Showing posts with label TV Movie Terror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TV Movie Terror. Show all posts

Thursday, October 31, 2019

20 of the Best Made For Television Horror/Thriller Films of the 70s and 80s




After constantly coming in well behind CBS and NBC in the ratings, the ABC Network gambled on a weekly anthology series of Made For Television productions in the hopes they could offer some legitimate competition to the two other major Networks. Initially designed as low budget pictures to fit a 90 minute time slot (sometimes a 2 hour slot), the Movie of the Week concept occasionally acted as a testing ground for potential television programs like STARSKY AND HUTCH and the first attempt at launching WONDER WOMAN as a series with Cathy Lee Crosby. Lasting six seasons between 1969 and 1975, some genuine classics (like DUEL and BRIAN'S SONG) were sprinkled among a slew of cult items. After the Movie of the Week finished its lengthy run, ABC continued to produce TV pictures as well as airing theatrical movies or even movies designed for theatrical release but made their world premieres on the small screen. The following list is a selection of some of the best Made For Television productions offered by 'The Big Three' between the years of 1970 through 1985. All films are accompanied by their original TV Guide premiere advertisement where applicable.

1. CROWHAVEN FARM 1970

Debuted November 24th, 1970 as the ABC Movie of the Week from 8:30pm-10:00pm

TV Guide description: "Crowhaven Farm (1970), a Made For TV chiller about witches, death and reincarnation. The drama centers on Maggie Porter, new owner of the farm, who's being tormented by eerie dreams."

After the theatrical success of ROSEMARY'S BABY (1968), the subject of witchcraft and satanism was transferred to the television medium in the form of the Aaron Spelling produced chiller, CROWHAVEN FARM; a sinister tale of revenge and reincarnation that, due to its own unexpectedly huge success, inspired imitations of its own such as the ominous Made For TV two-parter THE DARK SECRET OF HARVEST HOME (1978). A benchmark of TV Movie Terror, the majority of the FARM and the surrounding rural community differs from ROSEMARY'S cityscape coven. Incidentally, the popularity, and also the safety net of the TV movie format gave Polanski's classic horror film a Made For TV sequel in 1976 with LOOK WHAT'S HAPPENED TO ROSEMARY'S BABY. CROWHAVEN FARM's cast is crammed full of familiar faces like John Carradine; and even the ultimate Tough Guy William Smith appears in the very last scene to deliver a vaguely menacing message following a twist ending key to why CROWHAVEN is so well remembered. FARM's competition was NBC's fascinating SciFi-Horror-Thriller, HAUSER'S MEMORY about a scientist working for the CIA injecting himself with the cerebrospinal fluid of a dead scientist to preserve his memories on military secrets; only insidious figures wish to have that information. It aired from 9pm-11pm and starred David McCallum, Susan Strasberg and Leslie Nielsen.

2. DUEL 1971

Debuted Saturday, November 13th, 1971 as the ABC Movie of the Weekend from 7:30pm-9:00pm

TV Guide description:"'Duel', a nightmare on a deserted highway. You're doing 55. You floor it to pass a gas truck and it's cler driving ahead. Not quite... minutes later the truck is back, a hulking mass of metal that looms up from behind, shoots around you a missile and cuts you off. The deadly game begins. Dennis Weaver plays the prey in the TV-movie, filmed on location in the rugged Soledad Canyon area of Southern California. The story, published last march in Playboy, was written by horror film veteran Richard Matheson after an encounter with a reckless truck driver. Directed by Steven Spielberg."

Early in his career, Steven Spielberg directed one of the most famous Made For Television thrillers ever produced. Essentially a cat and mouse plot between a guy in a red car and an unseen lunatic in a very big truck, Spielberg extracts the maximum amount of suspense from a simplistic premise. DUEL was so good, additional scenes were shot for overseas theatrical play. Slickly made and bordering on horror, DUEL never feels like a TV production. DUELing for network ratings opposite ABC was NBCs rerun of THE WAR WAGON (1967) starring John Wayne and Kirk Douglas. Popular TV actor Dennis Weaver delivers a nerve-jangling performance that, while initially coming off as unlikable, eventually wins over audience sympathy. Weaver starred in two other Tele-Terror productions, the STRAW DOGS inspired TERROR ON THE BEACH (1973) and the ghost revenge horror of DON'T GO TO SLEEP (1982). DUEL's popularity ensured many repeat airings over the course of the next two decades. Spielberg's career would quickly skyrocket after directing JAWS (1975); a directing gig he got because of his phenomenally taut work on this little suspenser shot in Southern California. At the time of its debut, DUEL was not previewed by critics.

3. THE NIGHT STALKER 1972

Debuted January 11th, 1972 as the ABC Tuesday Movie of the Week from 7:30pm-9:00pm.

TV Guide description: "A modern monster story: Darren McGavin stars as a Las Vegas reporter on the trail of a maniac who thinks he's a vampire. This TV-movie was filmed on location."


THE NIGHT STALKER, a ghoulishly stylish horror movie, was at one time the highest rated film made for television. It beget a TV-movie sequel, THE NIGHT STRANGLER (1973), that debuted nearly a year to the day in January of the following year. Surprised and impressed by the ratings bonanzas of the two films, ABC bankrolled a TV series titled KOLCHAK, THE NIGHT STALKER (1974) which, unfortunately, survived for only a single season. The same fate awaited a 2005 reboot series. Dan Curtis, fresh off DARK SHADOWS (1966-1971) and two theatrical films based on that popular soap opera (1970s HOUSE OF DARK SHADOWS and 1971s NIGHT OF DARK SHADOWS), produced and John Llewellyn Moxey (CITY OF THE DEAD) directed. Dan Curtis would quickly become synonymous with small screen horror as well as its master.

