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» » Night Gallery Night Gallery (The Cemetery/Eyes/The Escape Route) (1969–1973)

Short summary

In the pilot of the television series Night Gallery (1969), Rod Serling introduces three separate paintings, each with its own story of uncanny vengeance against evil to tell. The first, "The Cemetery", involves a black sheep nephew (Roddy McDowall) who murders his rich uncle to inherit his fortune - both much to the detriment of the uncle's butler (Ossie Davis) - only to find that vengeance extends beyond the grave. In the second story, "Eyes", a rich, heartless woman (Joan Crawford) who has been blind from birth blackmails an aspiring surgeon and a man who desperately needs money to give her a pair of eyes which will allow her to see for the first time - even though for only half a day's time - only to have the plan backfire on her in ways she never imagined. In the third story, "The Escape Route", a Nazi war criminal (Richard Kiley) is hiding from the authorities in South America, where he is confronted with his past demons and a curious Holocaust survivor (Sam Jaffe) and finds ...

Upon first meeting Steven Spielberg, Joan Crawford was less than impressed. She called Sid Sheinberg, then head of Universal Television, and told him to replace Spielberg with a better director or she would quit the series. Sheinberg told her in no uncertain terms that the studio would back Spielberg over her, as she had not acted on television in years and was at the time the Chairman of Pepsi-Cola, and Universal was confident in Spielberg's abilities. She subsequently treated him with the utmost respect, and the two continued to correspond until her death.

The "Eyes" segment was Steven Spielberg's professional debut as a director. This was quite an auspicious beginning, considering that he was to direct screen legend Joan Crawford, winner of an Academy Award who had been acting in films since 1925.

Joan Crawford practiced walking around her apartment blindfolded in order to get in character.

In the first segment, in the scene in which Roddy McDowall shouts, "What in God's name is happening?" the sound track was faulty. During editing, McDowell was no longer available, so director John Badham himself looped the line.

This is second of two Joan Crawford vehicles in which she plays a woman who undergoes surgery to regain her sight. In 1952's This Woman Is Dangerous (1952), she played a similarly sight-impaired character who has a risky eye operation.

Actor Richard Kiley was forty-seven years old when he acted in "Night Gallery". That would make him very much younger than the character he played - Josef Strobe was a major general in the SS twenty-four years earlier, so he would have to be in his sixties at least.

The segments "Eyes" and "The Escape Route" are based upon novellas Rod Serling wrote for the book "The Season to Be Wary" in 1967. Serling conceived of this series as a way to revive the anthology concept of The Twilight Zone (1959) with a fresh spin. Initially the series was to be called "Rod Serling's Wax Museum."

Bette Davis was the original choice to play Claudia Menlo (the role played by Joan Crawford), but she declined.

The character of William Hendricks was born in 1893 and died in 1969.

Rod Serling's introduction for the pilot episode is different to that of the regular television series. Each canvas is covered with a sheet and there are no other paintings on display.

The opening credit sequence and the accompanying music are completely different to that of the regular show.

The character of Helmut Arndt left Venezuela in April 1961.

The character of Miss Claudia Menlo was born in 1915.

Steven Spielberg would go on to direct other TV shows for "Universal," following his work on this pilot episode.

Despite the "12" certificate on the British DVD release, there isn't a single drop of fake blood to be seen anywhere during the pilot episode.

Archive footage of New York was edited into the opening scene of the story "Eyes."

In "The Cemetery" segment, Gibbons mentions that Portifoy has bought 15 of his paintings. If each stage of Jeremy's rise from the grave is considered as a separate picture, the two series of paintings (that is, minus the original) add up to a total of 15.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: betelgeuze
    Very well made TV movie, with 3 different stories. the first stars Roddy McDowall as a bastard nephew who kills his uncle to take his money, then is haunted by the ghost of the uncle (or so he thinks) to death. Ossie Davis also stars in this episode, and he's wonderful. This is my personal favorite of the three. Roddy is snide and sly as the nephew, and when he starts to come unhinged he's marvelous. The second stars Richard Kiel as a WWII concentration camp captain hiding in some South American city, where he becomes strangely fixated with an idyllic painting of a man fishing in a mountain lake. The painting hangs in a museum, and he spends day after day in there just staring at it and eventually feels himself drawn into the painting. It's a relief to be hounded no longer by the war crimes police when he's in the painting. But back in reality he's recognized as a Nazi who was condemned after the war, and a former camp inmate tells the police about him. Kiel runs to the museum, intent on going into the life in the painting for good. But he makes a big, big mistake and will spend eternity paying for it and his crimes against humanity. The last episode stars Joan Crawford in a pretty much one-woman play. She's a blind rich woman, living in a huge penthouse apartment in NYC, who pays a loser for his corneas so that she can have them transplanted in her eyes. The kicker is that she will only be able to see for about 8 hours, and she doesn't care a bit that the man she takes the corneas from will be blind forever. She has the operation, and when the time comes to take the bandages off, the instant she does the city is plunged into a blackout. She spends the 8 hours trying to get out of the apartment building in the dark stairwells, and finally makes it back to her apartment when the sun comes up. She finally sees the sun, but it's the last thing she does.

