"Night Gallery" Hatred Unto Death/How to Cure the Common Vampire (TV Episode 1973) Poster

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6/10
Too Much Monkeying Around
Hitchcoc25 June 2014
Steve Forrest plays a guy who usually shows compassion for animals. He is a naturalist and respects the jungle. One day a group of stereotypical movie natives run to get him. When he arrives at a tiger pit, there is a big gorilla (obviously a man in a gorilla suit). His wife and fellow naturalist, want them to pull him out an let him escape back in the jungle. Instead, Forrest sees look of utter hatred in the eyes of the gorilla. Against his wife's wishes, he captures the gorilla and brings him back to the museum of natural history. The wife has developed a bond with the big guy and he responds Fay Rayeishly to her. One day, she makes the mistake of going into the cage and the gorilla gets loose. Forrest, in order to rescue her, battles with the gorilla. There is a kind of animal respect between them which seems to be the theme of this episode. Not one of the best in the series.
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6/10
"Hey gorilla! You remember me?"
classicsoncall13 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
I'm watching 'Hatred Unto Death' and just puzzling over why the gorilla needs a rationale to hate Grant Wilson (Steve Forrest). The guy wants to capture him and send him off to some zoo someplace. Wouldn't that tick you off if you were a gorilla?

Well Grant obsesses over the idea that he and the gorilla N'gi have a long history in which they were antagonists, and have reincarnated to continue their centuries old feud. Grant's wife Ruth (Dina Merrill) is much more sympathetic to N'gi's plight, and decides to spend some quality time with the big ape once back in the States, and now held captive in the basement of a scientific facility.

The set up for the resolution of the story is just a bit too hokey if you ask me. Why Ruth would open the gorilla's cage door to retrieve her wedding ring is somewhat bizarre, as I'm sure a more opportune time and circumstance would have worked to recover it. Needless to say, N'gi escapes long enough to cause some havoc and get shot a few times by Grant trying to make the save. In this man versus beast contest, it wouldn't take long for N'gi to ring Wilson's bell.

'How to Cure the Common Vampire' is another one of those silly throw away shorts that the Night Gallery seemed to be obsessed with. This time out, a group of vampire hunters momentarily question the method of killing a vampire asleep in it's coffin, and as usual, the joke on the viewer is in the punch line.
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6/10
Okay last episode
Woodyanders30 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"Hatred Unto Death" - A savage wild gorilla (George Barrows in a nifty ape suit) develops an immediate disdain for macho anthropologist Grant Wilson (a solid performance by Steve Forrest) as well as a hankering for Grant's more compassionate wife Ruth (an appealing portrayal by Dina Merrill). While the fairly involving story proves to be pretty predictable, it at least builds to a n exciting climax and ends on a satisfying downbeat note.

"How to Cure the Common Vampire" - Yet another extremely slight and corny short comic vignette with a dopey punchline.
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An ape and a vampire
stones7813 March 2013
If you mix them two together, who knows what you'll come up with. All kidding aside, the main portion of this episode revolves around a couple of anthropologists, Grant and Ruth Wilson(Steve Forrest, Dina Merrill), and how they deal with a gorilla they find in Kenya. It turns out that the gorilla and Grant have a mutual hatred for each other, even though they never met before; the gorilla was solidly portrayed by veteran "gorilla actor" George Barrows, and he does a very fine job as a man in a suit. Grant eventually has the ape captured and sent to a Dr. Ramirez(Fernando Lamas)for observation, while Ruth would rather have the ape free in the wild. Speaking of Ruth, she makes the stupid mistake of sticking her hand inside the cage, and then the ape pulls the ring off her finger; soon after, she opens the cage to get her ring back, and naturally, the beast overtakes her and escapes, and is on the hunt for her husband with a somewhat predictable outcome, even though the episode was solid.

The next segment, and it is very short, starts with a quick cut of a castle surrounded by water, and it looks like something out of a Roger Corman movie, but that doesn't detract here. The next scene has a few vampire hunters, including actors Johnny Brown(Good Times)and Richard Deacon(The Dick Van Dyke Show), as they open the coffin of a sleeping vampire and prepare to take care of business. This is one of those weird Jack Laird segments which border more on being funny rather than being scary, but I enjoyed it anyway, as I consider myself a vampire fan.
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2/10
Final Fates
AaronCapenBanner13 November 2014
'Hatred Unto Death' - Steve Forrest and Dina Merrill play Grant & Ruth Wilson, two anthropologists in Africa who capture a wild gorilla in a trap that seems to have a bizarre and irrational hatred for Grant, trying to escape and kill him with murder in its eyes. The ape(named N'GI) does show an affection for Ruth, and Grant theorizes that their hatred for each other is fate, as both may have been reincarnated many times until they die together. When N'GI escapes, it seems the final battle will be played out... Bizarre tale has an ambitious philosophical premise, but utterly inept execution, with an embarrassing ape suit.

'How To Cure The Common Vampire' - This brief but inane "cure" proved to be the end of the series.
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6/10
A passable episode.
Hey_Sweden19 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
'Hatred Unto Death'.

Scripted by Halsted Welles, from a story by Milton Geiger. Directed by Gerald Perry Finnerman, usually a cinematographer for the series. This story attempts to explore the idea that memories are so ingrained in the mind that they can be passed down through the years - even throughout the centuries. And so it goes when a trapped gorilla (veteran gorilla performer George Barrows) develops an instant and instinctual dislike for the anthropologist (Steve Forrest) who was trying to rescue it. And so Forrest decides he hates the gorilla in return. The man and the ape haven't met before.....or have they, at some point in the distant past? The mans' wifes' (Dina Merrill) fondness for the animal causes things to come to a head in short order.

'Hatred Unto Death' is mildly entertaining at best, although it does have decent atmosphere and a sense of grim inevitability to the plot. You just know that things aren't going to end well. The performances are fine, with Fernando Lamas turning up as a friend of the couple. Barrows is a standout, playing the big ape with both menace and sensitivity.

'How to Cure the Common Vampire'.

Written and directed by series producer Jack Laird, who strikes out again with another extremely brief comic vignette about characters (including Richard Deacon and Johnny Brown) hesitate before staking a vampire. Utterly flat, with a completely ineffective punchline.

Six out of 10.
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Not one of the better shorts
hellpepper19 July 2007
This is one of those "humorous" shorts from Night Gallery that really falls flat. Not all of them were bad and they were meant as nothing more than quick time fillers. But this one is a real groaner.

I guess what bugs me the most about this one is that the establishing shot of the castle, and the Vampire Hunters approach and then the opening of the coffin lid. All of this is made to pound the fact in that these guys are going to kill a Vampire.

And then it is all over within a second.

Ah well, I still love Night Gallery. Although as for the short humorous bits my favorites are "Mrs Lovecraft sent me" and "Junior".
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