Aside from Darren McGavin's infectious Carl Kolchak, who always seems to rub everyone the wrong way, the movie benefits from a ravenously energetic vampire villain played by Barry Atwater. An abundance of action and stunts elevate the film above the usual TV standards. THE NIGHT STALKER was released to theaters overseas and, in traditional fashion, was spared Judith Crist's critical wrath prior to its debut. Other than a 60 minute special on NBC titled SUFFER THE LITTLE CHILDREN about the effects of violence on the youngsters in war-ravaged Northern Ireland, THE NIGHT STALKER dominated prime time.

4. GARGOYLES 1972

Debuted November 21st, 1972 as the CBS Tuesday Night Movie from 9:30pm-11:00pm

TV Guide description: "Special effects such as flying monsters steal the show in 'Gargoyles', a horror fantasy about half-man, half-reptile creatures planning to wipe out the human race. Cornel Wilde is the anthropologist out to stop them. This TV movie was filmed in Carlsbad Caverns, New Mexico."

Thoroughly entertaining and showcasing impressive monster suits that belies its television production origins, GARGOYLES is fun stuff for the Drive-in crowd and still holds up today. Another plus is the aura of cross-country Americana with its roadside attractions that's all but extinct today. Future Oscar winning FX master Stan Winston did the monster makeups. Bernie Casey (HITMAN; DR. BLACK AND MR. HYDE) plays the leader of the cave-dwelling creatures. Giving GARGOYLES a run for its ratings was a repeat of the Made For Television Emmy winning drama BRIAN'S SONG (1971) from 8:30pm-10:00pm; while NBC countered with a repeat of 1961s award-winning WEST SIDE STORY from 8pm-11pm. As was often the case, GARGOYLES was unseen by critics prior to airing. Additionally, there was no advertisement for the picture's premiere.

5. A COLD NIGHT'S DEATH 1973

Debuted January 30th, 1973 as the ABC Tuesday Movie of the Week from 8:30pm-10:00pm.

TV Guide description: "A Cold Night's Death, starring Robert Culp and Eli Wallach as scientists trapped in a snow-bound research station. Worse: they're under attack by some unknown force terrorizing them to the brink of insanity. The electronic background score was composed by Gil Melle who scored Andromeda Strain."

One of the most chillingly creepy films you're likely to see, television director Jerrold Freedman (1972s KANSAS CITY BOMBER) and writer Christopher Knopf (1957s 20 MILLION MILES TO EARTH) utilized the budgetary limitations of network productions to their advantage with a single locale and a limited cast. The arctic isolation is frightening and the mesmerizing performances of Robert Culp and Eli Wallach hold your attention till the final, terrifying reveal. Competition for this Cold Night came in the form of BAFFLED, an occult-themed thriller on NBC starring Leonard Nimoy; and over on CBS was the crime drama BIRDS OF PREY starring David Janssen. As was often the case with most TV movies with creepy subject matter, A COLD NIGHT'S DEATH was unavailable for preview to critics; nor did TV Guide feature an advertisement for the film's debut. Like a lot of quality TV pictures, this one played theaters overseas. Ice-cold horror in the vein of Campbell's 'Who Goes There?', Freedman's blood-freezing slow burn is small-screen horror at its finest.

6. THE NORLISS TAPES 1973

Debuted February 21st, 1973 as the NBC Wednesday Night Movie from 7:30pm-9:00pm

TV Guide description: "'The Norliss Tapes', a pilot for a possible series, stars Roy Thinnes a a writer investigating the supernatural. First up: the case of a walking dead man. Filmed in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Carmel, CA."

Dan Curtis's underrated spooker was his second TV Movie directing gig after THE NIGHT STRANGLER (1973), which debuted a little over a month earlier. Designed as a potential weekly series about the search for an occult investigator who left behind a box of tapes of his paranormal explorations, it never made it past the pilot stage; so what became of David Norliss remains a mystery. Had the film rivaled the wild success of THE NIGHT STALKER (1972), then likely we'd of gotten at least a seasons worth of the supernatural. ABC's 7:30pm competition was in a similar vein with AND NO ONE COULD SAVE HER (1973), about Lee Remick's search for her husband who boarded a plane for Ireland and never got off. Unlike ABC's offering, NBC's THE NORLISS TAPES was kept from critical nitpicking prior to its premiere.

7. DON'T BE AFRAID OF THE DARK 1973

Debuted October 10th, 1973 as the ABC Wednesday Night Movie from 8:30pm-10:00pm

TV Guide description: "Mysterious, demon-like creatures are the chilling forces in 'Don't Be Afraid of the Dark.' For some unknown reason, the evil urchins are trying to terrorize a woman to death. John Newland ('One Step Beyond') directed this 1973 TV movie."


One of the most famous TV Terror's, DON'T BE AFRAID OF THE DARK wrangles some genuine, if minor, chills in its 74 minute running time. This was also the week Dan Curtis's DRACULA was to have debuted (more on that elsewhere in this article). Judith Crist showed anticipation for that one due to her love of Jack Palance but spared DARK, which was not available for review, any scathing remarks. Many who saw the film as kids upon its TV debut vividly remember the whispering little monsters scaring the hell out of them. Like some other titles on this list, DARK is one of those film's that stays with you. The forgettable 2010 remake from Guillermo Del Toro (a huge fan of the original) pales in comparison with its dull narrative and plodding pacing. The short-lived (only 4 episodes) cop drama, TENAFLY (1973-1974) starring James McEachin, had its debut pilot episode in the same time-slot. A big spooky mansion, hidden passageways, and minuscule, murderous monsters backed by a nicely eerie score by Billy Goldenberg (DUEL) make for a tasty Halloween treat for nostalgia lovers.

8. FRANKENSTEIN: THE TRUE STORY 1973

Debuted November 30th, 1973 as the NBC Friday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm. Part 2 debuted the following night in the same time-slot.

