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Spiders:
A Jabootu Readers' Forum:
An intro from your Uncle
Ken:
As usual, I was wondering if I’d get this latest article
done for this weekend. (Remember when I thought I’d get all three of
these posted that next weekend after the films’ broadcast? Ha ha ha!
We’re so stupid when we’re young.) And the time constraints are very
real and pressing: Next week is the next B-Masters’ Cabal roundtable,
and I’ve yet to even start my Teenage Zombies review. That’s
one deadline I really don’t want to miss. And there’s the two Netflix
rental discs sitting on my TV, DVDs I can’t return and exchange for more
until I write them up for the November issue of Video Cheese. And,
worst of all, I’d scanned Spiders but hadn’t even really
watched it yet. Tick tock tick tock…
Then it struck me! (Yes, it took that long. Kinda
slow, your Uncle Ken.) It’s not like there’s a rule saying that
I have to contribute to each and every one of these things. After
all, they are supposed to be ‘Reader’ forums. Maybe I
shouldn’t even be joining in at all. (Although I wouldn’t want to look
like I was being snobby, either.) And while earlier in the week the
submittals were looking fairly sparse, in the last couple of days they’ve
beef up mightily. So it’s not like I need to pad this article out any
further.
So, for the main, I guess I’ll let our Distinguished
Correspondents work this baby over. I hope they enjoy the results, and I
hope you enjoy the results, and I hope everyone looks forward to us trying
this again in the future.
Of course, I wouldn’t be me if I didn’t have some
observations. So here goes:
- Even from a cursory scan of the film, it was obvious that this was
the best of the lot. Not the greatest thing ever, mind you, but
solidly better than Crocodile and massively better than Octopus.
(Of course, the latter was the most touched by Jabootu. So it’s got
that going for it.)
- Best of all, there was plenty of Monster Action here. Which is,
after all, why one watches this stuff. And it builds rather nicely,
with the biggest arachnid being saved for last, and given a merry
rampage of destruction to boot.
- Alien DNA. It covers a lot of plot holes, doesn’t it? Why is that
giant spider bulletproof? Alien DNA. How can it grow so fast? Alien
DNA. What’s with the mouth? Alien DNA. How come it can violate the
Square-Cube Law with impunity? Faulty science. OK, that’s three out
of four, anyway.
- I really guess that it was too much to hope for that we could
actually see three monster movies in a row, none of which would trot
out the old Evil Government Bioweapons Project thing. Still, I’m
assuming that the Evil Guy here was meant satirically, given how over
the top he is.
- I suppose it’s hard now to shoot anything without perhaps
inadvertently aping an earlier film, but the scene of the three
characters up in the rocks spying upon the vast, secret government
base is right out of Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
- By the way, it’s apparently much easier to sneak around Top
Secret, Super Classified bases than I had realized.
- Things I Didn’t Know: If you hit the right button, an elevator
will literally plummet to the bottom of the shaft.
- Hmm, unless there’s a lot more sex and gore awaiting the eventual
video release of this, it was fairly (and thankfully) tame in those
departments. But what’s with all the swearing? Was it just the
cheapest way to go for that ‘R’ rating?
- I’d like to think that the mutation the astronauts went through
was a sly reference to Tarantula. In that ‘50s sci-fier, the
serum that made animals and bugs big just gave humans a fatal case of
acromegaly. The results were fairly similar to what the astronauts
suffer here. If this is on purpose, my hat’s off to the sly parties
responsible. More likely, though, it’s just a coincidence.
- Well, a week later and I’m eating my words. In the Crocodile
review, I mentioned my belief that CGI effects don’t work in monster
movies as well as physically created effects. Here that proved not the
case. The model spiders all looked plasticy. And while not perfect by
any means, the CGI spiders moved a lot better. Maybe insects, yes, I
know, and arachnids, with their almost mass-less seeming grace, are
just more suited to being represented in this fashion than mammals and
reptiles. Time will tell. (For instance, Devlin and Emmerich are
currently hatching up their own low-budget spider flick, Arac
Attack. And lets' not forget Arachnid,
about a giant alien spider...I kid you not. Nor, of course, Spiders
2.)
Well, that’s enough yakking from me. Now that I’ve
said my piece, I can actually begin to read everyone’s submissions.
Thanks again to all the fellows who contributed to these three articles.
We’ll do it again, and maybe next time the ladies will join in.
______________________________________________
-Fred Robinson/Nowhere Man-
Observations of clichés (Of Course…), stupidities, and
stuff I didn’t know (IDKT = I Didn’t Know That…), jotted down as the
movie progressed, with some notes expanded later.
By Nowhere Man (Fred Robinson), minion of Jabootu, fredwr@home.msen.com,
10/17/2000
- Ah, the secret HQ and situation room of Majestic-12. Named after a
thoroughly discredited "proof of government involvement in
UFOs" document. Can you say conspiracy? Sure. I knew you could.
- And why are they working with NASA? Maybe the Moon landings were
faked. Sadly, the movie never goes into this.
- Space shuttle "Solaris." Maybe somebody involved reads
Stanislaw Lem?
- I know! It’s spiders vs. the alien invaders!
- IDKT aliens get off on non-dairy creamer.
- Somebody says, "The shuttle is now passing over Canada,"
as a finger points to Italy on the map.
- IDKT injecting a spider makes it explode.
- Oh, a solar flare. How deus ex machina to have it happen just
as the spider is injected. Of Course, the critter escapes and bites
everyone.
- Of Course, the "electric fence" joak [sic]. Doesn’t that
remind you of Jurassic Park?
- If I hear "I’ve got a bad feeling about this" again
anytime soon, I’m gonna puke.
- Aren’t spiders more fragile than humans? Shouldn’t a crash that
kills most of the people turn the spider into goo?
- IDKT a thermos-sized bomb will ignite an entire space shuttle.
- OK, the three kids (to give the filmmakers the benefit of the doubt)
are locked inside a canvas-topped truck.
- These soldiers are very unobservant! Wouldn’t you notice three
extra bodies in your truck?
- Oh, a reverse alien: An egg is laid in the torso, and the hatched
critter crawls out the mouth.
- Boy, did that thing develop fast. From a quarter-inch (or so) egg to
a critter the size of a football in a couple of hours. That thing
grows faster than cancer.
- WTF is everyone else in this base? There were the two medical types,
and not a sign of any other kind of staff. You’d expect a scrambling
of everyone involved with the spider project in a case like this.
- "This is like a bad sci-fi movie." How true!
- Oh boy, they’re in Conspiracy Central. An Apollo 18 astronaut, one
box marked J. Morrison, another marked 11-22-63. What’s next, Nixon’s
missing 18 minutes?
- HTF did the spider get there before them, dragging 120 pounds of
female medical-type person?
- That’s one busy spider. It’s filled the entire stairwell with
webs.
- Jake’s walking pretty well for having a huge spider bite in his
leg.
- IDKT secret government agencies use Macs.
- IDKT secret government agencies have lousy computer security and
fancy graphic.
- IDKT zero G is a characteristic of atmospheres.
- If you inject a spider with alien DNA, you get… a lousy movie!
(And don’t even get me started on the thought of injecting a huge
spider with a huge hypodermic full of alien DNA. Genetic manipulation
don’t work that way, folks.)
- That was a damn big funnel-web spider they started with. Looked more
like a tarantula.
- And I don’t think there are any spiders that lay their eggs in
living hosts. Wasps do that to spiders.
- IDKT spider bites will make your flesh swell up and pulse.
- You’re climbing up the inside of an elevator shaft. Suddenly the
elevator comes up underneath you. Why not just jump on top of the
thing for a free ride?
- HTF did the spider get up there before them? And it’s huge, too.
What’s it been eating? (Besides a medical type and a college
student, I mean.)
