Ubiquitous
2012-04-22 18:06:16 UTC
by Billy Ingram
It's a foregone conclusion that whenever a big screen adaptation of a TV
show happens it's a disaster. Over and over we see the examples. But
there was a string of motion pictures based on television shows that
were as good or better than the originals.
They tended to be the very first adaptations - McHale's Navy (1964),
McHale's Navy Joins the Air Force (1965), Munster Go Home! (1964),
Batman (1966), and House of Dark Shadows (1970).
The first McHale's Navy film was pretty good, the second not so great,
but I would say they were on par with the sitcom. That's not really
saying much but they were movies for kids.
Munster Go Home! was a dumbed down, stretched thin episode of the CBS
show (that had just been cancelled), relying too much on bad puns and
childish slapstick. It might actually play better if you've never seen
The Munsters before, the best gags were all too familiar from the TV
version. The first season of The Munsters represented some of the
funniest television ever but the motion picture never aspired to that
level of quality, in terms of the writing anyway. But it does sport the
original cast (with a new Marilyn) in vivid color for the first time and
featured a cool new dragster created by George Barris.
http://youtube/Vf2v5uvt-Hk
Say what you will about the primetime portrayal of the Dark Knight but
if you liked the 1966 show you'd love the movie of the same year.
http://youtube/osrA1tQsAS8
But for me, House of Dark Shadows stands as the most effective TV
adaptation to the big screen until Star Trek II the Wrath of Khan came
along in 1982.
The daytime soap opera Dark Shadows struggled to find an audience before
Jonathan Frid joined the cast as Barnabas Collins. This happened in 1967
just after Batman ignited in primetime; both Frid and Adam West became
instant pop icons. Perhaps it was the success of the Batman movie that
prompted MGM to green light a film version of Dark Shadows four years
later.
The motion pictures House of Dark Shadows from 1970 and the sequel Night
of Dark Shadows from 1971 have never appeared on DVD - but a release is
promised for 2012. Interest in the upcoming Johnny Depp film version of
Dark Shadows has made the series super hot again. Who would have thought
this soap opera could rise again after the failed primetime revival in
1991?
House of Dark Shadows is a faithful re-telling of the origin of Barnabas
Collins straight from the soap opera plotline, only far more gruesome
and bloody. Creator and producer Dan Curtis constructed a rock solid
scenario so a blood curdling time was had by all.
There are many creepy moments and genuine chills in this gothic tale of
a vampire released after more than a century in captivity, consumed with
a longing to romantically reconnect with his long-buried past.
http://youtube/zjovb6UQgyA
The music by Robert Cobert was a major contributor to the overall
creepiness of Dark Shadows and it is carried over nicely to the motion
picture version. Some of the dialogue and camera set-ups are identical
to the first Barnabas TV story arc but the house was different, by
necessity. You can't shoot a motion picture on a TV soap opera set so
the Lyndhurst Estate in Tarrytown, New York and the Lockwood-Mathews
Mansion in Connecticut became the new Collins' mansions.
The feature film broke with the TV show's continuity in another key area
in that almost everyone was left dead by the end credits.
Night of Dark Shadows I remember being schlocky and seemingly meant to
go straight to the Drive-In circuit, the equivalent in 1971 of going
direct to DVD.
Like the television series, part of the film takes place in the past but
there's no Barnabas - instead Quentin Collins (David Selby) is the
center of attention, a silly prat possessed and in love with the ghost
of Angelique.
Most of the cast of House of Dark Shadows returned except Jonathan Frid
and Joan Bennett as Elizabeth Collins Stoddard. I guess she stayed dead
after the last movie.
Actors who played supporting characters that were offed in the first
film were reincarnated with different identities in Night of Dark
Shadows - but then that was a common thread on the TV show as well.
http://youtube/Udqf_kjxCbY
This movie was a great deal more violent and overtly sexual than the
afternoon soap, obviously, but not the least bit scary. I was left
totally confused by the whole tawdry affair, being a fan of the show and
seeing familiar characters in so murky a setting.
