A highly enjoyable
creature feature that revels in its own derivative nature and that occasionally
feels like a real movie instead of a drive-in schlockfest, Alligator was one of the three above-average monster flicks that
John Sayles penned during his breakout period, when he alternated between gun-for-hire
gigs and early directorial efforts. Like Piranha
(1978) and The Howling (1981), this
movie conveys a strong sense of self-awareness, often simultaneously
perpetuating horror-cinema clichés and winking at them. If nothing else, Alligator is almost certainly the best
movie that anyone could have made on the basis of a ridiculous urban myth. The
myth in question involves the notion that baby alligators adopted as pets
survive in sewers after being flushed away by owners who discard the animals,
growing to gigantic size beneath city streets.
Sayles’ fanciful script adds a
sci-fi flourish to this premise, tracking the lifespan of a particular baby
alligator who survives by consuming animal carcasses that are illegally dumped
from a laboratory conducting experiments on how to genetically increase the
size of animals. Thus, once the titular creature begins his inevitable rampage,
he’s a 37-foot mutant with a nasty disposition and a super-tough hide.
Borrowing more than a few tropes from Jaws
(1975), Sayles contrives an opponent who at first glance seems ill-equipped for
defeating a gigantic monster—disgraced and unlucky policeman David Madison
(Robert Forster). Once the alligator begins eating people in Chicago, David
investigates and actually sees the alligator, reporting the amazing discovery
to his superiors and receiving only disbelief and ridicule in return.
Undaunted, David seeks help from a scientific expert, just as Sheriff Brody
does in Jaws, so he teams up with
reptile researcher Marisa Kendall (Robin Riker). Adding a bit of pathos to the
mix, it turns out Robin owned the monstrous alligator when she was a little
girl, and she was helpless to stop her parents from flushing the critter down
the shitter. And later, just like in Jaws,
concerned officials hire a grizzled hunter, Colonel Brock (Henry Silva), to
wipe out the monster.
Yes, it’s all very by-the-numbers, and some of the FX
shots used to convey the scale of the monster are questionable. But as directed
by the capable editor-turned-filmmaker Lewis Teague, who previously
collaborated with Sayles on the potent crime picture The Lady in Red (1979), Alligator
hums along nicely, bouncing from enjoyably creepy sewer scenes in which the
monster is barely seen to outrageous above-ground sequences featuring the giant
gator chomping on people. Forster grounds the piece with an appealingly grumpy
characterization, and Sayles ensures that gentle sight gags and verbal humor
complement the bloodshed. An almost completely unrelated sequel, Alligator II: The Mutation, was released
in 1991 to universal scorn.
Alligator:
FUNKY
This is a great, fun "B" movie. Nice review!
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