Night Gallery: Season 2
S**N
The BEST Season, IMO, incredible stories brought to life by brilliant actors
This season, is, IMO, the best of Night Gallery.Virtually all of my favorite episodes reside in this collection, beginning withThe Academy,that is absolutely chilling and you find yourself shifting around in your chair wanting to be far away from it...the recalitrant son of the businessman who is having the guided tour, in hopes of improving his son's outlook, is in for a very different education.I enjoyed The Diary primarily to watch the excellent performance by Patty Duke, reminiscent of her Neely O'Hara role in Valley of the Dolls. She does a great interpretation of a female you would never want to meet.Camera Obscura is my number on all time favorite episode ever; Ross Martin and Rene Auberjenois are fabulous in their respective roles and the story is wonderful, Ross Martin is a collector par excellence and when he tries and fails to reform Auberjonois's greed in his zeal to collect his debts (by use of practices which can only be described as usury) from an impoverished friend of Martin's, Martin shows Auberjonois one last item in his collection: A camera obscura.And last but not least of my favorites, The Caterpillar, starring Laurence Harvey and Joanna Pettit, when Harvey is so bedazzled by her beauty he schemes to get possession of her by any means available.These shows represent the best of the best, and each one is a brilliant stand alone study of human (and sometimes inhuman) nature in all its forms. When I saw these episodes when they first came out, I was absolutely enthralled; I never missed a show and watched them every time they were on like it was the first time; never dreaming that someday they would all be available to watch as often as I wished in my own home. What a treat!!!Season 2, Episode 1: The Boy who Predicted EarthquakesOriginal Air Date: 15 September 1971A young boy who can accurately foresee future events becomes a TV star.Season 2, Episode 2: Miss Lovecraft Sent MeOriginal Air Date: 15 September 1971Sent from an agency for an overnight stay, a babysitter begins to think something is wrong when the father's reflection doesn't appear in a mirror and his unseen son sounds a lot like a wild dog.Season 2, Episode 3: The Hand of Borgus WeemsOriginal Air Date: 15 September 1971A man's hand is possessed and starts to exact revenge for the death of it's owner.Season 2, Episode 4: Phantom of What Opera?Original Air Date: 15 September 1971Season 2, Episode 5: A Death in the FamilyOriginal Air Date: 22 September 1971Petty thief Doran is on the run from the law and hides out at the funeral home run by Mr. Jared Soames, an undertaker who has an unusual method of dealing with the loneliness in his life.Season 2, Episode 6: The MercifulOriginal Air Date: 22 September 1971In this brief twist on Edgar Allan Poe's "The Cask of Amontillado", a marital partner is cemented inside a small cubicle as part of a mercy killing.Season 2, Episode 7: Class of '99Original Air Date: 22 September 1971The final is given at an unknown university that reveals more than just the knowledge of its students.Season 2, Episode 8: Witches FeastOriginal Air Date: ????Season 2, Episode 9: Since Aunt Ada Came to StayOriginal Air Date: 29 September 1971College professor Craig Lowell and his wife have recently opened their home to her aunt Ada Burn Quigley, but he suspects that she is not the sweet little old lady she appears to be.Season 2, Episode 10: With Apologies to Mr. HydeOriginal Air Date: 29 September 1971Doctor Jeckyl takes his potion with some unusual results.Season 2, Episode 11: The Flip Side of SatanOriginal Air Date: 29 September 1971A callous disc jockey finds himself spinning platters at a hellish radio station.Season 2, Episode 12: A Fear of SpidersOriginal Air Date: 6 October 1971Arachnophobic gourmet critic Justus Walters has no use for the clingy librarian who lives upstairs, until he discovers a tenacious spider in his kitchen sink and needs help to get rid of it.Season 2, Episode 13: JuniorOriginal Air Date: 6 October 1971A "black-out" vignette dealing with parents who have to decide which one gets out of bed in the middle of the night to feed their son.Season 2, Episode 14: Marmalade WineOriginal Air Date: 6 October 1971Roger Blacker gets caught in a cloudburst, is welcomed into the home of retired surgeon Dr. Francis Deeking, drinks excessively, and lies about his photographic achievements.Season 2, Episode 15: The AcademyOriginal Air Date: 6 October 1971A wealthy businessman is having trouble with his son, a delinquent who's constantly in trouble. He hears of a private school that specializes in "problem" children, and pays it a