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https://nerdist.com/article/night-gallery-anthology-horror-rod-serling-blu-ray/

When it comes to anthology genre TV, Rod Serling’s The Twilight Zone is the one most people hail as the best. It was by no means, however, the only show of its kind. In the wake of Zone, shows like The Outer Limits, Thriller, and One Step Beyond flooded TV in the 1960s. Alfred Hitchcock himself even had two separate series of suspense stories. By the 1970s, however, the well had started to run dry. It’d come back in the ’80s, but the last gasp of the first rash came in the form of Night Gallery, Serling and producer Jack Laird’s pure-horror (within reason) series. All three seasons of this oft-forgotten show are out on glorious Blu-ray from Kino Lorber, and it’s really worth a look.

The production history of Night Gallery is fascinating and super complicated, so I won’t try to get into it too much, but suffice to say, unlike The Twilight Zone, this was not a full Serling joint. He hosts and he wrote a good number of segments, along with producing, however.

The premise of each episode has Serling walking around the titular “Night Gallery,” a huge and mostly empty space with paintings hanging from the ceiling. Each painting is a macabre interpretation of a different story. Serling sets up in front of a painting and gives a trademark opaque introduction for whatever story we’re about to watch.

Rod Serling stands in the center of images from The Night Gallery.
Kino Lorber

The first Night Gallery episode was a feature length TV movie. It featured three separate stories; the first, “The Cemetery” is a riff on the M.R. James story The Mezzotint in which a painting changes, indicating something scary will soon attack. It features Ossie Davis as the long-serving butler of a wealthy Southern landowner on his deathbed and Roddy McDowell as the wealthy man’s nephew who stands to inherit everything.

The second story in the pilot is “Eyes,” directed by a young Universal contract director named Steven Spielberg. It finds Joan Crawford as a high society with vision impairments matron who undergoes an experimental surgery that offers her 12 hours to see. And the final story, “Escape Route,” has a fugitive Nazi facing ghostly comeuppance for his past crimes.

The Night Gallery pilot is very straightforward, though executed incredibly well, and was popular enough to get the series greenlit. The interesting thing, however, is that as the show went on, the kinds of stories got a lot wilder, with far fewer “gotcha” twists and more proper horror. The first season consisted of only six episodes, the second a full 22, and the third would be cut down to 30 minutes rather than 60, and has 15 episodes.

In total, the show had 96 separate segments. Rather than try to talk about all of them, instead I want to talk about some of my favorites, to give you an idea of why I think Night Gallery is so special and why it deserves to be talked about in the same breath as The Twilight Zone.

Season 1, Segment 3b: “Certain Shadows on the Wall”
A shadow remains permanently etched on the wall in Night Gallery.
Universal Television

This is an excellent riff on a classic ghost story. Agnes Moorhead is an aged woman who dies under mysterious circumstances and, inexplicably, her shadow remains on the wall to taunt her sinister brother. This features some truly creepy visuals and mood, great work from director Jeff Corey.

Season 1, Segment 5c: “The Doll”

An adaptation of an Algernon Blackwood story, “The Doll” finds a child’s toy terrorizing a Colonial officer in Queen Victoria’s army. A lot of Night Gallery‘s best segments fit into traditional Victorian, Gothic horror tropes, which coupled with the ’70s TV aesthetic produces an especially unsettling effect.

The face of a hideous doll in Night Gallery.
Universal Television
Season 1, Segment 6a: “They’re Tearing Down Tim Riley’s Bar”

The longest single segment on the show, and also the most atypical. Serling wrote this tale of a has-been salesman (William Windom) who longs for “the good old days” when his life had promise. Upon hearing that his favorite bar will be torn down, the man begins experiencing ghostly visions of the past. This segment earned Night Gallery an Emmy nomination for “Outstanding Single Program” in 1971.

