Kolchak: The Night Stalker

Kolchak: The Night Stalker

1974
Kolchak: The Night Stalker
Kolchak: The Night Stalker

Kolchak: The Night Stalker

8.4 | TV-PG | en | Drama

Kolchak: The Night Stalker is an American television series that aired on ABC during the 1974–1975 season. It featured a fictional Chicago newspaper reporter who investigated mysterious crimes with unlikely causes, particularly those that law enforcement authorities would not follow up. These often involved the supernatural or even science fiction, including fantastic creatures.

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Seasons & Episodes

1
EP20  The Sentry
Mar. 28,1975
The Sentry

The government is keen to hush up a series of mysterious deaths at the Merrymount Institute, an underground archival facility. When Carl investigates, he determines that the victims were ripped apart as if attacked by a crocodile or other large lizard. He eventually discovers that the workers excavated a series of strange egg-like objects, and that the eggs' mother, a large prehistoric lizard, is attempting to retrieve them. Fleeing for his life, Carl must return the eggs to the mother and fend her off.

EP19  The Youth Killer
Mar. 14,1975
The Youth Killer

Young swinging patrons of an exclusive dating service are turning up, dead of old age. The police don't believe they are the same persons, but Kolchak investigates and discovers that the head of the dating service is actually Helen of Troy, who sacrifices perfect young victims to Hecate, her patron goddess, in return for eternal youth and beauty. The fact that Helen is unaware one of the victims had a glass eye and lied about it on their form proves vital to Kolchak when he accidentally dons one of the rings that lets Helen sacrifice her victims in the appropriate manner.

EP18  The Knightly Murders
Mar. 07,1975
The Knightly Murders

Various Chicago citizenry are being killed with medieval weaponry. Upon investigating, Kolchak finds that they were all tied to the conversion of a small museum into a disco. It turns out that the museum houses the armor of Guy de Metancourt, a misanthrope who swore upon his death that his final resting place would never know gaiety and laughter. Now, his ghostly armor animates and kills those who would disrupt his resting place. The only way for Kolchak to stop the unchivalrous knight is to destroy it with a holy axe blessed by the pope.

EP17  Legacy of Terror
Feb. 14,1975
Legacy of Terror

Physically fit specimens (an Air Force pilot, a football player, a cop) are all being targeted for a grisly death: their hearts are being cut from their chests while they're still alive, with a dull blade, on higher and higher flights of steps. Kolchak investigates and spots a strange feathered creature near the scene of one of the murders. He finds out that an ancient Aztec cult is trying to resurrect their ancient god, Nanautzin, the Lord of the Smoking Mirror. Since his destruction at the hands of the Conquistadores 520 years ago (the Aztec millennia), his worshippers must sacrifice the hearts of five worthy victims every 52 years. Upon the completion of the final cycle, Nanautzin will be restored to life. However, the final death must be a ""perfect sacrifice"": a willing victim who is given his every wish for a year before his final death. Pepe, a box boy, is the ""perfect sacrifice"" and Carl must track him to the highest staircase in Chicago and convince him to back out of the sacrifice.

EP16  Demon in Lace
Feb. 07,1975
Demon in Lace

On a college campus, young men are dying of heart attacks. According to witnesses, they are last seen with young women who apparently died shortly before meeting the men. When Kolchak investigates, he finds that the men were associated with Professor Spate, who is researching an ancient Middle East tablet, and that a series of similar deaths plagued his expedition to recover the tablet. The tablet is tied to a supernatural creature known as a succubus, who possesses young women at the moment of their death and then reveals her true visage to men, frightening them to death and feeding upon their energies. Kolchak must destroy the tablet to destroy the succubus once and for all.

