Mexican B-movie helmer
René Cardona Jr. hit some kind of personal-best record when he concocted Cyclone, which mashes together
cannibalism, natural disasters, and sharks. Why stop with just one lurid
element when three would be better? The funny thing is that while most of Cyclone is inept and schlocky, with
poorly dubbed English-language dialogue and nonexistent characterizations, several
sequences are genuinely unsettling. By relying on the old Lifeboat device of trapping people aboard a vessel that’s floating in
the ocean with no hope of rescue, Cardona evokes feelings of
claustrophobia, despair, horror, and paranoia. Alas, like the waves of nausea
that afflict some of the characters, these moments of emotional truth pass
quickly, allowing the movie to settle back into its rut of sensationalistic
drudgery. Notwithstanding the film’s title, Cyclone
gets the whole business of a vicious tropical storm over with rather quickly.
In the first 10 minutes, viewers are introduced to folks on a fishing vessel, a
glass-bottom tourist boat, and a plane. Then comes the storm, which is depicted
with bargain-basement FX and grainy stock footage, so by 20 minutes into the
100-minute movie, the cyclone is over.
After a few twists of fate, all of the
survivors end up on the glass-bottom boat, and they endure excruciating hunger
until killing and eating the scruffy little dog whom one of the passengers
regards as her surrogate child. That sequence is tough to watch. After
consuming the dog, it’s a short leap for the survivors to consume human flesh
once people on the boat begin dying. Sharks hit the scene a bit later, and rest
assured Cardona manufactures a feeding-frenzy sequence that’s just as
half-assed as the aquatic horror in his previous opus, Tintorera: Killer Shark (1977). Although the characters in Cyclone are largely interchangeable,
some notable actors appear, including Carroll Baker, Arthur Kennedy, and Lionel
Stander, as well as Mexploitation fave Hugo Stiglitz. As a final note, Cardona
and his team demonstrate their usual penny-pinching approach to musical scoring
in Cyclone, because the exact same
ominous music cue gets played every 10 minutes or so. In other words, if you
watch the movie and feel like you’re stuck on a loop, the repetitive and
slow-moving narrative isn’t the only reason why.
Cyclone:
FUNKY
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