The Killer Shrews
The Killer Shrews | |
---|---|
Promotional poster | |
Directed by | Ray Kellogg |
Produced by |
Ken Curtis Gordon McLendon |
Written by | Jay Simms |
Starring |
James Best Ingrid Goude Ken Curtis Gordon McLendon Baruch Lumet "Judge" Henry Dupree |
Music by |
Harry Bluestone Emil Cadkin |
Cinematography | Wilfred M. Cline |
Edited by | Aaron Stell |
Distributed by | McLendon-Radio Pictures Distributing Company |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 69 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $123,000 (estimated) |
Box office | $1,000,000 (U.S.) |
The Killer Shrews is a 1959 science fiction film directed by Ray Kellogg. It was filmed outside of Dallas, Texas back-to-back with The Giant Gila Monster by producers Ken Curtis and Gordon McLendon. The film has been released on DVD and was featured in the fourth season of Mystery Science Theater 3000, as well as the first season of the similar show This Movie Sucks!. The film is now in public domain.
Plot
Captain Thorne Sherman (James Best) and first mate Rook Griswold ("Judge" Henry Dupree) deliver supplies by boat to a group on a remote island. The group, consisting of scientist Marlowe Cragis (Baruch Lumet), his research assistant Radford Baines (v), the scientist's daughter Ann (Ingrid Goude), her recent fiancé Jerry Farrel (Ken Curtis), and a servant Mario (Alfred DeSoto), welcome the captain and his first mate, but subtly resist the visitors staying overnight, even though a hurricane approaches. Thorne goes with the group to their compound. Griswold stays with the boat, to come ashore later.
The situation in the compound is less than safe. During evening cocktails, Thorne becomes aware of a life-threatening situation. Marlowe Cragis performs well-meaning research on serums and uses shrews as test animals. The doctor's purpose is to make humans half-size in order to reduce world hunger; smaller humans will eat less food on a planet with a limited food supply. Unfortunately, the doctor's experiments created mutant giant shrews that escaped and are reproducing outside the compound, growing larger by the day. The scientist and his staff barricade themselves inside their compound each evening.
Thorne and Ann begin to fall in love, causing jealousy in Jerry. Meanwhile, outside the compound, the giant shrews, which have a poisonous bite, are running out of smaller animals to eat. The shrews attack and kill Griswold. The giant shrews close in on the compound. One shrew breaks in through the window and hides in the basement. Mario and Thorne go down in the basement. Mario finds the shrew and shoots it, but it bites him. The shrew is then shot by Thorne and killed. The others arrive in the basement, but Mario dies. Radford discovers a highly toxic venom in the shrew's saliva, the result of poison bait he had placed in an attempt to kill the shrews. Another shrew breaks in and kills Radford. Before dying, Radford records the symptoms on his typewriter, right up to his death. From outside the compound, the shrews begin to chew through the compound walls on the main floor. The shrews force the group (save for Jerry, who wants to stay) out of the compound to escape to Thorne's boat. The group makes impromptu armor out of oil drums, lashes the armor together, and duck-walks together to the beach. Jerry changes his mind about individualism, and chases after the others. The killer shrews chase and seemingly kill Jerry. The socially cooperative group (Thorne, Ann, and Marlowe) manage a successful armored walk to the shore and swim to the boat.
On the boat, Thorne and Ann share a kiss and the film ends.
Cast
- James Best as Captain Thorne Sherman
- Ingrid Goude as Ann Cragis
- Ken Curtis as Jerry Farrell
- Gordon McLendon as Dr. Radford Baines
- Baruch Lumet as Dr. Marlowe Cragis
- "Judge" Henry Dupree as First Mate Rook Griswold
- Alfred DeSoto as Mario
Production
The film was shot outside of Dallas, Texas. The special effects were provided by first-time director Kellogg, who served as the head of Twentieth Century-Fox's special effects department throughout most of the 1950s.[1] Close-ups of the shrews were filmed using hand puppets, and for the wider shots, coonhounds were costumed as the shrews. This low-budget feature was regarded as one of the most successful "regional films". Unlike other regional films, it received national and even foreign distribution.
DVD release
- A new colorized version was released alongside The Giant Gila Monster as a double feature by Legend Films.
- The TV show Mystery Science Theater 3000 showed the movie in an episode during the fourth season. The cast focused their gags on the main flaws of the film: the lack of conflict in the first hour of the film (which mostly focused on the living room of the island house and the characters talking to each other), the silly appearance of the shrews (dogs dressed to appear like them) and how most of the dialogue was hard to understand due to the accents of the characters. The MST3K version of the film was released by Rhino Home Video as part of the "Collection, Volume 7" box set.
Sequel
A sequel, Return of the Killer Shrews, was produced in 2012, again starring James Best as Thorne Sherman. Bruce Davison took the role of Jerry. The film also starred John Schneider and Rick Hurst, Best's co-stars in The Dukes of Hazzard.[2] The length of time between sequels (54 years) is the longest for any live action movie in history.
See also
References
- ↑ The Killer Shrews TCM Notes
- ↑ http://www.killershrewsmovie.com
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Killer Shrews |
- The Killer Shrews at the Internet Movie Database
- The Killer Shrews at AllMovie
- The Killer Shrews at the TCM Movie Database
- The Killer Shrews at the American Film Institute Catalog
- The Killer Shrews is available for free download at the Internet Archive
- Edited clip from the end of the movie
- Bad Movies extended plot summary and review