Unlike the first Dark Shadows movie, which surprised everyone with
strong box office receipts, Night of Dark Shadows wasn't as successful.
Why didn't Curtis do something more in the same bloody vein of the
series and the first feature? Jonathan Frid didn't want to do it, he was
terrified of being typecast.
Can you imagine not wanting to be the star of what could have been a
lucrative film franchise? He should have instead been apprehensive about
not working again; Jonathan Frid was rarely seen on TV or in movies
after the ABC series left the air in March of 1971, two days before
Night of Dark Shadows began filming.
The daytime soap had undergone a major change in the last months of its
existence with Frid portraying perennial loser Bramwell Collins in a
drab storyline that took place in the 1800s.
Gone were the vampires, werewolves, and fantastic characters, replaced
instead by boring archetypes who were vaguely terrified of a room in the
home, a worn out theme by then. I guess the network wanted to see if the
show had any pull as a typical soap opera (set in the past?) without the
bizarre plotlines before they pulled the plug.
Here's the last scene of Dark Shadows, they thankfully delivered a
chilling moment at the very end. I remember being quite impressed.
http://youtube/Iz9ysN5xbak
I understand the director's cut of Night of Dark Shadows will be coming
to DVD in 2012 so maybe I should give this motion picture another shot.
Unlike House of Dark Shadows, Night was directed by Dan Curtis but MGM
forced him to rush cut over 35 minutes from his finished film. This
might account for the lack of cohesion.
An interview with series creator Dan Curtis:
http://youtube/cGnwVG0vQ8Y
Here's a Question & Answer period with Jonathan Frid, Barnabas Collins,
from a 2009 Dark Shadows convention.
http://youtube/CZcUztMmsA0
In 2004, a pilot for a new Dark Shadows series starring Marley Shelton
as Victoria Winters and Alec Newman as Barnabas Collins was produced but
never picked up.
It's a foregone conclusion that whenever a big screen adaptation of a TV
show happens it's a disaster. Over and over we see the examples. But
there was a string of motion pictures based on television shows that
were as good or better than the originals.
They tended to be the very first adaptations - McHale's Navy (1964),
McHale's Navy Joins the Air Force (1965), Munster Go Home! (1964),
Batman (1966), and House of Dark Shadows (1970).
The first McHale's Navy film was pretty good, the second not so great,
but I would say they were on par with the sitcom. That's not really
saying much but they were movies for kids.
Munster Go Home! was a dumbed down, stretched thin episode of the CBS
show (that had just been cancelled), relying too much on bad puns and
childish slapstick. It might actually play better if you've never seen
The Munsters before, the best gags were all too familiar from the TV
version. The first season of The Munsters represented some of the
funniest television ever but the motion picture never aspired to that
level of quality, in terms of the writing anyway. But it does sport the
original cast (with a new Marilyn) in vivid color for the first time and
featured a cool new dragster created by George Barris.
http://youtube/Vf2v5uvt-Hk
Say what you will about the primetime portrayal of the Dark Knight but
if you liked the 1966 show you'd love the movie of the same year.
http://youtube/osrA1tQsAS8
But for me, House of Dark Shadows stands as the most effective TV
adaptation to the big screen until Star Trek II the Wrath of Khan came
along in 1982.
The daytime soap opera Dark Shadows struggled to find an audience before
Jonathan Frid joined the cast as Barnabas Collins. This happened in 1967
just after Batman ignited in primetime; both Frid and Adam West became
instant pop icons. Perhaps it was the success of the Batman movie that
prompted MGM to green light a film version of Dark Shadows four years
later.
The motion pictures House of Dark Shadows from 1970 and the sequel Night
of Dark Shadows from 1971 have never appeared on DVD - but a release is
promised for 2012. Interest in the upcoming Johnny Depp film version of
Dark Shadows has made the series super hot again. Who would have thought
this soap opera could rise again after the failed primetime revival in
1991?
