk was unhappy with the filmed adaptions of THE CAINE MUTINY and MARJORIE MORNINGSTAR, and was resistant to the idea of allowing WINDS OF WAR to suffer a "watered down" adaption. Curtis countered by bringing Wouk on board to write the screenplay of the 15-hour 1983 television mini-series, going so far as to give the author final approval on scripts.





5: It takes a thief
Robert Cobert frequently cribbed his own music from other movies. Listen carefully and you'll hear music from DARK SHADOWS appear in such productions as INTRUDERS and THE GREAT ICE RIP-OFF. "Quentin's Theme" made stealth appearances in both movies. If you've got to steal, steal from the best!





6: Great Scott!
Kathryn Leigh Scott auditioned for the role of Liz Stoddard in the 1991 DARK SHADOWS revival. Just let that idea sink in. If you've got to lose a part, though, you might as well lose it to Jean Simmons.  (Oops. KLS actually auditioned for the role of Liz in the 2004 pilot, but lost to Blair Brown. Jeff got it correct in his book; I got it wrong here. My apologies.) Still, just think of the possibilities. THINK ABOUT THEM.








7: The Number of the Beast
Dan Curtis was briefly attached to direct DAMIEN: OMEN II. As a not-terribly-proud fan of THE OMEN movies, the lack of detail on this bit of trivia is maddeningly frustrating. But I probably shouldn't expect too many details about a production that ultimately didn't involve Curtis. Mike Hodges (GET CARTER, FLASH GORDON) was signed to direct but was booted and replaced during shooting by Don Taylor (THE FINAL COUNTDOWN).




8: A Monstrous Monopoly
Curtis' television adaption of FRANKENSTEIN debuted Jan. 16, 1972, the same night as THE NIGHT STALKER, which he also produced. THE NIGHT STALKER earned a 32.2 rating and 54 share, making it the highest-rated television movie to date. It was followed in 1973 by a sequel, THE NIGHT STRANGLER. The sequel marked the end of Curtis' relationship with Carl Kolchak.


Monday, January 11, 2016

An Interview with Kolchak's Vampire, 1975


It's difficult to overstate the success of THE NIGHT STALKER, which aired on this date in 1972. The movie reached a whopping 54 percent of all TV viewers upon its debut, which is stunning even without it's "horror movie" stigma. While star Darren McGavin did OK for himself, returning to battle the supernatural in the KOLCHAK sequel and weekly series, the film's iconic badguy was one-and-done. Played by Barry Atwater, vampire Janos Skorzeny was equal parts Jonathan Frid and Christopher Lee, a monster as savage as he was pathetic. Shortly before the official demise of THE NIGHT STALKER weekly series in 1975, the gang at CASTLE OF FRANKENSTEIN magazine tracked down Atwater to chat about his role in the original movie. Below is a transcript of the feature as it appeared in issue 25 on the magazine. I've preserved the magazine's unusual style choices and fixed a few typos.

(Note: A not-that-great comic published by Moonstone in 2009 attempted to create a direct connection between Barnabas Collins and Janos Skorzeny. You can get a taste of it HERE.)


THE NIGHT STALKER IS ALIVE
AND LIVING IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 

An Interview with the star of the original NIGHT STALKER, Barry Atwater 

As a Veteran actor who had already racked up a considerable record in numerous films and TV dramas, Barry Atwater suddenly achieved overnight fame as The Vampire Who Threatened to Destroy Las Vegas in the first and original THE NIGHT STALKER. In this special COF Interview, created by Richard E. Werft, Jr., Barry Atwater ventures deep behind-the-scenes concerning the creation of STALKER — but, more importantly, he also reveals himself as a very articulate and highly aware individual with a very sensitive and sensible insight about filmmaking, acting as a career and about the world around him. 

COF: Do you remember the first big break that brought you into films? 

BA: Yes — I worked in a student film at UCLA. The film got an Academy Award and the right notoriety; the aura around the Award was enough to me an agent and some parts. I couldn't act my way out of a paper bag at the time, but it didn't matter.

