Schlockmeister Greydon
Clark strikes again with this dull alien-invasion picture, which was made so
cheaply that only one alien is featured. The picture mostly comprises interminable scenes of teenagers running from danger, so Without Warning is more akin to the
slasher movies of the late ’70s and early ’80s than to other space-monster
movies of the same period. It’s worth nothing that cinematographer Dean Cundey
also shot Halloween (1978), because
Clark apes that picture’s style quite shamelessly with heavy shadows and long
Steadicam shots. In the opening sequence, a hunter and his son get killed by
flying discs that look like fried eggs with tentacles growing out of them, so
viewers learn quickly not to expect much. Later, two young couples hop into a
van and head for the woods, encountering the requisite creepy old people on the
way there. Word to the wise: When the proprietor of a general store
filled with taxidermy says don’t go in the woods, maybe don’t go in the woods.
Anyway, the flying egg things kill two of the teenagers, forcing survivors
Greg (Christopher T. Nelson) and Sandy (Tarah Nutter) to seek help from the
aforementioned creepy old people. The gas-station guy (Jack Palance) offers
assistance, but a crazed ex-soldier (Martin Landau) makes things worse by slipping
into a Vietnam flashback. Landau and Palance enliven their scenes, but the most
enjoyable bits of Without Warning are
unintentionally funny, as when Greg and Sandy defeat a horrific outer-space
monster that’s attacking their car—by knocking
it off the car with their windshield wipers. Consider yourselves warned
about Without Warning.
Without Warning: LAME
I'm surprised you didn't mention the strong similarities to Predator.
ReplyDeleteI remember the t.v. spots with the alien critter tossing the disc-thingies like a frisbee.
ReplyDeleteNot only does Without Warning have similarities to Predator - Kevin Peter Hall played the alien hunter in both films.
ReplyDeleteYour review is spot-on, but I did get a guilty pleasure from Landau's fevered performance. He at least knew what sort of movie he was in.
ReplyDelete