Despite overseeing the TV
movies The Night Stalker (1972) and The Night Strangler (1973), producer Dan
Curtis wasn’t involved with the short-lived series derived from those pictures,
Kolchak: The Night Stalker.
Undaunted, Curtis produced and directed a feature-length pilot for a copycat
project titled The Norliss Tapes.
Although the proposed series never materialized, the Norliss Tapes feature survives today, via syndication and home
video, as a stand-alone thriller featuring Curtis’ favorite monster, the
vampire. (Lest we forget, Curtis created the cult-fave bloodsucker soap opera Dark Shadows, which ran from 1966 to
1971.) While The Norliss Tapes is
unquestionably derivative, it’s a decent little shocker with a solid cast of
reliable B-level actors.
When the picture begins, publisher Sanford Evans (Don
Porter) visits the home of an author who’s gone missing, then finds recordings
related to the author’s in-progress book. As Evans listens to the tapes, we see
flashbacks depicting weird events the author, David Norliss (Roy Thinnes),
witnessed. In true Curtis fashion, things get spooky fast, with little left to
the imagination. It turns out Norliss was contacted by a woman named Ellen Cort
(Angie Dickinson), who claimed to have seen her dead husband rooting around
their house as a vampire/zombie/whatever. (Curtis presents this vignette with
full-on monster makeup, offering a nastier jolt than one might expect from a
small-screen flick.)
Meeting Ellen starts Norliss down the road of
investigating nefarious types who are bringing the dead back to life for
mysterious reasons. Along the way, Norliss encounters a sexy spiritualist
(Vonetta McGee), a disbelieving sheriff (Claude Akins), and, eventually, a demon
trying to enter the mortal world. Curtis crams a lot of enjoyably silly stuff
into 74 minutes, so even though Thinnes is a forgettable leading man, it’s easy
to see where this material could have gone with a more dynamic star. It doesn’t
hurt that Dickinson looks fantastic, and that Curtis was adept at boosting
production value with low camera angles and shadowy lighting. The Norliss Tapes won’t linger very long
in your memory, but it’s fun to watch once.
The Norliss Tapes: FUNKY
1 comment:
Had this pilot sold, the plan was to never reveal what happened to Norliss. So you can see why it didn't sell.
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