COF: Did they approach you for THE NIGHT STALKER with you specifically in mind? 

BA: I'm not sure how that came about. Someone may have suggested me to Dan ("Dark Shadows") Curtis. I think he looked up my picture in the Academy directory. He was interested and called up my agent. I went to the studio. I brought some pictures with me and he looked at one shot I brought and he said, "That's it! That's the one!"

COF: How did you feel about doing NIGHT STALKER ? Was it hard for you to enter into the mood of playing a fiend, a vampire? 

BA: No, not at all. We all have all sorts of feelings inside us; everybody. All we have to do is simply let go and the feeling comes out. That's what acting's about — just letting go, not suppressing or repressing or criticizing or censoring ourselves.

COF: How did you go about preparing for your role as Janos Skorzeny the vampire? Didyou stand in front of the mirror and decide on which facial expressions would be suitable? 

BA: No, I cannot control that. I just let that happen.

COF: How did you feel about interpreting, about getting into the character? 

BA: I felt he was very lonely. He has no friends. He's all alone, so he doesn't talk to people. I'm sure he's not a happy man, but he's stuck. He's like a heroin addict; he's stuck.  And I took that attitude. I've never taken heroin and never intend to, but what I heard about it is that a guy has to have it. If Skorzeny didn't have blood, what would happen to him? it must be really hell not to have blood. So, I simply took the absolute necessity to have blood, and if I have to kill people, I'm "sorry." I don't want to kill anyone. I don't get kicks by killing people. I simply have to have it. And if people don't understand it, it's not my fault — and they chase me and they do awful to me and they shoot bullets at me and I'm furious with them.

COF: Do you regret not having any speaking lines? 

BA: No, I was very glad — very, very glad there were no speaking lines. Because I think as soon as the vampire opens his mouth and starts to talk, he becomes an ordinary human being; an actor saying silly lines. And I think that was a brilliant idea of theirs not to have the vampire say a word.

COF: Was all of the hissing and growling overdubbed. 

B A: No, this is what happened: Sometimes when they shoot they use an Arriflex camera which makes a lot of noise. It's a hand-held camera. In the end, where the sunlight comes in and I try to go up the stairs and the sunlight hits me and finally I fall, and Kolchak kills me with a stake — all that was shot with an Arriflex which made a terrible racket. So, all the noises had to be dubbed. We went into an adjacent sound stage and I tried to go through the business to make it as consistent as possible with the hissing and the growling and the snarling to cover that sequence where they were using the noisy Arriflex camera.

COF: You were the co-star of the most successful made-for-TV movie. To what do you attribute your personal effectiveness in THE NIGHT STALKER? 

BA: That's due to the way it was photographed and the way it was cut. I'm not trying to give false modesty. I think if you like films it’s important for you to know what it is in the film that makes you like it, so you can appreciate it all the more. There are a lot of things to watch in the film aside from the actors. You watch the way the shot's done — how it's cut, the camera angle. Those are the things in a film that can really be exciting as film. The way it was cut and edited together. In THE NIGHT STALKER you would be watching scene A and hearing the dialogue and sound from scene A. As you got to the end of that, we would suddenly hear the sound from scene B — then the visual would switch to scene B. This kind of overlapping — it would pull us through, rather than jerk, jerk, jerk like that. It would kind of ease us through into the next sequence and make the pacing very much faster. It's a neat technique and it's exciting to watch. It feels good to watch.

COF: Could you describe the general make-up they used on you? 

BA: The eyebrows — little bitty scissors were used to cut out all the hair underneath here and then a lot of goop was put on them and they were brought out and turned up on the ends. Full, complete contact lenses were used for the bloodshot part. There's a "mildly" bloodshot and a "heavily" blood- shot set, so there were two sets of contact lenses, and then the fangs and then a wig with black hair.

COF: How was that sequence filmed where you ran that man out the window on an upper floor?

