| The Longest Night | |
|---|---|
|   | |
| Genre | Drama | 
| Written by | Merwin Gerard | 
| Directed by | Jack Smight | 
| Starring | David Janssen James Farentino Phyllis Thaxter | 
| Theme music composer | Hal Mooney | 
| Country of origin | United States | 
| Original language | English | 
| Production | |
| Producer | William Frye | 
| Production location | Thousand Oaks, California | 
| Cinematography | Sam Leavitt | 
| Editor | Robert F. Shugrue | 
| Running time | 74 minutes | 
| Production company | Universal Television | 
| Original release | |
| Network | ABC | 
| Release | September 12, 1972 | 
The Longest Night is a 1972 American made-for-television drama film written by Merwin Gerard and directed by Jack Smight. [1] This movie was originally shown as an ABC Movie of the Week on September 12, 1972. It is based on the 1968 Barbara Mackle kidnapping by Gary Steven Krist. [2]
The plot concerns the kidnapping of Karen Chambers, daughter of wealthy Alan Chambers. The kidnapper holds her underground in a homemade coffin. He leaves her there, with a fan for air and a gallon of water, until he receives the ransom money. Her family frantically searches for her.
Filming started June 1972 at Universal studios. [3]
The film inspired a story Quentin Tarantino created for CSI: Crime Scene Investigation , which the show's house writers scripted into an episode he directed in 2005 titled Grave Danger , a two-hour season finale in which the Las Vegas crime team had to rescue a colleague who has been buried alive. [4]