visit to determine if it's the kind of place that will straighten out his son.Season 2, Episode 16: The Phantom FarmhouseOriginal Air Date: 20 October 1971Psychiatrist Joel Winter is questioned by the local sheriff when one of his patients is savagely murdered in the forest near the sanitarium where Winter is on staff.Season 2, Episode 17: Silent Snow, Secret SnowOriginal Air Date: 20 October 1971Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hasleman are concerned when their young son Paul escapes from reality into a fantasy world full of snowy landscapes.Season 2, Episode 18: A Question of FearOriginal Air Date: 27 October 1971A mercenary is bet $15,000 that he cannot stay one night in a haunted house, a house that turned his companion's hair white in one night.Season 2, Episode 19: The Devil Is Not MockedOriginal Air Date: 27 October 1971The Nazi's plan to bring everyone under their domination throughout the Balkans during the early days of World War II including the master of a dark castle and his entire household.Season 2, Episode 20: Midnight Never EndsOriginal Air Date: 3 November 1971A hitch-hiking Marine feels he has met the woman who picks him up before.Season 2, Episode 21: BrendaOriginal Air Date: 3 November 1971A girl vacationing on an island comes across a creature that she befriends.Season 2, Episode 22: The DiaryOriginal Air Date: 10 November 1971A gossip columnist gets a gift of a diary in which the next day's events are described before they happen.Season 2, Episode 23: A Matter of SemanticsOriginal Air Date: 10 November 1971Dracula visits a blood bank with an unusual request.Season 2, Episode 24: Big SurpriseOriginal Air Date: 10 November 1971Mr. Hawkins is an elderly hermit feared by the children in the neighborhood. When three boys reluctantly pass his farmhouse on the way home from school, he offers them a big surprise if they visit nearby Miller's Field and do some digging.Season 2, Episode 25: Professor Peabody's Last LectureOriginal Air Date: 10 November 1971During one of his classroom lectures, college professor Peabody makes the mistake of dismissing pagan religious cults as childish superstitions.Season 2, Episode 26: House - with GhostOriginal Air Date: 17 November 1971In England an American with a nagging wife rents a house that comes with a stairwell ghost.Season 2, Episode 27: A Midnight Visit to the Neighborhood Blood BankOriginal Air Date: 17 November 1971A hungry vampire goes in search of a nocturnal nosh in a young woman's bedchamber.Season 2, Episode 28: Dr. Stringfellow's RejuvenatorOriginal Air Date: 17 November 1971In the American desert circa 1880, "Doctor" Ernest Stringfellow survives by selling snake oil in the form of a medicinal tonic with dubious healing powers.Season 2, Episode 29: Hell's BellsOriginal Air Date: 17 November 1971A hippie dies in an automobile accident and finds himself in hell. He wonders just how bad eternity in hell can be.Season 2, Episode 30: The Dark BoyOriginal Air Date: 24 November 1971In 19th-century Montana, recently-widowed schoolteacher Judith Timm is visited by the specter of Joel Robb, a fourth grader who died two years earlier.Season 2, Episode 31: Keep in Touch - We'll Think of SomethingOriginal Air Date: 24 November 1971Wealthy young housewife Claire Foster is a dead ringer for the attractive hitchhiker who pistol-whipped musician Erik Sutton and stole his car. But she steadfastly proclaims her innocence to him and to the police.Season 2, Episode 32: Pickman's ModelOriginal Air Date: 1 December 1971In 1890's Boston, art student Mavis Goldsmith has a desperate crush on her teacher Richard Upton Pickman and tries to learn why he is obsessed with painting rat-like ghouls. One night, she follows him home to learn more.Season 2, Episode 33: The Dear DepartedOriginal Air Date: 1 December 1971Con artist Mark Bennett and his bumbling accomplice Joe Casey run a successful spiritualist scam, until Mark falls for Joe's wife Angela.Season 2, Episode 34: An Act of ChivalryOriginal Air Date: 1 December 1971When a woman enters an elevator, a ghoul is asked to remove his hat.Season 2, Episode 35: Cool AirOriginal Air Date: 8 December 1971A Gothic love story about a woman and a man who lives in a refrigerated apartment.Season 2, Episode 36: Camera ObscuraOriginal Air Date: 8 December 1971A miserly banker finds himself trapped after viewing his client's strange optical device.Season 2, Episode 37: Quoth the RavenOriginal Air Date: 8 December 1971Edgar Allen Poe can't even get the first line down on paper.Season 2, Episode 38: The Messiah on Mott StreetOriginal Air Date: 15 December 1971When his grandfather is ailing, a nine-year-old Jewish buy runs out looking for the Messiah. His