- Wow, there’s not much give to that web. This is something that
bugs me: Movie characters fall several floors, and are suddenly
stopped with no ill effect and no gradual deceleration. If you fell
that far and stopped that suddenly, you’d be street pizza. Example:
In Batman, when Keaton and Pfeiffer are falling off the
cathedral, a Bat-grapple on the end of a Bat-rope stops their
20-storey fall with a jerk, and all she can say is a surprised
"Oh!" I’m surprised he could hold on to her, much less
hold on to the Bat-rope. [Editor’s Note: See the rather more
realistic Gwen Stacey incident in, I believe, The Amazing
Spider-Man #121. It’s that’s right, then yes, I am somewhat
embarrassed to be able to remember the issue number.]
- OK, there goes the flannel shirt. How much longer before she takes
off the rest of her clothes? (I know, you can’t even follow the
arguments for all the bleeped-out words. No way she’s taking off any
more. Still, a guy can hope, can’t he?)
- HTF many spiders are there?
- IDKT giant spiders are bulletproof.
- Ah, there we go. It’s wet t-shirt time!
- Of Course, the goal of the project was to create a super soldier
spider that would be dropped behind enemy lines. And Of Course, no
thought at all was given to how to stop the damn things when they’ve
eaten all of the enemy.
- OK, a giant ten-foot-plus tall spider has just clawed its way out of
the back of a 200-pound Man in Black. WTF did all the extra mass come
from?
- The secretary is using non-dairy creamer. Maybe she’s an alien
too?
- Flower stand! Flower stand! (OK, so it’s not a fruit cart. At
least one small independently owned agricultural-product sales
conveyance has to be destroyed in each chase or riot scene.)
- There are little asphalt ramps right where the SWAT truck runs up on
the sidewalk. How convenient.
- IDKT SWAT team members shout "Hut! Hut! Hut!" when they
leave their truck.
- IDKT giant spiders are made of stuff that sparks when bullets
ricochet off them.
- Hey, there’s no prop wash outside the chopper.
- Here’s another long fall with a sudden stop. That should have
broken her back.
- She’s hanging from a much different knot than the one she tied.
- Look, a tank-top clad woman with a bazooka! Doesn’t that remind
you of Terminator?
- Of Course, she’s a much better shot with a bazooka than the agent.
He’s only trained to use it, and was only standing on firm, level
ground, so naturally he misses. She’s had no training, and is riding
in a swinging helicopter (and later is hanging underneath the
chopper), and manages to hit it twice.
- These spiders are too fast and too big to be believed. The one
chasing the kids in the base is ahead of them at nearly every turn,
and still finds time to take out a handful of Army men (Marines?) and
hang everyone from the ceiling.
- There’s a reason we don’t see spiders much bigger than a person’s
hand. The way they’re built, they can’t get any bigger without
smothering themselves from their weight. And the big one at the end is
able to crawl up the side of a building. Arrgh! Make it stop! Make the
movie stop!
- I know somebody who would run screaming down the street if she saw
this movie, she hates spiders that much. Too bad I’ll not get a
chance to show it to her…
______________________________________________
-The Grand Poobah of PRAM-
My thoughts on this film:
- Majestic-12 HQ. What the heck is X-Files crap doing in a
giant monster movie?
- She's reading an article by Uri Adamski. Cute. Uri is probably a
reference to Uri Geller, psychic/professional litigant, and Adamski is
presumably a reference to George Adamski, one of the first UFO "contactees."
(This is back when aliens showed up and said hello, before they
discovered the joys of kidnapping and anal probing people. Of course,
then as now, anyone who had any kind of contact with aliens could be
counted on to turn their experience into a book, and make a pile of
cash. The aliens, oddly enough, haven't yet figured out the money
they're missing out on.)
- Marci, our heroine, is a crusading college reporter. She's kinda
like Karl Kolchak, except much prettier and a lot less sane. She has a
friend who is a computer h4X0r, as is now pretty much standard in this
stuff. He proves his 31337 skills by handing her a printout he
"downloaded"...on dot matrix paper. Either the college paper
is using some really old equipment, this guy is into retro computing,
or the prop guy on this movie got his props from the dregs that 'Whiz
Kids" left on the Studio lot.
- The evil government base is "Area 21." Ho ho ho, kids,
this is KOMEDY!
- Her editor has more brains than she does. Or maybe not: he's put a
UFO nut in charge of covering the space program, roughly the
equivalent of putting a Flat Earther in charge of covering geography.
And she tells him that a shuttle launch "is not hard news!"
Dude, you might want a different reporter on the space beat.
- Ah, an informed attribute. Marci is a good writer, which is why she
hasn't been kicked off the school paper.
- The shuttle is named Solaris. There should be a law forbidding lousy
movies from referencing classic films, on pain of death.
- A mysterious solar flare lets loose the spider on the shuttle
Solaris, right after the spider is injected with some mysterious
substance. The spider runs amok and, despite being about 5 inches
wide, forces an emergency landing of the shuttle at Area 21.
- Marci and her friends are spying on "Area 21." Her friends
are a lot saner than she is...but pretty dumb, as this is the
thirteenth time they've done this with her.
- Marci has somehow acquired Han Solo's binoculars from 'Empire
Strikes Back."
- Some secret base: these clowns have been around there thirteen times
and not been spotted by the base security. And the fence isn't even
electrified.
- This college paper is apparently far more serious than mine was. The
editor expects people to report in when there's breaking news.
"We have a deadline!" he screams. Apparently, in this world,
the college paper covers stuff beyond campus in great detail, unlike
in the real world, where college don't do too much in-depth coverage
of the world beyond campus.
- Solaris (which has supposedly burned up in orbit) crash lands in
front of our heroes, who show their brainpower by running right into
the burning wreck. For a follow-up, they'll play Russian roulette with
a shotgun.
- Here come the evil government agents (who are, of course, Men In
Black...), and the evil commandos. All of them are oblivious to
anything not directly in front of them.
- The evil spider injected something into the surviving astronaut.
Wonder if we'll see a monster whose offspring hatches from its
victims, in a yet another rip-off of Alien.
- Wow. This script shows a glint of intelligence, as the MIBs order
the commandos to clean up the site within 40 minutes, as a satellite
will pass overhead by then, taking pictures.
- Young MIB accidentally steps on the spider, angering Head MIB, who
cared more about the spider than anything else.
- Yep, the MIBs are evil. They gun down a doctor who tries to help the
surviving astronaut. Since this doctor has presumably been part of the
MIB medical corps for some time, how could he not know that it would
be deadly to argue with Head MIB? Maybe because the writers want to
establish that the MIBs are *EVVVVVVVVVIIIIIIIIILLLLL*, in case you
missed all the earlier, subtle (if being hit in the head with a brick
is subtle) clues that they're evil?
- Young MIB is squeamish. Bet you he'll defect and join the Scooby Gan...er,
our heroes.
- MIBs carry atomic grenades. And don't take cover after throwing
them.
- The commandos bring back Marci et al in a truck that's hauling
bodies from the shuttle crash. Fortunately, the commandos are stupid
and legally blind, and don't notice Marci and friends lying in the
truck.
- Marci and her homies sneak around Area 21, which, despite being a
very important super secret evil government base, has less security
than your average Wal-Mart.
- By coincidence, the surviving astronaut is brought to the very floor
they're sneaking around on.
- Now, they find a lab that proves that every insane thing Marci has
ever said is right.
- MIB medical leaves the surviving astronaut alone and unguarded, so
that Marci and pals can sneak in an talk to him.
- They help the astronaut out by getting a picture of him, thus
proving that they have what it takes to get ahead in journalism. If
you see a guy begging for help as his life ebbs away, take a picture,
for Pete's sake! It may get you a Pulitzer, or a job at CNN, at the
very least.
- MIB medical shows up right as the giant spider bursts out of the
astronaut's mouth (incidentally violating the law of conservation of
mass in the process), allowing our heroes to escape as the spider
kills MIB medical. Marci steps on and breaks her glasses in the
process.