    I love this movie; and I also loved Night Gallery, but this film has 3 different viewpoints and would appeal to a large audience. All the performances are excellent. Steven Spielberg directed the Joan Crawford segment, "Eyes"; it was one of his first director assignments.
  • comment
    • Author: porosh
    Serling performs a refining act on the "Tales from the Crypt"-brand of horror with this grim triptych. Each story is a little morality tale in the style of "The Twilight Zone," but instead of that series' sense of surreal wonder, the focus is now firmly on the macabre. The plotlines follow the model of the 1950s horror pulp comics, with characters spoiling for their comeuppance: a black-sheep nephew suffers a revenge beyond the grave after murdering his rich uncle; a ruthless blind woman blackmails a surgeon into performing a transplant using the eyes of a desperate bum; a war criminal finds what he thinks is respite from his pursuers when he is miraculously transported into a museum painting. The rest is pure Serling, though, with sharply drawn characters, stylish dialogue, and his characteristic final twist of irony. The execution is first rate, with a terrific cast, good production values (music, editing, photography), and inventive visuals from directors Boris ("The Omega Man") Sagal, Barry ("Across 110th Street") Shear, and Steven Spielberg (in his maiden effort).
  • comment
    • Author: Grokinos
    Any film fan knows that this is where Steven Spielberg got his start, directing the second vignette "Eyes". But NIGHT GALLERY deserves more respect and attention because of its overall creepiness than for the debut of a young "genius".

    Rod Serling, creator of "The Twilight Zone", hosts this anthology TV movie that later spawned the TV series of the same name. Both the film and the series feature a multitude of guest stars that keep things interesting. Part 1: An obnoxious southern man (superbly played by Roddy McDowall) kills his uncle (George Macready) for his fortune and is later haunted by a painting of the family cemetery. Part 2: A blind woman (Joan Crawford) arranges to use a gambler's eyes (Tom Bosley) so she can see for a few hours, but things don't turn out the way she planned. Part 3: A Nazi war criminal living in South America is enchanted by a beautiful painting that reminds me of his happier past.

    Of the three stories, Part 3 is easily the weakest. Part 1 and Part 2 are both amazing pieces of cinema and leave lingering memories to haunt you. But the plot and execution of Part 3 is rather boring and never really provides the viewer with memorable images or even a few chills here and there. Joan Crawford and Roddy McDowall easily take the cake as the best actors in the movie. Having always been a fan of both, I may be a bit biased, but most fans will agree with me that the two play wonderful villains, yet evoke a certain pity when they get theirs. The music in the movie is brilliant, by the way.

    NIGHT GALLERY is an above-average TV movie that should be out on DVD already. The VHS is out of print, I believe, but try looking for it. My advice: watch the first two, then stop, rewind, and eject. Avoid the third installment as it will positively ruin the viewing experience.
  • comment
    • Author: Survivors
    Divided in three segments hosted by Rod Serling, the pilot of "Night Gallery" presents three great supernatural stories. 'The Cemetery' tells a story of greed and revenge, with Rody McDowall and Ossie Davis in the cast. "Eyes", directed by Steven Spielberg, tells the ironic story of a wealthy and cruel blind woman performed by Joan Crawford that uses two men to allow her to see for eleven hours. "The Escape Route" tells the story of a Nazi war criminal confronted by one victim that finds a surreal means of escape. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Galeria do Terror - Piloto" ("Gallery of the Terror - Pilot")
  • comment
    • Author: Doktilar
    As far as TV pilot films go, this one is stellar. While the "Night Gallery" TV series, which resulted from this, had a number of classic, unforgettable stories, it's often this opening feature that most people remember the best.

    Of the three segments, I've always enjoyed the middle one with Joan Crawford, best. She does a great job. Super script too...such irony! The final segment is great as well, with Richard Kiley giving a powerful performance. Another classic ending. Roddy McDowell is also fine in the first segment, although aside from the creepy cemetery painting (I like how it keeps changing), this one was the least interesting to me, of the three stories.

    A fine, fine production all-around. Great acting, awesome scripts, and terrific production levels for a TV special of the time. It's too bad the series itself, has not been remembered so well through the years, but this was a superb kick-off for it. Rod Serling is wonderful as usual, giving his characteristic dry, eerie delivery for each of the proceedings. Highly recommended!
  • comment
    • Author: Danial
    This remarkable trio of spooky stories served as a pilot to the not-quite-so remarkable TV series of the same name, though now it is just as likely remembered as the point where two screen legends passed at opposite trajectories of their careers. Steven Spielberg's first professional directing job was segment two of this anthology, which also proved to be one of Joan Crawford's last acting efforts, certainly her last worth noting.

    Conceived by another legend, the brilliant Rod Serling, the concept of the film and subsequent series was meant to be a variation on his classic "Twilight Zone" series, varying tales of supernatural horror, each tied to a grotesque painting and each introduced by Serling, acting as the gallery's curator. It was an excellent start, though the resulting series proved to be a pale imitation of "The Twilight Zone," a peculiar hodgepodge of styles and concepts, some classics and some just plain silly.