EP15  Chopper
Jan. 31,1975
Chopper

The strange disappearance of an antique motorcycle is the first indication of trouble. What follows are a rash of murders where each victim is decapitated with superhuman force by what witnesses report is a headless motorcyclist. As Kolchak investigates, he discovers that the victims were all members of a cycle gang back in the 50's. A prank they played on a rival gang member, Harold ""Swordsman"" Baker, resulted in his unintentional decapitation. Baker's ghost killed several of their gang back in the 50's until his head was reunited with the rest of his corpse. However, the cemetary where Baker was interred was dug up and his head and body separated once more. Now, Kolchak must reunite the head and body once more before the headless cyclist finishes off the gang.

EP14  The Trevi Collection
Jan. 24,1975
The Trevi Collection

A fashion industry spy is thrown to his death from a room filled with nothing but mannequins as Carl looks on from the street below. This is but the first in a series of strange murders that point to a supernatural origin: apparently Madame Trevi, a leading designer in the fashion industry, is using witchcraft to stop those who oppose her. With the aid of a witches' coven, Carl is pointed to the source of Trevi's power and destroys it, only to find who the witch truly is. Armed with a mojo bag, Carl must confront the witch and publicly accuse her to strip her of her powers.

EP13  Primal Scream
Jan. 17,1975
Primal Scream

In a oil company's laboratory, the air conditioning fails, and a primate creature attacks a scientist. The creature, and others like it, begin going on a rampage throughout Chicago. The oil company was experimenting with cell samples brought back from the Antarctic, which began growing when exposed to heat. Now these bizarre missing links are wrecking havoc. Despite the government cover-up, Kolchak investigates, and must track the creatures down to their lair beneath the old nuclear-research labs of the 50's.

EP12  Mr. R.I.N.G.
Jan. 10,1975
Mr. R.I.N.G.

Kolchak writes an obituary for a deceased scientist, but soon becomes involved in further investigation when no one can give him a straight answer on how the scientist died. Meanwhile, a mysterious figure goes on a rampage throughout Chicago, stealing morticians' wax and Halloween masks. Kolchak eventually finds out that the scientist was working on Project R.I.N.G.: the development of an artificially intelligent robot. R.I.N.G. killed his creator rather than be shut down, and now the government is hunting it. Kolchak must find where the robot is hiding and reveal the story before the government catch up to R.I.N.G.

EP11  Horror in the Heights
Dec. 20,1974
Horror in the Heights

Kolchak’s investigation of a series of grisly deaths in a once-plush neighborhood, leads him to a creature who lures its victims by making itself appear to them as someone they know and trust.

EP10  The Energy Eater
Dec. 13,1974
The Energy Eater

Several Indian construction workers are killed during high-rise work on a new hospital. They leave the job, and the hospital is completed. However, a series of strange electrocutions continue to plague the hospital after its grand opening. Kolchak investigates and finds that a ""bear-god"" spirit, Matchemonedo, was resurrected from its burial spot beneath Lake Michigan by the hospital construction. Now the creature, which feeds on energy, is beginning to awaken. Kolchak must convince the hospital officials to re-refrigerate the ""bear-god"" and drive it back into hibernation before it awakens once and for all.

EP9  The Spanish Moss Murders
Dec. 06,1974
The Spanish Moss Murders

A series of apparently unrelated deaths involve each victim being crushed to death, and covered in wet, slimy Spanish Moss. Upon investigation, Kolchak discovers that each victim was related to Paul Langois, a hot-tempered Cajun. However, Langois has an iron-clad alibi: he's been the subject of a sleep experiment and been kept asleep for several weeks. Eventual, Carl realizes that somehow Langois' sleep state has caused him to manifest a subconscious ""boogey-man"" from the Cajun bayou: Peremalfait, a huge creature covered in Spanish Moss that crushes the life right out of you. Peremalfait ""kills"" Langois to prevent him from being woken up, and Kolchak must travel into the sewers of Chicago to kill Peremalfait with the only thing that can destroy it: a spear made out of bayou gum wood.

EP8  Bad Medicine
Nov. 29,1974
Bad Medicine

A series of suicides among high-society matrons coincides with a bizarre jewel theft by a towering Indian who mysteriously disappears when cornered. Kolchak investigates and finds that the Indian is a ""diablero,"" a cursed cliff-dwelling Indian medicine man condemned to walk the earth gathering an eternal horde of jewels. The diablero can change shape into the form of a coyote or crow, and hypnotize anyone with its eyes. Carl must seek the diablero in the highest place he can find, and turn the power of its eyes against it.

