Author Topic: Everyone In Collinsport's Favorite Word Slideshow  (Read 803926 times)

0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline Mysterious Benefactor

  • Systems Manager /
  • Administrator
  • FULL SUPERNAL SCEPTER
  • *****
  • Posts: 22146
  • Karma: +210/-12788
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
Re: Everyone In Collinsport's Favorite Word Slideshow
« Reply #2730 on: April 14, 2026, 06:28:16 PM »
Another post worth revisiting:

And now I want to share the novelization of Scene 119 because, as I brought up previously, some of the dialogue in the version of the scene in the script that was used for the novel is different - and as was the case with the novelization of Scene 118, the scene is also a bit longer due to dialogue that was eventually dropped somewhere along the way and does not appear in DC's script:

When she returned to her lab after the funeral she at
once went back to work on a problem which had been bother
-ing her. From a refrigerator she removed a tray of blood
samples, which she carried to a lab table. Then she be-
gan to carefully check each sample under a microscope.
She took her time with this. After a while she looked
up with a thoughtful frown, then began to re-examine all
the specimens once more.
  She was busily engaged in this task when there was a
knock on the lab door. She called out, "Come in."
  The door opened and Professor Stokes entered. He
said, "I got here as soon as I could."
  "I'm glad," she said.
  He crossed to the table and stared at the labeled blood
samples in a box. "I'm not interrupting you?"
  "It's all right," she said, staring into the microscope.
"I'll be able to give you my full attention in a minute,
Eliot."
  "Do you have blood samples of all the victims?"
  She raised her head and looked at him. "Yes."
  His eyes met hers. "Have they revealed anything to
you?"
  A puzzled frown shown on her attractive face. "Yes,
but I don't know what to make of it."
  "What do you mean?" he asked, coming over to her.
  She sighed and gestured toward the samples. "I've dis-
covered a cell in these samples that I've never seen
before. It obviously must have entered the bloodstreams
of the victims while they were being attacked." And she
put her eyes back to the microscope.
  There was a pertinent pause between them before Pro-
fessor Stokes asked warily, "Julia, do you believe in the
existence of vampires?"
  She gave him a startled look. "You're not really seri-
ous?"
  Stokes nodded gravely. "I am."
  "And you think?"
  "I'll tell you what I think in due time," he said, his
expression serious. "I'm familiar with many documented
case histories--some even in the twentieth century."
  "I too am familiar with the legend of vampires."
  "Then you'll realize all of the classic symptoms are
present in the attacks that have occurred here."
  "Julia heard him with widened eyes. She knew all about
the vampire theories. But here in this white-walled
modern hospital lab they seemed to have no place. She
found it difficult to believe that this mystery facing them
had its roots in the murky world of ancient witchcraft.
  Swallowing hard, she said, "But, Eliot, vampires are only
legend."
  Professor Stokes stared at her grimly. "Julia, Carolyn
Stoddard's body was almost completely drained of blood.
Isn't that correct?"
  "Yes."
  "Do you know of any animals in this area that attack
people for their blood?"
  She stared at him with a disturbed expression on her
attractive face. "Professor, this theory of yours will sound
utterly fantastic to most people."
  "I know it."
  "What do the police think of it?"
  He looked bleak. "If I told the police that the creature
they're looking for lives by night and sleeps in a coffin
during the day, they might question my sanity."
  "There's no question about that," Julia agreed.
  "Yet I believe it true."
  Julia turned back to her microscope, thinking. "Assum-
ing that you're right, the cell I've discovered would in-
dicate to me that this creature, whatever it is, might be
curable."
  Stokes frowned. "Vampirism isn't a disease, Julia. Vam-
pires are the living dead."
  "How could you possibly prove such a thing?"
  "I expect the proof will be forthcoming very soon,"
he said enigmatically.
  Julia stared at him, having no idea what he meant.


Offline Mysterious Benefactor

  • Systems Manager /
  • Administrator
  • FULL SUPERNAL SCEPTER
  • *****
  • Posts: 22146
  • Karma: +210/-12788
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
Re: Everyone In Collinsport's Favorite Word Slideshow
« Reply #2731 on: April 14, 2026, 06:28:52 PM »
If you don't want to know the circumstances surrounding yesterday's entry in this slideshow, then don't read any further...




