Kill and Cure | |
---|---|
Genre | horror |
Written by | James Workman |
Directed by | David Cahill |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producer | David Cahill |
Running time | 30 mins |
Original release | |
Network | Seven |
Release | January 25, 1971 |
Kill and Cure is a 1971 Australian television play. It was a pilot for a proposed thriller anthology series The Shockers that was not picked up but which aired as a stand-alone production.
It aired in Melbourne on 27 January 1971 along with a number of pilots for series, including The Group, Catwalk, The Undertakers, and The Chris Kirby Show. [1] (On Sydney on 25 January it aired along with another pilot E Force One.) Jim Oswin, General Manager of ATN-7, said "we are going to make them and we are going to play them. Then the network is going to sit back and take a good, critical look at them. And we want viewers to do the same." [2] It was shot at Channel Seven's studio in Epping.
The Age felt it was too unsubtle and derivative. [3] The Sun Herald felt the series would have to come up with something better if it was to be greenlit. [4]
The Seven Network reportedly authorised "three or four" more episodes. [5]
Two doctors working in a mental asylum in France experiment on patients. One of them turns into a monster.
Kill and Cure | |
---|---|
Genre | horror |
Written by | James Workman |
Directed by | David Cahill |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producer | David Cahill |
Running time | 30 mins |
Original release | |
Network | Seven |
Release | January 25, 1971 |
Kill and Cure is a 1971 Australian television play. It was a pilot for a proposed thriller anthology series The Shockers that was not picked up but which aired as a stand-alone production.
It aired in Melbourne on 27 January 1971 along with a number of pilots for series, including The Group, Catwalk, The Undertakers, and The Chris Kirby Show. [1] (On Sydney on 25 January it aired along with another pilot E Force One.) Jim Oswin, General Manager of ATN-7, said "we are going to make them and we are going to play them. Then the network is going to sit back and take a good, critical look at them. And we want viewers to do the same." [2] It was shot at Channel Seven's studio in Epping.
The Age felt it was too unsubtle and derivative. [3] The Sun Herald felt the series would have to come up with something better if it was to be greenlit. [4]
The Seven Network reportedly authorised "three or four" more episodes. [5]
Two doctors working in a mental asylum in France experiment on patients. One of them turns into a monster.