Season 2, Segment 10a: “The Dark Boy”

Night Gallery adapted several “weird fiction” stories from the early 1900s. “The Dark Boy” is one such, adapted from August Derleth’s story of the same name. In it, a young school teacher at the turn of the century takes up a position at a rural community. The welcoming committee tells her she’ll have 16 students, however when she gets to class she learns there’s a 17. Despite her attempts, this boy never seems to get what she’s teaching. Eventually she, and the audience, learn the sad and spooky truth of who this child is.

Season 2, Segments 11a and 12a: “Pickman’s Model” and “Cool Air”
Rod Serling stands in front of a painting of a hideous creature in the Night Gallery episode "Pickman's Model"
Universal Television

In successive episodes, Night Gallery adapted two H.P. Lovecraft stories. The first, “Pickman’s Model,” finds an artist depicting terrible and nightmarish things in his paintings. Guess what? They’re real. This one would later end up in Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities, which I think is actually the better version.

The second, “Cool Air,” adapted by Serling, turns one of Lovecraft’s very short horror stories into a romantic, supernatural drama. In it, a young woman falls for her father’s colleague. The man has a very specific aversion to heat of any kind, pumping his rooms with a rudimentary air conditioning system. There is, of course, a reason for his needing cool air, and as you might expect, it’s not a happy one.

Season 2, Segment 17b, “The Ghost of Sorworth Place”

Another excellent ghost story for the series. This one sees an American tourist happen upon an estate in Scotland owned by a comely young widow who seems petrified of something. The man soon learns the woman fears the return of her husband, who died one year prior. It’s Night Gallery, so you can guess this probably isn’t just paranoia. The ghost effects here are some of the series’ best.

Season 2, Episodes 20-22
Laurence Harvey sits on a bed in horrible agony in Night Gallery.
Universal Television

While looking over the segment list, I realized that all seven segments in the second season’s final three episodes are brilliant. They include: a student of sorcery trying to ensure a life of leisure; a “sin eater” in the Middle Ages meeting a grim fate; robots getting revenge for mistreatment; an expat in Borneo plotting a gruesome end to a romantic rival; and a psychiatrist who has to help a scientific genius process grief. All of them are just superb.

Season 3, Episode 2, “The Girl with the Hungry Eyes”

By the third season—saved from cancellation at the last moment—the network mandated the show go to 30 minutes. That meant, aside from two outliers, that was only one story per episode. Generally these episodes are not as good; however, the second episode is a crackerjack entry. It finds a photographer whose latest muse is not merely a beautiful woman, but the beautiful woman whom every ad agency wants as their spokesmodel. The trouble starts when, as the photographer gets more and more money, more and more men end up mysteriously dead. Succubus, babyyyyyy!

Joanna Pettit's eyes are deadly in Night Gallery.
Universal Television
Season 3, Episode 6, “The Other Way Out”

An old man lures a murderer to a secluded farm house where the man seeks to enact his revenge. He places the murderer in a pit with no way out. All the old man (played by Burl Ives, no less) tells his prisoner is that he’ll be dealt with when “Sonny” arrives. We learn the extent of the murderer’s crime and hear his pleas for mercy, only to be met with an absolute gut-punch when Sonny indeed arrives.

These are just some of the best episodes of the show. Give it a look and see for yourself. All three seasons of Night Gallery plus the pilot movie are available on Blu-ray from Kino Lorber. Just as they did with The Outer Limits and Kolchak: The Night Stalker, they’ve poured dozens of hours of commentaries and extras for fans of horror media and old American TV. They are the best sets of their kind on the market.

Kyle Anderson is the Senior Editor for Nerdist. You can find his film and TV reviews here. Follow him on Instagram and Letterboxd.

The post NIGHT GALLERY Is the ’70s Horror Anthology You Need in Your Life appeared first on Nerdist.