    The TV movie itself stands alone, though the trio of tales unfold in descending order. The first and best is "The Cemetery," a variation on the classic ghost story. In this southern Gothic creeper, Roddy McDowall murders his wealthy uncle, but finds that enjoying his newfound inheritance is a bit difficult since a painting on the wall seems to suggest that Uncle is buried, but not dead. The story is slight, even silly, but boy, oh boy, does Roddy know how to chew the scenery. I can think of no other actor who so obviously loved to act more than McDowall and here he plays evil to the hilt. Roddy was undoubtedly one of the most intrinsically likable stars there ever was, so much so that he could play the most despicably evil characters and still make the character a delight. "The Cemetery" is nicely written by Serling and tightly directed by Boris Segal, but it is Roddy's one-man show.

    But if Roddy McDowall could make loathsome characters inexplicably likable, than Joan Crawford had the knack for negating any trace of sympathy that her characters might possess. In Spielberg's "Eyes," Joan plays a ruthless millionairess who happens to be blind, but has the chance to briefly see again by buying the eyes of a living person who is in desperate need of money. It is a nice performance; hard and demanding, Crawford never asks for pity, but nevertheless earns it with the story's nifty twist ending. More a clever idea than a solid story, the tale is not particularly suspenseful; bit it does displays a cool sense of cynical irony. And never is it apparent that it is Spielberg's first crack at professional film-making, so sure is his use of the camera and setting of mood.

    The third tale of the trilogy, "Escape Route," is probably the most like the classic "Twilight Zone," dark and brooding; yet least successful as a thriller. Richard Kiley is a war criminal who thinks he can escape his past by literally throwing himself into art. Rod Serling has other ideas. As the trilogy's closing act, I guess it was suppose to be the one with the most impact, the one to show off Serling's penchant for moralizing. It doesn't quite come off. I think part of the problem is that Kiley, a good actor, lacks a powerful screen presence. The best episodes of "Night Gallery," and for that matter "The Twilight Zone," featured actors with strong personalities who were not only talented, but adept at pushing their performances to the edge, flirting with going over the top, just as McDowall and Crawford do. Any short form fiction, be it on the page or on the screen, needs that heightened sense of drama, that admission that reality has been left behind.

    Though it had some strong episodes at first, the "Night Gallery" TV series fell out of Serling's control and eventually became sort of a ghost story version of "Love, American Style," a crude mix of cheap jokes and heavy-handed suspense. It's a pity that it didn't stay true to this pilot; it could have been another "Twilight Zone."
  • comment
    • Author: Mr_TrOlOlO
    It's curious, but when you look at the page for this pilot for "Night Gallery", it reads as follows:

    "Directors: Boris Sagal, Barry Shear, and 1 more credit » "

    You have to click on the '1 more credit' tag to learn that Steven Spieberg himself was this other director--and this was his first professional job as a director! This is more than enough reason to watch the show's first episode and interesting that unless you click this link you might never know about his involvement.

    In some ways, this pilot is quite typical of a regular episode of "The Night Gallery". It consists of three separate stories (this often varied) and each is a story about horror and irony. The main difference, however, is that most of episodes of the series were NOT written by Rod Serling--despite him being the host of the shows. Here, he writes all three segments and so it's not surprising that they are very high quality--he was a heck of a writer and the execs at the network were idiots to hire him essentially as a host and begrudgingly let him contribute a few scripts. Duh.

    The first segment, "The Cemetery", stars Roddy McDowell as a scum-bag nephew waiting for his disabled disabled Uncle (George Macready) to die. You can't help but hate McDowell's character--he is 100% awful and delights in anticipating the old man's death. In fact, he tries his best to 'simplify things'--by putting Macready by an open window on a cold day when his butler (Ossie Davis) has his day off from work. Not surprisingly, when the old man soon dies, McDowell is ecstatic--unseemly so. However, his joy at is cut short when strange things start to happen to a creepy painting in his house...what, exactly, it is and why is something you'll have to find out for yourself. While I would not consider this a great segment, it is very good and a welcome introduction to the series. Plus it's humorously black ending is worth waiting for--although not entirely unexpected. I'd rate this one an 8..nearly a 9.

    The second segment, "Eyes", has the distinction of starring Joan Crawford. Oddly, despite her fame, the directing job was given to young Spielberg--an untried professional to say the least. Crawford plays a horrid lady who can get whatever she likes simply because she's rich and wicked. She shows this by her trying to get her doctor (Barry Sullivan) to arrange for an evil surgery--to transplant a poor living donor's eyes into Crawford!! Sick, yes, but even sicker because she knows that IF the surgery works, she'll only be able to see for a few hours at most!! As she says, "My single abiding interest is MYSELF"! Naturally the doctor refuses, so she blackmails him to get his cooperation. Nice lady, huh?! And, based on Christina Crawford's book "Mommy, Dearest", perhaps not unlike Crawford in real life!! Regardless of whether or not this is true, Crawford was wonderfully wicked in this show--it's one of her best performances late in her career. And who is this pathetic donor? None other than Tom Bosley (who, incidentally, was also surprisingly good)! Naturally there is an ironic twist--and it's one of the best episodes of the series. I'd give this one a 9--though I will admit there were a few plot holes with this one that other reviewers have also noticed. Still, it's a winner.

