The Night Stalker (telemovie)

The Night Stalker (telemovie)

Infobox Film
name = The Night Stalker
format = Thriller / Horror
runtime = 73 minutes
creator = Jeffery Grant Rice
starring = Darren McGavin
Simon Oakland
Carol Lynley
Claude Akins
Larry Linville
Ralph Meeker
Charles McGraw
Elisha Cook Jr.
Kent Smith
Barry Atwater
country = USA
network = ABC
Film Company = ABC Circle Films
Program = ABC Movie Of The Week
first_aired = January 11, 1972
followed_by =

"The Night Stalker" was a made for television movie which aired on ABC in 1972 about an investigative reporter, played by Darren McGavin, who has a penchant for dealing with the bizarre, supernatural, U.F.O.'s, and the paranormal. The film was based on an original unpublished short story titled "The Kolchak Papers", written by Jeffery Grant Rice. In the story, Las Vegas newspaper reporter Carl Kolchak comes across a serial killer working on The Las Vegas Strip who is a modern day Count Dracula named Janos Skorzeny.

Pocket Books finally published the book as a paperback original using the title "The Night Stalker", with a photograph of McGavin wearing his trademark porkpie hat and seersucker suit.

The film did well enough that it resulted in a 1973 follow-up movie called ' and a planned 1974 movie entitled ' which instead evolved into the 1974-75 television series titled "", with McGavin reprising his role in both.

An episode of the series entitled "The Vampire" was an actual sequel to this movie deriving its story from characters introduced in it.

Following the series cancellation, the franchise itself was still thought well enough of to prompt two more movies which were created by editing together material from 4 previous episodes of the series, with some additional narration provided by McGavin as Kolchak to help connect the plot lines. No new footage was included, however.

Plot

In the opening of the film, Kolchak is sitting on the bed of a sleazy hotel room speaking into his trademark portable tape recorder about the story he has written and how it has been withheld by the authorities. He describes a series of murders that had plagued the world-famous Las Vegas Strip. All of the victims had their blood drained, and Kolchak discovers the killer is a vampire, much to the chagrin of his cantankerous boss Anthony (aka Tony, Antonio) Vincenzo, portrayed by actor Simon Oakland. Kolchak also has a girlfriend named Gail Foster (Carol Lynley) who earns her living as a dancer. During the movie, Kolchak attempts to get her to give up her night job, though he does not offer her a proposal marriage, or other commitment. Kolchak is able to convince the police that they are fighting a vampire, but it is he who ultimately takes the vampire down and unlike subsequent productions, he does so with the help of his friend in the FBI (a credible eyewitness). In the end, Kolchak relates that his deal with the police for an exclusive was not honored and he was run out of town as was separately his girlfriend, for engaging in unsavory activities. Kolchak says he has placed ads in personal columns looking for her, but that he thinks it unlikely he will ever find her again.

Differences from subsequent productions

While Carl Kolchak and Tony Vincenzo both appear, no other characters from the movies appear in later productions. In this film and the next, Kolchak establishes the use of both a portable tape recorder which is considerably larger than that used in the series and clearly labeled Sony. His ubiquitous camera with flash attachment is also established but rather than the Pocket instamatic he uses in the series, he uses a standard 35mm in the first movie. He also introduces the trademark straw pork-pie hat. However, unique to this movie alone, Kolchak actually wears more than one suit as well as in a variety of materials, not the same identifiable seersucker suit seen in every production thereafter, à la Columbo. In the second movie, he permanently adopts the classic seersucker suit (though he alternates with one other in blue), but continues to wear different colored shirts and ties, the last production in which the character would do this. He wears white loafers in the movies, not adopting white leather tennis shoes permanently until the series. In contrast, Tony Vincenzo would only appear in the first movie without his identifiable 3-piece suits and instead sporting a substantially more casual look in open-collard short-sleeved shirts. Also, the first two movies found Kolchak driving an old rusted blue 1968 Chevrolet Camaro Rallye Sport Convertible, rather than his usual 1965 pastel yellow Mustang convertible driven throughout the series. Perhaps most importantly, Kolchak has a girlfriend in the first movie, the only relationship he would have during Darren McGavin's portrayal of the character.

ee also

*
*Crackle of Death (3rd produced movie)
*The Demon And The Mummy (4th movie)


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