grandfather said that he will appear big and black against the sky striking down their enemies. When he gets into trouble and is saved by a black man, he brings him home to his grandfather announcing that he had found him.Season 2, Episode 39: The Painted MirrorOriginal Air Date: 15 December 1971Removing the paint from the glass of an antique mirror, an aged shop owner sees an alien landscape that is used in a plot to rid himself of his unwanted partner.Season 2, Episode 40: The Different OnesOriginal Air Date: 29 December 1971In the 21st century, suburban widower Paul Koch is desperate to find a solution to his 17-year-old son Victor's facial deformity, but none seem to exist - on this planet.Season 2, Episode 41: Tell David...Original Air Date: 29 December 1971Lost and asking for directions a woman gets a warning and possible glimpse into her own future.Season 2, Episode 42: Logoda's HeadsOriginal Air Date: 29 December 1971A man scours the African jungle for his missing brother and finds Logoda, a witch doctor whose "trophy room" contains the shrunken heads of defeated enemies.Season 2, Episode 43: Green FingersOriginal Air Date: 5 January 1972In the days before the Supreme Court's Kelo v. City of New London decision extending eminent domain rights to private business development, the owner of a construction company must resort to nefarious means to acquire the home of a little old lady in order to build a factory.Season 2, Episode 44: The FuneralOriginal Air Date: 5 January 1972Greedy funeral director Morton Silkline balks at having to arrange a belated funeral for distinguished client Ludwig Asper, but Mr. Asper proves to be very convincing...Season 2, Episode 45: The Tune in Dan's CafeOriginal Air Date: 5 January 1972Season 2, Episode 46: Lindemann's CatchOriginal Air Date: 12 January 1972A fisherman who catches a mermaid longs to keep her, but wishes for her to be a real woman.Season 2, Episode 47: A Feast of BloodOriginal Air Date: 12 January 1972Vain young beauty Sheila Gray is repulsed by Henry Mallory, the unattractive man who wants to marry her. But he's given her a gift - an unusual fur brooch that will not fall off Sheila's coat, no matter how much it is shaken.Season 2, Episode 48: The Late Mr. PeddingtonOriginal Air Date: 12 January 1972A woman who is provided very little means from her husband's estate is shopping for the cheapest funeral she can find.Season 2, Episode 49: The Miracle at CamafeoOriginal Air Date: 19 January 1972Instead of spending his insurance settlement on a medical solution to his paralyzed legs, he visits a Mexican Shrine and looks for a miracle.Season 2, Episode 50: The Ghost of Sorworth PlaceOriginal Air Date: 19 January 1972Wandering through Scotland, American drifter Ralph Burke is instantly smitten with Ann Loring, a beautiful widow whose home Sorworth Place is haunted by a ghost.Season 2, Episode 51: The Waiting RoomOriginal Air Date: 26 January 1972The sins of unsavory gunfighter Samuel Dichter follow him into the afterlife.Season 2, Episode 52: Last Rites for a Dead DruidOriginal Air Date: 26 January 1972Attorney Bruce Tarraday suffers nightmares after his wife Jennie visits an antique store and makes an impulse purchase of a life-size druid sorcerer statue that she claims resembles him.Season 2, Episode 53: Deliveries in the RearOriginal Air Date: 9 February 1972In 19th century New England, callous surgery instructor Dr. John Fletcher is unconcerned about where the local grave robbers obtain the dissection cadavers that they sell to him for his classroom lectures.Season 2, Episode 54: Stop Killing MeOriginal Air Date: 9 February 1972Middle-aged housewife Frances Turchin confides in police sergeant Stanley Bevelow that her husband is trying to murder her.Season 2, Episode 55: Dead WeightOriginal Air Date: 9 February 1972A bank robber desperate to leave the country doubts the credentials of Mr. Bullivant, an aging exporter with a reputation for complete customer satisfaction.Season 2, Episode 56: I'll Never Leave You - EverOriginal Air Date: 16 February 1972An adulteress tries to destroy her terminally ill husband Owen with the help of a local crone skilled in the black arts.Season 2, Episode 57: There Aren't Any More MacBanesOriginal Air Date: 16 February 1972Arthur Porter is fed up with wasting his money supporting his eccentric nephew Andrew MacBane and threatens to cut him off, so Andrew turns to the occult to solve the problem.Season 2, Episode 58: You Can't Get Help Like That AnymoreOriginal Air Date: 23 February 1972Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Fulton delight in the sadistic torture of their servants, but they may have met their match when a new robot maid, known as Model # 931, shows up at their home.Season 2, Episode 59: The Sins of the FathersOriginal Air Date: 23 February 1972Famine runs rampant in 19th century Wales, requiring terrified young Ian Evans to feast on the sins of deceased Mr. Craighill in order to feed himself and his parents.Season 2, Episode 60: The CaterpillarOriginal Air Date: 1 March 1972A unscrupulous man who wants the beautiful wife of another colleague pays to have an "earwig" placed in the husband's ear. This insect will will tunnel through the victim's brain causing excruciating pain and certain death. His accomplice enters the wrong bedroom and places the insect in his employer's ear. After weeks of pain he miraculously survives, but his doctor tells him that his ordeal is not yet over.Season 2, Episode 61: Little Girl LostOriginal Air Date: 1 March 1972The government plays up to a genius' illusion that his dead daughter still lives so that he can finish his energy experiments even though his mind is still clouded.Season 2, Episode 62: Satisfaction GuaranteedOriginal Air Date: 22 September 1971An employment service has a difficult time fulfilling a customer's request for staff.
M**K
Kino Lorber, thank you! (Minor nits aside....)
While this Blu-ray set of classic American television may seem pricey, there are five discs and literally days or weeks of entertainment here for the dollar. "Night Gallery" has always enjoyed the dubious distinction of having the reputation of being inferior to Rod Serling's "The Twilight Zone, " but the comparison is unfair. "TTZ' ran for 5 seasons to "NG's" 3, and Serling had artistic control on the former and rather less on the latter.For all of that, there are many fine original teleplays and classic adaptations of literary horror works here, and the vast majority of what isn't A-level material is still hugely entertaining, funny, and handsomely mounted (for the most part).I've seen all of these early 1970s episodes repeatedly, first as a child when they were originally aired, and again after numerous viewings of the DVD boxed set. I can say without qualification that savoring these in gorgeous Blu-ray is like seeing them all again for the very first time, and the quality that Kino Lorber has put into this set deserves to be rewarded by purchase.What particularly stands out for me with this somewhat underrated series - underrated by critics of the time, that is...and certainly not by those of us who were kids when it aired - is how the segments that were strong in the first place come across in this presentation as even better, partially thanks to the modern miracle of subtitles, with nuances of richness in script and dialogue that sailed right past this hearing-challenged viewer upon original viewings. And the pristine Blu-ray treatment really drives home what wonders the art directors and lighting and makeup technicians were able to accomplish by dint of sheer resourcefulness and imagination, confronted by what must have often seemed like skeletal, weekly-TV budgets.Even the loathsome "blackouts" - the short comedy sketches of black humor that producer Jack Laird insisted on shoehorning into so many of the earlier episodes, to the consternation of Serling, the critics of the time, staff and co-workers in the creative processes associated with the show - even those blackouts sometimes seem better here and redeem themselves on the basis of beautiful color and set designs, and their underlying, obvious affection for old Universal horror film monsters. (Nothing could save the wretchedness of execution and concept for "The Witches," though, rightfully pulled from its original projected air date.)If I have nits at all with this beautiful set, these would be twofold. Firstly, the commentaries were all welcomed here by this viewer, and most were enjoyed very much, even if some were redundant to anyone who's read "Night Gallery: After Hours." But if you're going to the trouble of soliciting authors or directors to give some time to this project and offer commentaries, couldn't these picks be approached with a bit more discretion and care, so that those commenting are speaking clearly, loudly, and in even tones instead of mumbling or speed-reading into the mikes? I was completely unable, for example, to follow almost anything at all that the female commentator on "the Phantom Farmhouse" had to say about the episode, so fast was she talking.Secondly, nit-wise, I hate the type of swinging carousel doors employed here to house the five discs, which press into the printed cover art when one turns each "page" left to access a new disc. Surely there's a better way to mount five discs in a package that won't mar this as a collectible either for discs or package art?