December 19, 2022

NIGHT GALLERY Is the ’70s Horror Anthology You Need in Your Life

https://nerdist.com/article/night-gallery-anthology-horror-rod-serling-blu-ray/

When it comes to anthology genre TV, Rod Serling’s The Twilight Zone is the one most people hail as the best. It was by no means, however, the only show of its kind. In the wake of Zone, shows like The Outer Limits, Thriller, and One Step Beyond flooded TV in the 1960s. Alfred Hitchcock himself even had two separate series of suspense stories. By the 1970s, however, the well had started to run dry. It’d come back in the ’80s, but the last gasp of the first rash came in the form of Night Gallery, Serling and producer Jack Laird’s pure-horror (within reason) series. All three seasons of this oft-forgotten show are out on glorious Blu-ray from Kino Lorber, and it’s really worth a look.

The production history of Night Gallery is fascinating and super complicated, so I won’t try to get into it too much, but suffice to say, unlike The Twilight Zone, this was not a full Serling joint. He hosts and he wrote a good number of segments, along with producing, however.

The premise of each episode has Serling walking around the titular “Night Gallery,” a huge and mostly empty space with paintings hanging from the ceiling. Each painting is a macabre interpretation of a different story. Serling sets up in front of a painting and gives a trademark opaque introduction for whatever story we’re about to watch.

Rod Serling stands in the center of images from The Night Gallery.
Kino Lorber

The first Night Gallery episode was a feature length TV movie. It featured three separate stories; the first, “The Cemetery” is a riff on the M.R. James story The Mezzotint in which a painting changes, indicating something scary will soon attack. It features Ossie Davis as the long-serving butler of a wealthy Southern landowner on his deathbed and Roddy McDowell as the wealthy man’s nephew who stands to inherit everything.

The second story in the pilot is “Eyes,” directed by a young Universal contract director named Steven Spielberg. It finds Joan Crawford as a high society with vision impairments matron who undergoes an experimental surgery that offers her 12 hours to see. And the final story, “Escape Route,” has a fugitive Nazi facing ghostly comeuppance for his past crimes.

The Night Gallery pilot is very straightforward, though executed incredibly well, and was popular enough to get the series greenlit. The interesting thing, however, is that as the show went on, the kinds of stories got a lot wilder, with far fewer “gotcha” twists and more proper horror. The first season consisted of only six episodes, the second a full 22, and the third would be cut down to 30 minutes rather than 60, and has 15 episodes.

In total, the show had 96 separate segments. Rather than try to talk about all of them, instead I want to talk about some of my favorites, to give you an idea of why I think Night Gallery is so special and why it deserves to be talked about in the same breath as The Twilight Zone.

Season 1, Segment 3b: “Certain Shadows on the Wall”
A shadow remains permanently etched on the wall in Night Gallery.
Universal Television

This is an excellent riff on a classic ghost story. Agnes Moorhead is an aged woman who dies under mysterious circumstances and, inexplicably, her shadow remains on the wall to taunt her sinister brother. This features some truly creepy visuals and mood, great work from director Jeff Corey.

Season 1, Segment 5c: “The Doll”

An adaptation of an Algernon Blackwood story, “The Doll” finds a child’s toy terrorizing a Colonial officer in Queen Victoria’s army. A lot of Night Gallery‘s best segments fit into traditional Victorian, Gothic horror tropes, which coupled with the ’70s TV aesthetic produces an especially unsettling effect.

The face of a hideous doll in Night Gallery.
Universal Television
Season 1, Segment 6a: “They’re Tearing Down Tim Riley’s Bar”

The longest single segment on the show, and also the most atypical. Serling wrote this tale of a has-been salesman (William Windom) who longs for “the good old days” when his life had promise. Upon hearing that his favorite bar will be torn down, the man begins experiencing ghostly visions of the past. This segment earned Night Gallery an Emmy nomination for “Outstanding Single Program” in 1971.

Season 2, Segment 10a: “The Dark Boy”

Night Gallery adapted several “weird fiction” stories from the early 1900s. “The Dark Boy” is one such, adapted from August Derleth’s story of the same name. In it, a young school teacher at the turn of the century takes up a position at a rural community. The welcoming committee tells her she’ll have 16 students, however when she gets to class she learns there’s a 17. Despite her attempts, this boy never seems to get what she’s teaching. Eventually she, and the audience, learn the sad and spooky truth of who this child is.