TV Guide description:"Frankenstein--without a monster. This two-part adaptation has all of the Gothic trappings of Mary Shelley's novel, but the creature who comes off the doctor's table tonight is a handsome youth with an inquisitive mind. With an accent more on characterization than terror, the drama revolves around the 'father-son' rapport between Dr. Frankenstein and his creation, a relationship that takes a dark turn when the creature's body mysteriously begins to deteriorate. Christopher Isherwood and Don Bachardy wrote the literate script. John Geilgud, Margaret Leighton, and Ralph Richardson have brief roles in the work. Part 2 is telecast tomorrow night at this time."

TV Guide lavished quite a bit of praise for this epic, surprisingly gory production even though the finished film was not made available to resident stuffy critic, Judith Crist. A five page color article covering the novel and the new film was featured along with several photos from the movie. The usually condescending Crist had this to say: "And for something less contemporary, there's the first two-hour installment of a two-part Frankenstein: The True Story, so termed, we're told, because adapters Christopher Isherwood and Don Bachardy have returned to the Mary Shelley original that got lost along the Karloff-monster-movie way. Leonard Whiting is the doctor, Michael Sarrazin the 'creature' in this one. Another network tried some of the same in January, you may recall. It's not so much a matter of getting the real Frankenstein to stand up, it seems, as getting all the others to lie down."

The other Frankenstein picture she references was another two-parter that debuted Tuesday January 16th and concluded Wednesday the 17th. Simply titled FRANKENSTEIN, this was a shot on video production penned by Dan Curtis with the first part airing as the ABC Late Movie (ABC Wide World of Entertainment) from 11:30pm-1:00am, the same night as Curtis's THE NIGHT STRANGLER (1973) made its debut. Starring Robert Foxworth, Susan Strasberg and Bo Svenson as the Monster, is not as well remembered. THE TRUE STORY, which had the night to itself, is easily among the best adaptations of the classic novel of science gone awry.

9. THE CAT CREATURE 1973

Debuted December 11th, 1973 as the ABC Tuesday Night Movie from 7:30pm-9:00pm.

TV Guide description: "Murder and witchcraft make for eerie moments in 'The Cat Creature', about a series of mysterious deaths somehow linked to an ancient order of Egyptian priests. Veteran actor John Carradine appears in a cameo role as a skid-row hotel clerk."

One of the better cat-creature features, Curtis Harrington's curse-filled spooker finds Meredith Baxter (later the mother on FAMILY TIES [1982-1989]) embroiled in an ancient Egyptian curse involving mummies and vampiric creatures. Harrington also helmed QUEEN OF BLOOD (1966), THE KILLING KIND (1973), and RUBY (1977). THE CAT CREATURE was not previewed for critics. Three days earlier at 7:30pm on Saturday night, ABC debuted another feline fear flick titled MANEATER, about a madman setting two Bengal tigers loose on four vacationers; directed by Vince Edwards (BEN CASEY [1961-1966])! As for THE CAT CREATURE, the cast is a good one--including David Hedison, Keye Luke, and Special Guest Star, Stuart Whitman. TV Guide's notoriously picky critic Judith Crist said, "described as 'an old fashioned horror film' that might well be one since it's written by Robert Bloch, one of the best in the business--all the evil emanates from an ancient cat-shaped amulet." And old-fashioned is exactly how it feels--in the vein of a Universal Horror picture from their more escapist, if less classy, 1940s era. THE CAT CREATURE marked its territory unopposed that night. TV Guide offered no advertisement for the film's premiere.

10. DRACULA 1973

Debuted February 8th, 1974 as the CBS Friday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm.

TV Guide description (from official debut): "Jack Palance as 'Dracula', in this 1973 TV movie, Palance plays the vampire king as a slightly pathetic figure, a victim of twisted fate--but the actor still summons up the evil of the bloodthirsty Count."

Initially set to premiere Friday night October 12th, 1973, the film (unpreviewed for critics at the time) was postponed due to the announcement of Gerald Ford's nomination for Vice President. DRACULA rose from his small-screen respite four months later to take a bite out of the ratings on February 8th, 1974. Unlike the original, intended airdate, there was no advertisement for the film's official premiere. Palance isn't as over the top as you'd expect, and is unusually good in the role, imbuing his Dracula with animalistic, sinister, and even sympathetic qualities. He's comparable to Christopher Lee, bur more intense and with more dialog. Curtis's DRACULA is simply one of the best adaptations of Stoker's novel and among the most accomplished of television productions. Judith Crist must've gotten a gander at it during the delay because her summation is unusually kind considering her typical damnation of such films: "richly produced and elegantly cast, with Jack Palance excellent and somehow touching as the bloodthirsty Count." ABC had two other premieres critics never saw of the SciFi and Thriller variety with KILLDOZER on Saturday, February 2nd; and CRY PANIC on Wednesday, February 6th.

11. TRILOGY OF TERROR 1975

Debuted March 4th, 1975 as the ABC Tuesday Movie of the Week

TV Guide description: "Trilogy of Terror, a 1975 TV-movie, features Karen Black in a trio of horror stories. In the first, she plays a single woman stalked by a doll that comes to life; in the second, she portrays both a promiscuous beauty and her prim, plain sister; the third story follows a teacher who becomes involved sexually with one of her students... ABC plans to make an announcement warning that the movie may not be suitable for all members of the family."

A fan favorite and a high point in the annals of TV terror, Karen Black (THE GREAT GATSBY; AIRPORT 1975) runs the whole show starring in three suspense/horror stories. Dan Curtis's 90 minute nail-biter has remained a cult favorite due solely to its third tale, 'Amelia'; wherein Karen Black is terrorized by a Zuni Fetish Doll accidentally brought to life. This third segment was so popular, it was released on VHS as a stand-alone short. The first two stories--one about a student who's hot for teacher and lives to regret it; and the second deals with sibling rivalry that ends in tragedy. The first two are psychological in nature while the third is full-bore horror. Competition that night was NBCs TV Movie premiere of THE LAST SURVIVORS starring Martin Sheen. TRILOGY OF TERROR was not made available for review prior to its airing. Curtis returned to the anthology format with 1977s DEAD OF NIGHT that mirrors TRILOGY's narrative flow in that the last story is a stand-out while the other two feel like filler. Curtis later directed a Made For Cable sequel, TRILOGY OF TERROR II (1996) starring Lysette Anthony in three tales of horror--one of which is a sequel to the famous killer doll story.