BA: That was shot in the administration building of the Sam Goldwyn Studios and they replaced the window and used sugar for glass. They can make a pane out of sugar. It breaks, but it doesn't have very sharp, needle- like fractures. And they erected on the ground below a great big air pillow. It must have been maybe six feet high. It was inflated with blowers. And then the stuntman inside took a running jump, dived through the window and turned and tumbled and twisted as he fell three stories onto the cushion below. The window you saw from the inside of the building was on a set. The outside was another building altogether.


COF: Do you think it made a statement about society when the police forced Kolchak to get out of town? 

BA: Sure it did, and it's a statement that I think most of us believe as being certainly possible. It's a weird thing. I just read a book called "Centennial" about the year 1874 and about the big centennial exposition in Philadelphia. And it was the second term of Ulysses S. Grant, who was a very inept man — had no business ever being president. And the corruption was so thick throughout the whole government that it made me think, "Well... Watergate's really nothing new. Why should we be so really uptight about it? It's been going on for at least a hundred years, or probably before that." But we want to believe the best of ourselves and the best of our country—about George Washington and the cherry tree and all that sort of stuff. So, when it does happen we're always sort of shocked and horrified. And yet. in THE NIGHT STALKER, with that undercurrent of corruption, it really didn't surprise us a heck of a lot.

COF: I know THE NIGHT STALKER was a very serious drama, but between takes did you like to break the tension with some humor? 

BA: No, not especially. I don't horse around on the set. If it's a comedy picture I will, because it keeps up the fun ambiance. But if it's a serious film and I start to horse around or someone else starts to horse around, then this is bad, because it breaks the mood. You really have to keep that going, because it's very tenuous and it can slip away if you're not careful. You have to really concentrate; before you go into the set to take your place, you walk from the dressing room to the set. And I have to say to myself, where am I, what am I doing — because I've gotten out of it. So I have to walk back into it. What do I need, what do I want, what values do I have, what do I care about, what do I dislike, what do I admire, hate, respect, and so on. The whole inside has to go.

COF: If they re-made DRACULA and did it according to the book, do you have any ambition to portray the famous Count, the classic Vampire? 

BA: No way, no way. Look, DRACULA was written in 1898. That style of presentation of a story is old hat for us now. We really know it's a classic when we see it. In the recent version with Palance, we've had it—we've really had it. So, we cannot go and keep doing that over and over and over again. Here's what happened: take THE EXORCIST — you see, that is where we are now — where DRACULA was when it came out with Lugosi in the early 30's. It scared the heck out of us, and so did the first FRANKENSTEIN. Now, today in 1974, it's THE EXORCIST that's scaring people and making them sick. We cannot go back from the level of THE EXORCIST in terms of story, of treatment, of realism and honesty and candor. We're doing things, saying things and we're admitting things that we never did before. We are far more honest and candid a people than we ever were. I remember when sex movies started showing in theatres I couldn't believe it, because I was brought up in Denver, Colorado in a very square, Republican, Protestant society. And all this stuff Was where you wouldn't even think about it, much less talk about it. But we knew about it. Now we're all saying out loud what we're thinking in our heads. And I think this is marvelous. I think we're being honest and I think when we're honest we'll be healthy. When we start lying, then we get sick.

COF: What advice would you give to someone who wants to become an actor, and would you recommend the profession? 

BA : No. If you want to become an actor, nothing in God's will can keep you from becoming an actor. Nobody can recommend that you be or not be. If you want to be, you will be. You cannot help yourself. You will be, because you must be. You must be... or die. It occurred to me not long ago that acting is really an athletic activity and it wouldn't be far out to have acting as part of the Olympics because an actor really uses his body. You have to move. You have to feel. And I think one of the reasons athletes can make very good actors is because they already know how to move. They already know how to respond physically. If you can't do it physically you do it with words, but the words stand for a physical action. If I say, "Come here," what I'm really wanting to do is reach out and grab you and pull you here. So, I've simply used the words in place of an action; but I mean that action inside me when I say the words, and that's what turns it on — the meaning, the intention. I mean it... all of me means it.

