I
have always had a soft spot for Monsters (1988 – 1991), the horror
anthology from Laurel that succeeded the company’s successful Tales
from the Darkside (1984 – 1988).
Specifically,
I watched Monsters while I was away college, late at night on the
weekends, and even if my expectations weren’t high, the series usually met
them. I’ll forever associate the series with my freshman year dorm room at Robins
Hall, on the University of Richmond campus, and late night deliveries of Dominos
Pizza.
Monsters emerged from the great syndication
boom of the late 1980s, the period that brought us such cult-TV favorites as Star
Trek: The Next Generation (1987 – 1994), War of the Worlds (1987 –
1989), Friday the 13th: The Series (1987 – 1990), and
more.
Although
it was a distinctly low-budget horror series, Monsters always felt like
it was made with love and affection for the genre, and it never took itself too
seriously.
“It’s sort of like working in the old B-Movie
era,” series writers Bob Schneider and Peg Haller told Fangoria, “…one of the things
that’s great about Monsters is that
it’s good for writers. Because of the limited special effects and limited sets,
a lot of it has to be done with dialogue and characters…the situation demands
that you come up with a concept that really works.”
More
often than not, those concepts did work. The series featured some great,
straight-up horror shows (like “The Match Game,” or “The Hole”) but also, in
the spirit of Rod Serling’s horror anthologies, occasionally delved into social
commentary.
One
episode – “One Wolf’s Family” was a riff on Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner
(1968) and concerned a werewolf bringing home his were-hyena girlfriend to a
bigoted, Archie Bunker-like father, played by Jerry Stiller.
Another
story, “My Zombie Lover” was about a girl (Tempestt Bledsoe) who fell in love
with a zombie over the objections of her parents. In the age of Howard’s Beach,
Tawana Brawley and the disgraceful Willie Horton ad, these and other episodes
argued cogently against racism, and did so in funny and entertaining ways.
Time Magazine noted in 1989 that the typical
episode of Monsters is a “lively half-hour…which each week delivers just
what is advertised: a grotesque and usually malevolent creature,” and that the
show was “enlivened by grisly good humor.”
In
1997, The Blockbuster Entertainment Guide
to Television reported that the series was “irreverent” and “provided a
good scare, like those old midnight terror tales on the radio.”
That
latter observation represents almost exactly how I view Monsters.
The
stories are solid, and occasionally inspired, and the overall tone is nostalgic
in some sense. The series doesn’t attempt
to belabor grittiness or any other modern qualities of the genre. So, clearly, it’s a throwback. Even the
introductory montage (which I blogged about last Sunday) seems to obsess on the
simpler days of Yesteryear, when the American family would gather round the
living room TV to eat dinner and catch a show together.
Back
in the late 1988, Monsters went up against a better-known horror commodity,
Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund), who was hosting a different anthology, Freddy’s
Nightmares: A Nightmare on Elm Street The Series (1988 – 1990), and so proved
a ratings underdog despite the advertising lure of a “a new creature featured every week.” Where Tales from the Darkside
had signed 125 stations around the U.S., Monsters was able to scare up barely
78 affiliates.
But
because of the show’s quality, Monsters showed 55 percent audience
growth over the first month it aired while the inferior but better known Freddy’s
Nightmares saw its numbers plummet following heavy curiosity viewing.
After
three seasons and seventy-two episodes, Monsters went to Rerun Heaven, and
it was broadcast on the old Sci-Fi Channel frequently in the late 1990s. Just
this year, the anthology was released on DVD for the first time, and so for
Halloween this year, I’ll be blogging episodes throughout the day.
I’ll
close with another of Monsters’ amusing tag-lines. “Look what they’re hatching now!”
Today,
this blog will be the place to do just that.
Happy
Halloween!
Miss the good old days when the local station would show an episode of this, and before an ep of Tales From The Darkside. Thank God for DVD.
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