It scared the living daylights out of me.
Sun Jul 18, 2021: The first time I saw it was when it was shown on
NBC Saturday Night at the Movies
NBC Saturday Night at the Movies was the first TV show to broadcast in color relatively recent feature films from major studios. The series premiered on September 23, 1961, and ran until October 1978, spawning many imitators. Previously, television stations had been only been able to show older, low-budget, black-and-white films that wouldn't be shown at movie theaters. In the late 1970s, competition from cable television and home video led to a decline in viewership.
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History
Background and early history
Further information: List of NBC Saturday Night at the Movies titles
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For its 196162 television season, NBC obtained the rights to broadcast 31 post-1950 movie titles from 20th Century Fox, although only 30 were actually telecast that season (one film,
The Seven Year Itch, not being televised until the start of the 1963 season). On September 23, 1961,
Saturday Night at the Movies premiered with the 1953 Marilyn MonroeLauren BacallBetty Grable film
How to Marry a Millionaire, presented "In Living Color". Some of the other movies shown were
The Day the Earth Stood Still (March 3, 1962) and
No Highway in the Sky (March 24, 1962). (Having been filmed in Cinemascope, a Fox specialty from 1953 to 1967, many of these films had to be severely panned-and-scanned to fit the invariable full screen television aspect ratio of the time.)
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