- Ah, a Blair Witch moment, as Marci & Co. squabble amongst
themselves while fleeing the giant killer spider.
- With his dying breath, a member of the MIB medical team sets off a
security alarm. A grand total of seven men, two MIBs and five
commandos, respond. Downsizing has obviously hit Area 21 hard, or
they'd have more than seven people on staff.
- Yet more crap that would be rejected as too stupid to appear in an X-Files
episode. (And yes, that is *VERY* stupid.) The body of an Apollo 18
crewman -- with a Space Shuttle patch -- is found frozen. There's a
trunk labeled "J. Morrison," (this is obviously the writer's
attempt to interject some humor...too bad it isn't funny) as well as
one labeled "11-22-63." One of the characters notes,
"This is like a bad sci-fi film." Actually, it *IS* a bad
sci-fi film. A really bad one. Bad as in "man, that dog poo
smells bad," not "bad to the bone" bad, just in case
any readers were high on acid and thought the latter category applied
to this shambling wreck of a film.
- The Head MIB and the Head Commando (who is a colonel...leading 5
men. And you thought Tom Hanks had it bad in Saving Private Ryan
when he was reduced to commanding a seven-man squad. Could be worse,
folks!) argue. The Head MIB wants the giant spider alive, even if some
of the commandos get killed in the process. He threatens to shoot the
Colonel if the Colonel argues with him again.
- The Spider uses the Voorhees Unreality Engine (VUE) to set up a lair
filled with bodies on a lower level well before Marci & Co. gets
there, and also manages to web up many flights of stairs.
- The h4X0r dude gets bitten by the Spider. That bite has been pretty
much instantly fatal so far, but h4X0r dude shrugs it off. Our heroes
dump the Spider down a bunch of flights of stairs and escape. The
Spider twitches for a bit, then molts and gets bigger.
- Marci and friends find the unguarded master file room that explains
it all. Seems the MIBs have had a project to inject alien DNA into a
crossbreed Spider that breeds asexually, lays its eggs in its victims,
and has invariably fatal venom. They needed to inject the DNA into the
spider in orbit. Why? IITS. Note to writers: injecting DNA into an
already living organism isn't going to do much of anything. Splicing
the genes I could maybe buy, but something already living? Doesn't
work that way, and anyone who knows basic biology knows that. Guess
you guys missed that lesson, along with the one on the law of
conservation of mass.
- h4X0r guy reads the bit about 100% fatal venom, remembers he was
bitten, and freaks out. Now that he’s read about it, the venom
starts affecting him. This is kind of like those Warner Brothers
cartoons where characters ignorant of the law of gravity aren't
affected by it. Kinda, except it's unintentionally hilarious, unlike
those cartoons, which were intended to be funny. The upshot of this is
that h4x0r guy goes off in search of the Spider, which he finds. It
drags him off to its lair, leaving Marci alone with the other guy.
(Hereafter referred to as TOG.)
- Our heroes find the elevator and head up...too bad it's controlled
by a keycard system. They climb out of the elevator and up the shaft,
to try to come out on another floor. The elevator goes up the shaft
pass them. They continue up to the next floor, only to be attacked by
a POV shot! Yes, the VUE serves the Spider well. Despite having
traveled at least 5 floors up from where they were, he's waiting for
them. They fall down the shaft, and land in a massive spider web many,
many floors down. (VUE, do your stuff!) For some reason, only TOG gets
stuck, and Marci flees as the Spider drags another meal/incubator back
to its lair.
- The VUE comes into play again, as the Spider kills some commandos on
the floor it originally came in on, despite having been far below that
floor scant seconds ago.
- Marci runs into young MIB, and gets his gun. She shoots at him from
two feet away, but misses. This may be due to her having lost her
glasses: if so, it's the only time we'll see her affected by that loss
at all. Maybe she just wore them to look cute.
- Suddenly, all the commandos save their leader are gone. But Head MIB
kills Head Commando for firing on the Spider: he wants the Spider
alive, do you understand? That he now has only two guys to deal with a
giant Spider that has managed to kill at least 6 people so far, and
has webbed up a good chunk of the base, doesn't seem to faze him.
- Marci and Young MIB (whose name is John Murphy) have a knockdown,
drag-out fight. The Spider uses the VUE and shows up, forcing Marci to
save Murphy and realize that he's not a bad guy. She fights off the
Spider by stabbing its eyes with an iron rod.
- Head MIB (who is named Grey..hahahaha! Oh my sides!) shows up. He
knows who Marci is: her stories have come close enough to the truth
that he's kept an eye on her. Murphy rebels against Grey, but his gun
is empty! Fortunately, the Spider shows and attacks Grey, who curses
his creation as it poisons him and implants an egg.
- Murphy reloads as they head into the Spider's lair; he loots a body
and grabs a keycard. This gets them into the elevator, as the Spider
follows them into it. They use the elevator to crush the Spider, and
then leave Area 21, so Marci can get to the paper and get her story
in.
- They get to her paper, only to find Grey there. He's gunned down
Marci's editor for no real reason...except to show that he's
EVVVVVVVVVILLLLLL, in case you haven't gotten that by now. In full
Blofeld mode, he explains the project was designed to create an
unstoppable army of giant spiders, mwahahahaha! Apparently, the guy
who thought up Operation Razorteeth followed it with this brilliant
idea. 'Yes, General, we just parachute these spiders behind enemies
lines, and in a few weeks, the enemy will be replaced by an army of
unstoppable Giant Spiders!" 'So, how do we deal with them
afterwards?' "I'll need more funding to deal with that..."
- Grey loosens his tie as the Spider bursts out of him, doing even
more damage to the law of conservation of mass than it does to his
body.
- We finally get to what we've been waiting for: a giant spider on the
rampage in a big city. None of this X-Files reject crap; I want
to see giant spiders trashing a city! (It's interesting for me to note
that this movie is kind of the Mirrorverse version of Them!: In
that movie, the government was trying to fight an invasion of giant
ants accidentally created by nuclear testing. Here, the giant spiders
are deliberately created by the government as part of a mad scheme to
conquer the world. Almost diametrically opposed...and, of course,
where this movie stinks like a corpse left unburied for several weeks
in August, Them! is a very good film. But I digress.)
- The cops call for backup. John and Marci find Grey's helicopter in
the parking lot of the school paper. It's loaded with all sorts of
weapons, including a rocket launcher that fires depleted uranium
shells. John fires on the Spider and misses, setting a house or two
aflame as the Spider heads into the city.
- The Spider rampages into town, fighting the police, and then
climbing a small-time skyscraper. (Meanwhile, on Skull island, King
Kong complains about the wimps modern giant monsters are. I mean, in
his day, he climbed the Empire State Building...not some cheese ball
corporate office building that's maybe ten stories high, tops.) Marci
and John's chopper draws near, and the cops stop shooting, recognizing
it as a government chopper, whatever that means. ("Cease fire!
That's a Bureau of Indian Affairs chopper! They'll handle it!")
- Marcy fires a rocket at the Spider from inside the chopper. Since
most laws of physics, chemistry, and common sense have been suspended,
the back blast from the rocket doesn't kill her and John. The rocket
bounces off the Spider, so Marcy lowers herself on a rope to fire a
rocket into the Spider's mouth. Newton's laws don't exist in this
movie, so the recoil doesn't send her flying, and she kills the
Spider. Movie ends.
- Ummm, what about all those webbed up bodies back at Area 21? Aren't
there eggs in all of those bodies? Doesn't that mean that there should
be more Spiders coming? I mean, we've only seen three freaking Spiders
through the whole movie. From the poster, I expected a lot more. [Editor’s
Note: Spiders 2 is currently in production, along with Crocodile
2 and Octopus 2, as well as Rats.]
- Considering the amount of effort put into this project (to the point
where a Space shuttle and its entire crew are sacrificed), isn't it
odd how few people are in Area 21? I know the military is
"rightsizing," and all, but c'mon.
