Throughout film history, enterprising
actors have become producers in order to generate highbrow showcases for their
talents. Occasionally, however, thespians bereft of marquee names have taken
the opposite tack of producing exploitation films, presumably because those are
the only types of pictures for which they can raise the necessary capital. So
it is with Pigs, one of the strangest
vanity projects of the '70s. Actor Marc Lawrence, screen veteran known for
supporting roles as gangsters and other such thuggish types, wrote, produced,
and directed Pigs, and he even cast
his daughter, Toni, in the leading role. It’s worth noting that Pigs is a gruesome horror movie about an
insane farmer who feeds murder victims to swine—just the
kind of subject matter most people explore while making home movies their kids.
Although Pigs eventually provides the gutter-level thrills that viewers might expect, namely gory murder
scenes and nasty (but not explicit) images of farm animals chomping on human
flesh, there's virtually nothing to recommend in this equally vacuous and
vulgar picture. Characterization and narrative tension are barely discernible,
the acting runs the short gamut from perfunctory to substandard, and the long
wait between "exciting" scenes make the picture's 80-minute running
time feel much longer. Amid lots and lots of screaming, the movie also includes
several truly ugly scenes, such as the one during which Toni Lawrence’s character castrates
a would-be lover with a straight razor. (One can only imagine the therapy bills
that arose from Marc Lawrence asking his daughter to play this scene.) Furthermore,
to indicate how far removed Pigs is
from recognizable human reality, consider this line of dialogue, spoken by the
inept sheriff (Jesse Vint) tasked with investigating reports of bloodshed at
the swine farm: "I don't think there's a law against turning dead people
into pigs." Maybe not, but perhaps there should be a law against making
movies like this one.
Pigs:
LAME