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Aftersleep Books
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Rod Serling s Night Gallery An After-Hours TourThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
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Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
The reader might have cause to wonder whether the authors' effort was really worth it, however, for despite their large claims, the fact remains that "Night Gallery" was, to put it politely, a very uneven TV series. Their work in demonstrating how the series was hacked to bits in syndication is fascinating, but the uncut episodes (available on video from Columbia House, thanks in part to the authors), while much better, simply fail to make the case for the show. "Night Gallery" just was not a very good TV program, a fact of which audiences and Rod Serling himself were well aware.
Skelton and Benson also go to great lengths to rehabiliate the reputation of Jack Laird, the series' producer, who until now has widely been seen as a mere studio hack who ruined Serling's pristine vision. Their argument is interesting, but ultimately does not hold water. Laird was responsible not only for virtually kicking Serling---possibly the finest writer in the history of the medium---off his own TV series, but also for those awful short comedy "black-out" sketches that absolutely no one defends---including Skelton and Benson. It is tough to make a case for Jack Laird, given these obvious facts.
However, the book in general is wonderfully well-done. The research and writing are superb, and the behind-the-scenes struggles between Serling, Laird, and the network make for absolutely compulsive reading. Certainly a required text for fans of fantasy television in general and Rod Serling in particular. Splendid!