- The problem with this film was its attempt to be X-Filefish...a
feeble attempt. Next time, guys, skip the UFO crap, come up with a
better MacGuffin, and spend more time showing the giant Spiders
wrecking the city. I'm reminded of my friend Li's comment after we saw
Jurassic Park II: The Lost World, that she had paid good money
to see dinosaurs eat people and there just wasn't enough of that in
the movie, gosh darn it. I taped this dreck expecting to see giant
spiders destroy a city, and there wasn't anywhere near enough of that.
______________________________________________
-Nottchet-
Here are some very brief comments on
"Spiders."
Things I learned from Spiders (Apologies to Andrew
Borntreger):
- Some spider webs adhere only to the garments you want a woman to
remove.
- Military attack helicopters have no built-in weaponry. Missions are
strictly B.Y.O.B. (Bring your own bazooka.)
- Military helicopters look just like traffic helicopters painted
olive drab green.
Comments:
Disciples of Jabootu know how
to translate certain lines of dialogue in movies like Spiders. For
example:
Original dialogue: "Jake, see if you can get on
the computer."
Translation: "Jake, crack this high-security computer within one
minute of screen time, then immediately access the precise data that
explains everything."
Original dialogue: (To soldiers) "Pair off and go
search."
Translation: "Go die two by two."
______________________________________________
-Rob Dittmar-
USA’s Chow Time week of killer animal movies reached its
apex (or nadir, depending on one’s personal predilections) with Spiders.
Personally, I can’t find it in my heart to mercilessly lambaste the poor
creature. Rather than ranging far into Jabootu territory, it seems that Spiders
has instead nestled comfortably into a little patch right smack dab in the
middle of the old bell curve; certainly the middle of a restricted bell
curve drawn for harmless little B-movies like this. Perhaps, the movie
needed the touch of some semi-big name film director like Tobe Hooper to
push it free of its safe haven and down the back slope of said curve, but
sadly his trademark languid, soul-searching, character introspection is
not in evidence here. Instead what we have is a passable little
time-waster. The pace was quick enough that inanities were only spotted
upon retrospection. The animatronic spiders are not by any means laughably
unconvincing, and they’re sure not camera shy. As the final icing on the
cake, the bladder effect budget for this thing must have run into the six
figures. On the other hand the movie can be so disappointingly formulaic
that once the credits roll much of it vanishes from the mind like
fairground cotton candy disappears from your mouth, leaving just a hint of
flavor behind.
I’ll leave the thorough dissection of this ratty eight-legger
to the minions of Jabootu that have a stronger stomach than mine. Instead
I’ll try to break the film down into its constituent parts, and point
out the ones most in need of repair. I’ll end with an epilogue
explaining why there’s a soft spot in my heart (or head – you make the
call) for goofy little genre flicks like this.
Arachnids in Space
Spiders starts with shady government spooks trying
to develop a weapon of biological warfare by injecting alien DNA into a
spider during a space shuttle mission. Boy, if I only had a nickel for
every film that uses this same tired introduction, I’d be ready to
retire. I’m actually jumping the gun a little here, since this whole
alien DNA thing is only revealed latter in the film. In fact, a rather
inordinate amount of time is spent latter justifying this whole shuttle
mission setup. After all, for what possible reason do you have to launch
spiders into orbit just to inject them with alien DNA? Can’t you inject
them in a lab here on earth? The film later wastes some time explaining
this, but frankly the explanation just raises more questions than it does
answers. For our current purposes, we’ll just accept this for what it is
– a rather clunky device for getting our female protagonist to the scene
of the giant spider rampage.
Our female protagonist, Marci, is in fact a reporter for a
college newspaper who is obsessed with UFO’s. Our introduction to her is
very poorly handled, as we are subjected to a comic-relief type scene in
her office in which she talks to a pair of obvious crackpots about their
extraterrestrial origins. This really should have been rethought as these
"aliens" are clearly such flakes, that Marci really comes across
as a ditz for believing them. Its also amusing in these early scenes that
the filmmakers have gone out of their way to make Marci look like a mousy
little bookworm. She’s sporting rimless glasses that are always falling
down her nose, and a shapeless, over-sized man’s collared shirt to hide
all her curves. After the comic relief mercifully ends, however, Marci and
her two male flunkies, Slick (!?) and Jake, head out to some mysterious
military base in the desert that Marci thinks is hiding evidence of UFO’s.
(By the way, why does seeing a girl obsessed with the paranormal dragging
two male sidekicks out into the desert to put together a story seem like
déjà vu to me?)
Back on board the space shuttle, the totally unexpected
happens. Upon being injected, the spider gets loose and kills nearly every
on board the shuttle. The attack on the space shuttle is something that
the filmmakers should definitely have lavished a little more time on.
After the spider gets loose it takes literally 30 seconds for it to kill
everyone on board save one. We see next to nothing of the attack on the
crew outside of the old big-rubber-spider--prop- on-the-face gag, and the
pilot somewhat ineffectually whacking at the thing with a clipboard. We’re
also treated to some always-creepy bladder effects, as the spider’s bite
causes the side of the pilot’s face to balloon in and out. It’s too
bad that the filmmakers couldn’t have made more than this of the space
shuttle attack. I mean I guess they built the shuttle set, so why didn’t
they cut some of the latter alien DNA exposition stuff that, frankly, no
one gives a rat’s Clymer about, and film some footage of the
creepy-crawly scurrying around the confined space of the shuttle?
The mission gone horribly awry, the government spooks
decide to crash land the shuttle at the mysterious military base that
Velma, Shag, and Scooby (Oops, I mean Marci, Slick, and Jake) are heading
off to investigate. They arrive just in time to see the shuttle crash on
the mysterious base, and simply climb the fence to examine the wreckage!
You’d think a bunch of evil S.O.B.’s trying to create a biological
weapon by injecting spiders with alien DNA wouldn’t let scruples stand
in the way of stringing up a bit of razor wire around their base. I hope
the army does a better job than this over in Korea. Arriving at the
wreckage before the government spooks do, they find the pilot still
clinging to life. I couldn’t help but chuckle a little bit at this. I
mean the guy’s so full of spider venom he’s got terminal edema, he’s
piloted a shuttle to a crash landing, and he’s survived the ensuing
breakup of the ship. Talk about stamina! Those Mercury astronauts from The
Right Stuff are a bunch of pantywaisted nancy-boys compared to this
guy. I also thought it was amusing how with his jowly face and hairline
pushed back on his head, the pilot in certain shots resembled the late Mao
Zedong. At least, he would if the former Chairman of the CCP had spent his
later years popping pills and over-indulging like Elvis Presley. After the
government spooks show up to examine the crash site, Heather, Josh and
Mike (Oops, did it again. I mean Marci, Slick and Jake.) hide out in the
back of a truck.
He’s EEEE-VILLL, I Tell Ya’
Using what is becoming a truly obnoxious set of clichés,
the screenwriters not only have the government trying to develop
biological weapons, but have also drawn the character of Grey – the head
spook – as cartoonishly evil. Throughout the film he not only guns down
people in cold blood if they need medical attention or get in his way, but
here at the crash site he guns down a doctor when the doctor demands that
the dying pilot be gotten to a hospital. I truly wish that these tropes
were finally put to rest. First off, I know that these are the Clinton
years and people who work for the government don’t take that whole
obeying-the-law thing as seriously as they used to, but biological weapons
are illegal. The U.S. has signed several treaties banning not only
biological, but chemical weapons as well. Granted there are many
totalitarian countries that seek to develop them, but it is profoundly
cynical for screenwriters to regularly posit that the U.S. government has
negotiated these treaties with our allies in seeming good faith, only to
turn around and violate them. Why can’t the horrible mutations be the
result of a good experiment gone bad? Maybe they were up in the shuttle
trying to end world hunger or cure diabetes. There’s a very entertaining
little British film called Island of Terror that has this exact premise.