EP7  The Devil's Platform
Nov. 15,1974
The Devil's Platform

Kolchak discovers a young rising politician, has made a deal with the Devil to murder off his competition through incidents made to look like accidents.

EP6  Firefall
Nov. 08,1974
Firefall

A series of mysterious deaths plague the life of conductor Ryder Bond. In each case, the victim is incinerated by supernaturally hot flames. As Kolchak investigates, he finds out that an arsonist, Frankie Markoff, was a fan of Bond's, and was killed in a penny arcade. His funeral procession crossed Bond's car, allowing the spirit to become a ""doppelganger"" and try to take over Bond's life. Each victim was burned to death when they fell asleep, and if Bond goes to sleep the doppelganger will take him over for good. Fighting sleep himself, Kolchak must exhume Markoff's body and reunite it with his restless spirit before he too bursts into flame.

EP5  The Werewolf
Nov. 01,1974
The Werewolf

Bernhardt Stieglitz, a NATO soldier bitten by a wolf, leaves a string of murder victims behind him. When Vincenzo is forced to abort his long-awaited vacation and report on the last cruise of an ocean liner, the USS Hanover, Carl takes his place, only to find that Stieglitz is one of the passengers on board...and the full moon is rising. Trapped aboard the liner, Kolchak must use a shotgun and silver buckshot to kill the creature once and for all.

EP4  The Vampire
Oct. 04,1974
The Vampire

Catherine Rawlins, a female victim of Janos Skorzeny (the vampire from the original Night Stalker TV movie) is accidentally resurrected outside Las Vegas, and makes her way to Los Angeles. She takes up her old profession of call girl and Carl wrangles an assignment there to investigate.

EP3  They Have Been, They Are, They Will Be...
Sep. 27,1974
They Have Been, They Are, They Will Be...

A bizarre alien presence invisibly sweeps through Chicago, killing a petty thief and a UFO nut. The alien or aliens have the strength of a hurricane, generate a massive electromagnetic field, steal lead and electronic equipment, and suck the bone marrow out of humans and animals alike. Kolchak must track the alien(s) from an electronics warehouse to an observatory to Lincoln Park and drive them off before they kill again. His camera seems to hold the key to the creatures' weakness, although initially Carl is wrong in guessing what the weakness is. Carl follows the aliens and manages to keep them from feeding on him before they depart once and for all.

EP2  The Zombie
Sep. 20,1974
The Zombie

A voodoo priestess animates her dead son to take revenge on the gangsters that killed him.

EP1  The Ripper
Sep. 13,1974
The Ripper

A serial killer who preys on women haunts Chicago, and Kolchak comes to believe that the killer is in fact the original Jack the Ripper, a seemingly immortal killer who has killed women in many cities over the last century. The reporter must track the killer to the old house where he has taken up residence and put an end to his existence once and for all.

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8.4 | TV-PG | en | Drama , Mystery , Sci-Fi | More Info
Released: 1974-09-13 | Released Producted By: ABC Circle Films , Dan Curtis Productions Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Kolchak: The Night Stalker is an American television series that aired on ABC during the 1974–1975 season. It featured a fictional Chicago newspaper reporter who investigated mysterious crimes with unlikely causes, particularly those that law enforcement authorities would not follow up. These often involved the supernatural or even science fiction, including fantastic creatures.