Season 2, Segments 11a and 12a: “Pickman’s Model” and “Cool Air”
Rod Serling stands in front of a painting of a hideous creature in the Night Gallery episode "Pickman's Model"
Universal Television

In successive episodes, Night Gallery adapted two H.P. Lovecraft stories. The first, “Pickman’s Model,” finds an artist depicting terrible and nightmarish things in his paintings. Guess what? They’re real. This one would later end up in Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities, which I think is actually the better version.

The second, “Cool Air,” adapted by Serling, turns one of Lovecraft’s very short horror stories into a romantic, supernatural drama. In it, a young woman falls for her father’s colleague. The man has a very specific aversion to heat of any kind, pumping his rooms with a rudimentary air conditioning system. There is, of course, a reason for his needing cool air, and as you might expect, it’s not a happy one.

Season 2, Segment 17b, “The Ghost of Sorworth Place”

Another excellent ghost story for the series. This one sees an American tourist happen upon an estate in Scotland owned by a comely young widow who seems petrified of something. The man soon learns the woman fears the return of her husband, who died one year prior. It’s Night Gallery, so you can guess this probably isn’t just paranoia. The ghost effects here are some of the series’ best.

Season 2, Episodes 20-22
Laurence Harvey sits on a bed in horrible agony in Night Gallery.
Universal Television

While looking over the segment list, I realized that all seven segments in the second season’s final three episodes are brilliant. They include: a student of sorcery trying to ensure a life of leisure; a “sin eater” in the Middle Ages meeting a grim fate; robots getting revenge for mistreatment; an expat in Borneo plotting a gruesome end to a romantic rival; and a psychiatrist who has to help a scientific genius process grief. All of them are just superb.

Season 3, Episode 2, “The Girl with the Hungry Eyes”

By the third season—saved from cancellation at the last moment—the network mandated the show go to 30 minutes. That meant, aside from two outliers, that was only one story per episode. Generally these episodes are not as good; however, the second episode is a crackerjack entry. It finds a photographer whose latest muse is not merely a beautiful woman, but the beautiful woman whom every ad agency wants as their spokesmodel. The trouble starts when, as the photographer gets more and more money, more and more men end up mysteriously dead. Succubus, babyyyyyy!

Joanna Pettit's eyes are deadly in Night Gallery.
Universal Television
Season 3, Episode 6, “The Other Way Out”

An old man lures a murderer to a secluded farm house where the man seeks to enact his revenge. He places the murderer in a pit with no way out. All the old man (played by Burl Ives, no less) tells his prisoner is that he’ll be dealt with when “Sonny” arrives. We learn the extent of the murderer’s crime and hear his pleas for mercy, only to be met with an absolute gut-punch when Sonny indeed arrives.

These are just some of the best episodes of the show. Give it a look and see for yourself. All three seasons of Night Gallery plus the pilot movie are available on Blu-ray from Kino Lorber. Just as they did with The Outer Limits and Kolchak: The Night Stalker, they’ve poured dozens of hours of commentaries and extras for fans of horror media and old American TV. They are the best sets of their kind on the market.

Kyle Anderson is the Senior Editor for Nerdist. You can find his film and TV reviews here. Follow him on Instagram and Letterboxd.

The post NIGHT GALLERY Is the ’70s Horror Anthology You Need in Your Life appeared first on Nerdist.


December 19, 2022

The Superman Conundrum: From a Younger Kal-El to the Appearance of Val-Zod

https://blackgirlnerds.com/the-superman-conundrum-from-a-younger-kal-el-to-the-appearance-of-val-zod/

The controversial discussion around Henry Cavill stepping down as Superman had the internet buzzing since the actor officially announced it on his Instagram. 

