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"The Energy Eater"
Series Kolchak: The Night Stalker
Season 1, Episode 10
Kolchak 1x10 001
Air date December 13th, 1974
Writers Arthur Rowe; Rudolph Borchert
Director Alex Grasshoff
Producers Cy Chermak
Starring Darren McGavin; Simon Oakland
Episode guide
Previous
"The Spanish Moss Murders"
Next
"Horror in the Heights"

"The Energy Eater" is the tenth episode of the supernatural mystery series Kolchak: The Night Stalker. It was directed by Alex Grasshoff with a teleplay written by Arthur Rowe and Rudolph Borchert based on a story treatment by Rowe. It first aired on ABC on Friday, December 13th, 1974 at 8:00 pm. In this episode, Carl Kolchak investigates strange deaths at a hospital that relate to an ancient Native American entity. To get to the root of the problem, he enlists the aid of a shaman named Jim Elkhorn, and a nurse named Janis Eisen.

Cast[]

Starring[]

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Notes & Trivia[]

  • This episode was combined with "Firefall" in a compilation movie boasting the title Kolchak: Crackle of Death.
  • Stunt performer Paul Baxley has an uncredited role as an electrocuted worker in this episode. This is the third of six episodes of the show that he makes appearances in. He previously played a police officer on a staircase in "Bad Medicine". He appears next in "Primal Scream" as Doctor Jules Copenik.
  • Actress Joyce Jillson was a professional astrologer and worked in an official capacity as such for 20th Century Fox. She made claims to having been the personal astrologer to former First Lady, Nancy Reagan, though the White House always denied these claims.
  • The name of the Native American entity "the energy eater" is actually Matchemonedo.
  • Actor William Smith speaks fluent French in this episode. Smith is actually fluent in French, as well as other languages, which he learned while working as an Intelligence specialist in the United States Air Force.

Allusions[]

  • Carl Kolchak makes reference to Louis Pasteur in this episode. Louis Pasteur was a French scientist renowned for his work on vaccines. The term pasteurization is named after him. Despite Kolchak's assertion, Louis Pasteur never actually said "Any schmo can invent a rabies vaccine, but when will we find a cure for stupidity?".
  • Tony Vincenzo makes reference to the Pierce-Arrow Motor Car Company, which was an automobile manufacturer founded in 1901. They ceased operations in 1938. They were known for producing luxury automobiles.

Quotes[]

  • Carl Kolchak: The city of Chicago sparkles with monuments to man's achievement; his aspirations, his quest for the truth, his respect for the law, now a different sort of monument. There was a theory that dying institutions erect their own mausoleums before they die. This particular monument was to be a hospital and research center, dedicated to extending the life of man, improving the quality of that life. It succeeded instead in introducing a new horror, a new way of death – a mystery.

....

....

  • Carl Kolchak: As the great Louis Pasteur once said, "Any schmo can invent a rabies vaccine, but when will we find a cure for stupidity?".

....

  • Carl Kolchak: They were loading unmarked boxes from an unmarked truck, but for me, everything had 'double-cross' written all over it.

....

  • Tony Vincenzo: Your angle on the hospital dedication, Carl. How did you come up with it?
  • Carl Kolchak: Oh, a little, uh, research and, uh, imagination.
  • Tony Vincenzo: Some angle. Two pages condemning the lack of geriatric facilities. What did you promise her this time? Orthopedic glitter shoes?
  • Carl Kolchak: Well, Tony, Tony, there is a vast and growing proportion of our citizens in their autumn years who are living on fixed income, faced with a-a growing inflation, possibly even recession. I mean, they have their rights, their special needs. They're organized.

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