The Shop of Little Horrors: Horror on the Small Screen
Posted Today at 11:59 AM by
Tony H
Updated Today at 12:10 PM by
Tony H
Tags
freddy's nightmares ,
television
The Shop of Little Horrors
Big Budget Films Make for Small Television Scares
In the late 80’s Jason Vorhees and Freddy Krueger were at the top of their box office game, bringing their respective studios a modicum of success in a relatively dry market. These characters were the go-to guys and sequel after sequel was being churned out.
It should not have come as a surprise that studio execs would eye the small screen as the next venture for the franchises in hopes to bleed dry any life remaining from the titles.
With the success of a Twilight zone reboot, Monsters, Tales from the Darkside and The Hitchhiker, late night syndicated programming proved to be fertile ground for Hollywood monsters.
The year was 1987 and producer Frank Mancuso, Jr. was working on brining a late night program entitled The 13th Hour to the small screen. The series would focus on two cousins who inherit from their Uncle Lewis an antique shop that sold cursed items.
--From the Prologue of the Series—
“Lewis Vendredi made a deal with the devil to sell cursed antiques. But he broke the pact and it cost him his soul. Now, his Niece Micki and her cousin Ryan have inherited the store…and with it the curse. Now they must get everything back and the real terror begins.”
The series could easily have stood on its own with this premise, but Mancuso, in an effort to draw viewers, adopted the moniker of the film franchise currently under his production belt: Friday the 13th.
____________________________________________________________
Read the rest of my horror on TV retrospective on
my blog at
www.genrefinity.net