Search results
Cast
Episode Guide
- 1. The Dead Man; The Housekeeper Dec 16, 1970
- A doctor tests his power of suggestion to the limit; a man plans to transfer two souls.
- An invalid plots revenge on his wife; a drunkard doctor finds a 21st-century medical bag.
- 3. The House; Certain Shadows on the Wall Dec 30, 1970
- A released patient finds a house from her dreams; family fights for life in a haunted house.
Night Gallery is an American anthology television series that aired on NBC from December 16, 1970, to May 27, 1973, featuring stories of horror and the macabre.
Night Gallery: Created by Rod Serling. With Rod Serling, Larry Watson, Joanna Pettet, Matt Pelto. Rod Serling presents tales of horror illustrated in various paintings.
The horror anthology series Night Gallery began on December 16, 1970 (after the television pilot for the series was aired on November 8, 1969) and ended on May 27, 1973, with three seasons and 43 episodes. It was created by Rod Serling and broadcast on NBC.
A story-by-story look at Season 1 of 'Rod Serling's The Night Gallery'.
Night Gallery - Watch every episode on NBC.com and the NBC App. Rod Serling hosts the macabre anthology series.
Explore the 3 seasons of 'Rod Serling's The Night Gallery' episode by episode.
- www.amazon.com
- …
- Featured Categories
- DVD
- Horror
Sep 12, 2017 · Night Gallery: The Complete Series. Prepare for the chill of a lifetime as the master of suspense, Rod Serling (The Twilight Zone), hosts 98 stories of terror in this classic series, featuring every spine-tingling episode from all three seasons of Night Gallery.
- DVD
S1.E0 ∙ Pilot. Sat, Nov 8, 1969. A seemingly haunted painting drives a greedy man insane. A rich blind woman gets a new pair of eyes that allow her to see for only one brief ironic moment. An idyllic painting gives a Nazi war criminal in hiding some fleeting comfort. 7.4/10 (2.1K)
About Night Gallery. For those old enough to remember, Night Gallery was creator-host Rod Serling’s follow-up to The Twilight Zone. Set in a shadowy museum of the outré, Serling unveiled a dark and disturbing collection of canvases as preface to a highly diverse anthology of tales in the fantasy, horror, and science fiction vein.
Unlike The Twilight Zone, which emphasized science-fiction stories, Night Gallery featured supernatural and horror tales, including some original stories written by Rod Serling or adapted from such horror authors as H.P. Lovecraft.