COF: Do you ever feel the urge to write, direct and produce a film on your own? 

BA: Yes, I would like to do that. That's a very exciting medium. It's the most exciting for me. Kenneth Clark said in his CIVILIZATION that he felt that the most culturally representative aspect of this century would be the motion picture rather than architecture.

COF: Do you ever think of the degree of immortality you achieve by having yourself recorded on film? 

BA: What good does it do? When I'm dead, I'm dead.



THE NIGHT STALKER made the above statement in Los Angeles, a little over two years after the first unofficial documentary report of his death was made public. So, Kolchak... beware! 

Friday, October 2, 2015

Podcast Alert: KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER



Confession: I don't listen to many podcasts. It's not that I don't enjoy the format, but it's difficult to find to time to reserve for 30-60 minutes for an isolated listening session. (I'm still trying to catch up on Big Finish's DARK SHADOWS audio dramas this year.)

There are a few that I like, though. At the top of my short list are The Dana Gould Hour, WTF with Marc Maron and Desmond Reddick's Dread Media podcast.

The latest addition to my playlist is the Plaid Stallions podcast. While I've been a fan of the website for years, it was only recently that I discovered their podcast. As it happens, my timing couldn't have been better: the latest episode centers on KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER. It's a long discussion (hitting about 69 minutes, haha) that covers the original television movies, the short-lived series, the scarcity of KOLCHAK merchandise, and an attempt to get a comic book about the character off the ground in the '70s. You should absolutely listen to it.

You can listen to the episode streaming above, or download it as an MP3 by clicking HERE.

If you haven't visited the Plaid Stallions website, you can find it HERE.


Tuesday, September 15, 2015

It’s gonna be a Kolchak Christmas


Carl Kolchak's fans are an insatiable lot. While many people have warm, fuzzy memories of the Dan Curtis produced movies (and the not-quite-as-good television series) it might come as a surprise to some of you to learn that Kolchak's legend has grown rather large in recent years.

While the stars never aligned to lure actor Darren McGavin back to the role before his death in 2006, creators have added considerably to Kolchak's misadventures in print. It would be pretty easy to get lost in all of the novels, comics, short story anthologies, and Audible Audio adaptions that have hit the market in the years since the television show was cancelled way back in 1975.

And Moonstone Books will be adding to the character's history in December with a pair of KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER trade paperback collections.

The first is KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STRANGLER FILES,  a comic anthology collecting the company’s adaption of the 1973 television movie THE NIGHT STRANGLER. Chris Mills and Amin Amat adapt Richard Matheson’s original screenplay, and continue the tale with the three-part series KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STRANGLER FILES (also include in this edition). The softcover book runs 126 pages and retails for $15.95.

The second collection from Moonstone is an anthology of original prose stories titled PASSAGES OF THE MACABRE. The contributing writers are Matthew Baugh, James Chambers, Cathy Clamp, Ed Gorman, Mark Graham, C.J. Henderson, Tracey Hill, Nancy Holder, Nancy Kilpatrick, Rick Lai, Marilyn Romatka, Lilith Saintcrow, Hank Schwaeble and Dave Ulanksi. The softcover book runs 280 pages and retails for $16.95.

The books are not yet available for order; I'll update this post when that information becomes available. UPDATE: KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STRANGLER FILES and PASSAGES OF THE MACABRE are now available on Amazon!

Via: Bleeding Cool

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Kolchak's creator had a huge impact on pop culture


Jeff Rice, the creator of intrepid reporter Carl Kolchak, died last month at the age of 71.

Rice was the author of "The Kolchak Papers," the inspiration for the landmark television movie, THE NIGHT STALKER. Curiously, the novel was published after the broadcast of the movie ... and would include the name of the film's screenwriter, Richard Matheson, on the cover.

Even though his story would have a massive impact on pop culture, Rice wouldn't benefit much from his most famous creation. He threatened to sue ABC when a television series starring Carl Kolchak went into production in 1974 because the studio hadn't secured the rights from the author. They settled out of court, Rice got his screen credit ... and was subsequently shunned.

