The Crow: Stairway to Heaven | |
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![]() The Crow: Stairway to Heaven title card | |
Genre | |
Based on | |
Written by | Brent V. Friedman Naomi Janzen Peter M. Lenkov John Turman |
Directed by | Scott Williams |
Starring | Mark Dacascos Marc Gomes Sabine Karsenti Katie Stuart |
Narrated by | Mark Dacascos Sabine Karsenti |
Theme music composer | Peter Manning Robinson and Cherish Alexander |
Country of origin | Canada |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 22 |
Production | |
Producers | Bryce Zabel Edward Pressman |
Cinematography | Attila Szaly |
Editors | Charles Robichaud Richard Schwadel |
Running time | 43 minutes |
Production companies | Crow Productions Alliance Communications Alliance Atlantis Communications Crescent Entertainment PolyGram Television |
Original release | |
Network | Syndication |
Release | September 25, 1998 – May 22, 1999 |
The Crow: Stairway to Heaven is a Canadian superhero television series created by Bryce Zabel. It originally aired from September 25, 1998, to May 22, 1999, consisting of 22 episodes. The series was based on the Caliber Press' The Crow comic book series. It starred Mark Dacascos as the protagonist, Eric Draven. [1]
Exactly one year after being brutally murdered, rock musician Eric Draven returns searching for a way to right what was wronged and to reunite with his missing soulmate Shelly Webster. Guided by a mystical spirit crow, he is neither living nor dead, possessing strange new powers to aid him in his search for revenge which, ultimately, must become a quest for redemption.
No. | Title | |
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1 | "The Soul Can't Rest" | |
A year after he and his fiance Shelly Webster were murdered, Eric Draven returns as a Crow to get revenge on gang leader Top Dollar and his henchmen T-Bird, Tin Tin and Funboy. | ||
2 | "Souled Out" | |
Eric goes after the man who hired Top Dollar, corrupt businessman Mace Reyes, who is secretly a Snake, an evil version of a Crow. | ||
3 | "Get a Life" | |
After a woman is killed in a shooting, Shelly's spirit asks Eric to find the killer and clear the name of the victim's ex-boyfriend, Gil. | ||
4 | "Like It's 1999" | |
When one of her friends joins an anarchic gang, Sarah infiltrates it to save him, only to end being taken prisoner by the group's leader, Shane Gant. | ||
5 | "Voices" | |
Eric tries to help Jesse Hickock, the medium of a visiting carnival whose powers are being exploited for criminal ends by unscrupulous ringmaster Doc Connell. | ||
6 | "Solitude's Revenge" | |
Greg Kessler, a murderer who Albrecht arrested, is released from prison and captures Albrecht, who he begins hunting for sport on abandoned island off the coast of Port Columbia. | ||
7 | "Double Take" | |
Shelly's identity is stolen by a woman who is on the run from a corrupt FBI agent who is working for the Mafia. | ||
8 | "Give Me Death" | |
Top Dollar escapes from an asylum and goes on a rampage, intent on forcing Eric to kill him in the belief that this will give him the powers of a Crow. | ||
9 | "Before I Wake" | |
A despondent Eric undergoes an experimental form of hypnosis to try and contact Shelly, and instead ends up being possessed by the spirit of a previous Crow named Blackfeather. | ||
10 | "Death Wish" | |
Eric befriends suicidal stunt motorcyclist Jake Thompson at the behest of the ghost of Thompson's young son, Casey. While working to reunite the two, Eric uncovers a plot to assassinate Thompson. | ||
11 | "Through a Dark Circle" | |
An occult ritual that Eric performs in an attempt to reach Shelly accidentally summons the spirit of executed serial killer Richard Lee Wilbanks, whose demonic powers can harm even Eric. | ||
12 | "Disclosure" | |
The Blackout is bought by crooked real estate developer Frank Moran, the abusive husband of Eric's friend Shea. Eric infiltrates and dismantles Moran's organization for Albrecht, who is forced to turn Eric over to Internal Affairs. | ||
13 | "The People vs. Eric Draven" | |
In a clip show, Eric is put on trial for the murder of Shelly Webster. | ||
14 | "It's a Wonderful Death" | |
Incarcerated after being found guilty of Shelly's murder, Eric is placed in an unwinnable time loop of the night that she died by the Skull Cowboy after wishing, "What I really want is to be back with Shelly before this whole nightmare started." | ||
15 | "Birds of a Feather" | |
After being acquitted of Shelly's murder, Eric meets Doctor Hannah "Talon" Foster, a new Crow who was killed alongside her daughter, Rebecca. | ||
