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Category:    Home > Reviews > Horror > Thriller > Monster > Natural Disaster Cycle > Bug (1975/Paramount DVD)

Bug (1975)

 

Picture: B-     Sound: C+     Extras: D     Film: B-

 

 

The same year Steven Spielberg gave us Jaws, the man who would direct the sequel, Jeannot Szwarc, gave us Bug.  Unlike the mix of uplifting moments and terror Spielberg gave us in the Alfred Hitchcock mode, the other 1975 natural predator thriller stars with an earthquake and quickly leads to the arrival of an insect unheard of.

 

This beetle-like creature can handle immense pressure, come from deep underground and have the odd ability to start fires.  They also love to eat ashes!  First, vehicles blow up, but soon, animals and people are the targets of their arrival.  One big fan and scientist in the study of insects (Bradford Dillman) happens to pick up on this very early.  He even decides to start secretly experimenting with them, but obsession begins to overtake him and the results will just make things more terrifying.

 

Here, we get a good, tight B-movie that delivers on the creepiness and Dillman manages to get as creepy as the insects themselves.  There is some of the “stupid Horror people” syndrome going on that would have you yell at the screen for the victims to watch out, but they are usually smarter than what you would get in the reactionary slasher films of the 1980s, so there is more impact to such scenes.  William Castle and Thomas page co-wrote the screenplay, based on Page’s book The Hephaestus Plague and is one of those rare late Horror films form Castle that played it straight.  This would be the last film in Castle’s great career, usually known for outrageous gimmicks.  That ended by the mid-1960s with the likes of Rosemary’s Baby and Bug would be his last film.  He went out with a good one.

 

The anamorphically enhanced 1.85 X 1 image looks very good for its age, with good color and clarity.  Cinematographer Michael Hugo, A.S.C., delivers the perfect balance of natural, quite, safe surroundings and darker footage of the building horror.  Credit to those who came up with the interesting microphotography and designs of the bugs.  No digital used whatsoever and creepy as anything.  The Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono is not bad and Charles Fox’s electronic score holds up very well and is still on the creepy side, even if a few moments show their age.  This was a time such scores were still experimental and in the zone between music and sound effects.  I wonder if it had been recorded in stereo.  There are no extras.

 

Szwarc had already directed some of the better episodes of Rod Serling’s Night Gallery, and police dramas like Kojak, It Takes A Thief, Ironside, Baretta, Toma, the original Columbo and The Rockford Files.  More recently, he returned to that territory with episodes of CSI.  Though not always on target, he has a great knack for picking interesting projects.  Bug is one of his best.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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