In fact this riled up fans so much that the hashtag #FireJamesGunn became a trending topic on social media.  To give some context here, James Gunn, most notably known for his work directing the Guardians of the Galaxy Marvel movies and DC’s The Suicide Squad and creator of The Peacemaker TV series was recently hired on as co-head of Warner Bros. Discovery’s DC Comics film and TV unit along with Peter Safran. James Gunn will now be the Kevin Feige of the DC cinematic universe.

The producers have decided to focus on the earlier parts of Superman’s life, leaving Cavill to pick up his pink slip from Warner Bros and move onto the next project.  And while there are several articles out there speculating who should play the next-gen Kal-El (aka Superman), what about Val Zod? This is a character that Michael B. Jordan has expressed interest in playing and is set to executive produce a series for HBO Max currently in development. 

So while we fan cast over who will wear Superman’s cape next, let’s explore the comic book canon Black superheroes in the DC universe that offer a unique, fresh and substantive story to the prolific action hero. 

Calvin Ellis

Also known as Kalel, Calvin Ellis is an alternate version of Superman who appears in the multiverse of DC Comics. He is the President of the United States and the superhero known as Superman in the alternate universe of Earth-23.

Val-Zod

Val-Zod is a Kryptonian who is the second character to take on the mantle of Superman in the DC Comics Universe. He was raised on the planet Krakoa instead of Earth and is a member of the Justice Society of America.

Honorable Mention:

Kwaku Anansi

Kwaku Anansi is a character in the DC Comics universe who is a member of the superhero team known as the Global Guardians. While he is not had the actual mantle of Superman and is actually more aligned with being a Spider-Man-like character, he has powers and abilities similar to those of Superman. He is an Anansi, a mythical spider and trickster god from African folklore who claims to be directly responsible for the creation of Vixen’s Tantu Totem. His powers include super strength and the ability to fly.

As the shakeup begins over at Warner Bros, J.J Abrams’ Black Superman reboot is still happening. The controversy around the development of the reboot, a script penned by cultural critic Ta-Nehisi Coates decided to racebend Superman and make Clark Kent Black, instead of going with a canon Black character like Val-Zod or Calvin Ellis.

While it’s too early to tell what Gunn and Safran’s plans are for the DC cinematic universe are as it relates to this specific hero, one thing is for certain, there are a lot of options to create various stories, experiences and new franchises under the Superman mantle.

There’s also a conversation to be had around Milestone characters such as Icon, Rocket, Static and Hardware. Where will they fit into the new guard over at Warner Bros Discovery?

We’ll see what happens and in the meantime; reading up on these characters are a great way to kill some time while you wait.


December 18, 2022

Spider-Man’s Groovy Disco Villain the Hypno-Hustler, Explained

https://nerdist.com/article/spiderman-hypno-hustler-explained-disco-villain-donald-glover-marvel/

The Hypno-Hustler is one of the most obscure, not to mention ridiculous, Spider-Man villains out there. And he is often ranked as one of the worst too. Despite sharing a creator with the man who gave the world Rocket Raccoon, Bill Mantlo. And yet, this musical criminal is going to be the subject of a live-action movie, starring none other than Donald Glover. The news comes straight from The Hollywood Reporter. But just who the heck is this obscure Spider-Man villain? We’re here to explain it all to you.

The modern iteration of the Hypno-Hustler, often used as a gag.
Marvel Comics

Hypno-Hustler, the Disco Devil

The Hypno-Hustler was one of many attempts during the peak of the late ‘70s Disco music craze to try to cash in on the phenomenon. (the other, far more famous example, is the mutant Dazzler). After Saturday Night Fever, everyone from Mickey Mouse to Count Chocula was cutting a Disco album, so Marvel wanted in on some of that action. Hence, the Disco-themed villain Hypno-Hustler made his debut in Peter Parker, the Spectacular Spider-Man #24 way back in 1978.