    The third, "Escape Route", stars Richard Kiley--a very good actor who most would not recognize despite his many appearances on TV, movies and on stage. Kiley plays a man who is a Nazi war criminal living in South America. He becomes fixated on a painting in a museum--a painting with WEIRD qualities. And, a man at the museum (Sam Jaffe) recognizes him as an evil officer from Auschwitz. What happens next has a lot to do with a creepy painting of the man being crucified that's in the same art gallery in "Escape Route"--wow, is that spooky! However, despite this, the final segment is not especially scary, though it is a nice story about Karma. I'd give this one 7.

    Overall, this pilot is quite a bit better than the subsequent series. Much of this, I am sure, has to do with Serling's continually diminishing involvement with the scripts. However, on occasion, the show did manage some incredibly effective episodes. I'd give this pilot an overall score of 7.
  • comment
    • Author: Hono
    This was Joan Crawford's second to last film (actually a TV movie) that was the pilot to the famous show created by Rod Sterling. There are three segments all which evolve around a painting and have very good morals. The first two are the best. Crawford's segment (the second) directed by Steven Spielberg (his directorial debut) is about a vicious, blind Park Avenue millionaire who undergoes an eye transplant just so she could see for a few hours, but everything does not go the way she plans. "Night Gallery" is a masterpiece, and I highly recommend it to anyone, especially Crawford fans or Twilight Zone fans.
  • comment
    • Author: Briciraz
    Remembering about three episodes on TCM of Night Gallery,it's are great macabre tales,the first segment The Cemetery a young nephew who received a inheritance after leave your old uncle to die deliberately and saw the painting changing everyday,in the second segment is most interesting for all them,a old blind woman (Crawford) buy a couple of eyes which will give to her twelve hours of plenty vision only,and the final segment is about a former Nazi who intent to be a fisherman,as a pilot is a good start really!!

    Resume:

    First watch: 1998 / How many: 2 / Source: Cable TV-DVD / Rating: 8
  • comment
    • Author: greed style
    As big a fan as I was of Rod Serling's 'Twilight Zone', I couldn't figure out why I'd never run across 'Night Gallery' until I looked at the original air dates for the series. 1969 was my first year in college and I didn't have a whole lot of time for television, although weekly viewings of 'All in the Family' and 'The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour' was a must.

    So it's not many TV series that start out with an episode numbered zero, I thought that was the limited purview of super-hero comic books. I guess having this run as a TV movie pilot before the actual series began was the reason for the odd numbering here on IMDb. There are enough reviews on this board talking about the individual chapter plays, so I'll confine my remarks to other observations while I watched the stories.

    For starters, considering the casting involved I'd say 'Holy cow'!, how did Serling and company come up with the payroll required for the talent involved in this show? Starting at the top you've got Joan Crawford, Ossie Davis, Richard Kiley, Roddy McDowall, Barry Sullivan and Sam Jaffe heading the various segments. Not to mention the guys who probably came cheap like Tom Bosley who was still doing guest appearances in TV shows of the era. And wait, can this be right - Steven Spielberg directing the second segment titled 'Eyes"! That was the Joan Crawford piece, talk about coming a long way!

    I enjoyed all the entries here with 'The Cemetery' probably being my favorite. The twist ending managed to have it's own twist ending if you know what I mean, something that Serling achieved every now and then with the Twilight Zone series. I wasn't surprised that there was a story like 'The Escape Route' in the mix. Serling dealt with World War II and the Nazis more than once during his earlier series run. 'The Escape Route' was somewhat similar to the Zone's third season episode titled 'Death-Heads Revisited', in which a former concentration camp officer is rendered insane for the brutality with which he treated his prisoners. Crucifying Gruppenfuerher Helmut Arndt/Josef Strobe was a fitting end for a former madman.

    So with this pilot episode out of the way I'll be looking forward to the rest of stories in the series. I like the concept involved, spinning tales out of paintings hanging in an art gallery curated by host Rod Serling. Serling didn't waste any time commenting on the trio of stories first presented here. When it was all over, he simply said "Good Evening". Good enough for me.
  • comment
    • Author: Mr_Jeйson
    In "The Cemetery"(..directed by Boris Sagal), a loathsome money-hungry nephew, Jeremy Evans(Roddy McDowell, playing him as a really slimy scumbag) ready and willing to horde on his Uncle's inheritance, just waiting for the old timer,William Hendricks(George Macready) crippled and ravaged by a stroke that has taken his means of movement and communication, to croak. His Uncle was once a painter obsessed with death..his works often evoke that. Osmond Portifoy(Ossie Davis)has been under employ to the old man for many years and Jeremy relishes in reminding the butler who will be dipping their hands in the money jar. To show you just how virulent Jeremy can be, he points out to Portifoy(..and for extra slander, he uses "Portifoy" nearly every sentence with a sneer)how his mother worked her fingers to the bone without ever asking Uncle for a dime and that he always desired to live the good life, but needed the means to do so. McDowell is in command carrying this heavy smell of pomp and greed("I'm a black sheep nephew with an itch")..you just love to hate him. Jeremy finds out that he'll receive his Uncle's inheritance due to the fact that his mother is dead and her share will go to him thanks to a clause in Hendrick's will. So Jeremy locks his Uncle's wheelchair next to an open window allowing the draft to kill him(..while also letting his Uncle peer at the family graveyard as a reminder of where the old man is about be heading). Oh, but you know Jeremy's got his comeuppance coming to him, yes sir! Jeremy notices a painting on the wall(Hendrick's portraits line the wall of the stairwell) and the freshly dug grave where dear dead Uncle was buried begins to change every time he looks at it. Watch as Jeremy slowly unravels as he sees Uncle's casket appear, then open, then show someone rising slowly walking to the front door of the manor. But, all is not what it seems. I do think McDowell's tour-de-force performance approaches high camp but I just enjoyed it immensely..he's such a blood-sucking leech, a real weasel. Watching Jeremy squirm and ultimately become frightened out of his wits was a ton of fun.The ending is a bit silly(..and rather logically unsound), pointing out another schemer out for a payday, but overall I think it's fun, if derivative somewhat. The idea of the ever-changing portrait is a cool idea, I thought.