12. THE SAVAGE BEES 1976

Debuted November 22nd, 1976 as the NBC Monday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm.

TV Guide description: "The Savage Bees, a 1976 TV-movie, deals with a swarm of killer bees hovering over New Orleans only days before Mardi Gras."

Arguably the best of the "Bee" movies, and produced to capitalize on the African Killer Bee craze, this 1976 TV movie benefits from some taut scenes of suspense and palpable horror that belies its low budget network origins. It isn't surprising then, that Bruce Geller's tele-film made its way to theaters overseas. Unpreviewed for critics prior to its premiere, a repeat airing the following year on April 27th, 1977 yielded some surprising praise from the usual sting of Judith Crist; noting the finale as "a smashing climax worth re-seeing." Two years later, these Bees were sequelized in Lee H. Katzin's TERROR OUT OF THE SKY (1978) wherein Dan Haggerty and other cast members confront a new breed of bee that ultimately traps them and a bunch of Boy Scouts on a bus. The sequel, however, was a Tuesday Night premiere produced for CBS. Geller was famous for creating the MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE (1966-1973) series. He died in a plane crash along with another TV producer in 1978.

13. CURSE OF THE BLACK WIDOW 1977

Debuted September 16th, 1977 as the ABC Friday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm.

TV Guide description: "A deadly metamorphosis is part of the 'Curse of the Black Widow', a 1977 TV-movie that recalls the horror flicks of the 50s."

While the identity and creepy-crawly nature of the title arachno-lady is kept under wraps till the last few minutes, TV Guide's advertisement isn't shy about revealing that you're getting a cop thriller cum monster movie. The low key comedy bits are a curious inclusion for the usual serious business Dan Curtis indulged in. Some unintentional humor surfaces when the giant spider roars like Rodan! Unavailable for critical review (or drubbing as was almost always the case), Crist had this to say: "CURSE takes a negative approach to spiders, with a woman undergoing a sort of Jekyll-Hyde transformation, we're told, and becoming 'uncontrollably drawn to luring men and trapping them in her web'." Two days earlier on Wednesday saw the CBS premiere of SPIDERMAN, a 90 minute television movie that went to series the following year for a season. At 9:00pm on NBC was the fourth season debut of THE ROCKFORD FILES wherein Jim Rockford investigating a mystery man who has assumed his identity. And at 9:30pm on CBS saw the 90 minute premiere of the LOGAN'S RUN television series starring Gregory Harrison and Heather Menzies. CURSE was the small screen horror king's last TV-movie terror till 1996s TRILOGY OF TERROR 2. CURSE had a surefire ratings bonanza as a lead-in with the 60 minute documentary, THE MAKING OF STAR WARS. Arachno-mania continued three months later in December when CBS assaulted viewers with TARANTULAS: THE DEADLY CARGO.

14. THE BERMUDA DEPTHS 1978

Debuted January 27th, 1978 as the ABC Friday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm.

TV Guide description: "Marine biologists pursue a mysterious creature that haunts 'The Bermuda Depths' in this eerie 1977 romantic drama."

Arguably the most esoteric movie ever made, DEPTHS has one of the most devoted fan followings of any movie regardless of the size of the screen it was made for. The second, and most intriguing, of three Rankin-Bass co-productions with Japan's Tsuburaya Production company (famous for the vast ULTRAMAN series'), with the first being 1977's THE LAST DINOSAUR and the third 1980's THE IVORY APE. Judith Crist had this to say: "The week's one theatrical newcomer, 'The Bermuda Depths', was made for theaters but never released therein and is unavailable for preview. The plot line offered me defies description or capsulizing. Suffice it to say that with a cast headed by Burl Ives, we are promised 'an adventure, a supernatural thriller, unearthly romance and a riddle' set in the Bermuda Triangle." When it aired again as the ABC Friday Night Movie on August 29th, 1980, Crist's critical summation upon viewing the film was her usual style of derision: "Equally worthless is 1978's 'The Bermuda Depths', a mix of fantasy, science fiction, satanism, incoherent plotting and bad acting through which Burl Ives wanders." Competing for viewership on the night of DEPTH's premiere was an episode of THE ROCKFORD FILES on NBC; and a pilot for a potential, if unscheduled, horror series titled THE WORLD BEYOND aired on CBS. Straight to television in America, other movies bypassed theaters in the US making their debuts on TV such as the 1979 Italian horror film THE GREAT ALLIGATOR directed by Sergio Martino.

15. THE INITIATION OF SARAH 1978

Debuted February 6, 1978 as the ABC Monday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm.

TV Guide description: "Supernatural happenings surround 'The Initiation of Sarah' in this 1978 TV-movie about a psychic coed (Kay Lenz) and an evil sorority housemother (Shelley Winters)."

It's cute Kay Lenz versus mega-bitch Morgan Fairchild in THE INITIATION OF SARAH, a curious mix of telekinetic powers and witchcraft. Shelley Winters is basically reprising her Ma Barker BLOODY MAMA (1970) role if she were a satanist. Unavailable for critic review, Judith Crist accurately summed it up as 'Carrie goes to college'. There's some mild titillation and a few cool shock moments that have made this INITIATION a minor cult item. Kay Lenz was fresh off the wild ratings success of RICH MAN, POOR MAN (1976), and its lengthier sequel RICH MAN, POOR MAN BOOK 2 (1976-1977). Director Robert Day directed Drive-in fare like the gooey FIRST MAN INTO SPACE (1958); one of Gordon Scott's best Tarzan's in TARZAN THE MAGNIFICENT (1960); and Hammer's respectable version of SHE (1965) starring Ursula Andress, Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. Other than the conclusion of 1976s MIDWAY (making its TV premiere and with unused footage to supplement two 2 hour time slots), SARAH was virtually competition-free. The film was remade in 2006 for the ABC Family channel.