Hypno-Hustler debut issue, Spectacular Spider-Man #24.
Marvel Comics

The Hypno-Hustler’s real name was Antoine Desloin. He was the lead singer of a Disco musical group called the Mercy Killers. They were scheduled to headline at a popular nightclub called “Beyond Forever.” But the club’s manager caught the Hypno-Hustler robbing his safe, so Desloin used his high-tech hypnotic equipment on the manager. He had a guitar that could emit hypnotic soundwaves, and also had some boots that spewed out knockout gas. He even had retractable knives in the soles. Later up on stage, Hypno-Hustler and the Mercy Killers used their hypnotizing equipment on the audience in order to rob them all. And it would have all gone according to plan, if not for that meddling wallcrawler.

A Fateful Encounter on the Dance Floor

Hypno-Hustler and his band, the Mercy Killers.
Marvel Comics

As luck would have it, Peter Parker was dancing away at the club on that fateful night. And so, the friendly neighborhood Spider-Man was there to challenge the Hypno-Hustler. In the brawl, Spidey discovered that the Hypno-Hustler’s headphones protected him from his own hypnotic sounds, rendering him immune. Spidey then took his headphones off, therefore causing him to become a victim of his own hypnosis. In traditional Spidey fashion, Peter left Hypno-Hustler all webbed up for the police to take into custody. Interestingly enough, they introduced a Disco-themed villain who used music to hypnotize and steal on the Lynda Carter Wonder Woman TV series that same year.

Not Exactly an A-List Spider-Man Rogue

The Hypno-Hustler in modern day Marvel Comics.
Marvel Comics

Hypno-Hustler did not exactly become one of Spidey’s recurring villains after this encounter. Within a year of his introduction, the Disco bubble burst. By the end of 1979, the terms “Disco Sucks” and “Dead as Disco” were on everyone’s lips. Everything pertaining to this genre instantly became tacky and passe. Thus, the Hypno-Hustler, with his all-silver costume and period-specific hairdo, seemed like an instant relic of a pop culture fad gone by. He has appeared a handful of times in the decades since. Usually as a background character cameo as the butt of a joke. He sadly did not survive the implosion of Disco like his fellow cash-in character Dazzler did. We last saw the Hypno-Hustler at a Vil-a-Non meeting for reformed villains.

We imagine Donald Glover will be able to have a ton of fun with a character like Hypno-Hustler. Especially if he makes the film an homage to the glorious excess of the Disco era. Maybe they make the movie a throwback period piece. Or maybe it takes place in the modern day, at a retro-themed nightclub. If we get a Spidey dancing cameo, that would make it all worth it. As long as Donald Glover wears a very close reproduction of the original Hypno-Hustler costume and embraces the absurdity, we’re here for it.

The post Spider-Man’s Groovy Disco Villain the Hypno-Hustler, Explained appeared first on Nerdist.


December 18, 2022

‘The Best Man: The Final Chapters’ Brings us Back to One of Our Fave Rom-Com Franchises

https://blackgirlnerds.com/the-best-man-the-final-chapters-brings-us-back-to-one-of-our-fave-rom-com-franchises/

BGN interviews the cast and crew of the Peacock limited drama series The Best Man: The Final Chapters.

Featured in the interviews are: Creator/Executive Producer/Co-Showrunner Malcolm D. Lee, Executive Producer, Co-Showrunner Dayna Lynne North, Regina Hall (Candace), Morris Chestnut (Lance Sullivan), Melissa DeSousa (Shelby) and Terrence Howard (Quentin).

The Best Man: The Final Chapters. dives deeper into the beloved relationships and how they’ve evolved. Past grievances resurface in the unpredictable stages of midlife crisis meets midlife renaissance. Fans of the film franchise aren’t ready for the twists and turns the series provides! This is the first time in nearly 10 years the iconic cast will be on-screen together since The Best Man Holiday.

Interviewer: Jeandra LeBeauf

Video Editor: Jamie Broadnax

The Best Man: The Final Chapters premieres December 22nd on Peacock TV.


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