| Cast
and Crew: |
Darren McGavin,
Simon Oakland, Carol Lynley, Larry Linville, Wally Cox, Ralph
Meeker, Richard Anderson, Barry Atwater, Claude Akins |
| The
Review: |
The conspiracy can finally be revealed.
Even “The X-Files” was in on this one. The smoking man wasn’t
Mulder’s father after all. Carl Kolchak is Fox Mulder’s father.
Hang with me and the truth will be revealed. In January 1972
ABC ran a movie of the week they had mixed feelings about.
The promos had received a good response and preview audiences
rated it as highly as a very good theatrical film. “The Night
Stalker” seemed like it was slumming since it really was a
horror movie about a vampire stalking women in modern day
Las Vegas. The modern day Van Helsing hunting down the vampire
is a veteran, cynical reporter in a seersucker suit. Reporter
Carl Kolchak (Darren McGavin) has had many big stories in
his day but his sensationalistic style rubs his editor Vincenzo
(Simon Oakland) the wrong way. Kolchak has a habit of ticking
off city officials and generally getting the paper in hot
water. When Kolchak announces in his story that a modern day
vampire stalks the city streets he runs into a city cover
up. Kolchak becomes the only person that can stop the vampire
(Barry Atwater) because no one will believe his incredible
story. ***
“The Night Stalker” really put
ABC’s “Movie of the Week” on the map. With an unheard of 54
share (meaning over half the audience in the United States
were watching the program), it blew away every other TV movie
including the well regarded “Brian’s Song” that came before
it. Writer Richard Matheson (“The Twilight Zone”, “What Dreams
May Come”), producer Dan Curtis (“Dark Shadows”) and veteran
TV and movie director John L. Moxey (“Circus of Fear”) crafted
an amazing TV event. When it was first shown to ecstatic preview
audiences ABC vice-president Barry Diller realized that they
should have turned it into a theatrical feature. McGavin’s
Kolchak and the second TV film and 1974 TV series that followed
became the inspiration for Chris Carter’s “The X-Files” and
“Millennium”. The first TV film holds up very well thirty-three
years later. Moxey’s sharp, realistic direction, Matheson’s
humorous but no nonsense script and the strong performances
from the cast make this that rare TV movie that has the same
qualities as a dynamic theatrical movie. At 74 minutes the
brief, powerful first film is the better of the two. The sequel
“The Night Strangler” also set the industry abuzz with a script
that took all the best elements of the first film and crafted
another suspenseful story that, if slightly less effective,
still managed to capture the imagination of TV audiences.
***
“The Night Strangler” takes place
in Seattle, Washington. Kolchak was fired at the end of the
first film. Vincenzo now the editor of the Seattle Daily Chronicle
runs into a drunk Kolchak showing his clippings about the
killer in the first film to any reporter that will sit still.
Vincenzo takes pity on Kolchak and, against his better judgement,
hires him again. The dead end story of the murder of an exotic
dancer suddenly inflames local officals when Kolchak discovers
that the same pattern of murders reoccur every 100 years.
The circumstances are quite different from those of the first
film. The victims all had their necks broken but with 7cc
of blood and a puncture mark at the base of the skull. Kolchak’s
incredible story causes Vincenzo’s ulcer to act up. Suddenly,
Kolchak is hunting monsters again very much on his own. ***
With a strong supporting cast,
witty well written script and taunt direction by Dan Curtis,
”The Night Strangler” also became a huge success prompting
ABC to commission yet a third script from Matheson. Instead,
the network decided to develop the films into a TV series
but then, strangely, dumped it in the TV graveyard on Friday
night at 9 o’clock. It was summarily cancelled after only
21 episodes but the inspiration of “Kolchak: The Night Stalker”
and the rest, as they say, is history. ---
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