[spoiler]Yesterday's quote:
DS 1991 Ep #3 (-1966) - Prof. Woodard - 'Yes, I know there's a terrible storm, but I--I told you it's important. I MUST talk to him. It's very important.'

From SHADOWS IN THE '90s: The Dark Shadows Concordance 1991 - PLOT SUMMARIES - MINISERIES PART TWO (EPISODES TWO AND THREE):
     WOODARD'S HOME:  Woodard impatiently asks the
person on the other end of the phone if Patterson has returned
yet.  The phone cuts off.  He slams it down.  A cat yelps.  He
starts, then says, "Sebastian, that's not a good thing to do to an
old man."  A window flies open, then something falls.  He goes
downstairs, calling to his cat.  Barnabas, from behind, grabs his
throat.  Woodard yells in terror.  Barnabas, coldly, "You've
made a serious mistake, Professor.  Your foolish curiosity has
now brought you into my bleak universe..."


The summary doesn't  reference the quote directly - but it does reference the circumstances it comes up in...

And as I've done previously when it comes to the '91 Series, I used a screen capture from the TGG Direct DVD release that's the same dimensions as the ones from the original series -


- because even though that release also doesn't have the correct color timing like the VHS release does -


- also like the VHS release, it has the correct aspect ratio, plus it even tends to show a bit more of the frame and it's clearer than the VHS.

And even though the MGM DVD release, like the TGG Direct release, tends to be clearer than the VHS, frustratingly, the aspect ratio is cropped from 4X3 to 16X9 -


And just a reminder, we've seen a notation similar to "DS 1991 Ep #3 (-1966)" before and in this case it means that the quote should have come from a Vicki's Arrival-Burke's Revenge-Matthew Morgan-Introducing Josette ep but there are no longer any eps from that storyline that haven't been quoted from.

Offline Mysterious Benefactor

  • Systems Manager /
  • Administrator
  • FULL SUPERNAL SCEPTER
  • *****
  • Posts: 22146
  • Karma: +210/-12788
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
Re: Everyone In Collinsport's Favorite Word Slideshow
« Reply #2732 on: Yesterday at 05:46:14 PM »
If you don't want to know the circumstances surrounding yesterday's entry in this slideshow, then don't read any further...

[spoiler]Yesterday's quote:
Ep #1050 (1970PT[-1966/67]) - Liz - 'No, it MUST be tonight! You MUST come with me to the mausoleum, Roger.'

From "#1050/1051: Robservations 08/05/03: Mourning; Claude North and His Dagger"
Liz returns--Roger, I want you to come with me and decide where Carolyn is to be buried. Not tonight, says Julia.  Yes, insists Liz, I must start believing that she's gone, and it would help me to decide one thing--where she is to rest--please, Roger!  That can wait until tomorrow, her brother says. No, it must be tonight! says Liz--you must come with me to the mausoleum.
[/spoiler]

The Robservations references the quote perfectly...

And just a reminder, we've seen a notation similar to "(1970PT[-1966/67])" before and in this case it means that the quote should have come from a The Return of Laura ep but there are no longer any eps from that storyline that haven't been quoted from.

Offline Mysterious Benefactor

  • Systems Manager /
  • Administrator
  • FULL SUPERNAL SCEPTER
  • *****
  • Posts: 22146
  • Karma: +210/-12788
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
Re: Everyone In Collinsport's Favorite Word Slideshow
« Reply #2733 on: Today at 04:46:06 PM »
If you don't want to know the circumstances surrounding yesterday's entry in this slideshow, then don't read any further...

[spoiler]Yesterday's quote:
Ep #286 (1967) - Vicki - 'But then, he MUST have done something to, to frighten her to make her feel so desperate.'

From "#0285/0286: Robservations 12/14/01: Barnabas Gets Soul"
Interesting that Barnabas lied to Vicki and said it was Jeremiah chasing Josette on that stormy night.
Vicki, confused, suggested that if Jeremiah had loved her, he wouldn't have frightened her. "I can't defend everything he did--nor could he," responded Barnabas softly. (I believe this was the first episode in which he called her Vicki rather than Miss Winters.)
[/spoiler]

The Robservations only sort of references the quote...