After actor/producer Andy
Griffith left the series that bore his name, the 1960-1968 family favorite The Andy Griffith Show, he spent nearly
two decades casting about for another project that curried equal favor with the
public. Some of the failed pilots and short-lived series he made during these
wilderness years, which extended until the 1986 launch of his geriatric-lawyer
show Matlock, are interesting because
they’re edgier than the kind of material one normally associates with Griffith. For instance, the 1974 telefilm Winter Kill, the first of three TV movies designed to launch a new
series featuring Griffith as a small-town sheriff facing grislier problems than
The Andy Griffith Show’s unflappable
Andy Taylor ever encountered, is a suspense story about a serial killer. It’s
startling to see good-ol’-boy Griffith tracking down a psycho who slips on a
ski mask and prowls around a snow-covered resort town by night, blowing away
victims with a shotgun and spray-painting the number of each murder near the
crime scene. Mayberry, this ain’t.
Even aside from the novelty of seeing Griffith
in a new context, Winter Kill is
fairly effective, and with good reason: Screenwriter John Michael Hayes, whose
career was winding down at this point, counted three Alfred Hitchcock classics,
including the seminal Rear Window
(1954), among his past credits, so he clearly learned a few things about
generating tension from the Master of Suspense. Winter Kill unfurls in a straightforward fashion, with Sheriff Sam
McNeill (Griffith) uncovering his neighbors’ tawdry secrets while he looks for
connections between murder victims. This prompts flashbacks showcasing the
sordid sex lives of various townies, and we also discover the pressures McNeil
faces when he starts treating his constituents as suspects.
Although the specifics
of the story are a bit on the generic side and the supporting cast is largely
populated with workaday actors (exception: a young Nick Nolte shows up as a
cocky ski instructor), Winter Kill
manages to sustain interest from start to finish because Hayes and director Jud
Taylor stay focused on the race to catch the killer. Furthermore, the murder
scenes are memorable for their docudrama simplicity: Watching the masked killer
methodically load his weapon and then trudge through snow toward his next
victim preys upon the universal fear of something awful creeping out of the
night. And who better to protect us than our beloved Sheriff
Andy? If nothing else, Winter Kill is a reminder of Griffith’s versatility, something worth remembering on the sad event of his passing today at the age of 86. (Available at WarnerArchive.com)
Winter Kill: GROOVY
Sounds interesting and a little creepy. Thanks. I'll be checking this out shortly.
ReplyDelete