"You didn't do that kind of thing in 1970s Hollywood," recalls Rice's friend, Mark Dawidziak. "Jeff immediately was barred from the studio lot. A five-book deal for more novelizations was called off. Jeff's Tinseltown career was over, just as it was getting started. By the late '70s, if you knew a vampire novel by a writer named Rice, it probably was Anne Rice's 'Interview With the Vampire.'"

Rice failed to garner a national obituary when he died in July. Dawidziak is attempting to remedy that oversight with a thoughtful piece over at cleaveland.com. You can find it HERE.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Monster Serial: THE NIGHT STALKER, 1972

Hello, boils and ghouls! October is upon us and that means one thing: HALLOWEEN! While most holidays get a measly day or two of formal recognition, orthodox Monster Kids prefer to celebrate it in the tradition of our people: By watching tons of horror movies. This month at THE COLLINSPORT HISTORICAL SOCIETY, we're going to be discussing some of our favorites every day until Halloween. So, put on your 3-D spex, pop some popcorn and turn out the lights .... because we're going to the movies!


By WALLACE McBRIDE

What would it be like to live forever? Ideally, immortality should offer a life free of consequences, where even your worst mistakes would eventually be forgotten. You might have to watch others wither and die, but problems like sickness and suffering would be concerns for other people. Fantasies of immortality have less to do with a fear of death than it does the indulgence of one's own ego: "I am too special to die."

THE NIGHT STALKER, the 1972 television movie that introduced intrepid newspaper reporter Carl Kolchak to the world, is a film preoccupied with questions of ego, not to mention immortality. This is to be expected from a movie about a vampire. That's part of the allure of this monster, whose life is equal parts gift and curse. But, the vampire is only an incidental element of THE NIGHT STALKER. The character has not one line of dialogue in the film, and what little we know about him is conjecture on the part of the other characters. He leaves the film the same way he enters: A mystery.


If you're willing to overlook the presence of a vampire serial killer, THE NIGHT STALKER is a pretty typical film noir. In fact, the film has more in common with the existential nightmares of Raymond Chandler than the monster movies produced by Carl Laemmle for Universal. The vampire is far and away the least dangerous villain of this film. Had it been made 30 years earlier, it might have starred Fred MacMurrary.

As is typical for noir, THE NIGHT STALKER lacks the presence of a hero. Oh, it has a protagonist in the form of Kolchak, played by Darren McGavin, but there's nothing especially heroic about him. As the story begins, he's a down-on-his-luck reporter working, he insists frequently, for a crummy newspaper in Las Vegas. Beside Kolchak's complaints, we aren't given any examples as to how the newspaper is lousy. It's likely he's voiced these same criticisms of his previous ten employers, which is why he's so prone to unemployment. In short, he's an asshole.

Kolchak makes a connection between a series of murders in the city, insisting they're the work of one person. This "connection" is held together less by facts than by Kolchak's own need for validation, though. You get the sense that Kolchak has a score to settle ... not just with his former employers, who were clearly correct when they fired him, but with the world at large. There's always a weird moment in vampire films when a character has to make a logical leap to believing in the supernatural, but this transition feels right for Kolchak. You never get the impression that he really believes his own bullshit, and mostly latches onto his serial killer/vampire theories for no other reason than they'd make for good stories.

Good stories with his name attached to them, I should say. Based on what we see in THE NIGHT STALKER, Kolchak is not a good newspaper reporter. He's not a responsible one, at any rate, and he seems to have gotten lucky with his vampire conclusion.


A little research eventually identifies the killer as Janos Skorzeny, a wealthy Romanian national born in 1899, and played by character actor Barry Atwater. Skorzeny has spent most of his life traveling, apparently in search of innovative ways to integrate himself into society. Posing as a doctor, we're told he preyed on air raid victims in London hospitals during World War II before moving on to Canada in the late 1940s. At some point, though, Skorzeny surrendered any pretense of humanity. When Kolchak finally corners him in the movie's climax, we see the vampire has been living like a vagrant in an empty house on the edge of town.