House of Dark Shadows is a faithful re-telling of the origin of Barnabas
Collins straight from the soap opera plotline, only far more gruesome
and bloody. Creator and producer Dan Curtis constructed a rock solid
scenario so a blood curdling time was had by all.
There are many creepy moments and genuine chills in this gothic tale of
a vampire released after more than a century in captivity, consumed with
a longing to romantically reconnect with his long-buried past.
http://youtube/zjovb6UQgyA
The music by Robert Cobert was a major contributor to the overall
creepiness of Dark Shadows and it is carried over nicely to the motion
picture version. Some of the dialogue and camera set-ups are identical
to the first Barnabas TV story arc but the house was different, by
necessity. You can't shoot a motion picture on a TV soap opera set so
the Lyndhurst Estate in Tarrytown, New York and the Lockwood-Mathews
Mansion in Connecticut became the new Collins' mansions.
The feature film broke with the TV show's continuity in another key area
in that almost everyone was left dead by the end credits.
Night of Dark Shadows I remember being schlocky and seemingly meant to
go straight to the Drive-In circuit, the equivalent in 1971 of going
direct to DVD.
Like the television series, part of the film takes place in the past but
there's no Barnabas - instead Quentin Collins (David Selby) is the
center of attention, a silly prat possessed and in love with the ghost
of Angelique.
Most of the cast of House of Dark Shadows returned except Jonathan Frid
and Joan Bennett as Elizabeth Collins Stoddard. I guess she stayed dead
after the last movie.
Actors who played supporting characters that were offed in the first
film were reincarnated with different identities in Night of Dark
Shadows - but then that was a common thread on the TV show as well.
http://youtube/Udqf_kjxCbY
This movie was a great deal more violent and overtly sexual than the
afternoon soap, obviously, but not the least bit scary. I was left
totally confused by the whole tawdry affair, being a fan of the show and
seeing familiar characters in so murky a setting.
Unlike the first Dark Shadows movie, which surprised everyone with
strong box office receipts, Night of Dark Shadows wasn't as successful.
Why didn't Curtis do something more in the same bloody vein of the
series and the first feature? Jonathan Frid didn't want to do it, he was
terrified of being typecast.
Can you imagine not wanting to be the star of what could have been a
lucrative film franchise? He should have instead been apprehensive about
not working again; Jonathan Frid was rarely seen on TV or in movies
after the ABC series left the air in March of 1971, two days before
Night of Dark Shadows began filming.
The daytime soap had undergone a major change in the last months of its
existence with Frid portraying perennial loser Bramwell Collins in a
drab storyline that took place in the 1800s.
Gone were the vampires, werewolves, and fantastic characters, replaced
instead by boring archetypes who were vaguely terrified of a room in the
home, a worn out theme by then. I guess the network wanted to see if the
show had any pull as a typical soap opera (set in the past?) without the
bizarre plotlines before they pulled the plug.
Here's the last scene of Dark Shadows, they thankfully delivered a
chilling moment at the very end. I remember being quite impressed.
http://youtube/Iz9ysN5xbak
I understand the director's cut of Night of Dark Shadows will be coming
to DVD in 2012 so maybe I should give this motion picture another shot.
Unlike House of Dark Shadows, Night was directed by Dan Curtis but MGM
forced him to rush cut over 35 minutes from his finished film. This
might account for the lack of cohesion.
An interview with series creator Dan Curtis:
http://youtube/cGnwVG0vQ8Y
Here's a Question & Answer period with Jonathan Frid, Barnabas Collins,
from a 2009 Dark Shadows convention.
http://youtube/CZcUztMmsA0
In 2004, a pilot for a new Dark Shadows series starring Marley Shelton
as Victoria Winters and Alec Newman as Barnabas Collins was produced but
never picked up.
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"If Barack Obama isn't careful, he will become the Jimmy Carter of the
21st century."
"If Barack Obama isn't careful, he will become the Jimmy Carter of the
21st century."