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The tv show is currently not available onine

Cast

Darren McGavin , Simon Oakland , Jack Grinnage

Director

Raymond Beal

Producted By

ABC Circle Films , Dan Curtis Productions

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Reviews

Blueghost I've reviewed TV series in the past, but typically only if I find something interesting about them. So it is that I think this show is interesting, but for a different reason.A lot of sitcoms and dramas have sociology implications. The idea being that we absorb impressions and regurgitate them in real life. Eh, that's true sometimes depending on who we are. And the reason I like this show is because it's good old fashioned story telling. Kolchak is a reporter in a world where ghosts, spirits, and other supernatural phenomena are real, and he must contend with a hot headed reporter and a police chief who thinks he's off his rocker."The Night Stalker" doesn't have any agenda of addressing social issues like poverty, race relations, social stigmas, domestic abuse, or whatever. I'm glad we have those shows, but it's like these days you can't get away from that junk, and "The Night Stalker" comes from an era when you could tell an old fashioned ghost story without needing to put in some marketer's agenda.It's not a fancy show, but it's got a good amount of suspense and thrills. It can be over the top here and there, but it's also grounded. Like a former producer or director of the series said in an interview "In those days, we just did it!" And he further went on to say "These days, everything has to be developed..." And I think he's hit the nail on the head of why we don't get better films and TV, and "The Night Stalker", even though its run was brief, was very successful.And it wasn't scary as such, but just highly suspenseful and kept your attention. I mean okay, it deals with ghosts and other stuff from folklore (vampires and such), but it's a good suspenseful series showing how one reporter fights to get the truth out to the world and deals with threats from "the great beyond." Really a fun watch. I'm glad it's on DVD.Enjoy.
bkoganbing Although it only ran for 1 season and 20 episodes, Kolchak the Night Stalker has retained a cult following ever since. I've never understood why shows like Kolchak that have such devoted followers were never able to translate that into ratings power.Carl Kolchak with light linen suit, panama hat, and ever present camera works for a wire service and keeps getting these assignments that somehow involve the supernatural. Darren McGavin plays Kolchak with a great amount of irreverence and cynicism that all newspaper people on the big and small screen are supposed to have since The Front Page made its debut.All kinds of creatures that go bump in the night find there way to Kolchak and he defeats them. Sad though the evidence of their existence always seems to disappear. One thing that remains constant is his ever feuding battles with his editor Simon Oakland who was working on one big ulcer. Sob sister columnist Ruth McDevitt always had an inane word or two to calm the proceedings.A show I wish had a longer run.
jefffisher65-708-541158 Kolchak:the Night Stalker is my favorite "fantstic genre" type of TV series of them all. Undoubtedly, it is somewhat dated by modern standards, but it did originally run in the mid-1970s, folks. What the program lacked in quality make-up was more than made-up for by the sheer creepiness of it all! And the fact that Kolchak, the marvelous Darren McCavin, rip, was a past-50 something ordinary mortal who quite often became terrified almost out of his mind by these creatures made him the more endearing, I think.As most here know, the two previous TV-films, THE NIGHT STALKER(1972), and THE NIGHT STRANGLER(1973) led to the series itself. The original TV-film was the highest-rated TV movie for several years, in fact. And the series was an ancestor of both BUFFY and THE X-FILES as noted.I was nine when K:TNS began its one-season run on ABC, and caught many of them either on their first-airings, or in the summer-rerun phase(the network did cut some scenes for the prime time repeats for those jaded enough by today's product to think Kolchak wasn't creepy!) When CBS began to run the series on the "CBS Late NIGHT" schedule in 1979, I was thrilled. In those days, short-run TV series were not often played in syndication. The program gained a large cult following which continues today as CBS ran the program into the early 1980s on its late-night schedule, late Friday, I believe.Can't add a whole lot to the wonderful love/hate relationship between McGavin and Simon Oakland's Tony Vincenzo, other than it added a good deal to the series' charm. To answer some here, Carl did turn in routine-type reporting articles along the way(although they sometimes tended to get INS sued as Tony wasn't slow to point out!). For the record, there was an actual INS at one time - it's mentioned once in the classic 1954 film "Them!", for example.My favorite episodes are probably again, "Horror