Several bargain-basement
American stars appear in this rotten international production, which is part
aquatic horror movie and part romantic heist thriller. The story alternates
between two tonalities—incoherent and stupid—while the filmmakers waffle about
what sort of movie Killer Fish should
be. Sometimes, it’s a straight-up Jaws
rip-off with bloody scenes of victims getting chewed to death by carnivorous
sea creatures. Sometimes, it’s glossy late-’70s fluff about slender people with
nice tans having sex with each other. And more often than not, Killer Fish is simply confusing. The
picture starts out with an elaborate robbery sequence during which criminals
Robert Lasky (Lee Majors) and Kate Neville (Karen Black), along with their
accomplices, break into the office of a Brazilian power plant and steal a cache
of emeralds. To distract security guards, Robert and Kate set off a huge
explosion. Meanwhile, mystery man Paul Diller (James Franciscus) gambles in a
tropical bar. Turns out Paul is the brains behind the robbery, and an inside
man at the company that owns the plant. Paul, Robert, and Kate stash the
emeralds in a lake, figuring that’s a safe hiding place while they wait for the
inevitable investigation to cool down. Only Paul, without telling his pals,
fills the lake with piranha so no one can grab the gems prematurely. As if the
story wasn’t already crammed with enough random elements, enter fashion model
Gabrielle (Margaux Hemingway), who arrives in Brazil for a shoot and,
naturally, falls in love with smoldering Robert. Never mind that Kate’s sorta
hung up on Robert even though she’s Paul’s girlfriend. After several of Paul’s
underlings die from piranha bites while trying to steal the gems, the surviving
major characters end up on a boat together during a giant storm, which producer Alex Ponti (son of Carlo, stepson of Sophia Loren) and director Antonio Margheriti depict with cheesy miniature
effects straight out of a Toho Productions monster mash. Awful disco music runs
underneath all of this nonsense. An embarrassment for everyone involved, Killer Fish is almost completely without
redeeming values, except perhaps for some attractive locations. Together with The Norseman (1978), Steel (1979), Agency (1980), and The Last
Chase (1981), this movie also helped kill Majors’ post-Six Million Dollar Man movie career before it really began.
Killer Fish: LAME
"break into the office of a Brazilian power plant and steal a cache of emeralds."
ReplyDeleteBecause power plants are the first place you'd expect to find rare gems stored, right?
LOL.
Exactly.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds too awesome to be true! Must see it someday!
ReplyDeleteProducer Carlo Ponti? I don´t think so, at least from the poster that you show...it says Alex Ponti! Anyway, I always enjoy your blog, great work!
ReplyDeleteYep, jumbled my Pontis by one generation. Fixed now. Thanks for catching the error.
ReplyDelete"Carlo Ponti presents..." in the print I have seen.
DeleteI absolutely scene where Ollie the fat photographer gets completely devoured and consumed by the killer fish the fish really went to town and ate every last bit of him it was a very funny, very extremely gory so gory that it had to cut out parts and censored Ollie's death for a PG movie on the dvd but version on Youtube was had Ollie's uncensored gory death scene even the other Piranha horror movies especially the Roger Corman's Piranha movies couldn't do a great gory death scene like Ollie's very gruesome over the top death scene that poor dead fat bastard lol!!!
ReplyDelete