    The second tale, "Eyes"(..directed by Steven Spielberg)stars Joan Crawford as an acid-tongued, rich, blind woman, Claudia(who has built her own apartment complex in New York and lives as it's only tenant), who blackmails a surgeon, Dr. Frank Heatherton(Barry Sullivan)into performing a dangerous and unorthodox grafting procedure transplanting the central optic nerves of an obsessive gambler's eyes, Sidney(Tom Bosley of "Happy Days" fame) needing 9 grand to pay off a debt from a bookie threatening his life. Although the procedure will only grant her 11 hours of sight, she's willing to have that for just the precious moments to see color and objects always darkened to her. But, in a nasty bit of irony to match her own behavior towards others like Heatherton, New York City goes through a black out ridding her of those precious moments she has so longed for. This tale has that Rod Serling intellectual banter between characters you remember from stage-like episodes of "Twilight Zone" as fates are contemplated and discussions are batted around. This also has the "coming out" stylistics of a future filmmaker.

    The third tale, "The Escape Route"(..directed by Barry Shear) follows a Nazi named Strobe(Richard Kiley, with a scar covering one eye for extra impact)hiding away in South Africa, haunted by memories of his war crimes and constantly looking over his shoulder worried about being caught by agents who specialize in hunting "his kind" out. He becomes pre-occupied/transfixed with a museum painting of some fisherman on a mountain lake..his desire is to enter the painting as a means of escape from the torments of running. He tries to shake an old Jew, Bleum(the marvelous Sam Jaffe, whose frail, wrinkled body, offers a terrifying example of what torture, imprisonment & death can do to one who had seen it all)who seems to recognize him. A creepy crucifixion painting depicting one's suffering leads us into Strobe and Bleum's first meeting..and, for a reason you'll find later, is as important to this tale as the fisherman painting. A chilling exploration of a tired monster with few escape routes whose wish is granted..just not the way he thinks.

    As expected(considering the title)each episode features within it's plot the importance of a portrait. All three tales bear Rod Serling's distinctive writing style with the usual "gotcha!" twisting irony one grows to expect. I guess the first one is closest to the "Night Gallery" series, but this film is much better than what comes after it because of Serling's strong involvement in every tale presented. He is also the host introducing us to each macabre tale.
  • comment
    • Author: Hystana
    I was there when Night Gallery first appeared, in my early teens. And I was into Theatre at the time and knew a few things about production. Nihgt Gallery was instantly a classic. Rod Serling would introduce the segments with paintings which led into the plot. One had Roddy McDowell playing his usual malevolent character to the max, in an ordinary tale made better by acting and production. Another segment dealt with the rich buying happiness in a very unique and creative way. It wasn't a mind blower, but the most reminiscent of the Twilight Zone series. The third was the true classic, with Richard Kiley giving a masterfully performance of a vicious horrible creature, a Nazi war criminal who thinks he merits leniency after years on the run. He feels he can escape into a picture at a gallery in which men are fishing at a serene lake. This episode alone is better than any Twilight Zone series, and that is not easy to do. This was easily the creme de la creme, the Mona Lisa of Rod Serling's career, undeniably. If you haven't seen it, you must watch it! You will be enthralled! There were later episodes that also had great suspense, and terror that modern gore films can only fantasize about producing. The famous "Earwick" episode, the super scary "Robert the Bruce" episode. It's easy to see why studios won't release these again, for the same reason they don't release the other great classics of the past (Bronco, Sugarfoot, Laredo, The Untouchables-it's even hard to find some everyone knows about-Gilligan, the Hillbillies, Big Valley), because they want to make audiences think the old classics were the ho hum shows they air today so they won't lose audiences from new show. You will be pleasantly surprised by NIGHT GALLERY
  • comment
    • Author: Vobei
    As a collection of three stories, The Night Gallery stands as one of the best horror anthologies ever filmed. The first of the three stories is the best. Roddy McDowell and Ozzie Davis are fantastic in this eerie little piece about greed, deception, and revenge. The second story is also the second best. Joan Crawford is excellent as the heartless, sightless woman who will sacrifice anyone to be able to see the world around her. The last story is the least of the three. Although Sam Jaffe is very good as the survivor of a Nazi prison camp, Richard Kiley just doesn't do enough with his role as the former Nazi haunted by his monstrous past. All in all, this is one of the premier made-for-TV movies produced in the late sixties/early seventies era. With a few notable exceptions, the TV series which followed never really lived up to this auspicious beginning. If you've never seen this movie, it's definitely worth a look--if for no other reason than to see and hear Rod Serling introduce each episode.
  • comment
    • Author: Iseared
    First shown on NBC-TV in November 1969, NIGHT GALLERY, the pilot to the 1970-73 TV anthology show of the same name, was the last major work of Rod Serling, creator of what may still rank as the best TV series ever, "The Twilight Zone." Although, when the series started, Serling wasn't given the kind of creative control he felt he needed to make the series work (and not surprisingly, it was mercilessly compared to "The Twilight Zone"), on this pilot film, he was firmly in control. Adapting three stories from his 1967 collection "The Season To Be Wary", Serling came up with a thoroughly engaging anthology film that combined morality, melodrama, suspense, and the supernatural into a stunning brew not seen on television before.

