We open in the New
Mexico desert sometime in the early 1950s. Two coppers, Ben Peterson
and Ed Blackburn, find a young girl wandering near the road, shell
shocked and unable to speak. Further up the way, they find her
family's trailer torn apart. There are no signs of survivors, only a
strange indentation left in the sand by some unknown animal. As the
men survey the wreckage, they hear a strange sound, like a whistling.
Writing it off as just the wind, the men call for backup.
After forensics
arrives, Peterson and Blackburn head a mile up the road to a local
home supply store, hoping the owner can give them some kind of lead.
They find the place in shambles, the owner lying dead in the cellar.
Blackburn stays behind to wait for forensics while Peterson heads off
back to the station. That's when the strange whistling sound comes
back and Blackburn is killed by something fairly large (and fairly
hungry) off screen.
The case goes
nowhere, even after Robert Graham, an FBI agent, joins the
investigation. Their big break comes with the arrival of Doctor
Harold Medford and his daughter (also a doctor) Patricia.
Employees of the Department of Agriculture, they had been assigned to
examine the plaster cast of that strange indentation found in the
sand near the trailer. The Medfords have a hypothesis. The presence
of sugar at the crime scenes... The abundance of formic acid in the body
of the store owner... The footprint that looks distinctly like that of
an ant... There's also the business of the atomic tests that took place
in White Sands back in 1945, a stretch of desert not too far from the
sleepy town our characters call home.
A close encounter in
the desert proves the hypothesis to be true. The atomic age has
given birth to a terrifying mutation. Gigantic ants, upwards of 12
feet in length, turned carnivorous from lack of food, are spawning
somewhere in the sands. With a small group of military personnel, our
band of heroes are able to destroy the New Mexico colony, but not
before two queens hatch and fly off to parts unknown. The hunt is now
on and the timer is ticking down. Failure to find and contain the
ants will lead to mass devastation, if not total human extinction.
THEM! was released
in 1954, the same year that saw the Japanese release of the original
GODZILLA. While there are a few coincidental similarities between the
two (for example, both feature scenes of ships being destroyed by
giant monsters and both films stage the reveal of their beasties in
practically the same way, with their large heads poking out above
rock formations), the real similarity between the two is in their
tone. The atomic age sci-fi b-flicks of the 1950s would turn campy a
few years later, but THEM! shows no signs of humor, intentional or
otherwise, in its presentation. The film plays deadly straight with
its subject matter, sometimes even approaching full blown horror
movie theatrics.
The first half of
the film is the strongest. We begin with a gruesome murder mystery,
move quickly into the realm of science fiction, and then swiftly
descend from there into claustrophobic horror. The ants, while not
particularly convincing, prove to be quite the onscreen spectacle and
the descent into the New Mexico formicary is a tense, supremely well
executed bit of filmmaking. Unfortunately, Medford's discovery that
the nest contained two missing queens signals the transition away
from horror-tinged science fiction. From that point on, THEM!
becomes more of an action film, complete with the all-too-familiar
military worship often found in 1950s b-movies of this sort.
To be fair, although
THEM! does become something much more routine in its final half, it's
still a great film. The underlying pretense that what we're watching
is a serious disaster prevention movie rather than a schlocky cheese fest with big bugs never
goes away, and the final ten or so minutes brings the claustrophobic
chills back with aplomb. The final attack on the ants takes place in
the sewer system of Los Angeles. Tunnels collapse, hordes of giant
ants appear from out of the darkness, a lead character we presumed
safe bites the dust, and the whole thing wraps itself up in fire and
explosions. It's a great, thrilling climax after a shaky second act.
Another departure
from the 1950s b-movie norm comes in the final moments of THEM!.
Normally when we walk away from films like this, we do so with the
comfort that nothing like this will happen again. Nuclear regulatory
agencies will tighten their grasp and the military will stand ready
just in case the grasp ever slips. But THEM! doesn't have quite the
same optimistic outlook. A character mentions the obvious. If the
ants were the result of just a single test… what will come of all
the other detonations?
Thankfully, the
answer to that question was a whole spate of giant monster movies,
including IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE SEA, TARANTULA and 20 MILLION
MILES TO EARTH. THEM! proved to be as influential in the States as
GODZILLA was in Japan, although the giant monster craze was much
shorter lived here. The film would go on to inspire video games like
the Cinemaware classic It Came from the Desert and the Fallout
series, whole scores of pulp writers like Guy N. Smith, and even
later science fiction films like ALIENS and TREMORS. It's easy to see
why THEM! was such a hit back in 1954 and why the film is still
appreciated by sci-fi and horror fans today. It really is a genuinely
good film, buoyed by terrific performances and snappy direction, held
together with clear sighted seriousness. Is it on the same level of
genius as THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD? Maybe not, but it most definitely
deserves to be remembered as one of the finest atomic age terrors
ever to grace the silver screen.
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