MovieChat Forums > Trilogy of Terror (1975) Discussion > searching for another movie with 3 stori...

searching for another movie with 3 stories...


Trilogy of Terror, classic. But it always throws me off when I'm looking for a similar movie. Don't know the name of course. It's from the 70s. The only stories I can remember is maybe a witch takes revenge on some boys for making fun of her and kills them off one by one by strange accidents. (one way by skydiving accident ???) The other story involved a strange hole found at the edge of a town and a father and son become obsessed with it?????

I don't know, something like that. Every once in a while, I check the tv listings hoping to find it, but nothing. Help me find this movie. Thanks.

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This is called Encounter with the Unknown hosted by Rod Serling, this is one of the last thing's he did before passing away. This is not that bad if you enjoy 70's style horror movies. There's no real gore in it at all which makes me think it was probably shown on TV in it's original form probably as a late night movie or a Saturday afternoon matinee.

It is available on tape from a defunct company that put it out in the early 1980's. Copies do appear on EBAY regularly.

Glad I could help you out and I hope you can find a copy.

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Wow!! Many, many thanks. Just one of those things that I would think of from time to time and it would bug the heck out of me. Writing it down and putting it in my wallet. You never know, might see it somewhere. Thanks again.

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Look for stand out performance by Clerance Williams III.

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The pilot for the NBC series NIGHT GALLERY contained three different stories. If memory serves, Joan Crawford starred in one of the stories as a wealthy blind woman who pays for an operation that will temporarily restore her sight. I don't remember what the other two stories were.

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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."

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You guys know your 1970's trilogy shows. Maybe you can help me out with another...

I vaguely remember seeing this when I was a kid, had to late 70's to early 80's. And I remember it being a trilogy of stories and I could swear it was an on-going series.

The first story involved a vampire, living in present day (I think... this is the most hazy). Second story was about someone trying to kill this woman (a blonde maybe), who always seemed to escape from whatever peril she was put in. Again, vaguely, I think it was called, "Who wants to kill so & so?". And finally the last one involved some cowboys either finding an alien city or fighting off aliens in the Old West.

Please tell me I'm not insane and that this was a tv show (or series!).

Thanks.

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Hi, I think the show you are thinking of was called "Cliffhangers". The guy who played Dracula was Michael Nouri(the Flashdance guy) and he was a college professor in San Francisco or something like that,eh.



Now, I have a one - does anyone remember a movie from the 60's or 70's where half a guys heart was stolen and he was trying to find who took it to get it back?

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Cliffhangers:
Curse of Dracula http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0078591/
Secret Empire http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0078684/
Stop Susan Williams http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0078694/

The series was canceled with only Curse of Dracula reaching a conclusion.

Have you forgotten how it felt that day/To see your homeland under fire/And her people blown away?

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Okay...maybe I'm getting too old..but I gotta know in order to pass on to others less fortunate (they haven't seen the movies yet)some moovie greats.

First is story involves a woman that undergoes plastic surgery, becomes beautiful, and then begings to take revenge on thos that made fum of her...a plumber she drowns...a cheerleader she has flip down a hallway out the building..I recall a pretty famous actress in this one.

Now the other...(saw this one in the 70s - junior high gymnasium). A guy makes some deal to be brought back to life. What he didn't ask for in the negotiation was to have the embalming fluid in him removed. It eats him from the inside out. I think there are three parts to this movie...in another one of the shorts some guy gets run down a narrowing hallway lined with razor blades - chased by dogs.

Any inforamtion is appreciated! Thanks.

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The first movie I believe is called The Girl Most Likely To with Stockard Channing, I have not seen the movie myself but upon reading what you remember and reading about it from another movie site on made for TV movies it sure sounds like it. I don't know of it's availabilty.

The second movie is Tales from the Crypt the original movie from 1972. It has four short story segments in it and what you remember is pretty close what happens in the movie. This I highly recommend it was put out by a company called Amicus, that was Hammers rival in the mid 60's and in to the early 70's. They made several other short story movies Dr. Terror's House of Horrors, The House that Dripped Blood, Vault of Horror which I have not seen yet and looking for a copy. Well back to Tales from the Crypt it has Peter Cushing and Joan Collins in it and it's just alot of fun to watch as a midnight movie with the lights out. All the stories are quite macabe in there own unique way and it's well remembered by alot of horror people. It is readily available through ebay and you may even have some luck at your local video store. Happy that I could help...

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Steven Kings "Creep Show" has 5, its utter awesomeness

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Think the first move starred Stockard Channing - don't remember the title. (I see it's already been answered 'The Girl Most Likely to...') Don't know the other one.
Anyone know one where a model marries a guy who owns an Italian villa? She's there for a chocolate commercial, and he (or his son) is obsessed with birds. She convinces him to give them up, and then he gets a monkey butler (think I might have two moves confused). But seems like either/or were part of a trilogy starring the same actress.
But then, could be part of a tv series.

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