Though Kolchak was short-lived as a series, its impact on popular culture has been substantial. In particular the series has been described as a predecessor to
The X-Files (1993–2002, 2016, 2018).
The X-Filess creator,
Chris Carter, has acknowledged that the show had influenced him greatly in his own work. In one interview when told that the majority of the viewing public considered the success of
The X-Files series as being inspired by shows such as
The Twilight Zone or
The Outer Limits, Carter said that while those shows were indeed an influence on
The X-Files, it was only about 10 percent, with another 30 percent coming from the
Kolchak series and the rest derived as being based upon original 'pure inspiration'. Carter paid tribute to
Kolchak in a number of ways in the show. Several episodes featured a character named for Richard Matheson (
Raymond J. Barry), screenwriter of the two pilot films. Carter wanted McGavin to appear as Kolchak in
The X-Files, but McGavin was unwilling to reprise the character for the show. He then pitched the idea of him portraying
Fox Mulder (
David Duchovny)'s father Bill which he also turned down. He did eventually appear in several episodes as Arthur Dales, a retired
FBI agent described as the "father of the X-Files". In the third episode of the 2016
revival series, Guy Mann (
Rhys Darby), a character prominently featured in the episode "
Mulder and Scully Meet the Were-Monster" is conspicuously attired in Kolchak's signature
seersucker jacket, black knit tie, and straw hat. The first work to openly be inspired by
Kolchak: The Night Stalker appeared less than a year after its original broadcast. The comic book
The Tomb of Dracula #43 (
cover dated April 1976) stars a character named Paul Butterworth, an investigative reporter with an obvious resemblance to Kolchak in both appearance and personality. Like Kolchak, he clashes with his editor, Paul Lamenzo, and is ultimately unable to get his story about a supernatural menace published. The inspiration is acknowledged by the story's title, "Paul Butterworth: The Night-Stalker". The 1995 comic book
Primortals #10 depicts a reporter named Carl calling his boss Vincenzo as he investigates the landing site of an alien spaceship. The issue's writer, Christopher Mills, later went on to write
Kolchak comic books.
2005 television series Although Rice retains the rights to written Kolchak works, and
Universal Studios owns the rights to the TV series, ABC maintained dramatic rights to the character and ownership of the two TV movies. The network began airing a new
Night Stalker series on September 29, 2005, with the character Carl Kolchak portrayed by
Stuart Townsend. On November 14, 2005, ABC and creator
Frank Spotnitz announced that the new series was being cancelled due to low ratings. The complete 2005 series was released on DVD. In a nod to the original series, the pilot episode has a brief shot of Darren McGavin lifted from the first TV movie, as the new Kolchak is walking through the
Los Angeles Beacon newsroom. The book included stories by such writers as
Rodney Barnes,
Kim Newman,
Nancy A. Collins,
Jonathan Maberry,
Steve Niles, Gabriel Hardman, and
Peter David. Artists included
J.K. Woodward, Marco Finnegan, Colton Worley, Paul McCaffrey and Julius Ohta.
Film adaptation In May 2012,
Disney announced a film adaptation was in the works with
Johnny Depp starring and producing with
Edgar Wright directing.
Home media Magnetic Video released the first TV movie on VHS,
The Night Stalker, and years after the label was taken over by
20th Century Fox, it was kept in print as part of its "Selections" series until their licensing deal with ABC expired.
MGM Home Video released the two TV movies on DVD on August 24, 2004.
Universal Studios released
Kolchak: The Night Stalker – The Complete Series on DVD a year later.
Madman Entertainment released the complete series on DVD in Australia and New Zealand on July 15, 2009. Besides
Amazon carrying the DVD set for sale on its website,
Netflix offered it for rental. During the early 2010s, Netflix had it available to stream for a time, then took it off again.
Kolchak: The Night Stalker returned in August 2016, just as Universal was about to release it again on DVD. Although the series was not added as part of
NBC's new
Peacock streaming site in 2020, it was available on the free ad-supported NBC.com. In September, it was added to the
MeTV lineup at 11 p.m. central on Saturdays, along with lots of trivia on its website. The two TV films,
The Night Stalker and
The Night Strangler, were each released on
Blu-ray October 2, 2018, and DVD by
Kino Lorber.
Kolchak: The Night Stalker (1974–75) Complete Series Blu-ray (also by Kino Lorber) was released on October 12, 2021. The Blu-ray features 21 commentary tracks by film/tv historians as well as a new interview with writer David Chase. In addition to recording a commentary for the premiere episode "The Ripper", Mark Dawidziak, author of
The Night Stalker Companion and
Kolchak novel,
Grave Secrets, also provided a Booklet Essay. ==References==