16. SALEM'S LOT 1979

Debuted November 17th, 1979 as the CBS Saturday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm. Shown in two parts, the movie concluded the following Saturday in the same time-slot.

TV Guide description:"'Salem's Lot' spells terror in this 1979 TV adaptation of Stephen King's supernatural thriller set in a mall Maine community."

There's some genuine spookers on this list, but without question the scariest of them all is Tobe Hooper's SALEM'S LOT. Forty years after its original airing, the vampires of Salem's Lot remain the most terrifying ever put to screen... big or small--with their undead pallor, yellow eyes, and blood-stained teeth. Whether it's the floating vampire kid scratching at the window begging to be let in; Geoffrey Lewis slowly rocking back and forth in a rocking chair staring with his yellow eyes; or any scene with the feral Barlow, there's many a memorably bone-chilling moment in the tiny hamlet of SALEM'S LOT. Other than the LOVE BOAT on ABC and BJ AND THE BEAR on NBC, SALEM'S LOT was unopposed on the film front. The smash hit TV-film got its first repeat on May 23rd, 1981. Again airing on a Saturday night, it was bumped up to the 8 o'clock hour and edited down from its two part airings at 2 hours each to a single 3-hour slot. With 45 minutes shaved off, producer Richard Kobritz stated, "For me, it's the best version." TV Guide afforded SALEM'S LOT an entirely different ad for its first replay, making it seem more like a dark romance than the full-fledged horror it is. A trimmed down version with some additional, more intense scenes played American cable and was released on VHS tape and to theaters overseas. As good as the original TV version is, the international cut is scary as all hell, unnerving, and highly recommended.

17. DARK NIGHT OF THE SCARECROW 1981

Debuted October 24th, 1981 as the CBS Saturday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm.

TV Guide description: "In 'Dark Night of the Scarecrow', a 1981 TV-movie, four men face chilling retribution for the vigilante slaying of a retarded man."


A prime example of small screen horror that plays like a theatrical feature, novelist and screenwriter Frank De Felitta gave genre fans a Trick r' Treat favorite for Halloween back in 1981. Genuinely scary with a spooktacular score and death scenes, despite implied, that are quite gruesome for television, it's somewhat of a horror take on John Steinbeck's famous novella 'Of Mice and Men'. In fact, Larry Drake, the kindly retarded man blamed for a murder he didn't commit, played Lennie in a Broadway version of 'Of Mice and Men' in 1985. Judith Crist and her typewriter wrote: "Charles Durning, as the local postman, heads a quartet of vigilantes who shoot down the town's simpleton, who's wrongly suspected of killing a child. When justice fails to punish the baddies, mysterious 'accidents' take place. Who's responsible? Who knows? Who cares?" Competition from the other major Networks was a LOVE BOAT with passengers Joan Van Ark, Brian Kerwin, Christopher Norris, and Flip Wilson setting sail on ABC; while over on NBC was NASHVILLE PALACE, a country and comedy variety special series premiere hosted by Roy Clark and guests including Slim Pickens, Tanya Tucker and Jerry Reed. DARK NIGHT endures as a shining example of Television Terror. Like some of the other fear flicks on this list, SCARECROW is perfect Halloween viewing.

18. DON'T GO TO SLEEP 1982

Debuted December 10th, 1982 as the ABC Friday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm.

TV Guide description: "'Don't Go To Sleep', a 1982 TV-movie, casts Valerie Harper and Dennis Weaver as the parents of a disturbed girl who believes she's being visited by a sister who died in a violent auto accident."

Arguably one of the most intense Made For Television pictures, Aaron Spelling produced this TV clone of POLTERGEIST (1982) that haunted theaters a few months earlier. Richard Lang's small-screen tale of ghostly vengeance and psychological horror is unsettling enough that it likely would've done very well if it had been released to theaters domestically; great cast, too. SLEEP's competition was an episode of the CBS Network firebrand DALLAS (1978-1991); and an episode of KNIGHT RIDER (1982-1986) in its first season on NBC. If you're a fan of the Clint classics EVERY WHICH WAY BUT LOOSE (1978) and ANY WHICH WAY YOU CAN (1980), you'll find Ruth Gordon acting in basically the same capacity just minus all the foul language. A prolific director of TV programs and TV movies, Lang also directed the gory theatrical western, THE MOUNTAIN MEN (1980) starring Charlton Heston. As for SLEEP, it didn't cause Judith Crist to lose any of hers as it was unavailable for preview.

19. I, DESIRE 1982

Debuted November 15th, 1982 as the ABC Monday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm.

TV Guide description: "A female vampire posing as a prostitute stalks modern-day Hollywood in 'I, Desire'. Stalking her: an increasingly obsessed coroners aid (David Naughton), who's attacked by the fiend, but can't get anyone to believe him. A 1982 TV-movie."