Kolchak has a crushing need to be acknowledged, a need that's ravaged his career, but Skorzeny's life has become structured around avoiding notice. The vampire had become consumed with the idea of survival, even when life had nothing to offer him.

Ultimately, it's all a wasted effort on Kolchak's part, though. Yes, he succeeds in rescuing Skorzeny's final victim from captivity, but he wastes no words of concern for her. The Powers That Be in Las Vegas  use the slaying of Skorzeny to force the obnoxious Kolchak out of town, threatening to charge him with murder if he doesn't seek more friendly climes. Just to twist the knife, they also offer Kolchak's girlfriend a similar proposition: Leave town, or face charges for unspecified unsavory activities. The movie ends with Kolchak alone, unemployed and in possession of  a book he's written about his experiences that he can neither publish nor substantiate. Like Skorzeny, he's been damned to a life without consequence.

Skorzeny has no dialogue in the film. While the device makes him a more interesting character, it becomes more curious when compared to producer Dan Curtis's previous horror success, DARK SHADOWS. Jonathan Frid, the actor who played Barnabas Collins on that show, reportedly had a less-than-warm relationship with Curtis. Frid also had problems memorizing his copious amount of dialogue for the live-on-tape TV show, and walked away from the franchise not long after shooting the feature film adaption, HOUSE OF DARK SHADOWS, in 1970. While it's probably a coincidence, I can't help but wonder if Curtis took some satisfaction in watching the surly McGavin pound a stake into the heart of a silent Frid stand-in. 


THE NIGHT STALKER works astonishingly well on a story level. As a movie, though, it's on much shakier ground.  While television movies on the 1970s were generally more ballsy than their modern counterparts, THE NIGHT STALKER's overall production is hopelessly quaint. The movie's photography, commercial-dependent story structure, sound ... everything physical about the film just feels small and pedestrian today.

McGavin's performance still sings, though. As Kolchak, he's a man blissfully unaware of how close he's standing to the edge of the world, yet also someone who probably spends a great deal of time resisting the urge to leap into the abyss. It's the kind of film noir Robert Altman might have made if he better understood the genre, only with more vampire action. If you're a fan of horror, THE NIGHT STALKER is worth the 74 minutes you'll spend with it. It wouldn't hurt your experience if you were to lower your expectations a little, though.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Dark Shadows prop stars in 1974 action movie



Technically, the great Fred "The Hammer" Williamson was the star of 1974's Black Eye, directed by Jack Arnold (Creature from the Black Lagoon, It Came from Outer Space.) But it was a very familiar Dark Shadows prop that stole the spotlight on the movie poster, which included taglines such as "Whenever the cane turns up, someone turns up dead," and "The name of the game is the cane of pain." In fairness, the famous Barnabas Collins cane was not a creation of the ABC prop department (Jonathan Frid said the cane came from "Sam the Umbrella Man on 57th St.") But it's unlikely the creators of Black Eye were unaware of the cane's significance.

Black Eye also features Richard Anderson, who appeared in the Dan Curtis-directed Kolchak film, The Night Strangler.

Has anyone out there seen this film? I'm a fan of Fred Williamson but, like Humphrey Bogart, the guy has made so many movies that it's almost impossible to keep up with them all. Yes, I just compared Fred Williamson to Humphrey Bogart.


Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Depp, Wright developing Kolchak movie



I made a terrible discovery when I was about seven years old.

It started with a handful of Pringle's potato chips. These weren't those fancy Xtreme! flavored chips the kids have today, with their skateboards and rock music and whatnot. These were salt flavored and we were happy with them.

As I was eating those Pringle's my younger brother offered me chewing gum, served in stick form as was the fashion at the time. I was happy with my Pringle's but really wanted some gum, too. So I tried to chew gum on one side of my mouth while eating potato chips on the other. What I ended up with is a wad of chewing gum with wet bits of potato pulp stuck in it. 