    Segment 1, "The Cemetery", directed by Boris Sagal, features Roddy McDowall as an unscrupulous nephew who causes the death of his uncle by exposing him to a cold wind in order to grab his hands on the old man's fortune. But as he soon learns, one of the paintings his uncle created in his last days--that of the family cemetery--keeps changing on him every time he looks at it. And soon, it seems to show his uncle coming back from the grave.

    Segment 2, "Eyes", stars Joan Crawford as a ruthless, imperious blind woman who blackmails a prominent surgeon (Barry Sullivan) into giving her an ocular transplant so that she may enjoy roughly twelve hours of sight before going blind again. The operation, done with the help of an eye donation from a petty gambler, turns out to be a success--until a blackout causes Crawford to think otherwise. This episode is noted as the professional maiden directing effort for Steven Spielberg.

    Segment 3, "Escape", directed by Barry Shear, stars Richard Kiley as a Nazi fugitive hiding out in Buenos Aires who becomes captivated by a painting of a fisherman in the local art museum. He dreams of becoming that fisherman and escaping from hiding, but a chance encounter with a Holocaust survivor (Sam Jaffe) will deny him that in a chilling conclusion.

    Although Serling's moralizing sometimes gets a bit on the heavy-handed side, NIGHT GALLERY is still superbly conceived, with the case giving excellent and often chilling performances. The first segment is appropriately spooky; the second ingenious and unconventional (for TV); and the third, even though it is the weakest, a worthy capper on this film. Spielberg, of course, got the glory for his segment, but Sagal's and Shear's segments are nothing to sneeze at either. All in all, NIGHT GALLERY comes highly recommended.
  • comment
    • Author: Hidden Winter
    Rod Serling writes and hosts a trio of terror tales that are all presented as paintings in a sinister art gallery.

    First yarn and most ghoulish yarn, "The Cemetery" - Greedy and smarmy rich heel Jeremy Evans (a deliciously slimy portrayal by Roddy McDowall) murders his millionaire uncle so he can collect the man's fortune. However, Evans soon finds himself being haunted by a grotesque painting. Director Boris Sagal ably crafts a strong gloom-doom Gothic atmosphere. McDowall has an absolute ball with his delightfully detestable character while Ossie Davis impresses as loyal servant Osmond Portifoy. Dandy double twist ending, too.

    Second and most powerful anecdote, "Eyes" - Mean and bitter wealthy old blind bat Claudia Menlo (superbly played to the spiteful hilt by Joan Crawford) resorts to ruthless measures to have her sight briefly restored only to have things go horribly awry due to an unexpected blackout. Directed with tremendous assurance and visual flair by Steven Spielberg in his directorial debut, this segment further benefits from ace acting from Barry Sullivan as the reluctant Dr. Frank Heatherton and Tom Bosley as hapless gambler Sydney Resnick as well as boasts a doozy of a grim climax.

    Third and most caustic outing, "The Escape Route" - Unrepentant Nazi war criminal Josef Strobe (a fine performance by Richard Kiley) seeks refuge in a South American country, but still can't escape from the sins of his past. Director Barry Shear adroitly creates an edgy paranoid mood and builds a good deal of tension. Sam Jaffe contributes a typically sound turn as frail, yet resilient Jewish concentration camp survivor Bleum while Norma Crane adds plenty of acerbic bite as catty whore Gretchen. The chilling and brutally ironic final image packs a startling punch.

    An on the money anthology film.
  • comment
    • Author: Fordrelis
    Rod Serling presents three spooky tales revolving, in one way or another, around paintings. The basic ideas are not really new (for example, in the 1955 anthology "Three Cases Of Murder", a man physically enters a painting), but the stories are uniformly well-acted and worth watching. The first one is OK, elevated by Roddy McDowall's performance (he is perfect at playing "a swine"), but it has one of those "have your cake and eat it too" endings that I am not particularly fond of. The second is the highlight of the trilogy, stunningly directed in a semi-experimental style by the young Steven Spielberg; even in those 25 minutes you could tell that he would go far. The third is somewhat predictable, but still haunting. On the whole, a promising beginning for the series. **1/2 out of 4.
  • comment
    • Author: Nirn
    Rod Serling effectively presents three tales of the supernatural, shown first as eerie paintings.

