Seeing as how this playful
horror show is not only a modestly budgeted telefilm but also the first of two
pilot movies that preceded a short-lived series, The Night Stalker has cast a long shadow. A cult favorite for its
mixture of humor and shock value, The
Night Stalker and the weekly show it spawned—Kolchak: The Night Stalker—have been repeatedly cited by producer
Chris Carter as the principal inspiration for his enduring X-Files franchise. Indeed, prior to The Night Stalker, it was rare for episodic television to feature
ghouls and and monsters, except in the safe zones of anthology shows
(e.g., The Twilight Zone) and
comedies (e.g., The Munsters).
Tellingly, one of the key players behind The
Night Stalker, producer Dan Curtis, tested the public’s tolerance for
small-screen scares by creating the vampire-themed daytime soap Dark Shadows, which ran from 1966 to
1971.
The Night Stalker teamed Curtis
with gifted fantasist Richard Matheson, who adapted the script from a book by
Jeffrey Grant Rice. Like Curtis, Matheson was highly skilled at making spooky
stuff palatable to TV viewers—witness his success with episodes of The Twilight Zone and the Steven
Spielberg-directed telefilm Duel
(1971). But enough about pedigree. While The
Night Stalker is particularly interesting for its place in TV history, the
movie is fun on its own merits, although its power to thrill has dulled with
the passage of time and the accompanying coarsening of filmed entertainment.
Darren McGavin, perfectly cast, plays Carl Kolchak, a low-rent reporter with a
vivid imagination. Exploring the circumstances of bizarre murders in Las Vegas,
Carl latches onto the wild idea that the killer is a real-life vampire—not a
crazy person who acts like a mythical bloodsucker, but an actual supernatural
creature. Naturally, this notion vexes Carl’s long-suffering editor, Tony
Vincenzo (Simon Oakland), as well as local authorities including the
hot-tempered Sheriff Warren A. Butcher (Claude Akins). Undaunted, Kolchak
gathers enough evidence to persuade everyone that the preternaturally resilient
murderer Janos Skorzeny (Barry Atwater) must be staked in the heart. Easier
said than done.
Unfolding with the familiar rhythms of a police
procedural—clues, setbacks, witnesses, etc.—The
Night Stalker builds a decent head of steam, with reliable TV director John
Llewellyn Moxey delivering a lively version of the Dan Curtis house style.
Think dramatic lighting, slow-burn suspense sequences, and zesty fight scenes.
McGavin’s performance, as well as the motor-mouthed dialogue that Matheson
provides for the actor, elevates the material considerably. Kolchak’s
exasperation at the reluctance of authorities to believe the obvious is
palpable, and his tap-dancing way of trying to play events for his advantage is
consistently amusing. If there’s a weak link in the formula behind this piece,
it’s Curtis’ usual predilection toward showing things full-frame instead of
opting for mystery—the producer subscribes to the blunt-force-trauma school of
storytelling.
Nonetheless, the combination of the offbeat material and
McGavin’s winning performance was worth sustaining, hence a second telefilm, The Night Strangler (1973), which Curtis
directed from a Matheson script, and the 20 weekly episodes of Kolchak, airing between September 1974
and March 1975. A poorly received revival series, titled The Night Stalker and featuring Stuart Townsend in the lead, flamed
out over the course of 10 episodes in the 2005–2006 TV season.
The Night Stalker: GROOVY
Peter, thanks for getting to this. I recall that, in my teenage years, this unified my whole family: Mom enjoyed the variety of folklore that it exploited, I loved the sheer diversion of it, and Dad appreciated its sly Watergate-era undertones, along the lines of "What horrors are The Establishment hiding from us?" David Chase, who would go on to "The Rockford Files" and then of course "The Sopranos," contributed some of his earliest work here. Creator Jeff Rice first pitched this as The Front Page meets Dracula. A minor but enduring classic.
ReplyDeleteSimilarly, I was taken aback at high school when my art teacher not only knew about this show, but said he enjoyed it....I think it was the first time an adult expressed a liking for something that would have been written off as silly rubbish by most "grown ups"
ReplyDeleteThere's an interesting 1965 novel titled PROGENY OF THE ADDER, by Leslie Whitten, that is *very* similar to The Night Stalker. In fact there's been much debate, among folks who are interested in that sort of thing, as to whether Stalker creator Jeff Rice knew the novel beforehand.
ReplyDeleteActually, these weren't done as pilots - the first movie spawned a sequel, and THEN ABC decided to spinoff a series (done at Universal without Curtis). One of the episodes gave Robert Zemeckis and his partner Bob Gale one of their first writing credits.
ReplyDeleteThe new version was actually called "Night Stalker" (no "The," just as they weren't called "Outer Limits" or "The Star Trek").
I think I rented this many years ago. I always have a fascination about films taking place in Las Vegas. I remember nothing about the plot line but inconsistency of filming locates; one being Las Vegas the other set being a big Victorian mansion. I just couldn't buy a Victorian mansion being in the Nevada desert.
ReplyDeleteSorry Cindylover1969, but it is indeed The Outer Limits.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCcdr4O-3gE
I know it has "The" in its title. Read my post again carefully.
DeleteI 🖤 KOLCHAK
ReplyDeleteIndispensable viewing, and the best "Made for TV" horror film ever made, in my opinion. Exceptionally well-paced, with a tight script and a memorable climax.
ReplyDelete