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| Joan Weldon about to face a humongous man-eating ant! |
THEM! (1954). Director: Gordon Douglas.
Colorized.
Gigantic mutant ants, due to radiation from the first atomic test, have come into being in the deserts of New Mexico. These creatures are not only humongous, but are man-eaters. Sgt. Ben Peterson (James Whitmore), who came across a traumatized little girl (Sandy Drescher), and FBI agent Robert Graham (James Arness), team up with two professors from the Department of Agriculture: Dr. Medford (Edmund Gwenn); and his daughter, Pat (Joan Weldon). They find the nest in New Mexico but then discover that two flying queens have escaped and may have started new nests -- but where? Humankind is facing extinction if they don't find out -- and soon!
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| Edmund Gwenn and James Whitmore |
Despite the fact that their previous monster movie,
The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, was a tremendous hit, Warner Brothers was nervous about
Them! and canceled plans to have it released in color and 3-D. It is still an extremely effective picture, and nowadays it's easy to forget that this was a completely fresh idea back in the day --
Them! ushered in a flood of movies about outsized insects and arachnids of varying quality. The film is bolstered by the performances of James Whitmore and Edmund Gwenn, and Arness and Weldon are professional enough, if a cut below. Other cast members include Onslow Stevens [
The Couch], Ann Doran [
It, The Terror from Beyond Space], Leonard Nimoy (in a bit), Olin Howland [
The Blob], and Sean McClory [
Valley of the Dragons].
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| Stevens, Gwenn, Weldon, Arness |
When Whitmore notes at the opening that the walls of both a trailer and general store were not pushed
inward, a viewer might wonder how the giant ants could get inside these places to push the walls outward. But Whitmore says that the walls were
pulled out -- by the giant ants' pincers. However, it's less easy to explain why it's made clear in New Mexico that the ants leave the nest at night to forage, but are inside the storm drains of Los Angeles
at night during the climax. One could explain the inconsistencies away by saying these big bugs
are mutations, so who knows
what they may be up to. One has to assume there were lots of missing persons in L.A. after the ants moved in. The citizenry of Los Angeles certainly take it comparatively calmly -- and accept much too readily -- that the ants exist and are on the loose. No mass exodus? In any case, the Internet Archive has a beautifully colorized print of
Them! As usual, the color adds a new and exciting dimension to the picture. The second half of the film seems a little dragged out, but the climax is eerie and suspenseful. NOTE: You can read more about this movie and others in my book
Creature Features: Nature Turned Nasty in the Movies.
Verdict: Excellent big bug movie is chilling and very effective as both horror and science fiction. ***1/2.
Have never seen this one but have read about it. Just watched a Joan Collins documentary where she talked about starring in Empire of the Ants in the 70s...they looked a lot like these!
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They used real ants optically combined with people in the Joan Collins movie. THEM uses large mechanical models -- three of them! A classic picture worth seeing in my opinion.
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