Why not try it again?
Secondly, even if we accept the whole biological weapon
scenario, why does the head of the project need to be utterly evil and
ruthless? The people who worked on the atom bomb weren’t evil. They were
just ordinary men with special knowledge doing what they could to win the
war for the U.S. Why can’t a government scientist just be an ordinary
patriotic Joe trying to do his part to defend his country? I’m not sure
that it would have made all that much difference for the purposes of this
film, but the least the screenwriters can do is give the movie’s actors
a break. If they gave the audience a chance to develop some empathy for
the poor sap playing this part, then the actor playing Grey here could
have tried to put in at least a two dimensional characterization instead
of spending all his screen time perfecting his Simon Bar-Sinister
impersonation.
To give the film a soupcon of credit, they do
subvert the cliché to some extent by having a basically decent
second-in-command, Murphy, who will team up with Marci later in the film
to vanquish the pulpy menace. However, this only points out how annoying
the whole ludicrously evil scientist cliché is in the first place. After
all, if this guy’s so decent, how did he hook up with this project in
the first place? Given that he seems to be the Grey’s assistant, is he
only just now learning how amoral Grey is? He does seem to take the
cold-blooded shooting of the doctor in stride. Is gunning down
foul-mouthed doctors all in a day’s work for government spooks?
Miles and Miles of Poorly Lit Corridors
Hiding out in a truck that has come to the shuttle crash
site (and hiding under corpses found in the wreckage – yuck!), our
intrepid college reporters are taken deep into the bowels of the secret
military base. Sadly another cliché is ahead. This one is the particular
fondness - first pointed out to me by Liz over at her And You Call
Yourself A Scientist! site – that military architects seem to have for
designing bases with miles and miles of poorly lit corridors. In fact not
only are the corridors poorly lit, but every square inch of the walls has
a pipe entering or exiting it. Not content with covering the walls with
pipes, the architect of this particular base also suspended extra pipes
from the ceiling and added pipes rising from the floor. To be fair to his
grand vision, however, the architect also included at least a couple of
hundred feet of poorly lit hospital-type corridors, possibly left over
from the set of Halloween II. There are also an elevator shaft or
two, a (need I say it?) poorly lit stairwell, and steel grate catwalks
that have been placed over big pools of murky liquid – the utility of
which is left to our imaginations. It’s also looking as if those
reductions in biological warfare spending are starting to pinch. As an
amusing counterpart to the seeming vastness of the base, there seems to be
only 8 people staffing the place.
Poorly lit corridors form the backdrop for many an
extremely tedious B movie. The utility of the set in saving money on
scripting is obvious. Rather than trying to generate suspense by careful
scripting, the screenwriter merely sets the monster loose in said
corridors. Then the director can shoot endless minutes of sweaty
heavily-armed men and women, their faces drawn haggard with apprehension,
shining flashlights and poking their guns into every single nook and
cranny formed by the elaborate plumbing decorating the corridor walls and
ceiling. Poor lighting also allows the filmmaker to keep his
crummy-looking monster puppet in darkness all the time so we can’t see
how truly phony it looks. In defense of Spiders, however, the film
doesn’t fall victim to the tedium so strongly implied by its sets. In
fact, after the spider gets loose in the base and Grey sends the four
soldiers that work there out to find it, the spider makes very short work
of them indeed. The bulk of the arthropodic noshing takes place in the
base set’s open, and in some cases decently lit, spaces. Furthermore,
every one of the eponymous beasties of the title is a camera hog. There
sure isn’t any skulking in the shadows for these buggers.
What we do have, however, is some definite silliness. When
Jake gets the bite put on him in the stairwell and the onset of bladder
effects foretells his imminent demise, we are subjected to some of the
worst ensemble acting in the movie. Slick gets his when he and Marci are
knocked down an elevator shaft by the enormous spider only to land on one
of her giant webs. In a fairly effective little scare scene, we watch as
the spider scuttles down the side of the shaft to land on top of the poor
dolt. Things take a truly wacky turn when Murphy, searching for the
escaped arachnid, comes across Marci trying to make her escape from the
base. Taking him to be one of the bad guys, she proceeds to get into a
knock down, drag out fight with him. First she knocks his gun out of his
hand, picks it up, and squeezes off a few shots at his head in anger. Then
he tackles her, and the two of them roll into that big vat of murky liquid
I referenced above after she knees him in the groin. She continues
punching the poor dope after the plunge and only the timely intervention
of the spider (!) saves the poor guy from further abuse at the hands of
our little spitfire. The spider pulls him away from her and after Marci in
turn drives the spider away from him with a messy sharp stick to one of
the beast’s twelve eyes, she forms an uneasy alliance with him.
I’ll also point out here that the filmmakers have seemed
to slowly peel away Marci’s mousy disguise as the film has progressed. I
don’t know if this was intentional on their part or not, but she started
the film with her nerdy glasses and frumpy, oversized shirt. Her glasses
get broken in the chaos surrounding the spider’s first appearance
underground. Her frumpy shirt got stuck to the spider web in the elevator
shaft, and she had to make her escape without it. Now like the heart of an
onion, outer layers have been pulled away to show her pearly essence.
Dressed only in a tank top, and sans glasses at this point, it
seems that the filmmakers thought we wouldn’t see how attractive she was
until her prior trappings were well and truly gone. As an aside to the
crazy fight described above, however, I don’t care how scrumptious the
lady is: if she fires three bullets at some guy’s head, that guy’s
going to be carrying one hell of a grudge (not to mention one hell of a
load in his pants) whether she meant to hit him or not.
Fleeing the spider they run into Grey, but before the evil
spook can cause them any harm, the spider reappears. She wraps up Grey
with her web and proceeds to implant an egg in him. Off Marci and Murphy
run, only to find the cocooned carcasses of the spider’s victims. We
could knock the film here for ripping off Aliens, but in all
honesty, spiders do in fact cocoon their prey to dine on at their leisure.
In fact, we should really be blaming Aliens for ripping off ideas
from the lowly spider. At this point, to make a long story short, Marci
and Murphy tangle with the spider some in the elevator, but in the end
manage to escape to the outside world.
Rampage!
You have to give this mess some credit. They really don’t
tarry over anything long enough to let the thing become tedious. After
escaping the base, Murphy and Marci head back to her college. My guess is
that they are planning to expose the evil machinations of the government
spooks housed nearby. However, this plan is short circuited when the pair
enter the office of Marci’s editor only to find him dead on the floor
and the evil Grey sitting in the chair at his desk. Evil spook or no, the
guy’s got endurance. Even with a gut full of spider’s spawn, he’s
still out causing trouble. His career comes to a messy close, however,
when a new spider hatched in the guy’s belly bursts out of his body. If
you think John Hurt had it rough, the spider that emerges from Grey is the
same size as he is! Oddly, another movie about gigantified arachnids, Ticks,
features just such a repulsive effect as an enormous tick erupts from the
body of some hapless co-ed. The alien DNA that the spider possesses must
allow it to bend the very fabric of space and time itself. It emerges from
Grey with a length roughly corresponding to his height, say 6 feet. After
everyone flees the building ahead of it, however, it busts through a wall
and has clearly tripled its size at the very least.
The ensuing rampage is not badly done at all. There is a
heavy reliance on CGI, but even that is pretty nicely spliced into real
3-D footage. The giant CGI legs flicking collegians across the grounds
particularly impressed me. The CGI legs are obviously two dimensional, but
it also seems that real three-dimensional actors were flung into the air
for this footage. A real car crash has been staged that does indeed look
to be caused by the digitally incorporated spider. The only real
incoherence comes in the aftermath of Marci and Murphy finding the
helicopter that Grey piloted to the college. The helicopter is stocked
with a rocket launcher that fires depleted uranium shells. OK, I won’t
quibble with this turn of events, even though a shady government spook
would probably be better served by less cumbersome ordinance like
shotguns. However, Murphy first lets go with a missile aimed at the
rampaging spider, and after missing it, decides to take to the air in the
chopper. The next thing we know its dark outside, and Marci and Murphy are
flying around in the chopper looking for the spider. My question is - how
did they lose the thing in the time it took to get into the helicopter and
take off after it? How fast does that spider run? It sure seems that they
could have spotted a monstrous rampaging spider the instant that they took
off, and with the sudden change of day to night the filmmakers have
certainly implied that much time has passed.