    First story, 'The Cemetery' is a creepy yarn about wretched nephew Roddy McDowell, who inherits his uncle's estate, only to be plagued by sinister paintings of his uncle rising from his grave to seek revenge. Ossie Davis is also good as a disrespected butler who is far more cunning than he seems, much to their regret...

    Second story, 'Eyes', stars Joan Crawford as a spoiled, rich, but blind woman who tries to literally purchase another man's eyesight, even for a short time. Highly ironic ending is most effective. Steven Spielberg directs this memorably.

    Third tale, 'The Escape Route', stars Richard Kiley as a Nazi on the run in South America, who tries to escape justice inside a much-loved painting of a fisherman...things don't go as planned, with a chilling ending indeed.

    Led to the TV series, which only on occasion lived up to this quality, but was still mostly enjoyable.
  • comment
    • Author: Xava
    Well I liked this movie. About like Hitchcock, there's a surprise. Roddy McDowell got what he deserved. Killing his Uncle, who had Pneumonia. The painting, which displayed a coffin, ran McDowell crazy. Of course Ossie Davis the butler, got taken at the end. Joan Crawford, a blind lady, who underwent an eye transplant. However a blackout took place, when she thought, she was going blind again. Last the Nazi, who wanted to be a fisherman. He got into the wrong painting. A painting of torture. Yet he tortured Jews, during the War. What comes around goes around.
  • comment
    • Author: Nothing personal
    The Night Gallery is a great series. The TV pilot film was a great one. The three story telling film starred Joan Crawford, Ossie Davis, Richard Kiley, Roddy McDowall, Barry Sullivan, Tom Bosley. The acting by all of these actors is very good. The dialog was really good. The shorts were filmed very good. The music is good. Rod Serling hosted the show well. The short films are quite interesting and they really keeps you going. Most of them are spooky! This is a very good and thrilling film. If you like classic shows like The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, The Nightstalker, and others, and classic Horror, Crime, Thrillers, Dramas, and interesting films then I strongly recommend you to go over to Amazon.com and buy this film that is also included with the complete first season on DVD today!
  • comment
    • Author: Keath
    This, the pilot to the Night Gallery series, makes for a rather chilling preamble, starting with The Cemetery, in which Jeremy Evans (Roddy McDowall) offs William Hendricks (George Macready), his reclusive, rich uncle to inherit his estate, unaware that Osmond Portifoy (Ossie Davis), Hendricks' butler, wants to drive him mad or scare him to death by switching copies of the cemetery painting to have it look as if Hendricks were leaving his grave to seek revenge for Jeremy's evil deed, and Portifoy also seeks to inherit the estate once his hated rival is gone. But he discovers too late that, just as greed was his rival's undoing, so it would be his undoing when he sees Jeremy leaving his grave in the painting, and starts raving madly as the door slowly opens. In the next story, Eyes, wealthy, blind Claudia Menlo (Joan Crawford), threatens to ruin Dr. Heatherton (Barry Sullivan) unless he transplants the central optic nerves from the eyes of bookie Sidney Resnick (Tom Bosley), thus giving Menlo 11 hours of sight. It's a success, but her sight returns during the 1965 New York City blackout. In a rage, Menlo trashes her suite. She then calls for help without result, so Menlo collapses in tears. The next day, she sees the sun rising over the New York City skyline, awed by its beauty and shocked when it fades, as her 11 hours are up. The last thing she sees while falling to her death is the ground. The last story, The Escape Route, is about Josef Strobe (Richard Kiley), a man who is really Helmut Arndt, a Nazi hiding in Buenos Aires. One night, to evade capture, he enters the museum, ignoring a concentration camp canvas, but Bleum (Sam Jaffe), a camp survivor, is frozen by the sight. Strobe prefers to look at a canvas of a fisherman, and finds that he can will himself into the canvas. When the museum closes, Strobe kills Bleum outside a bar after Bleum tells him that the Israelis now know where Strobe is hiding. Strobe evades the agents, enters the museum, now closed, and begs God to get him into the picture. He squints, then screams in agony, vanishing from sight. A guard and a curator run to the scream, but find no one. The guard tells the curator that the fisherman canvas was taken away and replaced with the crucifixion painting. They see Josef Strobe on the cross in the canvas, moaning in agony, since this was his punishment for the evil that he did. Serling certainly didn't pull any punches with these stories. Spoiler alert: John Badham, associate producer of this pilot, would direct 6 segments of this series.
  • comment
    • Author: Gann
    I have three problems with "EYES." First of all, they knew at the get-go that she would only have 11 or 12 hours worth of sight. That being the case, why didn't the doctor arrange for the surgery to take place at NIGHT and for the bandages to come off, say, AT SUNRISE? That way she would have had all day long to see the sun, as well as EVERYTHING else. As it was, the bandages were scheduled to come off at NIGHT. So she had 11 or 12 hours of sight - IN THE DARK.

