A drab creature feature
set in the funky milieu of the Venice Canals, back when the coastal Los Angeles
neighborhood was still a sketchy enclave for artists and surfers and vagrants, Son of the Slithis—the title of which is
occasionally abbreviated to just Slithis—offers
little of interest, even for monster-movie maniacs. The setup is the usual
noise about radioactive waste getting into the water system and causing the
birth of a mutated killer. The plot is just as trite, with a journalism teacher
and a police detective both investigating murders until clues lead them to
discover the truth about “slithis,” an experimental substance that was
unwittingly released by a sloppy lab workers. And the monster itself is a
standard man-in-suit embarrassment, suggesting the Creature from the Black
Lagoon’s dorky cousin. As for the attack scenes, envision shots of everyday
people checking out strange noises in their homes at night, only to discover a
giant green slime monster with a bad attitude—the watchwords here are “dreary’
and “repetitive.” Unsurprisingly, highlights are hard to come by in Spawn of the Slithis. The bit with the mad
doctor revealing he once felt the cold touch of slithis, resulting in a face
that looks like it was dipped in acid, is infinitesimally amusing, in a campy
sort of way. And the vignette of the monster either eating or killing or raping
a young woman is diverting, if only because the muddy photography forces the
viewers to parse the imagery for clues about what’s happening. More typical of
the picture, alas, is the long scene of the hero negotiating with three drunks for
information. Like the movie itself, the drunks have nowhere to go and they’re
not in any hurry to get there. Even though Spawn
of the Slithis is basically coherent and linear, it’s so lifeless that it
never even generates much in the way of so-bad-it’s-good ironic entertainment
value.
Spawn of the Slithis: LAME
1 comment:
I remember this one fondly from the early VCR rental days... In theatre ads they also pushed a "Slithis Survival Kit"... Shades of William Castle.
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