The spider has indeed reached the heart of the city
proper. Once again, we must give the goofballs who made this film some
credit, as the police in the city do seem to be reacting laudably. There
are the requisite pedestrians fleeing in terror, yet the police do seem to
have wisely cordoned off the city streets in order to isolate the venomous
monster. Although gunfire doesn’t mortally wound the spider, she is in
fact forced to flee from the shots by scuttling up the side of a building.
Shades of King Kong you might say, but in fact the bristly beast is
intent on laying an egg or two on the roof of this building, not spooning
with Fay Wray. Murphy and Marci have caught up with the spider and because
Murphy must man the controls of the helicopter, Marci must take it upon
herself to employ the heavy artillery.
Murphy approaches the spider and Marci lets loose with the
uranium shell. The damage done by the shell is negligible, and I’m not
sure that we’re supposed to believe the beast’s hide is impenetrable,
or that Marci simply missed with her first shot. There’s only one shell
left after the miss, however, and Murphy attempts to move in closer. The
spider rears up and damages the helicopter, knocking Marci off. Marci has
tied a rope around her waist so she doesn’t plummet to her death.
Nonetheless, I don’t care what kind of knot she tied, if she really fell
as far as the movie indicates she would suffer severe internal injuries
when the rope breaks her fall. She’s tougher than a space shuttle pilot
and evil government spook rolled into one, however, and still has hold of
the missile launcher after her plunge. While Murphy wrestles with the
controls of the ‘copter to keep it from crashing, Marci draws a bead on
the spider and as it rears up she fires a shell right down its throat. The
monster’s ticket has been punched, and after the requisite explosion of
slime our slippery protagonists sputter off to celebrate their victory.
Epilogue: In Celebration of B Movies
Now that this bugger has been rocked to sleep, I must
explain my reluctance to savage the beast that I noted in my introduction.
One of the reasons that I find harmless little B movies like this to be
such fun is the acting. I say this with a completely straight face. I’m
not being post-modern or cynical, taking ghoulish pleasure in laughably
bad performances. On the contrary, what I enjoy are sincere and dedicated
performances from the lovely B movie ladies that star in these films. B
flicks like Spiders give actresses, that Hollywood would normally relegate
to bit parts a chance to prove their mettle. I want to be crystal clear
that I’m not craving exploitation here. None of the flicks we’ve seen
demanded that their female leads appear nude or in sex scenes, and I have
to give all three a great deal of credit on that ground alone. I’m as
red-blooded as any other American male, but I still feel that filmmaking
based around sleaze simply sad and dispiriting. On the contrary, all three
of our USA Chow Time delicacies have given some quite pretty ladies the
chance to ACT, ACT, ACT! They’ve been given the chance to hog that
camera, make it love them, and make the film they’re in a success
because of their charismatic performances. Whether they were successful on
that score is a verdict that I will leave to posterity.
Spiders is particularly notable of the three USA
features because the filmmakers cast one Ms. Lana Parrilla to play the
female lead, Marci. I will argue the point if anyone wants to, but I don’t
believe that I’m being all that controversial if I point out that a
disproportionate number of female leads in Hollywood movies are given to
blonde or fair-haired actresses. Many who would second this observation
may want to attribute it to racial or ethnic prejudice, but frankly I’m
not convinced that’s the sole reason. Even the whitest of white-bread
brunette actresses are unlikely to snag a lead role in high-profile A
films. As an example - and I will argue the point with Jabootu’s minions
- I’m convinced that Courtney Cox’s charismatic performances in the
Scream trilogy were greatly responsible for the success of those films.
Even given this however, Scream is a genre film and I don’t think we’ll
see Ms. Cox ever being considered to play the kind of leads offered to
stars the likes of Helen Hunt, Jodie Foster, or Gwyneth Paltrow. Spiders’
Ms. Parrilla is unfortunately in the same boat as Ms. Cox. Make no
mistake; she’s a very attractive young woman. Not only is Ms. Parrilla a
natural brunette, however, she is also quite clearly a Latina. Thus I am
afraid that - even were she the greatest actress since Ethel Barrymore -
when Hollywood goes to cast its next hootily pretentious expose of the
horrors of American suburban life, Ms. Parrilla would be very lucky indeed
to land the role of Helen Hunt’s neighbor, Angie Ortiz. When the casting
call goes out for actors to star opposite Anthony Hopkins in a dark,
brooding psychological thriller, Ms. Parrilla would be lucky to briefly
appear on screen next to Jodie Foster as Junior Agent Hernandez.
For the makers of B movies, however, the A rules
serendipitously don’t apply. There’s no doubt that B movies are still
top-heavy with towheads as witnessed by USA’s earlier Octopus and
Crocodile. The poor knucklehead that’s been suckered into putting
up his hard-earned moolah to back a movie about spiders mutated into
giants by the injection of alien DNA, however, is not looking for the
female lead to sell the project. I even cling to the naïve belief that
movies like this may be cast by actually auditioning actresses and picking
the ones who read best for the part, regardless of their hair color or
ethnicity. Spiders merits even further plaudits by putting no
emphasis whatsoever on Ms. Parrilla’s ethnicity - much less her hair
color. I don’t think the screenwriter even gave even character a last
name – much less one that might imply her ethnic roots. She’s
certainly not forced to speak with a phony south-of-the-border accent or
comically lapse into Spanish like Ricky Ricardo at times of stress. The
character of Marci is also spared ethnically motivated confrontations with
the rest of the characters in the film.
Personally, I find this attitude on the part of the makers
of B movies extremely refreshing. What I’ve pointed out above may seem
like nothing at all, but big-budget high-brow Hollywood types show such
extreme political correctness that they can’t see anything but
ethnicity or race when they go to cast their high-profile movies. I’m
afraid that the only time Ms. Parrilla would get a casting call for some
high-concept A movie would be if the script was written to demand the
inclusion of a Latina woman. Furthermore, if this was the case its not
implausible that she would have to fake an accent to draw attention to her
ethnicity. Since Hollywood views the rubes in Middle America as
irredeemably dim-witted and racist, she would most definitely have to
suffer prejudice during the course of the film just so we understand that
fact. And sadly if the film wasn’t written so as to draw attention to
her ethnicity, Ms. Parrilla would most likely be chosen for some bit part
just to make the subsidiary characters suitably multi-cultural in
Hollywood’s eyes.
My fondness for Spiders then lies in the chance it
gave to an adorable young lady to do nothing more than steal the show as
an adorable young lady. There’s an innocent Little Rascals feel to the
whole proceedings – all we need to put on a show is a pretty young
actress, some reasonably handsome lug, a script and some big rubber
spiders. We don’t have a bunch of pretentious Hollywood types feeling
that they have to pound some enlightenment into our Neanderthalic,
benighted little noggins. There’s no need for someone to be a victim, a
stereotype, or token. Casting the part of a pretty young American college
girl merely means finding a pretty young American lady who can act
reasonably well and nothing more. So in conclusion - is Ethel Barrymore’s
reputation safe in the aftermath of this flick? Well, as I said above, I’ll
leave that to posterity to judge, but give credit to the makers of Spiders
for giving Ms. Parrilla the chance to make her case.
______________________________________________
-Test Tube-
This is about Spiders for your Jabootu thingy. I
missed the first part because Psycho was on. I now just caught
about 3 minutes of it and I refuse to watch anymore.