The moral of this story is that two things you love can sometimes create an abomination. Which brings me to my point: two things I love (Johnny Depp and Edgar Wright) are teaming up to create a feature film based on Kolchak: The Night Stalker. Is Depp working his way through the entire Dan Curtis library?


From Deadline:
  
Wright, best known for directing Shaun of the Dead and Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World, comes aboard before the studio has set a writer, and he will oversee and shape the project with Depp and Dembrowski from the ground floor. As Deadline revealed, the film took root at the studio last summer, borne out of Depp and Dembrowski’s fond memories of the original 70s movie and series that starred Darren McGavin. He covered crime for a tabloid and his cases always led to supernatural perpetrators that included zombies, vampires, werewolves and aliens. Of course, neither his editor nor anyone else would believe him or allow him to run what seemed like outrageous stories. But Kolchak would put himself in grave danger each episode. David Kennedy will be exec producer of the film.

I didn't start this blog so I could turn into some Internet cliche, always bitching and moaning about every movie that comes down the pipeline. So I'm just gonna end this post here.

Monday, February 13, 2012

A look at the Dark Shadows/Kolchak crossover


In 2009, Moonstone published a comic featuring Carl Kolchak and characters from Dark Shadows. It probably seemed like a good idea at the time, but the Kolchak Tales Annual is the definition of the word "inessential." There are a few good ideas present in the script but the writer never found a proper story to present them.


The story begins with a nod to the first episode of Dark Shadows. Instead of Victoria Winters arriving by train we get reporter Carl Kolchak, who wastes a few pages summarizing the Night Stalker/Night Strangler movies. He goes on to explain that he'd received a suspicious letter from a gentleman named Barnabas Collins in Collinsport, Maine ... as well as an invitation to his home.

A "letter" that appears to be the size of a broad-sheet newspaper.

Being curious and unemployed, Kolchak accepts the invitation and begins his journey. He's met by a man identified as Willie Loomis but we pretty much have to take the writer's word for it because the likeness is terrible. The art in "licensed" books (comics based on existing properties such as movies and TV shows) are usually spotty, at best. Because of a variety of contractual reasons the publishers of licensed properties almost always hire artists who are good at capturing the likenesses of actors instead of hiring, you know, GOOD artists. John Byrne, once one of the biggest names in comics, intentionally avoided drawing Star Trek comics because he doubted his ability to make Captain Kirk look like William Shatner. Meanwhile, members of the cast of Buffy the Vampire Slayer were reportedly so unhappy with how they were drawn in comics that they insisted on having input into the editorial process.

The end result is that nobody buys a book like Kolchak Tales for the art. Keep that in mind when looking over these pages.


Kolchak becomes convinced that Collins, who is away on Bangor for business during the reporter's daytime arrival, is a vampire seeking revenge for the slain Janos Skorzeny. This leads to a glorified slap-fight when Barnabas arrives home later that night. He and Willie disarm him, allowing for Barnabas to show Kolchak how they do exposition in Collinsport.


Yep. Barnabas is no longer a vampire. Among the many women he murdered in 1795 was one who turned into a vampire, herself. This woman later turned Janos Skorzeny, leading to the problems Kolchak experience in Las Vegas during The Night Stalker movie. Barnabas invited Kolchak to Collinwood to thank him for his efforts.


And that's pretty much it.  A lot of inner monologue, a few Three's Company-level misunderstandings and a little chit chat and Kolchak is sent home. The end.

I'm not entirely certain what I was expecting from the comic. Dark Shadows is very romantic and sentimental, while the two Kolchak movies were much more realistic and cynical. Even though they share a few occult similarities the two properties are very, very different. The final product is something that is empty of story, unless you count obligatory fan service (such as mentioning Tony Peterson's law firm) as "story."

In other word, give this book a miss. If you need a Dark Shadows comicbook fix there's a perfectly good series now being published from Dynamite. The first collection is due in trade paperback in April.
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