It’s not as if one starts
watching an early-’70s horror movie titled Frogs
with expectations of greatness, but it’s reasonable to assume the picture will
deliver a few rudimentary thrills over the course of a brisk narrative. Alas,
something far less insidious is in store for the unlucky viewers who dive into
this amphibian atrocity. Noteworthy only for its extensive use of real animal
footage, Frogs is among the dullest
movies of its type, dragging through long, uneventful sequences in between
nasty shots of swamp critters eating people. Despite the film’s title, frogs
are not the only killers on display here; in fact, frogs are presented like
evil masterminds goading their fellow beasties toward mayhem. Because, really,
when one tries to list the fiercest predators in the natural world, aren’t
frogs the first things that come to mind? The story begins with nature-magazine
photographer Pickett Smith (Sam Elliott) riding his canoe around a private
island in Florida while he takes pictures of animals and pollution. Soon, he’s
invited to join the island’s residents, the Crockett family, for their annual
Fourth of July celebration. The patriarch of the clan, Jason Crockett (Ray
Milland), is domineering but wheelchair-bound, a rich prick who gets off on
controlling the lives of his children and their spouses. (Quasi-notable actors
playing his relatives include Adam Roarke and Joan Van Ark.) The Crocketts
are preoccupied with a frog infestation on their island, so Pickett offers his
counsel as an ecology expert, initially guessing that extreme weather changed
breeding patterns. Yet after various island residents turn up dead, Pickett
suggests nature is striking back after years of pollution. Nonetheless, Jason
denies the obvious until it’s too late—but, hey, you knew that would happen, right?
Hack director George McCowan devotes most of his energy to staging gruesome
death scenes involving alligators, snakes, spiders, turtles, and other
creepy-crawlies. If the movie zipped along a little faster, Frogs might qualify as effective kitsch,
but even though the picture just squeaks over the 90-minute mark, it’s padded
to the point of extreme tedium. Therefore, unless scales and tails get your
motor running, it’s best to stay out of the swamp.
Frogs:
LAME
I love the scene with the leechs! Omg, I had totally forgotten about this flick til now. Now I'll go back to forgetting about it, thank you!
ReplyDeleteHow DID that lass get killed by the turtle, anyway?
ReplyDeleteSnapping turtle. I understand they deliver quite a bit.
ReplyDeleteThis movie seemed to play on late night weekend CBS in Los Angeles at least once or twice a year it seemed. I watched it at least three times. To a kid, this was great Sci Fi! I'm sure it doesn't hold up as an adult :)
As others have noted elsewhere, this film is very “ribbiting.”
ReplyDelete(I’ll show myself out).
Who's going to be scared of a movie called "Frogs"?
ReplyDeleteThey should've taken a page from the folks who made "Night of the Lepus", where an army of rabbits attacks. ("Night of the Rabbits" wouldn't work).
"Frogs" would've done better business as "Night of the Anura". They might've gotten people to buy a ticket because the title sounds vaguely scary.