Some guy in a very horrible curly mullet with GLASSES was
COMPUTING on his POWER COMPUTER. He got "HOOKED ONLINE!" and he
was "IN NOW!", they found out the killer spiders were shot up
with "ALLLIIIIEEEEEN DeeeNA!". Then I got a good look at the two
other people in the room, some girl with big breasts and HERO with IN
STYLE hair and LARGE BROAD SHOULDERS signaling he and the girl would be
the only survivors in this movie, and I bet there is the evil TRAITOR who
PLANNED IT ALL who will without a doubt get nibbled up by the spiders. Now
that they found all of this out, its time for the computer nerd to die,
cause, well, he's not physically perfect (and he has glasses) so therefore
he dies. The way he dies, I guess a spider bit him somewhere near the
beginning cause he has a tear in his jeans and its bulging out and
bleeding.
Well its badly cut up by the el cheapo USA Networks
Censorship Board and in the control room slow motion he's real silent then
something....um...well he's screaming he's gonna die (COWARD!) and um, it’s
really cut up and hard to tell what's happening here, he says the 'F' word
about 2 billion times so the scene skips around about 300 times. Then I
changed the channel. Already know what's going to happen. Seen this crap
again and again. How come killer bug B-movies can’t be like the old
ones? I remember this 70s killer spider movie where uber-spiders take over
a fruit factory [Editor’s Note: Tarantulas: The Deadly Cargo
with Claude Akins) and its like, WHOA! THIS IS CHEESY AND IT KICKS
&@*!!% ASS! It was real cheap, it was a bunch of overweight factory
workers running from plastic spiders and dying after someone pelted them
with fake spiders. Another great one was about KILLER FIRE ANTS that take
over a hotel building [Editor Again: Ants aka It Happened
at Lakewood Manor with Suzanne Sommers], it was cheap and badly acted
but it sure as hell was more entertaining that what I just saw on USA.
Even worse, in a free magazine I got in the mail it had
posters for... Crocodile 2, Spiders 2, and Octopus 2.
______________________________________________
-Zandor Vorkov-
- The movie starts with a close-up of a spider. That’s not really
important or anything, but, Yikes! A spider!
- Come to find out, it’s a NASA spider, being sent up on the space
shuttle Solaris. I think "solaris" ought to be
pronounced "so-lar-is" but everyone pronounces it
"solar-is". That just bugged me. (Get it? Har har.)
- All right, the main character is going to be Marci, a journalism
student who has doe eyes, collagen lips, high cheekbones, and long
legs (yawn, seen it before). Her friends are Jake, a hacker, and Slick
(!), a photographer.
- Okay, this scene with the crazy people who think they’re aliens is
the worst filler since Coldyron’s morning routine in R.O.T.O.R.
However, it does lead us to an important plot point.
- Oh, come on, Slick? Slick? Who came up with that?
- It looks like spiders can self-propel themselves at people in zero
gravity environments. On a side note, the scientist lady whacking a
plastic spider on a string is a priceless moment. It’s supposed to
simulate zero gravity but isn’t quite successful.
- So the code name for the spider is "Mother-In-Law," eh?
Methinks the writer has some issues with his (her?) spouse’s mother.
- Let me get this straight, the crazy alien couple pointed out an
abandoned building where the government detained them after they
arrived on earth. Marci and co. went there in search of a story. Then
the Solaris just happened to crash at that very spot. What an
amazing string of contrivances – er, coincidences.
- Marci says they must investigate the crash for survivors. I’m sure
the sensational story she’ll get out of it is the furthest thing
from her mind. Yeah, she’s only concerned about survivors. Uh-huh.
- The spooks show up driving jeeps. I thought all branches of
the military had completely replaced jeeps with humvees.
- If I were on the run from evil government spooks and their military
escort, I probably wouldn’t try to hide in the personnel carrier. It
just seems kind of stupid.
- Oh, barf. Evil spook guy just shot a dissenter. That must have
lowered the morale of his unit. Plus, that guy he just killed probably
has some folks who’ll want to know why he’s suddenly sporting a
.40 caliber hole in his chest. Is Evil Spook confident that the
witnesses to the shooting won’t tell anyone? If not, he’ll have to
kill them, too. Then he’ll have even more deaths to cover up. I’m
not saying it can’t be done, I’m just saying it would cause a lot
more trouble than not having shot anyone at all.
- Let me get this straight: the crazy alien couple pointed out an
abandoned building where the government detained them after they
arrived on earth. Marci and co. went there in search of a story. Then
the Solaris just happened to crash at that very spot. Then they
just happened to jump in a meat wagon that took them to a secret
underground facility. Then they were left alone so they could have
opportunity to escape and explore. What an amazing set of
contrivances. Yes, contrivances.
- Marci and co. seem to be confused about where they should go. I’d
take the ramp that appears to be going up, or I’d look for a set of
stairs. Then again, I’m not an intrepid journalist.
- Marci says they should follow the Evil Scientists who are toting the
mutilated crash survivor to a lab. Because they should help him, you
know. Slick raises the very valid point that they can’t possibly
help him. However, Marci insists. If you could see the pilot, you
would understand that Slick is absolutely correct. So I’m forced to
believe that Marci is only interested in getting whatever story out of
the poor guy she can. She should have openly admitted this. It would
have made her seem a bit heartless, but it would also have made her
seem much more intelligent. I’m betting the target audience of this
movie would rather have a smart lead character than an emotional one.
I know I would.
- How do they know that’s an alien baby in the specimen lab? I don’t
see a sign anywhere that says "Alien Baby, Handle With
Care." For all they know, it’s a human baby that the Evil
Scientists have experimented upon. Are we supposed to believe it’s
alien because it looks like a stereotypical "alien," with
bulbous head and big, black eyes?
- Here I must digress a bit. When I visited the zoo once, I went to
the sea lion habitat. There were some people there who were looking
befuddled and disappointed. The man scratched his head and said,
"Those don’t look like sea lions at all." The woman
followed with, "They don’t look anything like that on TV
(emphasis hers)." If aliens landed tomorrow and didn’t look
like the ones we see on TV, I’ll bet a lot of people would scratch
their heads and say, "They don’t look like aliens at all. They
don’t look anything like that on TV." I find it
disgusting that some people believe the images they see on a
television screen more than what they see in real life with their own
eyes.
- I’m not sure what got me on that tangent, but get on it I did.
- Slick, you might want to stop taking flash pictures. It might alert
someone to your presence, you know.
- Darwinists would have a field day with this one. Marci, Jack, and
Slick stand around and stare while a giant spider crawls out of dead
guy’s throat, then proceeds to start blowing webs all over the
place. The fight or flight response must be dead in the modern,
city-dwelling, human being.
- It’s nice to know that if I’m ever bitten in the throat by an
eighteen-inch long spider, I’ll live just long enough to sound an
alarm, despite the huge holes in my carotid and jugular and the venom
shot directly to my brain.
- When the trio finds a cryogenically frozen astronaut from Apollo 18,
Marci objects that there was no Apollo 18. Marci, you’re in a
secret, underground facility, on the run from giant spiders and
government spooks, and you’ve already seen what you thought was an
alien baby. Is the possibility of an Apollo 18 mission so hard to
believe?
- Actually, it is. Back when space launches actually meant something
to the public, how could the government manage to conceal one?
Furthermore, why would they? Why not just have the launch a public
fact and keep the mission secret, or conceal it behind another
mission?
- Guys, you might want to close that cryo-chamber to conceal the fact
you’ve been here.
- Note to the Writer: We’ll believe that Gray is evil even if he
doesn’t shoot his own men. In fact, shooting his own men makes him
seem like a moron, not evil. Try having him shoot some of the good
guys instead.
- Instead of taking the stairs up until they find the elevator, why
don’t Marci and co. just take them all the way to the top? It’s
only about thirty floors. I can climb more than thirty floors and I’m
fat and have asthma. Oh, wait, now that they’ve discovered large
spider webs, they decide to keep going. I see a flaw in their logic.
