Judged by the standards of
real movies, no-budget creature feature The
Milpitas Monster is an unwatchable trainwreck. Appraised in the proper
context, however, it’s mildly endearing. Made by a group of high-school
students and featuring contributions by citizens throughout the small town of
Milpitas, California, the picture is best viewed as an offbeat community
project. The acting is abysmal, the camerawork is poor, the special effects are
amateurish, and the storytelling is wretched, but one gets a sense of folks
having a great time working together on a whimsical endeavor. The narrative
concerns a small town under siege by a 50-foot critter that feeds on garbage,
so the film delivers an unsubtle message about the environmental impacts of
conspicuous consumption. Following the usual creature-feature formula, the
movie depicts military mobilizations, scientific efforts to create a weapon
useable against the monster, and townsfolk running and screaming whenever the
beastie appears. While not persuasive, the illusions the young filmmakers
created are resourceful. Effects include a full-sized monster hand, matte shots
featuring an actor in a monster suit, and stop-motion animation for scenes in
which the creature flies. As for the titular terror, it walks like a mammal but
seems more like an insect, with compound eyes and gossamer wings. (Presumably a
fly buzzing around waste was the desired analogy.) In any event, the
behind-the-scenes story of The Milpitas
Monster is infinitely more interesting than the film’s actual content.
The Milpitas Monster: LAME
Judging by the movie poster, the monster looks like the Mothman, after swallowing Bigfoot, during a fight in a dumpster.
ReplyDeleteCreature creation courtesy of Mad Libs.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds just like the equally inept 'Spawn Of The Slithis' (1978), though he plodded around Venice.
ReplyDelete