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Tarantula

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Zodiac
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« on: September 27, 2007, 10:46:07 pm »



1955 Movie Poster
Directed by Jack Arnold
Produced by William Alland
Written by Robert M. Fresco
Martin Berkeley
from a story by Ray Bradbury uncredited.
Starring John Agar
Mara Corday
Leo G. Carroll
Music by Herman Stein
Cinematography George Robinson
Editing by William Morgan
Distributed by Universal International Pictures
Release date(s) December 14, 1955
Running time 81 min.



Tarantula is a 1955 science fiction film directed by Jack Arnold, and starring Leo G. Carroll, John Agar, and Mara Corday. Among other things, the film is notable for the appearance of a 25-year-old Clint Eastwood in an uncredited role as a jet pilot at the end of the film.
« Last Edit: September 27, 2007, 10:46:48 pm by Zodiac » Report Spam   Logged

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Zodiac
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« Reply #1 on: September 27, 2007, 10:47:49 pm »


The plot concerns a biological researcher, Professor Gerald Deemer (Carroll) who is trying to prevent the food shortages which will result from the world's expanding population. With the help of atomic science, he invents a special nutrient on which animals can live exclusively, but which causes them to grow to many times their normal size. In his laboratory, he houses several oversized rodents and, inexplicably, a tarantula.

When his researchers try the nutrient, they develop runaway acromegaly and one of them is driven mad, half destroys the lab (freeing the animals) and attacks Deemer and injects him with the solution. As a result, Deemer gradually becomes more and more deformed while the now-gigantic tarantula ravages the countryside. A sympathetic doctor (Agar) and Deemer's female assistant (Corday) investigate the mystery of the clean-picked cattle bones and the eight-foot pools of arachnid venom, and the spider is eventually destroyed, after several failed attempts, by a napalm attack launched from a fighter squadron led by Clint Eastwood.

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Zodiac
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« Reply #2 on: September 27, 2007, 10:49:04 pm »



The special effects for both the giant animals and the unfortunate scientist's deformity are fairly advanced for the time, with real animals (including a rabbit and a guinea pig in Professor Deemer's lab) being used to represent the giant creatures. A real spider was also used for shots where the whole monster was shown, with models reserved for close-ups (and its skyscraper-sized version), resulting in a rather more convincing monster than the giant ants in the previous year's big-bug film, Them!.

Like Them!, Tarantula makes atmospheric use of its desert locations; and although a radioactive isotope does make an appearance, it differs from most big-bug films in having the mutation caused by the peaceful research of a well-intentioned scientist rather than nuclear weapons and/or a mad genius. Arnold was to use matte effects again two years later to show miniaturisation rather than gigantism in The Incredible Shrinking Man, which also featured an encounter with a spider.

The poster shown here contains at least two factual errors. One is that it shows the tarantula with only two eyes instead of eight. The other is that it shows the creature carrying a woman in its fangs, a la Fay Wray in King Kong, a scene which never appears in the film.

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« Reply #3 on: September 27, 2007, 10:54:57 pm »







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« Reply #4 on: September 27, 2007, 10:59:10 pm »





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« Reply #5 on: September 27, 2007, 11:04:39 pm »

Tarantula (1955)

This is the very best of all the giant tarantula movies. Where the pretenders rely on cheap gimmicks, overexposed spiders, and dippy teens, Tarantula treats its subject matter with a serious, adult viewpoint. Which is good since I might have otherwise thought the scheme by the mad doctor to help feed Earth's exploding population by developing a nutrient that grows things to super size was a bit on the retarded side. I can understand wanting to raise cattle or hogs the size of houses - that would provide food for everyone including the undocumented workers we'd have to get to work at the ginormous meat packing plants.

What struck me a bit as fuzzy science though was the point of testing this out on a tarantula. Sure, the tarantula was only the size of large dog when the crazy lab assistant who'd injected himself with the serum busted up the joint and let Tarantula loose into the desert, but why would we need them even that big? Were we going to start ranching our mega-cattle while cowpokes sat majestically astride their eight-legged steeds? Then there's the whole "trying it out on humans" phase of the experiment that made even less sense. If we're trying to combat a food shortage problem, should we really be inventing stuff to make us grow into the 50 Foot Woman in a week?