- In an amazing plot twist, the nerd is the first of the heros to get
bitten. The nerd always dies, unless he’s a handsome nerd, then he
can live, because there’s no way a girl would go for a plain-looking
guy, right? That just wouldn’t be believable.
- Wow, the spider died after falling several stories. I’m impressed.
Oh, wait, it’s just molting. Darn, I thought I’d finally found a
movie that knows the limitations of its monsters.
- If funnel web spiders are asexual, then they really ought to stop
pretending to have distinct genders.
- When Jake learns he has about two minutes to live, Marci tells him
that, "We’ll find a way out!" I doubt he cares.
- Note to the Writer, #2: It might seem dramatic to have characters in
denial, wanting their loved ones to be okay even after finding a big
puddle of blood and guts, but it just makes the characters seem dumb.
It would be more intelligent and just as dramatic to have Marci
breaking up over Jake’s obvious death.
- I’m slightly impressed. When Marci and Slick take the elevator,
the security system arms because they didn’t enter the code. I
figured they’d just ride out and then go through the "So what
if we don’t have any proof!" thing with the news chief before
the spooks and the spider caught up with them. But, no, the security
systems arms, just like it should have. I’m further impressed that
they don’t just punch in random numbers and happen onto the code.
Good job, movie.
- I must digress again. It’s sad that a movie doing something right
is the exception to the rule.
- Imagine dropping two ripe tomatoes from a height of, oh, twenty feet
onto a tightly stretched fishing line. That’s right, they’d
splatter. Now imagine dropping two humans a distance of about 120 feet
onto a tightly stretched spider web that has higher tensile strength
and doesn’t give as much. That’s right, they’ll be completely
unharmed. Groan.
- Funnel web spiders don’t spin webs like that, anyway, they spin
webs shaped like funnels (hence the name). Insects and other prey fall
in the top and slide down the funnel into the waiting jaws of the
spider. Now why couldn’t the movie have shown something like that?
Instead of being (cough) stuck, Marci and Slick could have been
scrambling to climb up the funnel while the spider killed them at its
leisure. Marci still could have escaped by cutting through the web. I
suppose, though, that what was filmed was less expensive.
- Hey, Marci, you got free by taking off your jacket. Never mind that
your pants would have been stuck, too. Just help Slick get out of his
jacket and he can get away with you. Too late, oh well. I do note that
Marci fleeing while listening to Slick’s dying screams of agony is
done well here. I seriously believe Marci will be haunted by that the
rest of her life.
- Oh, wow! Murphy (the nice spook) just walked by the most obviously
fake giant spider web I’ve ever seen.
- Note to the Writer, #3: I know you want to show female empowerment
and all, but having Marci physically beat up Murphy, who is bigger,
stronger, and a highly-trained government spook, is not the way to do
it. Her sudden physical prowess is out-of-character. If you wanted it
this way, you should have written some early scenes of Marci
kickboxing, or practicing judo, or at the very least lifting weights.
As it stands, the best way to have her defeat Murphy is by wielding a
pipe or some other weapon against him. Having her launch a successful
surprise attack and disarming him would be good, too.
- Note to the Writer #4: After establishing Marci as such a great
humanitarian by sending her into the freshly crashed shuttle to look
for survivors, having her follow the survivor into the lab to help
him, and then making her insist upon trying to help Jake after finding
his intestines spilled everywhere, you cannot have her make a 180
degree turn and attempt to kill Murphy in cold blood. If you want to
show how the ordeal has hardened her, have her shoot him in the leg or
the shoulder. The Marci from the beginning would not have turned into
a murderer even after all she’s gone through. Besides, up to this
point, she’s hardly been hassled by the spooks, only the spider.
Therefore, she has less motivation to kill Murphy.
- Note to the Writer, #5: After having Marci make that 180 degree turn
to cold-blooded murderess, you cannot have her swing all the way back
and risk her life to save Murphy from the spider. Now, had the spider
attacked while she was holding the gun on him, before it was obvious
what she was going to do, this would work. Some dialogue to the effect
of, "Nobody deserves to die by that thing. Not even you,"
would establish that she didn’t rescue him for his own sake, she did
it because she didn’t want to be haunted by any more screams. And it
would be in character.
- Marci might not know anything about spiders, so I’ll cut her some
slack for stabbing it in the eye. The eye is part of the cephalothorax,
or "head" of the spider. There aren’t many vitals there.
What she should have done was stab it in the abdomen, or
"gut," where it is soft and where most of its vitals are.
Its heart, in particular, is a very easy target. Just stab the top of
the abdomen toward the middle. Then again, this is also an
alien/arachnid hybrid, so I’ll cut some more slack.
- Murphy, having decided that Gray is evil (well, duh!) pulls his gun
on him. Problem #1) Marci took Murphy’s gun and dropped it. Maybe he
had a spare. Problem #2) Murphy’s gun is empty, but the slide doesn’t
lock back, indicating it was never loaded or cocked in the first
place. Maybe he forgot to cock his spare. (That I’m making excuses
for this movie might hint at the fact that I like it, despite its
shortcomings.)
- Gray, if you survive this, I hope you learn not to put your arms at
your sides when something is trying to wrap you up.
- I noticed this small detail during Murphy and Marci’s elevator
ascent. The floor indicator on the elevator panel is going up from
about thirteen to twenty. This is the same footage of the panel used
earlier during Slick and Marci’s failed ascent. So what’s the
problem? It’s also the same footage used even earlier during the
meat wagon’s descent. Oops.
- If two, dirty, blood-soaked people ran into my office, I’d react
with more than a, "Hey, where have you been?"
- Say WHAT? Gray is alive, and he’s killed Marci’s news
chief! He escaped the spider, got out of the complex, and got here
before Marci and Murphy somehow, then killed a man in a crowded office
without anybody noticing! The man must be the best government spook in
the history of government spooking!
- Oh, so Gray got to live just so we could see this crudely realized
but neat effect of the spider tearing out of his body. Fair enough.
- I might have let it go with the first one, because it did eat a few
people, but where did this spider get the mass to grow from about
three feet long to about fifteen feet? How did it grow so fast? I
think it has something to do with the alien DNA (and isn’t it just
convenient that aliens have DNA that is completely similar and
compatible with a terrestrial spider?) but the Law of Conservation of
Mass still must be satisfied.
- The spider stomping on the guy who ducked underneath it is a nice
touch.
- Hey, Mr. Campus Security Guy! See those rickety legs the spider is
standing on? Drive your car headlong into them, you just might break
them and make it bleed to death. Um, at least drive away now that it’s
ripped the roof off your car. Too late!
- Marci and Murphy need a visit to the eye doctor, they didn’t see
Gray’s chopper twenty feet in front of them. (Wow! Gray could fly a
chopper too! He was awesome!)
- Wrong, Murphy, depleted uranium is used for its mass in
high-velocity rounds and missiles, not explosive shells.
- Murphy missed the spider and blew up a building, instead. I guess we’re
not supposed to think about all the people he probably just killed.
- Amazing! The police are reacting to the spider in a coordinated,
efficient manner, and they’re managing to herd it away from crowded
areas. This is so much better than the police’s reaction in a
certain dinosaur movie. Wow! Now they’re shooting the joints in its
legs and are actually hurting it!
- No wonder the rocket didn’t do any damage to the spider; it didn’t
even cause any collateral damage to the building it was on. How
powerful can it be?
- I must also point out that spiders don’t have lips, or proper
mouths for that matter. Spiders eat by injecting their prey with venom
that liquefies the internals, then they suck the juice out through
their fangs or a small pipette between their jaws.
Easily the best of the "Chow Time" movies, and
the only one I’d buy if it comes out on DVD. Some quibbles with the
script aside, a thoroughly enjoyable b-movie, especially for giant bug
fans like me.
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