This underrated vampire thriller has a lot to recommend it; not the least of which is direction by John Llewellyn Moxey of THE NIGHT STALKER (1972) fame and the thickly atmospheric B/W spooker CITY OF THE DEAD (1960). In some ways, I, DESIRE is an inverted version of THE NIGHT STALKER, swapping out a male vampire for a female one. The major difference between the two is Skorzeny, pouncing on his victims, never spoke any dialog aside from animalistic hisses and growls while the sexy vamp of DESIRE growled like a panther, but manipulated men into baring their necks for her stiff nightcaps. Don Peake's (THE HILLS HAVE EYES; THE PREY) forbidding score is music to your ears; and the villainous, vampiric performance of Barbara Stock makes one wonder why she didn't do more sexy horror roles. David Naughton had previously been a singin' and dancin' spokesperson for Dr. Pepper; and later got the gig as the star of MAKIN' IT, a 1979 disco sitcom that was anything but Solid Gold. The catchy theme song was a hit, though. Movies came in the form of the Disney scavenger hunt cult comedy favorite MIDNIGHT MADNESS (1980); the teen sex comedy HOT DOG: THE MOVIE (1981); and horror-comedy classic AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON (1981). DESIRE's competition was Brian De Palma's DRESSED TO KILL (1980), making its network television premiere on NBC at 9pm. Occasionally popping up on cable TV, it's unfortunate this tense bloodsucker hasn't been resurrected on DVD or Blu-ray.

20. THE MIDNIGHT HOUR 1985

Debuted November 1st, 1985 as the ABC Friday Night Movie from 9:00pm-11:00pm.

TV Guide description: "Teenagers in a New England town inadvertently invoke a centuries-old witch's curse in 'The Midnight Hour' in this Halloween comedy-thriller. Production design by Charles Hughes (Michael Jackson's 'Thriller' video. A 1985 TV-movie."

With the success of Michael Jackson's iconic THRILLER (1983) mini-movie and video, and the box office hit THE RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD (1985) putting a fresh spin on zombie lore, THE MIDNIGHT HOUR blends the two for a surprisingly entertaining, if awfully silly two hours of Halloween entertainment. Like RETURN, there's even a midget zombie. The accidental mass zombie "uprising" is a nod to the 1972 favorite CHILDREN SHOULDN'T PLAY WITH DEAD THINGS. Jack Bender's colorful comedic creeper is likely the only Made For TV horror movie that's built entirely around the holiday. There's some great makeup courtesy of Oscar winning makeup man Steve LaPorte and Emmy winning Rick Stratton. The cast is full of old pros and young performers--some of whom went on to great things like Peter DeLuise (5 seasons of 21 JUMP STREET) and LeVar Burton (7 seasons of STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION). And it's all backed by a fabulously frightful, Halloween-centric soundtrack served up by everybody's favorite raspy-voiced DJ, the epochal Wolfman Jack, daddy. Vampires, zombies and werewolves are the life of the party that begins at THE MIDNIGHT HOUR.

HAPPY HALLOWEEN



Sunday, January 27, 2019

TV Movie Terror: Trilogy of Terror 2 (1996) review


 
TRILOGY OF TERROR 2 1996

Lysette Anthony (Laura/Elma/Dr. Simpson), Geraint Wyn Davies (Dan), Matt Clark (Ansford), Geoffrey Lewis (Arly Stubbs), Blake Heron (Bobby)

Directed by Dan Curtis

The Short Version: Dan Curtis sequelizes his own 1975 TV horror anthology favorite in a Made For Cable chiller starring three times the Lysette Anthony--repeating Karen Black's triplicitous turn in the original. The first concerns greedy lovers receiving an unexpected surprise in a graveyard; the second sees a mother bring her son back from the dead with disastrous results; and the third is a direct sequel to the famous Zuni Fetish doll segment of Curtis's original TRILOGY. Mostly a rehash of the director's 70s horrors with a killer doll selling point that's lost its shock value indigenous to the modest 1975 source. The director's 90s update is still enjoyable escapist horror for those nostalgic for old-school style Made For TV Terror.


A dark, brooding anthology featuring enormous, flesh-eating rats, demonic revenge from beyond, and a murderous, devil-possessed doll make up the Terror in this Trilogy. 


Filmed in Canada over the course of 22 days and debuting on the USA Network on October 30th, 1996, the belated TRILOGY OF TERROR 2 improves on the original in that the entire film is consistent with the title's promise of "terror"; as opposed to the '75 version's third tale being the sole, purely horror segment. There's nothing particularly remarkable about this encore, but it's efficiently made, modestly gory, and retaining the spirit of Dan Curtis's style of horror that dominated the small screen back in the 1970s.

One of the things that made TRILOGY OF TERROR unique was Karen Black starring in all three of the stories; two of which she was the predator and the third the Prey. For this sequel, British actress Lysette Anthony follows suit, tackling leads in all three yarns. In the case of T2, Anthony's portrayals are more diverse: the archetypal gold-digger of anthology horror; a tragic figure who goes to unnatural lengths for maternal salvation; and a victimized scientist faced with a supernatural enemy.


Lysette Anthony had worked with Dan Curtis earlier in the decade as Angelique, a witch character, on the short-lived revival of DARK SHADOWS; the 1991 series lasted only a dozen episodes before the coffin closed. Anthony's trust in Curtis was such that she didn't even read the script before accepting the role(s).

Curtis brought famed SciFi-Fantasy-Horror writer William F. Nolan back to pen his sequel. It had been 20 years since the two had worked together on the theatrical haunted house spooker, BURNT OFFERINGS (1976). Nolan collaborated with Curtis a few times including writing duties on the creepy supernatural horror, THE NORLISS TAPES in 1973 and authoring the first two stories in the original TRILOGY OF TERROR (1975). Nolan is likely most famous for co-authoring the SciFi novel 'Logan's Run' with George Clayton Johnson in 1967--turned into a movie in 1976.

In a 1996 Fangoria article, Curtis remarked he had the sequel in mind seven years earlier in 1989. Possibly inspired by the success of the award winning HBO horror series, TALES FROM THE CRYPT (1989-1996), T2 has some of that EC flavor of those notoriously grim comic books; mostly apparent in the first story, the typical tale of infidelity and revenge from beyond the grave... 

