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  1. #1

    Vampire flicks:

    Greetings,

    Back in the '70's there was the ABC Movie of the Week. They showed, quality, made for television movies with incredible talent. It was through the ABC Movie of the Week that we saw "Kung Fu," "Brian's Song" and a host of other good quality shows. One movie that really stood out and got notice was an urban vampire movie called "The Night Stalker" this show was pretty much the talk of the town or, to put it nicely, it rocked!! It starred the late Darren McGavin and the show's success spawned a series of the same name that may have been influencial the creation of "The X Files"

    Here is a tidbit found on Youtube. At 5:27 you will hear score that may have influenced the motifs used in the 5 Venoms (it does sound like Shaw Brothers lifted this one):

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2H3xuhkZuY

    Enjoy,

    mickey

  2. #2
    Oops!

    I did write "flicks."

    Another great vampire movie that came out during the '70's was called "Grave of the Vampire."
    This movie starred William Smith and was about a man who was searching for the vampire who raped his mother, creating him. Definitely shades of Blade, here.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3f1AnYyA0NA


    mickey

  3. #3
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    I remember watching The Night Stalker on Friday nights when I was about 11. If I remember correctly, it premiered in the fall of 1974 and only lasted halfway into 1975. And yes, it definitely was a heavy influence on The X-Files. IMO, the best episode of Night Stalker was probably the first; about Jack the Ripper re-appearing in Chicago. I think the show became a victim of its own premise; every week a new monster (a slime monster, a group of vampires, a Greek goddess, a werewolf, an underground giant lizard, a headless motorcyclist, an evil witch, etc.). However, I still think Kolchak was one of the great TV characters.

    The show itself was a spinoff of the original TV movies The Night Stalker (about a vampire) and its sequel, The Night Strangler.

    Not a vampire flick, but another quality movie I saw on TV in the '70s (can't remember what year; either 1972 or '77) was called Gargoyles. I don't know if it was made-for-TV or not. An odd thing about it was that when I saw it, there was a prologue which claimed it was based on real events(!?). It was about humans encountering gargoyle-like reptilian beings in a desert area of the American Southwest. I think it was a well-made movie, and even a bit scary at the time.

    A great made-for-TV vampire flick was the film version of Stephen King's novel Salem's Lot. I saw it again recently, and it still stands up today as a good, atmospheric vampire story, and is one of the best Stephen King adaptations ever.

  4. #4
    Hi Jimbo,

    I vaguely remember seeing "Gargoyles." Someone posted it up on youtube. I do remember the last part, though. I got the feeling this was not made in the USA. I do remember a similar "Gargoyles" movie that featured an underground civilization that spoke a strangely ancient language that was almost like English. They had to use subtitles when one of those gargoyles spoke. These characters were pale looking and had blondish white hair. Do you remember a movie like that? The ending was almost identical, the difference being that they flew off with two human females.

    mickey

  5. #5
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    Mickey,
    The ones in the Gargoyles movie I saw were mostly small, child-sized(?) beings with maybe beaked faces, but their leader was a tall, winged being that looked a lot like the typical image of the devil. I seem to remember it ending with the winged guy flying off. I think there was a colony of them breeding somewhere in a cave or underground. I don't remember any blondish hair, but I could be wrong (it's been over 30 years). I remember a scene where a dead woman is found hanging upside-down from her ankles on a pole. But I thought this particular movie was an American film, could be wrong there, too.

    There is a passing resemblance between the alpha leader of these gargoyles and the monster in Jeepers Creepers.

    I'm not sure if modern made-for-TV horror movies can compare atmospherically to some of those '70s ones. I find most of the Sci-Fi channel's TV horror movies are pretty bad, and overstuffed with ultra-fake-looking CGI. Plus most of the actors they get nowadays look like underwear/lingerie models or extras on CSI: Miami.

  6. #6
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    Actully the Gargolyes moved starred ex-NFL player Bernie Casey (he was also in one of the Revenge of the Nerd movies) as the head gargoyle. I don't remember them being small though.

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    THR honors Encounter of the Spooky Kind

    Hong Kong Flashback: Sammo Hung Strikes Box Office Gold With a 'Spooky' Comedy-Horror Mash Up
    5:30 PM PDT 3/17/2019 by Elizabeth Kerr


    Fortune Star Media Limited
    'Encounter of the Spooky Kind'

    Nearly 40 years ago the martial arts giant pioneered the industry’s signature sub-genre — the 'hopping' vampire thriller — and helped kick off the New Wave of the 1980s.
    Anyone with even a passing interest in peak-era Hong Kong kung fu movies will recognize Sammo Hung for the titan he is. As a start, he’s the oldest of the so-called the Seven Little Fortunes, students of the China Drama Academy, who went on to shape not just Hong Kong’s film industry but to some degree, Hollywood’s, both directly and indirectly; other Fortunes include (duh) Jackie Chan and fight choreographer-director Corey Yuen, who applied his distinct kung fu touch to X-Men, The Transporter and choreographed all of Jet Li’s American action titles. Since beginning his career as a child actor, bit player, stuntman and action director in the early 1960s, Hung has racked up literally hundreds of credits. Just a few of his many highlights are King Hu’s 1966 classic Come Drink With Me, 1973’s touchstone Enter the Dragon, Jackie Chan’s Project A, Long Arm of the Law, Pedicab Driver, Wong Kar-wai’s wuxia art film Ashes of Time and Carlton Cuse’s inimitable, short-lived CBS series Martial Law, which really needs to be seen to be fully appreciated.

    Along the way, the rotund Hung became an unlikely movie star and one of the key figures in the Hong Kong New Wave movement of the ’80s. With a physique that belied nimble precision and a round, jolly face, Hung was the cinematic opposite of the sexier, cooler Bruce Lee, but he was accessible in a way that Lee was not. Some crack comic timing helped. So it’s no surprise that 1980’s Encounter of the Spooky Kind, which Hung also directed and wrote, was a popular hit and Hong Kong cinema landmark for a host of reasons. In addition to making Hung a (bigger) household name, Encounter was one of the earliest in the (then) surging Hong Kong industry’s budding kung fu-horror-comedy mash-up sub-genre, and the inspiration for the geung-sih, hopping corpses or vampires from Chinese mythology — a trope that would dominate the decade.

    Hung, sporting one of his finest bowl cuts, stars as Bold Cheung, a bit of a dim bulb and a cursed, ghost-plagued cuckold. When his wife and her lover Tam are nearly caught red-handed by Bold, Tam hires the crooked Taoist priest Chin to bump him off via spooky pranks (because just stabbing him would be too easy). Fortunately Bold has an ally in Tsui, another priest who’s offended by Chin’s abuse of magic power, and he helps him out. What it lacks in narrative cohesion (a lot), Encounter more than makes up for in creative set pieces, goofball comedy and ultra-physical fights, which Hung makes look effortless. The highlights: Chin possesses Bold’s right arm at one point, which Bold has to fight off at the same time as he fends off some undead attackers, and an acrobatic monkey-fu finale that plays out on bamboo scaffolding. Only Bruce Campbell in The Evil Dead II has battled his own body parts more gleefully than Hung does here.

    Admittedly, Bold’s decision to punch his cheating wife in the face — several times (!) — probably wouldn’t make the cut today and the scratchy ’80s production values look every one of their 39 years, but Encounter of the Spooky Kind still has its genuinely inspired charms, and as a harbinger of the hopping vampire genre to follow it’s just about perfect. They just don’t make them like this anymore.
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