Night Flier
New Line Cinema (1998)
Horror
In Collection
#1252
5*
Seen ItYes
(6/13/2011)
026359146626
IMDB   5.4
97 mins USA/English
DVD  Region 1   R
Miguel Ferrer Richard Dees
Julie Entwisle Katherine 'Jimmy' Blair
Dan Monahan Merton Morrison
Michael H. Moss Dwight Renfield
John Bennes Ezra Hannon
Beverly Skinner Selida McCamon
Rob Wilds Buck Kendall
Richard K. Olsen Claire Bowie
Elizabeth McCormick Ellen Sarch
J.R. Rodriguez Terminal Cop #1
Robert Casey Terminal Cop #2 (as Bob Casey)
Ashton Stewart Nate Wilson
William Neely Ray Sarch
Windy Wenderlich Henry Gates
General Fermon Judd Jr. Policeman
Director Mark Pavia
Producer Mitchell Galin
Alfredo Cuomo
Writer Stephen King
Mark Pavia
Jack O'Donnell

Stephen King 's short story, The Night Flier , originally appeared in Prime Evil: New Stories by the Masters of Modern Horror (1988), edited by Washington, D.C., lawyer Douglas E. Winter, and it was later collected in King's Nightmares & Dreamscapes (1993). This film adaptation aired on HBO (November 1997) and was seen in European territories prior to the American theatrical release. An unknown vampiric Cessna pilot is suspected of night murders at remote airfields. At the tabloid Inside View , longtime reporter Richard Dees ( Miguel Ferrer ) expresses disinterest, so eager newcomer Katherine Blair ( Julie Entwisle ) is instead given the story by editor Merton Morrison ( Dan Monahan ). Then there's another murder, prompting Dees to reverse himself. He demands the story back and takes after the killer in his one private plane, tracking witnesses, gathering grue, and staging photos when the subject looks too dull. Blair is also on the trail, and the two newshounds are soon competing. Both are out for blood — and so is the night flier. Stephen King campaigned for director Mark Pavia and co-scripter Jack O'Donnell to steer The Night Flier after he saw their short film Drag, which King called "the best short horror film I've seen in 20 years." Locations included Wilmington, North Carolina. The character of tabloid journalist Richard Dees was first introduced in Stephen King 's 1979 novel The Dead Zone. — Bhob Stewart
Edition Details
Series Stephen King
Distributor HBO Home Video
Chapters 24
Release Date 10/23/2009
Packaging Snap Case
Screen Ratio 1.85:1
Subtitles English; French; Spanish
Audio Tracks ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
No. of Disks/Tapes 1
Personal Details
Purchase Date 2/28/2003
Owner Thomas Eisenmann
Store Best Buy
Purchase Price $9.99
Condition Excellent
Reviewed Widescreen Review
Bit Rate 384 KB
Anamophic Yes
Links IMDB
Amazon US
The Night Flier at Movie Collector Connect

Features
Anamophic
The DVD includes the original theatrical trailer, cast and filmmaker profiles and production notes.

Widescreen Review
Story Synopsis:
Stephen King’s The Night Flier is a new tale of a modern-day vampire who flies by night in a dark-winged Cessna. For Richard Dees (Ferrer), his unbelievable tales make his faithful readers believe. And he wants to deliver the facts about the Night Flier who lands at secluded airports and brutally murders local residents. Dees begins to follow the unknown killer in a Cessna of his own, uncovering clues that reveal a pilot so terrifying and untamed by human nature, that their final confrontation will leave no body unbloodied.

DVD Picture:
The picture quality is superb, especially the anamorphic widescreen DVD, which exhibits improved color resolution, detail and sharpness when compared to the otherwise excellent LaserDisc picture. The DVD, when viewed in the component anamorphic format, is also a bit brighter, with better shadow delineation and deeper, more solid blacks. Colors are rich and vibrant with naturally rendered fleshtones on both versions. Neither version displays noise or artifacts. The LaserDisc is matted at 1.85:1, while the DVD’s anamorphic and letterbox aspect ratio is 1.78:1.

Soundtrack:
The Dolby® Surround soundtrack projects a spacious soundfield with excellent aggressive surround envelopment and deep bass. The DVD’s Dolby Digital 5.1 discrete soundtrack sounds better delineated with a wider soundstage, split surrounds and deeper, more powerful .1 low frequency effects. The music score is nicely spatial with a wide soundstage presence that images well. Dialogue is perfectly natural sounding with excellent spatial integration. This is an effectively designed soundtrack that perfectly complements this haunting tale.

This Disc Contains The Following WSR-Rated Superb Qualities:
Superb Sound Effects Recording Quality
Superb Music Score Recording Quality
Superb Color Fidelity
Reference Quality