Story #1: The Graveyard Rats

Caught in a compromising position by her elderly, wealthy, wheelchair-bound husband, Laura Ansford can remain the sole beneficiary in Roger Ansford's will so long as she keeps her vow to love thy husband till he passes on. Not content with this arrangement, Laura and her lover conspire to knock off the old man before his time. With the deed done, the two money-hungry lovebirds think they're in the clear till they learn Roger has had the microfilm detailing the account numbers for his fortune buried with him. Overcome with greed, Laura and her co-conspirator decide to dig him up despite warnings from the graveyard caretaker that the particular plot where Roger wanted to be buried is overrun with rats... big ones.

The film's most ghoulish segment was originally written by Henry Kuttner back in 1936, appearing in Weird Tales, the revered fantasy-horror magazine that featured works by notable authors like H.P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard. William F. Nolan's adaptation differs in a few ways--one by swapping out Kuttner's graverobber central figure for the plotting, adulterous couple. In the film version, the graverobber (played by the always reliable Geoffrey Lewis) is a minor character.

At the time, erotic/suspense thrillers were still very popular and Lysette Anthony did a few of them like SAVE ME (1994), AFFAIR PLAY (1995), DEAD COLD (1995), and MAN OF HER DREAMS (1997). Some brief sexual content involving her character recalls Anthony's works in that genre while tapping into the EC-style of libidinous machinations leading the greedy to an early grave.


One other difference between the print and film version is the removal of a zombie-type figure crawling around in the increasingly narrowing tunnels Kuttner's graverobber finds himself trying to escape from. Nolan's version works just fine, and itself, a weird tale well told.

Story #2: Bobby


Distraught over the drowning of her child, Elma uses a satanic spell to return her son Bobby to life. Appearing on her doorstep on a dark and stormy night, she is quick to notice that something is terribly wrong with Bobby.

An original story written by Richard Matheson for Dan Curtis's DEAD OF NIGHT (1977), his supernatural short finds a second home in T2 remade in a slightly streamlined form; yet virtually identical with minimal alterations. Nolan's contribution is negligible, if any. Matheson gets sole writing credit. The principal difference between the two is the '77 version has an expository scene between Elma and her husband John on the phone that gave viewers a bit more characterization while emphasizing the horror of a later scene when the two are on the phone again.

Compared to Joan Hackett's portrayal from the first time around, Ms. Anthony is good in the role as the grieving mother, if more overzealous in her hysteria upon the realization her son (or what she believes is her son) is trying to kill her.


Blake Heron, the 12 year old actor playing Bobby, shot to stardom very quickly. Battling drug addiction reportedly even at a young age, Heron would die from an accidental overdose of fentanyl in September of 2017.

A genuinely terrifying story, it's still curious why Curtis would opt to remake the old segment as opposed to going with a different one. Additionally, the makeup is different for the big reveal at the end; even though it's less creepy than before. The Lovecraftian aura helps. Still, this 'Bobby' is suspenseful and as well made as its 1977 source; just don't expect any surprises unless you're unfamiliar with Curtis's DEAD OF NIGHT. 

Story #3: He Who Kills

At a nasty murder scene, police discover the bodies of two mutilated women and a burned up doll inside an oven. Believing it to be a ritualistic slaying, the police take the doll to a museum in the hopes that a Dr. Simpson can identify its significance. After hours in the museum, the lady ethnologist learns the gruesome-looking doll represents a centuries extinct African cannibal tribe... and that the thing is alive and ready to kill.


The hype generated for T2 was built solely around the return of the Zuni Fetish Doll, the outrageously creepy little monster that comes to life to terrorize Karen Black in Curtis's 1975 original. Picking up where that segment finished, the doll now terrorizes Lysette Anthony in much the same fashion; the major difference now is that it's no longer a single apartment building, but inside a museum.

A marionette in the original picture, the diminutive wooden maniac is operated via animatronics for the sequel. A one-woman show the first time around, the new version affords some additional characters and a few extra deaths.

Nolan was thrilled to be putting his own spin on Matheson's work; a short story titled 'Prey' written by him in 1969. Nolan's take on Matheson's material is just as energetic as before, if playing it safe by rehashing the source almost note-for-note. Even so, seeing one of cinema's scariest killer dolls again in an updated setting is exciting for nostalgia buffs.

Aiding all three of these cryptic tales is some striking photography and nicely atmospheric locations. On the whole, Curtis made a movie that's three-quarters of dusted-off old material done over, yet he succeeds elsewhere; even managing some nods to his past works.

Dan Curtis is one of the horror genres most recognizable names and has contributed some of its most memorable, and popular, small-screen examples. While he continued to produce horror fare for television, TRILOGY OF TERROR 2 (1996) was his last time directing various creatures of the night. It's an enjoyable 90 minute spooker, even if it's mostly haunted territory traversed 20 years earlier.

This review is representative of an airing on OuterMax (Cinemax channel).

Thursday, August 2, 2018

TV Movie Terror: Snowbeast (1977) review


 
SNOWBEAST 1977

Bo Svenson (Gar Seberg), Yvette Mimieux (Ellen Seberg), Robert Logan (Tommy Rill), Clint Walker (Sheriff Paraday), Sylvia Sidney (Carrie Rill)

Directed by Herb Wallerstein

The Short Version: JAWS in the snow tells of a flesh-hungry Bigfoot ruining everybody's vacation at a popular Colorado ski resort on its 50th anniversary. For a Made For Television production, it's pretty decent and arguably the best cast to ever see a Sasquatch. Wallerstein treads as close to Spielberg's blockbuster fish opus as he can without receiving a lawsuit; and much like Spielberg's movie, you see very little of the monster. You do see lots of skiing, though; so much, in fact, that if you've never hit the slopes before, you'll feel like an expert after watching SNOWBEAST.


A carnivorous Bigfoot attacks and eats skiers during the 50th anniversary of Rill's Lodge Winter Carnival. The Lodge's owner, an old flame, a former friend, and the town sheriff go on a hunt for the monster to stop it before it can kill again.


