Gargoyles

Gargoyles

1972 "Watch Out! The Gargoyles Are Here"
Gargoyles
Gargoyles

Gargoyles

5.9 | 1h14m | NR | en | Fantasy

After receiving word about a mysterious carcass/skeleton unearthed in the Arizona desert, a father and his daughter decide to remove it from the burial grounds for further study. Once they do so, they, as well as the town, are besieged by a colony of gargoyles living in some nearby caverns.

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5.9 | 1h14m | NR | en | Fantasy , Horror , TV Movie | More Info
Released: November. 21,1972 | Released Producted By: Tomorrow Entertainment , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

After receiving word about a mysterious carcass/skeleton unearthed in the Arizona desert, a father and his daughter decide to remove it from the burial grounds for further study. Once they do so, they, as well as the town, are besieged by a colony of gargoyles living in some nearby caverns.

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Cast

Cornel Wilde , Jennifer Salt , Grayson Hall

Director

Earl Rath

Producted By

Tomorrow Entertainment ,

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Reviews

Rainey Dawn Gargoyles is not a down right horrible film - it does have some entertainment value for fans of B-films, sci-fi and horror. I didn't find the movie scary at all but it did entertain me - and that is what counts.It's not a top quality film but the Gargoyles look really cool... pre-CGI and for a low budget made for TV movie I'm pleased with their look. Pretty menacing looking and elaborate considering.The story is basic - really not all that cheesy but it's certainly not a "deep" type of story. The movie is what I expected it to be - so I wasn't completely disappointed with it.This is pretty good movie to kick back with on an otherwise boring afternoon if you like these type of films.5/10
freejack man I was 8 years old when this came on TV. I have not seen it since, and I ran across it on Youtube this morning. I'm watching it right now. And I now realized I forgot a lot of it. But the scary scene out in desert with the shadow of the gargoyle was creepy and scare today.Now the father and daughter are out in desert in evening and there is something on the roof of car. It's scary.I'm tired of people trashing movies because really its about poor CGI.I like "trashy" cheap movies, like the Asylum, because it's not about the special effects.I watched Jack the Giant Killer and it was lifeless, just special effects.I'll take a so-called trashy movie any day of the week.This movie is good. Somewhat poorly acted, but it's kitsch.
Scarecrow-88 A professor, known for literature on demonology, and his daughter, encounter ancient demonic creatures known as gargoyles while traveling in the desert—to visit an old timer known as Old Willie who claims to have a special skeleton worthy of his attention—that have been in an incubation stage for centuries, now hatched and building an army with the ultimate goal of wiping out mankind and assuming control of the planet! Not bad television horror has a cult following, mainly by those who watched it as kids in the 70s. Cornell Wilde (High Sierra) is the professor who realizes that if the gargoyles are allowed to leave the cave as a large group that man will probably be rendered extinct. Not only does that motivate him though: the lead demon gargoyle (played by Bernie Casey!) has kidnapped Wilde's daughter, Jennifer Salt (Brian DePalma's "Sisters"), holding her prisoner in the cave, perhaps desiring her sexually (it seems more and more evident that his interest in her goes beyond just holding her captive as bait). Scott Glenn even has a part in this early part of his career as a stone-faced dirt biker wrongfully accused, along with other friends just found in the wrong place at the wrong time by Chief William Stevens and Deputy John Gruber. Woody Chambliss (looking rather gruff and in need of a shower) is Uncle Willie whose skeletal remains of a gargoyle piques Wilde's interest has a little supporting part that gets the ball rolling. Even under quite a costume, with protruding teeth and eye contacts, Casey is successful in parlaying a menace that should be taken seriously and when he warns Wilde of what is to come, you know his lead demon gargoyle means business. If I were to criticize this movie, it would be the mistake of shooting the gargoyles during the day when the costumes are more obvious and less authentic-looking. And, during this film, the gargoyles are seen visibly more during the day than at night, especially in the cave where the last half is primarily set. Still, Casey's costume, make-up, and face are quite impressive, and the addition of those wings looks pretty gnarly. When the gargoyles destroy windows, doors, and Wilde's station wagon, I think these moments are when the movie really hums. You really understand here the kind of damage in store for the Earth if the creatures are able to breed into an army. The plot is fairly simple and straight-forward. It becomes Wilde, Stevens, Glenn, and the bikers against the gargoyles, led by Casey's chief gargoyle. Rather violent for a 70s television film, Wilde and company shoot several of the gargoyles at close range during desert fights. The sight of Grayson Hall (Dark Shadows; she steals her scenes as a hotel owner always carrying a glass with booze) hanging upside down from an electrical pole and the truck driving in circles (it once housed Hall and driver/gas station attendant/mechanic Jim Connell) without occupants are also memorable moments in this television movie. "Gargoyles" has a nice reputation and while it doesn't quite live up to the expectations I had, I still enjoyed it, particularly as a creature feature. I think the costumes, which are reminiscent to me of the work of Milicent Patrick (creature designer of "Creature from the Black Lagoon"), have "personality" and are provided with expressively designed faces and scaly bodies (some even have wings and beaks). I do recommend this to fans of rubber suited monster movies. A bit of trivia: Stan Winston was one of the make-up designers. Good use of New Mexico locations. For a film shot in a manner of days in sweltering heat, "Gargoyles" benefits from this, I think, and the score has that unnerving quality that fits the overall tone of potential global terror if Wilde and others don't stop the monsters.
bkoganbing This made for TV horror film which stars Cornel Wilde battling the children of Satan arising from the earth again will give you a few chills as we think about Gargoyles taking over the earth as they keep trying to do. Although the film was shot on spare change in the Arizona desert it did get an Emmy Nomination for the Gargoyle makeup which was pretty good.Cornel Wilde is an archaeologist who with daughter Jennifer Salt is on a mission to an old desert rat, played by Woody Chambliss who runs a strange museum as a tourist trap. But he's got a skeleton that Wilde is sure is a fake. But a visit from some real Gargoyles convince him otherwise, especially after Chambliss is killed.Sheriff William Stevens is convinced that a bunch of dirt bikers did the deed, he's not ready to believe in Gargoyles. But when they kidnap Salt and kill motel manager Grayson Hall, Stevens is a believer and he and Wilde and the dirt bikers go into the desert searching for the Gargoyle lair and Salt.As I said the film is done on the cheap, but it definitely has some gruesome and horrifying moments. Bernie Casey as the head Gargoyle is eloquent in his defense of Gargoyle right to life.This one is pretty good for a made for TV film.