Film Review
Tarantula was one of the more
successful follow-ups to Gordon Douglas's groundbreaking sci-fi
thriller
Them! (1954), the film that
engendered something of a craze for movies in which mankind is menaced
by overgrown beasties of the kind that you normally squash underfoot in
your back garden.
After giant ants tried and failed to destroy
humanity in
Them, spiders had
their turn in
Tarantula,
giving the arachnophobes a good excuse to stay at home and wash their
hair. The film was directed by Jack Arnold who had already made a
few tentative forays into the sci-fi genre with
It Came from Outer Space (1953) and
Creature from the Black Lagoon
(1954); he would later give us the all-time classic
The Incredible Shrinking Man
(1957).
Whilst it may lack the gritty realism and unremitting tension of
Them!,
Tarantula is superior in at least
one respect: you can look at the central monster without cringing and
wishing you did not have that particular gene that made you so
attracted to old science-fiction films. In the mid-1950s,
audiences were remarkably forgiving over
Them!'s frankly rubbish giant ants
which, today, instil far more hilarity than horror. The
hairy-legged star of
Tarantula
(that is the spider, not the infeasibly handsome John Agar) which
filled the entire cinema screen as it wreaked havoc in an oddly
male-only desert community must have came as a boon for dry cleaning
companies at the time.
It helps that a real tarantula was used for most of the sequences
featuring the spider (blown up to mammoth proportions through adept use
of the matte process). Only when Mr Eight Legs has to interact
with its victims (i.e. pick them up and eat them) does the film resort
to props that pose a slight challenge to our willing suspension of
disbelief. Over all, the effects are pretty impressive, and
even with the benefit of colour photography and CGI effects, it is
doubtful whether the end result could be greatly improved upon.
The only real weakness with
Tarantula
is one that afflicts most sci-fi films of this (and indeed any) era - a
story that is riddled with plot flaws and populated by implausible,
undeveloped characters. Plot flaw number one is the real
killer. Just why do Professor Deemer's staff inject themselves
with the food serum when it has clearly been established that it causes
animals to grow to abnormal sizes? What were they expecting - to
oust Robert Wadlow from the Guinness Book of Records? And
why is it always unnamed radioactive isotopes that always cause people
and animals to grow or shrink or go berserk?
There is a lot to be said for a high school education but one of its unforeseen downsides is
that it can really spoil your enjoyment of a 1950s sci-fi movie.
For those who are happily untainted by the black art that is high school chemistry, the word
isotope is one that teems with mystery and inspires irrational
terror; for those who lack such ignorance it is only moderately less banal than the
word
custard. (Indeed, for anyone who was subjected to school dinners
of the kind that prevailed until the mid-1970s, the word
custard is
one that is infinitely more likely to chill the marrow. The worst
that an isotope can do to you is to make you a father to a race of blind
three-armed mutants. Being confronted with a dish of school custard, by contrast,
was like entering into a pact with the Devil.) And what are we to make of the ending? If in doubt, blast it with
napalm! We see this rather a lot in science-fiction of this
decade: scientists mess things up, fail to solve the problem, and the
American military have to come to rescue, with bombs. Nothing
like a story with a nice cogent moral, is there? I'm still
waiting for the sequel with the giant guinea pig.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
When the body of a man is found on the outskirts of a desert town, the
county sheriff calls in Dr Matt Hastings to ascertain the cause of
death. From the man's misshapen appearance, Hastings deduces that
he died from acromegaly, a rare glandular disorder that causes extreme
swelling of the body. The odd thing is that it normally takes
years for the symptoms to become this advanced, and yet the sheriff is
certain that the man was in perfect health only a few days ago.
It transpires that the man was a laboratory assistant to Professor
Deemer, an eminent research biologist who is working on a radioactive
nutrient that will help to alleviate a global food shortage.
Despite some promising results, Deemer's food serum has the undesirable
side-effect of promoting unnatural growth, so that a mouse will grow to
the size of an adult rabbit in a matter of days. In spite of this
setback, Deemer's assistant Jacobs injected himself with the serum, the
result being the acromegaly that killed him. Another of Deemer's
assistants is about to go the same way and attacks the professor,
giving him a dose of the serum before wrecking the laboratory.
When he regains consciousness, the professor believes that all of his
over-grown specimens have been destroyed. In fact, one has
escaped into the desert - a tarantula the size of a cow. A short
time later, Deemer's new assistant, Stephanie Clayton turns up in town,
eager to begin work on a project that could potentially save the human
race from starvation, although she is soon distracted by the dishy Dr
Hastings. Miss Clayton's arrival coincides with reports of
bizarre events in the area. Vehicles and property have been
wrecked, people have mysteriously disappeared, and human and animal
skeletons have been found strewn over the desert floor. Near one
of the skeletons, Hastings notices a pool of a strange sticky substance
which is soon identified as spider venom. His worst fears are
rapidly confirmed. The tarantula that escaped from Deemer's
laboratory has grown to the size of a house and is roaming the desert
in search of food. The gigantic spider appears to be invincible,
undeterred by rifle fire or explosives. And it is hungry - very,
very hungry...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.