 Not to worry though because we're in quite capable hands. Director Jack Arnold gave us the best creature from the black lagoon movie (Creature From The Black Lagoon), the best shrinking man movie (The Incredible Shrinking Man ) and the best monster on the campus movie (Monster On The Campus). Star John Agar didn't have any trouble handling The Mole People, the Attack Of The Puppet People, or the Invisible Invaders. And female lead Mara Corday was so good in this one that she was menaced a few years later by The Black Scorpion. These 1950s monster movies were pretty much like 1980s Italian trash cinema in their propensity to re-use talent again and again in various permutations. If it ain't broke, don't fix it, right? You gotta dance with who brung you. No point in reinventing the wheel, etc., etc.

Agar is country doctor Matt Hastings. He's an affable chap kept busy by all the medical needs of his small desert community though he doesn't really get on with the local mad scientist, Dr. Deemer, who has a lab at his house 20 miles outside of town. He complains to the sheriff that when he first met the doctor, he just didn't feel very welcome. Well, you ought to see how welcome he suddenly makes himself once the sexy lab assistant named Stephanie (she goes by Steve) moves in out there! Dr. Matt also finds the bizarre death of Deemer's research partner from acromegaly (Rondo Hatton suffered from this) which causes you to become a deformed freak to be a good excuse to harass Deemer as well.

Despite Deemer's assertion that there's nothing suspicious about the death, Dr. Matt isn't convinced. However, his investigation into the death hits a dead end after he conducts an autopsy on the guy and everything comes back normal (other than developing full-blown acromegaly and dying from it in less than a week). There isn't much time for the sheriff to gloat about how Deemer was right and Dr. Matt was wrong though because old Andy, the rancher, is having himself a whole mess a trouble down on the back forty!

 Dr. Matt and the sheriff arrive on the scene to discover the bones of some cattle and a mysterious pool of white liquid nearby. No one has any answers until another similar incident occurs and Dr. Matt takes a sample of the white goo to analyze. Only after tasting some for himself of course! And who could blame him? Dang stuff looked like cream! But why was it so icky then? Because it was tarantula cream!

A quick plane ride to the university at Phoenix to consult with their mysterious liquid expert reveals the slop to be venom thus setting the stage for a confrontation of staggering proportions between Dr. Matt and Tarantula! Dr. Matt gets himself ready for his upcoming bout with Tarantula by watching an informational film at the university about tarantulas. See, he's not just going to get up in Tarantula's multi-eyed face chucking dynamite at him, he's going to learn everything he can about Tarantula and then chuck dynamite at him!

What we get is Tarantula's highlight reel. There he is fighting off his only predator, the super evil spider-wasp (when aren't we getting a movie about that heinous creature?). And then you've got him punching a rattlesnake in the face! The big finish is when he eats some kind of desert beetle. It's clear he's sending a message to Dr. Matt and that message is "I like the taste of desert beetles!"

For his part, Tarantula gives an excellent, nuanced performance in this one. While Giant Spider from Earth Vs. The Spider was all about gimmicks like spinning giant webs, playing possum in the school gym, and hogging as much camera time as he could, Tarantula smartly subscribes to the less is more philosophy of acting. Tarantula keeps his screen time limited and when he's on screen, he owns it. He knows the value of striking fearsome pose on top of a mountain a night, of pulling sneak attacks on humans like trying to bury Dr. Matt and Steve in a surprise landslide and peeping Steve in Deemer's house as she was getting ready for bed! Can you imagine how big the pool of white venom was he left that time?

 As capable as Dr. Matt is, when you see Tarantula striding down the highway directly toward everyone, you have no doubt that it's going to take more than a wad of dynamite to make Tarantula back down. And when Tarantula walks nonplussed through the smoke from the explosion, you realize that when Tarantula was staring down Dr. Matt, his millions of scary eyes were seeing only thing - desert beetle on hind legs!

So with all appearing to be lost, who do you go to for back up? Is there anyone left who can stop the unrelenting spidery menace of Tarantula before he stomps a mudhole in Dr. Matt and his desert town and walks it dry? Damn right there is! Tarantula, allow me to introduce you to the United States Air Force and their jets which are loaded with napalm. Oh yeah, I almost forgot. The lead pilot? Some guy named Clint Eastwood. And he just started his own giant bug dead pool and put you on it.

http://monsterhunter.coldfusionvideo.com/Tarantula.html
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