in the Heights," The Vampire," "The Spainish Moss Murders," and "Demon in Lace," in no particular order. I would have to say the final five minutes or so of "Zombie" are almost beyond endurance! It's hard to pick a true favorite, "The Ripper" was excellent as well, I must say, even "Choper" was quite good if one forgives the poor-quality headless motorcycle rider.There were to have been at least three more episodes, possibly four has the series not ended its season slightly ahead of the usual length for TV programs in the 1970s. Fan-magazines of the 1990s like "it couldn't happen here" (which I contributed to some) ran material on those un-produced programs - I have wondered if both "The Norliss Tapes, and "Curse of the Black Widow," two more 1970s Dan Curtis supernatural-detective type TV films weren't also meant originally for "TNS.For the fans interested the most, "Fangoria" # 3 in 1979 ran a nice episode guide, and article on TNS, although with some mistakes in the piece. The mid-1970s Marvel satire comic "Arrgh!" ran a nifty"Kolchak" parody in issue # 4 which also featured Kolchak on the cover. Another fanzine type publication was "The Kolchak Chronicle" out of Texas as well. The TV films were published as paperbacks by Jeff Rice from Pocket Books around the same time the TV series began, and other items are out there for those who wish to search for them, i.e., comics, other novels, even model kits.
eclecticist In the mid-1970s, "The X Files" was called "The Night Stalker" (TNS). Now a show that far ahead of its time couldn't exist for long in the mediocre milieu of network television, but for one brief year, we were treated to one of the greatest characters ever to inhabit TV Land.All week, I would wait for the night the show came on, and if my homework was finished and my chores completed, I could try to talk my way past my mom's objections that "It'll give you nightmares!" (Which it did, but they were a small price to pay.) Now if we're being honest, I'll have to admit that the quality of the scripts (not to mention the special affects) was wildly uneven. But when it was good, it was magical! And even when the episode's plot left something to be desired, the relationship between Kolchak and his boss, Anthony Vincenzo (played to perfection by Simon Oakland), made every minute worthwhile.If ever a series revolved around an anti-leading man, TNS was that series. Carl Kolchak wasn't young, handsome, or suave, and he worked for a two-bit, perpetually broke news service. A real old-school reporter, he was cynical and hard-bitten, and his prose tended toward the florid. His suit was always rumpled, and his shoes were worn. He always seemed to be in a hurry, yet he always arrived late and out of breath. In any fight, he was sure to get the worst of it.In other words, he was far from the glamorous, polished hero image usually found in TV's mystery shows. Which made him real! Every week I would root for him to find one--just one--person that would believe his incredible stories ... but just try to get someone to take you seriously when you're talking about vampires or werewolves! Even the cops, staring the evidence in the face, were loathe to admit to anything, even away from the public eye.Mr. Vincenzo, Kolchak's boss, was always harried and hounded to the verge of a nervous breakdown by the stress of trying to keep his tiny bureau out of bankruptcy while simultaneously pleasing his bosses in New York. All Tony ever wanted was a little peace and quiet, a good night's sleep, and a smooth-running operation. With Kolchak on his staff, however, those were all as rare as high-quality photographs of an alien or the devil.Long before Moonlighting's conflict-energized dialogues between Sybill and Bruce, Tony and Carl could go at it with the best of them--and always at the top of their lungs. Kolchak usually managed to get the best of his boss, who was always threatening to fire the troublesome reporter "if that story isn't on my desk first thing in the morning!" Instead, he was much more likely to get a 3 a.m. call from the local police precinct, pleading for him to come down and post bail. Because Kolchak's main characteristics were persistence, an open mind, and incredible curiosity--none of which endeared him to local law enforcement. The police brass was always trying to cover up the uncomfortable details that Kolchak was determined to unearth ... and he wanted them to admit things that would get them thrown in a loony bin.Kolchak is a dying breed. On one hand, TV News was already outbidding print services for talent, and on the other Woodward and Bernstein were about to revolutionize reporting. Soon, reporters would no longer dream of a big scoop on the latest sensational murder; instead, it was to become all about politically themed exposes ... who can take down the biggest politician.But Carl Kolchak was a great character, foibles and all, and Darren McGavin played him spot on, note for note. So it may have lasted a mere 20 episodes ... but what a show!

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