Q**T
Night Gallery Season Two Displayed on Blu-Ray
Kino Lorber Studio Classics releases on 5-disc Blu-ray Universal Studio's Night Gallery Season Two, hosted by Rod Serling, comprised of 22 episodes now looking their best in HD, a fine upgrade from both the 2008 DVD set and the complete series set from 2017. porting over those extras, but now including audio commentaries on all episodes (some multiple) and the lost tales featurette that had been on the season three set but belongs on this one more. Also, the second part of The Syndication Conundrum, A Look at the Show's Troubled Second Life in Reruns, narrated by Craig Beam.One issue I'd like to address is my disagreement with Craig Beam over his episode audio commentary, specifically 'The Different Ones', which is not a popular fan favorite, nor as good as "The Twilight Zone" episode 'Eye of the Beholder', which it resembles, and its direction could have been more inspired, however I still quite like it because of enormous sympathy with the lead character Victor, whose appearance makeup is perfectly fine to me (what should he look like exactly?!), and the point isn't conformity, but acceptance, which Victor finds with the citizen exchange program with the other planet, which also applies to the same age young man on his way to Earth. The point being that both men were the victim of a cruel cosmic accident where they were born on the wrong planets, a mistake that will finally be corrected since they will be very much appreciated and loved on their new ones. Conformity is an entirely irrelevant issue here in comparison to the personal happiness they will enjoy. This point needs to be made, and I'm happy to make it here.Comes with an episode booklet and a slipcover.
T**C
Good tales with a twist but don't expect horror
I found this really entertaining even though, to me, a lot of the stories were those with clever twists rather than outright horror. "Camera Obscura" is my favourite, I loved the short story when I first read it and it's been done justice by this series. My biggest disappointment was the one with David McCallum, I was really hoping this was going to be a retelling of 'The Locket', from 'Campfire Tales'. They even had a well at the farmhouse, for goodness sake! But alas it took a different, and I have to say, more mundane turning. The story that unsettled me was 'Little Girl Lost', I hate any story that involves the apocalypse, threatened or otherwise. Don't expect gore but do expect some good stories.
S**I
The Best Of 70s TV
As much as I like The Twilight Zone, I was always more a fan of The Night Gallery for its horror and supernatural leanings - not to mention all the gaudy early 70s sights and sounds. It used to be shown late at night in my region when I was a teenager, so it's good to finally be able to own the show and to get to see some of the episodes that I missed first time around.
N**W
Dim the Lights, Grab the Popcorn.. You Are in For A Real Treat!
Wow! I was so happy when I found the entire series of Night Gallery at Amazon, having bought Season One a few weeks ago, and this has brought back some very pleasant memories of when I was a child in Jamaica, when at that time we watched TV in Black and White. It's great watching all the episodes in colour now, and it's even a greater treat watching them with my husband and kids. All this are on 5 discs which contains 22 episodes with 61 stories in all. A true bargain and professionally hosted by Twilight Zone's Rod Serling.
S**S
... Serling's flawless Twilight Zone but never the less very good and worth a watch
Not as fresh as Mr Serling's flawless Twilight Zone but never the less very good and worth a watch. Sadly only series 1 is available on Region 2 so be aware when ordering.
S**A
Love them.
I have been waiting for this dvd to come out for uk dvd players. Love them.
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