In the annals of Made For TV horror, SNOWBEAST (1977) is one of the better known of the form--amassing a minor cult following from both genuine devotee's, and fans poking fun of its accidental campiness. It's a fairly well made one--with some surprisingly good performances, a compelling script by Joseph Stefano, and a few moments of concrete suspense. Unfortunately, much of this ends up covered in an avalanche of unintentional humor by some of the limited scenes of the Bigfoot itself.


Aside from breaking a few windows and a surprisingly intense attack on a gymnasium, the brute force of the flesh-eating cryptid is sloppily presented. To be fair, this is possibly due to the constraints of small screen production values and limitations on violence. With that said, the title monster has an awfully hard time breaking down a flimsy barn door; later displaying his primal ferocity by ripping a ski rack from the back of a truck. Moreover, other than a long shot of it on top of a hill partially hiding behind a tree, you never get to see the entire monster in-frame; instead, you get a clawed hand here, a clawed foot there, or a close-up of its face. This particular Bigfoot is supposed to be 12 feet tall only judging by the numerous POV shots, it's around half that size. 


As mentioned above, the creature's screen time is extremely limited. As a supplement, the movie is generously padded with skiing scenes. Lots of skiing. So there's that. The Colorado scenery is quite beautiful and the photography of Frank Stanley (DP of Eastwood flicks like MAGNUM FORCE and THUNDERBOLT AND LIGHTFOOT) gives viewers a few good glimpses of it. And then there's the skiing scenes. To mix things up a bit, there's also snowmobiles. There's so much skiing that you'll feel like you've been on vacation in the Alps.


In spite of the abundance of snow action, what makes SNOWBEAST an enjoyable experience is less its monster than the characterizations between the three main leads due to the script from PSYCHO (1960) scribe, Joseph Stefano. Clearly JAWS (1975) was fresh in the minds of the filmmakers and Stefano swims a little too close to Spielberg's movie at times. Stefano even treads the outskirts of angles in Benchley's original novel that were dropped from the film version by way of the love triangle between Bo Svenson (THE INGLORIOUS BASTARDS [1978]), Robert Logan (the DANIEL BOONE television series), and Yvette Mimieux (THE TIME MACHINE, JACKSON COUNTY JAIL).


Bo Svenson is top-billed as Gar, a former Olympic gold medalist who used to walk tall, but since fallen from grace and seeks the help of Tommy, his wife's former lover and the owner of the Rill Lodge. There's some good material here in that you feel there's a genuine friendship between the two men and that there may be some fire still flickering between Tommy and Ellen, Gar's wife. Avoiding the usual cliches this sort of love triangle brings with it, Stefano teases a potential affair between the two former lovers, but then throws in a surprising sequence that gives Gar both his manhood back and his wife.


Robert Logan had just come off of two back-to-back successes with related nature movies--the popular THE ADVENTURES OF THE WILDERNESS FAMILY (1975) and ACROSS THE GREAT DIVIDE (1976). Logan was a family film fixture in the mid-to late 1970s so the snowy locale of SNOWBEAST was a good fit for him. After his Bigfoot excursion, Logan remained in the great outdoors with two sequels in the Wilderness family series--THE FURTHER ADVENTURES OF THE WILDERNESS FAMILY (1978) and MOUNTAIN FAMILY ROBINSON (1979).


With an alleged 12 foot tall Sasquatch and the 6'6" Svenson there was room for one more big man in the form of 6'6" Clint Walker. The actor known for seven seasons of CHEYENNE (1955-1963) and THE DIRTY DOZEN (1967) plays Sheriff Paraday--basically splitting the Brody role with Robert Logan. Walker isn't in the movie all that much; and his extra scenes in the longer cut (although his presence is most welcome) make little difference since he's given next to nothing to do. Walker's participation is so neglected, his sheriff character feels inconsequential to the action since he doesn't really do anything; and his undignified exit from the film is lazily implemented. Instead of having the Big Man square off against the Bigfoot, the monster kicks a stack of logs down a hill, turning the truck over that Walker never gets out of. Somehow, the logs manage to defy the laws of physics and end up planted through the back of the truck, too--successfully trapping Walker inside.


The other Big Man, Bo Svenson, does take on the snow 'squatch in a terribly disappointing climax using nothing more than a ski pole. Since Svenson had recently taken over the Buford Pusser role from Joe Don Baker in the WALKING TALL sequels and subsequent television series, what better way to end the picture than to have Svenson whack the hell out of the hairy beast with a tree like so many county line drug dealers and gangsters.


There needs to be more TV horror movies on DVD and or blu-ray and the fans of SNOWBEAST will be more than pleased with this presentation from Retromedia. Containing two versions of the movie--the original 72 minute version first broadcast in April of 1977; and an international version that runs approximately 16 minutes longer (see photo above and insert). The latter cut (which played in syndication after its debut) is slightly better than the shorter, premiere airing. Expanding even more on the three-character arc--as well as featuring more scenes with Clint Walker--it fills in some massive holes bigger than the Abominable Snowman's foot prints.

A remake starring DUKES OF HAZZARD's John Schneider hit the slopes in 2011.


Movies about Sasquatch were huge in the 1970s... literally. Some of the entries became fan favorites like THE LEGEND OF BOGGY CREEK (1972) and CREATURE FROM BLACK LAKE (1976). SNOWBEAST (1977) trails those two, but is unique for its strong cast and how brazenly it rips off JAWS (1975). If it weren't for the cast, and a couple tense moments, there'd be little to recommend outside of the spectrum of TV Movie curators, camp collectors, and Cryptid completists--all of whom will want to track this one down.

This review is representative of the All Region Blu-ray from Retromedia. Specs and Extras: running time: 01:12:42; international version running time: 01:28:21

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