One of the stranger
factoids about ’70s cinema is that Hollywood legend Joan Crawford made her
final big-screen appearance in a terrible UK-made monster movie. Yes, the
iconic actress who won an Oscar for Mildred
Pierce (1945) concluded her storied career by costarring with a stuntman
wearing one of the silliest creature costumes ever committed to celluloid, and
she was denied the option of milking her scenes for camp humor. Trog, which concerns a prehistoric
troglodyte who runs amok in modern England after being freed from centuries of
imprisonment in underground ice, is played straight—even though the title
character’s ensemble consists of furry boots, a loincloth, and an absurd monkey
mask that looks less like artistic movie makeup and more like the battered
treads of a worn-out tire. Watching Crawford interact with this embarrassing
excuse for a monster is stupefying, especially when Crawford plays such
ridiculous moments as teaching “Trog” to play fetch. Had this picture been made
by some grade-Z American company with insufficient funds, one could have
excused the inanity of the content as a casualty of compromised circumstances.
Alas, Trog was made by a proper
British film company, with decent production values and professional lighting.
Therefore, the mind reels trying to imagine how the crew of Trog made it through each day of
shooting burdened with the sure knowledge they were manufacturing crap. The film’s story is hackneyed in the extreme—after spelunkers discover Trog in his
cave, an anthropologist (Crawford) sedates Trog and takes
him to her lab, where she studies the creature whom she believes to be the
missing link. Meanwhile, an angry local official (Michael Gough) campaigns to
get Trog destroyed. (Because, of course, the world’s scientific community would
tolerate the murder of a one-of-a-kind beast easily restrained behind bars.)
The rest of the story unfolds by rote, at least for anyone who’s ever seen a
monster movie—Trog reveals sensitivity, escapes under dubious circumstances,
lashes out in fear, and becomes the target of a manhunt. Through it all, Crawford
delivers her stilted lines with earnest severity, sporting an unnatural color
of blonde hair and a series of monochromatic pantsuits and schmatas. Her look is only slightly
more flattering than that sported by the title character.
Trog:
LAME
A prominent memory of my early childhood is of visiting elderly relatives and being put in front of the TV while the adults talked about whatever incomprehensibly boring stuff they talked about. This movie came on. I was utterly terrified by the visage of that nightmarish creature! I couldn't get away from the TV fast enough, back to the safety of the grown-ups.
ReplyDeleteAnd Trog himself was pretty scary too.