What’s it about?
A doctor is called to examine the body of a horribly deformed man found in the desert of the southwestern U.S. The man appears to have suffered from a rare disorder that causes deformities over several years, but he is identified as a scientist who had last been seen apparently healthy and unblemished just a month before. Trying to find out how this could be, the doctor investigates at the remote laboratory where the scientist had been working. It appears to have been recently damaged in a fire, and the surviving scientist only reveals that he and his late partner had been working on a new synthetic nutrient to help ease world hunger.
Meanwhile, a new assistant at the laboratory strikes up a friendship with the investigating doctor. Through her, the doctor learns that the nutrient is unstable and unpredictable -- and that it has caused astounding gigantism among the laboratory animals it’s used on. Eventually, it becomes clear that a tarantula that had received injections escaped during the fire, and is now preying on cattle (and the occasional human) in the area. The tarantula continues to grow at an alarming rate, and ultimately terrorizes the town.
Illustration copyright 2009 Dennis J. Reinmueller
Is it any good?
It’s good enough to have made a believer out of me where the special effects are concerned. I have never much liked the use of close-up photography of real animals as “monsters” in these kinds of movies. I’ve always felt that the creatures inevitably look too ordinary and that the inability to have monsters interacting with actors is a fatal shortcoming. But TARANTULA makes that tactic work probably as well as it ever could -- and no doubt my dislike of such things is a result of having only ever seen cheap, unimaginative knock-offs of this very movie. For one thing, close-up pictures of a real tarantula are pretty darn creepy and alien looking. (This, however, is not necessarily true of lizards, to name another oft-enlarged movie monster.) And shots of the tarantula and the environment aren’t just flatly superimposed -- great care was obviously taken to make it look like the spider is actually interacting with the rest of the things in the frame. It crawls down hills, clambers atop buildings, and so on. There are obviously limits to this, but for the most part it’s done very well.
The story has a lot of the same silliness that other 1950s sci-fi movies do. The science is laughable, and the dialogue is often stilted and unnatural. TARANTULA, however, is far from the worst offender of the decade (or even of the year) in either of those areas, and the main characters at least have some personality. The catalyst for the creation of the giant spider -- the search for a synthetic nutrient -- is also a nice break from the usual stories about atomic fallout spawning mutations, man’s encroachment dislodging previously hidden monsters, or (worst of all) the mad scientist breeding an unstoppable weapon.
But obviously the main attraction is the tarantula itself. Because of how the effects are generated, it can’t usually do much more than stalk into view and look menacing. It’s a limited bag of tricks, but the movie makes the most of them. Especially effective are some shots of the spider peering through the second storey windows of the house where the laboratory is housed. And since the nutrient has a different effect on humans -- causing horrific deformities instead of gigantic growth -- there are other creepy things to fill in some of the gaps where the spider can’t go. I wouldn’t exactly say that TARANTULA is required viewing for anybody, but it’s also not likely to disappoint if you like giant monsters. It can stand with THEM! (1954), GOJIRA (1954), 20 MILLION MILES TO EARTH (1957), and THE BLOB (1958) as one of the best examples of the 1950s.
What else happened this year?
-- THIS ISLAND EARTH mixes an utterly absurd script with top-of-the-line special effects to produce a ridiculous movie with serious third-act problems that looks fantastic. It was later mocked (with some justification) in MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000: THE MOVIE (1996).
-- Hammer released the first of its Professor Quatermass sci-fi adventures, THE QUATERMASS XPERIMENT. I’ve unfortunately never been able to find this one, but all the Quatermass movies have an excellent reputation.
If you watch only one sci-fi movie from 1955...
Make it TARANTULA, unless you can find THE QUATERMASS XPERIMENT. If you can, let me know if it’s as great as I imagine it to be.
Monday, February 23, 2009
1955: TARANTULA
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I found it hard to believe that the monster effects were that good, but they are:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.badmovies.org/movies/tarantula/tarantula2.jpg
http://www.badmovies.org/movies/tarantula/tarantula6.jpg
I'm impressed. That mouse is pretty good for even today's standards, I think.
Yeah, I really wish I'd gotten my own screenshots of this one. The effects aren't all equally good, but they are a lot better than I expected and a few of the shots (like the animals in cages) are pratically perfect.
ReplyDeleteThe only downside is that the tarantula just does a lot of looming and not a lot of anything else.
Also I thought Dennis's illustration for this week was especially hilarious.
ReplyDeleteSo I just finished watching this, and while I'd agree that the giant spider effects look pretty cool, the film is also just sort of dull whenever the giant spider effects aren't on the screen. Nonsensical stuff just seems to happen for an hour and then they fight a spider and that's the end.
ReplyDeleteIt was, however, pretty cool to see John Agar giving a decent performance in this after only ever seeing him in The Brain from Planet Arous and the remake of King Kong.
http://www.watch-movies.net.in/play_new.php?si=299372&s=2&tra_st=0&u=aHR0cCUzQSUyRiUyRiUyRnN0YWdldnUuY29tJTGZW1iZWQIM0Z3aWR0aCUzRDcyMCUyNmhlaWdodCUzRDQ1MCUyNmJhY2tncm91bmQlM0QwMDAlMjZ1aWQlM0Rvc2V6dnBvbHNhdHA=&host=stagevu
ReplyDeletethat is the url for the quartermass xmeriment i hope it works i took 20 minutes to type it in my cut and paste wouldnt work for some reason. if it doesnt work then go to www.watch-movies-links.net and search for the movie.