“Bob” Christiansen, Roger Gimbel and Rick Rosenberg. Norton’s made-for-TV production of “Gargoyles” was produced by veteran producers Robert W. The teleplay for “Gargoyles” (1972) was written by the husband-and-wife screenwriting team of Stephen Karpf and Elinor Karpf. Wells’ “ The Invisible Man” (three episodes in 2001). Norton also directed also directed several episodes of “ Tour of Duty” (from 1987-89), “ SeaQuest: DSV” (two episodes in 1993) with Roy Scheider and the Sci-Fi Channel (pre- “SyFy”) miniseries adaptation of H.G. The 1972 classic creature telefilm masterpiece was directed by Bill Norton, who was credited under the name of B.W.L. You can now subscribe to the Hellbent for Horror podcast now available on iTunes, Google Play, PlayerFM, and Stitcher.You can keep up with Hellbent for Horror on iTunes iTunes link: Google Play link: Stitcher link: For you, the listeners of Hellbent for Horror, Audible is offering a free audiobook download with a free 30-day trial to give you the opportunity to check out their service.“Award-winning horror classic!” Cover art for the out-of-print Hen’s Tooth Video DVD edition of “ Gargoyles” (1972), featuring Bernie Casey. Thanks for listening.Join the Hellbent for Horror Horde on Patreon! Click here: If you like the show, please consider writing a review on iTunes or Google Play. Even a dollar an episode helps to sustain the show. You can contact Scott Drebit on Twitter: Scott's articles on "Drive-in Dust-offs" Read Scott's articles on "It Came from the Tube" you like the show, please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not to mention that some of these movies were the starting ground for great writers, directors, and make up artists. In this episode, horror film journalist Scott Drebit from Daily Dead ( ) and I talk about some classic TV horror movies that you can hunt down and watch on the internet. Some of those network TV-produced movies generated some genuine scares, and sent kids to bed to have nightmares. They were fast, cheap and, occasionally, great! Many of these telefilms were horror movies. Back in the early 1970's, Network TV executives started to make original movies to compete against Hollywood.
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