The Night Strangler (film)
The Night Strangler | |
---|---|
Jo Ann Pflug and Darren McGavin in The Night Strangler | |
Genre |
Crime Horror Mystery Thriller |
Written by | Richard Matheson |
Directed by | Dan Curtis |
Starring |
Darren McGavin Simon Oakland Jo Ann Pflug Richard Anderson |
Music by | Bob Cobert |
Country of origin | United States |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
Dan Curtis Robert Singer (associate producer) |
Cinematography | Robert B. Hauser |
Editor(s) | Folmar Blangsted |
Running time | 74 minutes (TV Premiere) |
Production company(s) | ABC Circle Films |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | January 16, 1973 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | The Night Stalker |
Followed by | Kolchak: The Night Stalker |
The Night Strangler is a television film which first aired on ABC on January 16, 1973 as a sequel to The Night Stalker.[1]
The Night Strangler proved almost as popular as its predecessor garnering strong ratings and eventually prompting ABC to order a TV series (neither writer Richard Matheson nor producer/director Dan Curtis was involved in the TV series). In the United States the TV movie ran (without commercials) approximately 74 minutes. ABC planned to release the film overseas as a theatrical release and had additional footage shot rounding out the movie to 90 minutes.[2]
Plot
In 1973, reporter Carl Kolchak (Darren McGavin), now in Seattle, Washington (having been run out of Las Vegas at the end of the last film), is hired by his former editor, Tony Vincenzo (Simon Oakland), assigned to the story of a series of killings in which the victims, all exotic dancers, are strangled, have their necks crushed and are then drained of a few ounces of blood.
Researcher Titus Berry (Wally Cox) discovers that there was a similar rash of killings in 1952, setting Kolchak on the trail of another unbelievable story. Kolchak investigates further murders (with the reluctant support of Vincenzo), but is stonewalled by the police, wanting to have certain details of the murders kept secret.
Out of "burning curiosity," Berry researches further back, and he learns of another series of murders in 1931; Kolchak notes that it is 21 years from 1973 to 1952 and another 21 years from 1952 to 1931. Together they look further back to 1910 and discover another series of murders; it turns out that they have been occurring every 21 years since 1889.
Kolchak discovers that each series of murders took place over a period of 18 days; after further investigation it seems the killer needs the blood for a kind of elixir of life which keeps him alive for 21 years at a time. Of course, no one believes Kolchak, and the powers that be want to silence him.
Berry uncovers further clues in an old interview with Mark Twain and a vital clue leading to a Dr. Richard Malcolm, a surgeon in the Union Army during the Civil War, who was one of the original staff at the Westside Mercy Hospital.
Though the hospital is long gone, Kolchak goes to the clinic standing on the site, in the hope that it might still have the hospital's old records, but he finds something far more important just inside the front door: a painting of the clinic's founder, a Dr. Malcolm Richards, who is the spitting image of Richard Malcolm.
Kolchak calls Berry to meet him there and proceeds to alter the painting to make the similarity more obvious. Berry is amazed, but the police are less than impressed, and Kolchak is arrested.
Finally, Kolchak and Berry convince the police (and their boss) of the facts: that the killer really is practically immortal, and that he will kill again. But the story is once again suppressed.
Kolchak enters into a race against time to stop the killer before he is able to complete the creation of his elixir and disappear for another 21 years.
Novelization of TV Film
In the novelization The Night Strangler, from the TV film of the same title, it is strongly hinted that the immortal villain, Dr. Richard Malcolm, is actually the Count of St. Germain. When asked directly, Malcolm laughs ironically but does not deny it.
Third TV film sequel
A third film was planned which was based on a story by Richard Matheson but completed by science fiction and horror novelist William F. Nolan (the two share credit on the unproduced script). The third film was set aside when ABC elected to order the TV series and have it produced by Universal (none of the original participants aside from actors Darren McGavin and Simon Oakland appeared in the TV series).
Entitled The Night Killers and set in Hawaii, the script had Tony Vincenzo hiring Kolchak to work for him. Once again Kolchak discovers a cover-up—this time involving a mysterious UFO, a nuclear power plant and important people being murdered and replaced by androids. Kolchak ties all of this together believing that the aliens on the UFO landed on Earth intending to set up a colony and replacing key government figures with these androids to assist them in their secret colony.[3][4]
Cast
- Darren McGavin as Carl Kolchak
- Jo Ann Pflug as Louise Harper
- Simon Oakland as Tony Vincenzo
- Scott Brady as Capt. Schubert
- Wally Cox as Titus Berry
- Margaret Hamilton as Prof. Crabwell
- John Carradine as Llewellyn Crossbinder
- Al Lewis as Tramp
- Nina Wayne as Charisma Beauty
- Virginia Peters as Wilma Krankheimer
- Kate Murtagh as Janie Watkins
- Ivor Francis as Dr. Webb
- Diane Shalet as Joyce Gabriel
- Anne Randall as Policewoman Sheila
- Francoise Birnheim as Restaurant Woman
- Richard Anderson as Dr. Richard Malcolm/Dr. Malcolm Richards
Release
The film was released on a double feature DVD with The Night Stalker by MGM Home Entertainment in 2004.
See also
- The Night Stalker the predecessor to The Night Strangler
- Kolchak: The Night Stalker, a 1974 television series based on the movies, also starring Darren McGavin
- Night Stalker, a 2005 remake of the original Kolchak series
- Squeeze, an episode of The X-Files with a similar plot
References
- ↑ "The Night Strangler". The New York Times.
- ↑ The Night Stalker Companion," by Mark Dawidziak
- ↑ Darrenmcgavin.net
- ↑ This theme of Androids taking over the Earth was used in the Japanese Cartoon "Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks (1993)".