FANS:
MEMORIES:
Stratoman remembers...This show was just great. The cheesey special effects weren't scary to us kids (or so we SAID), but it ... More »
Posted on 02/12/09
Cast:
Carl Kolchak...Darren McGavin
Tony Vincenzo...Simon Oakland
Ron Updyke...Jack Grinnage
Emily Cowles...Ruth McDevitt
Gordy Spangler...John Fiedler
Monique Marmelstein...Carol Ann Susi
Tony Vincenzo...Simon Oakland
Ron Updyke...Jack Grinnage
Emily Cowles...Ruth McDevitt
Gordy Spangler...John Fiedler
Monique Marmelstein...Carol Ann Susi
Studio:
Universal TV
Network:
ABC
Release History:
9/13/74 - 8/30/75 ABC
Based on an unpublished novel by author Grant Rice called The Kolchak Papers, audiences were first introduced to the character through a pair of made-for-television movies. The first, The Night Stalker, aired in 1972 and told the story of a reporter investigating the presence of a murderous vampire in Las Vegas. It would become the highest rated television movie of the era and spawn a sequel called The Night Strangler. The combined success of these two films made a television series inevitable. And in 1974, Kolchak: The Night Stalker debuted on ABC.
As in the films, Kolchak was a reporter obsessed with investigating supernatural menaces that go bump in the night. With his ever-present blue seersucker suit and tropical straw hat, and a sarcastic and abrasive personality, he was a unique character, one that was always at odds with his editor, Vincenzo, who rarely believed his strange stories. Luckily, he could rely on fellow reporter, Emily Cowles, whose friendship was one of the few that he trusted.
In each episode, a series of mysterious killings would occur, with the evidence pointing to a not-of-this-world perpetrator. With the local authorities and his boss remaining skeptical, it would be up to the fearless reporter to shed light on the story, all while risking life and limb from these creatures of the night in the process. Perhaps most frustrating to Kolchak is that evidence of the creatures always remained elusive and caused his superiors to look upon him with constant disbelief. But they were out there – the werewolves and aliens and vampires – and Kolchak was their lone adversary. Many fans in particular remember his encounters with a Hindu demon called the Rakshasa, who was responsible for a series of grisly murders in the elderly community. This episode, called “Horror In The Heights,” showed the demon as one who could appear in the form of a person that the victim most trusted, right before ending their life.
Considering the impact of Kolchak: The Night Stalker, it is amazing that the series only ran for a lone season before being cancelled in 1975 - due to low ratings. Its influence was undeniably felt, particularly in such future shows as The X Files and the Nicolas Cage produced, The Dresden Files, and the original series still boasts a large fan base in the science-fiction/horror community. An attempt was made to revise the beloved series in 2005, in an all-new show simply called, Night Stalker. Actor Stuart Townsend portrayed the Kolchak character in the mere six episodes that were produced before the show was cancelled. Fans just didn't feel that it lived up to the original, which remains one of the most frightening spectacles to ever air on television. Not to say that the long-legged lamp wasn't nightmare-inducing in its own special way.