16 | "Never Say Die" | |
A deranged Russian criminal uses a cursed manuscript, four ritual murders and the power that resides within Eric's loft to become the host of the evil spirit of Rasputin. | ||
17 | "Lazarus Rising" | |
Eric becomes the unwitting test subject of the Lazarus Group, an ancient secret society whose leader, Frederick Balsam, seeks to achieve immortality by transferring his mind into the body of a Crow. | ||
18 | "Closing Time" | |
Acting through an agent named Soleil Hazard, Top Dollar uses a mystical melody to enthrall Eric and the rehabilitated Funboy. | ||
19 | "The Road Not Taken" | |
Eric and Hannah break up a human smuggling ring, and rescue a baby named Celia Meyers. | ||
20 | "Brother's Keeper" | |
Guided by the spirit of their father, Eric has an uncomfortable reunion with his troubled stepbrother Chris, who is hiding money from the Mafia. | ||
21 | "Dead To Rights" | |
As a serial killer who specifically targets police officers runs amok in Port Columbia, Eric begins finding it harder and harder to control his actions as the Crow. | ||
22 | "A Gathering Storm" | |
After acquiring a new body, Frederick Balsam murders every other member of the Lazarus Group, and uses a dark ritual to separate Eric and the Crow, which abducts Shelly, who had been sent by Heaven to try and save the now powerless Eric. |
Production took place in and around Vancouver, British Columbia, which in the series was named Port Columbia. Several scenes were filmed inside the top floors of the Sun Tower, and at the BC Museum of Mining in Britannia Beach.[ citation needed ]
As with each of the movie adaptations and the original comic book, underground music played a key role in the show. Bands such as Econoline Crush and Mudgirl made guest appearances on the show, while the source music included tracks by Rob Zombie, The Crystal Method, Delerium, Bif Naked, The Painkillers, Oleander, and Xero). Two tracks from Peter Himmelman's 1998 album Love Thinketh No Evil, "Fly So High" and "Seven Circles", were re-recorded for use by Eric Draven's band, Hangman's Joke, with the latter song becoming a major plot point during the early episodes of the series.
A special effects explosion went wrong during filming on August 15, 1998, when stuntman Marc Akerstream was struck on the head and killed by flying debris. [2]
Despite positive reviews [3] [4] [5] the series was cancelled after one season in June 1999, when Polygram was sold to Universal Studios, which decided not to continue Stairway to Heaven. [6] The producers planned to make a television movie to wrap up the major loose ends from the cliffhanger at the end of the final episode, but it never materialized.
Later Bryce Zabel said than he planned to make a six-hour miniseries to wrap up the show. According to him,the series would pick up five years after the events of the finale. [7]
In 1999 and 2000, the series was aired extensively on The Sci-Fi Channel in the United States and the United Kingdom. In March 2010, CBS Action in the UK aired the series.
On March 17, 2005, all 22 episodes were released in a 5-disc DVD boxed set in central Europe through Dutch distributor A-Film. The set features the original broadcast trailer, a behind-the-scenes featurette, and interview snippets with cast members Mark Dacascos, Marc Gomes, Sabine Karsenti, Katie Stuart and John Pyper-Ferguson, fight co-ordinator James Lew, crow handler Dave Sousa, director of photography Attila Szaly, and executive producers Bryce Zabel and Brad Markowitz.
2005 also saw a bare-bones episode-only release of the series in Australia on six discs across two volumes via Warner Bros.; this release was preceded by an even more basic single disc through Magna Pacific which featured the pilot and two "bonus" episodes.
On July 24, 2007, Arts Alliance America released The Crow: Stairway to Heaven - The Complete Series in a five-disc, region 1 DVD set in. This set features an extensive array of special features including commentaries, a photo gallery and a gag reel. [8]
On February 15, 2011, Alliance Home Entertainment released The Crow: Stairway to Heaven - The Complete Series on DVD in Canada only. [9]
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result | Ref |
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1999 | Leo Awards | Best Cinematography in a Dramatic Series | Attila Szalay | Nominated | [10] |
Best Picture Editing in a Dramatic Series | Richard A. Schwadel | Nominated | [10] |