    Secondly, the doctor himself stated that the operation had never been performed on a human before. This being the case, don't you think the Doctor would have STAYED THERE WITH HER TO SEE IF THE OPERATION WAS A SUCCESS? I know I would have, if nothing else, out of CURIOSITY.

    Lastly, even if the city WAS blacked out, she still could have seen SOMETHING. She stumbled downstairs and went outside. She should have seen the headlights of cars or, if nothing else, AT LEAST the stars in the sky or the moon. I've been in black-out situations before and it is NEVER COMPLETELY black.

    Of course, if the above items were explained, there would have been NO "EYES" segment, but still, to me the mark of a good writer is to not leave "holes" in stories that leave people wondering why stupid things happen that make no sense, thus, making it more believable.
  • comment
    • Author: Marilace
    This ninety-minute TV movie, which served as the pilot for what would turn out to be a vastly inferior series, is first-rate Rod Serling: a little preachy, very unsettling, and preoccupied with the themes of human desperation and ugliness. The first segment, 'The Cemetery', is terrific; Roddy McDowall and Ossie Davis play off one another wonderfully, and it's a pleasure to see Roddy's nasty little character get his comeuppance. 'Eyes' is not as good; Steven Spielberg's direction is a little conspicuous and the entire thing basically consists of Joan Crawford ranting for half an hour. Serling returns to form, though, with 'Escape Route', the story of a Nazi war criminal (Richard Kiley) running from his brutal past. (This one would have worked beautifully on "The Twilight Zone".) Serling turned out the occasional gem on the series (Emmy-nominated 'They're Tearing Down Tim Riley's Bar'; 'The Waiting Room'; and 'Cool Air', based on a story by H.P. Lovecraft), but the "Night Gallery" pilot film was really his last hurrah on network television. The paintings by Jaroslav Gebr are great, too, as is the theme music (this theme was done by William Goldenberg, and is much creepier than the one used for the series). Recommended.
  • comment
    • Author: นℕĨĈტℝ₦
    That was Richard Kiley in that nazi segment. Kiel was the guy who had the metal teeth in a James Bond film and was nicknamed "Jaws". I didn't read all the reviews having developed a headache, but I see most of you got it right. I'd also like to ask about Gary Collins (I think.....my mind doesn't work perfectly, either) who'se failed show was merged with Night Galery either before or after it's prime. Some of the segments are available free online but all the ones I want are short and I cant find them anywhere....anybody got a clue??? In fact, I would love for somebody to put together an anthology of those classic short episodes but I suppose the lawyers would object.
  • comment
    • Author: tamada
    "Twilight Zone"s Rod Serling creates another creepy TV series: "Night Gallery." A series of paintings that lead into another dimension.

    This is the TV movie that started it all: a series of paintings that were helmed by Boris Sagal, Steven Spielberg, and Barry Shear.

    The first segment is about a swine nephew who kills his uncle in order to inherit his fortune; the second segment is about a blind woman who gets an eye transplant; and the third segment is about a former Nazi who is trying to escape his past, but a Holocaust survivor denies him of that.

    My favorite was, of course, the second segment. I thought it was a fantastic effort on Spielberg's part. You could definitely tell that the youngling director had some talent then.
  • comment
    • Author: Kitaxe
    An excellent segment to this trilogy involves Roddy McDowall as Jeremy, a never-do-well nephew waiting for his wealthy uncle to die, and leave him his estate.

    Portifoy, well portrayed by Ossie Davis, is the uncle's faithful butler, who had served him most of his life. When the uncle finally dies, he has bequeathed his estate to Jeremy, but only under duress. Jeremy laughs as he tells Portifoy he will keep him on for $200.00 per month.

    Portifoy is not happy with the arrangement and decides to stay on just for a short time.There is a painting of the estate and the cemetery is in the back yard. The picture becomes distorted, and Jeremy, each day, becomes more and more terrified, thinking he sees his uncle's corpse rising from the cemetery and coming toward the house.

    There is a twist at the conclusion, and you will enjoy this episode. 10/10.
  • Episode cast overview, first billed only:
    Joan Crawford Joan Crawford - Miss Claudia Menlo
    Ossie Davis Ossie Davis - Osmund Portifoy
    Richard Kiley Richard Kiley - SS-Gruppenführer Helmut Arndt / Josef Strobe
    Roddy McDowall Roddy McDowall - Jeremy Evans
    Barry Sullivan Barry Sullivan - Dr. Frank Heatherton
    Tom Bosley Tom Bosley - Sidney Resnick
    George Macready George Macready - William Hendricks
    Sam Jaffe Sam Jaffe - Bleum
    Norma Crane Norma Crane - Gretchen
    Barry Atwater Barry Atwater - Carson
    George Murdock George Murdock - 1st Agent
    Tom Basham Tom Basham - Gibbons
    Byron Morrow Byron Morrow - George J. Packer
    Garry Goodrow Garry Goodrow - Louis
    Shannon Farnon Shannon Farnon - 1st Nurse
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